Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Google Puts a Giant Nexus 7 Ad on Its Homepage



There was a time when Google said it would never sully its beautiful white homepage with ads, and today we get a very big one for its new tablet, the Nexus 7.  This is not the first time Google has advertised its own products on that very valuable page, but it's the most prominent, with the ad taking up about as much space as the logo and search bar on the page. Clicking, of course, leads to thePlay store, where you can purchase the gadget.  

Back in 2009, the search engine gave its Chrome browser some play. In 2010 it put a little line beneath the search box for the Nexus One phone. Now, six Nexus products later, we get another, bigger Web advertisement. The debut comes just as Google has expanded sales overseas, to France, Germany and Spain. What better way to reach an international audience than through a globally accessible website? That, along with its (generallywell received television campaign should ensure that almost one billion people know that Google has its own tablet sale. Last year, the Google.comhomepage drew 1 billion visitors. 

GALAXY Note, Fun for All Species


It seems like humans aren’t the only ones that can enjoy the fantastic features offered by the GALAXY Note. We’d like you to meet Peter the elephant from Ayutthaya, Thailand. His hobbies include eating fruits, sleeping, bathing and playing with his GALAXY Note of course. What does Peter like to do with his Note? Call his aunt at the Bangkok Zoo? Well no, but he likes to play the piano, sketch with the S Pen, take photos, and flip through pictures.

It’s actually pretty amazing how dexterous and intelligent Peter is. Let’s take a look at the first video.


Here’s Peter playing the drums on the note. Pretty good sense of rhythm if you ask me. 


…and the piano as well. 



The GALAXY Note’s 5.3" HD Super AMOLED screen makes it the perfect phone for not just elephants but anyone who loves multimedia. The phone’s versatility is enhanced by the S Pen which lets you quickly jot down notes or make simple and quick photo edits on the go. 

The 6 sleekest gadgets of 2012


2012 has brought us some wild designs from both big-name brands and niche corners of the gadget and appliance market. Here are the six sleekest, most well-designed new pieces of tech we've seen this year, so get ready to drool, and keep your wallet handy!

 

1. Samsung T27B750 HD Monitor 
Price: $549.99
High-definition displays have come a long way in the relatively short time since they gained widespread appeal. Still, most HD displays look remarkably similar, and there is very little variety in terms of design, aside from varying screen sizes. Samsung is looking to shake things up a bit with the T27B750, a 27-inch display — which can be used as a computer monitor, HDTV, or both — with a design you've likely never seen before.

By placing the main support arm on the side of the unit, the weight of the display can be spread beneath the screen itself, rather than requiring a bulky stand that dominates your TV stand or desk. It also supports wireless display technology, as well as a host of built-in media functionality putting it on-par with the best Smart TVs on the market.

 

2. Nike+ Training TR1+ Lunar Footwear
Price: $220 to $235
Fitness gadgets aren't exactly hard to find these days — ranging from heart rate monitors that keep you in tune with your biology to bracelets like the Nike+ Fuelband that track every move you make, 24 hours a day. Nike is one of the leaders in this space, and the company's new Lunar TR1+ footwear may be the smartest, most workout-friendly shoes on the planet.

The TR1+'s come equipped with sensors and bluetooth functionality that speaks directly with youriPhone, and the free companion app provides realtime feedback and helps you tune your workout to get the most out of your training. The built-in sensors track how far you run, how high you jump, and a plethora of other metrics so you can tweak your performance accordingly.

 

3. Razer Ouroboros Gaming Mouse
Price: $129.99
When it comes to PC gaming accessories, no piece of equipment is more important than the mouse. Because of this, there are dozens of options for those looking to find the perfect fit. Razer's new Ouroboros mouse may essentially render those options obsolete, as you can tweak just about every aspect of the unit to fit your exact specifications.

With adjustable length, width, and back arch options, the mouse can be formed to match anyone's hand. The Ouroboros can even be converted from left-handed to right-handed mode, making it a truly universal piece of hardware. It also happens to look extremely cool, so that's a plus.

 

4. A2B Velociti Electric Bike

Price: $2,300
E-bikes lie somewhere between traditional city bikes and electric mopeds. With battery-assisted pedaling systems, they allow for speedy jaunts about town, but many e-bikes are bulky, unattractive behemoths that simply make their riders look silly as they cruise about. The A2B Velociti manages to include all the benefits of power-assisted biking while remaining sleek and tasteful.

With a range of 20 miles, a maximum speed of 20mph, and a relatively short 3.5-hour recharge time, the A2B is the perfect marriage of classic two-wheel transportation and the power-assisted future we're all headed towards.

 

5. Philips Fidelio SoundSphere Mini Wireless Speaker System
Price: $499.99
If you're looking for a pair of powerful, stylish speakers for your home or office, you can't go wrong with the sleek, futuristic look of the Fidelio SoundSphere duo from Philips. Designed to provide big sound in a small space, the SoundSphere's tubular design hides all the hardware while projecting your music or other audio out towards the ceiling. A separate tweeter on each speaker hangs over the main tube, providing crisp sound with a minimum of distortion. Best of all, the SoundSphere system features a built-in iPhone dock, and can also be used with your PC via USB cable.

 
6. LG LFX31945ST Door-in-Door Refrigerator
Price: $3,499.99
French door refrigerators are great, but do you ever get the feeling like they could use yet another door? LG feels that way, which is why the company introduced new door-in-door fridge technology. Featured on the LFX31945ST model, the added outer door lets you peruse the drinks and condiments you normally store in such places without opening the main fridge compartment and letting out all the cool air built up within. The design effectively turns the door into its own separate refrigeration compartment, while still giving you plenty of interior space once both main doors are open.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

For iPhone 5, Apple Must Go Big and Skinny




For iPhone 5, Apple Must Go Big and Skinny
It would be a huge mistake for Apple to offer up the next iPhone without giving it a larger screen. However, as we've seen with certain Android phones, having a large screen sometimes also makes a phone too big and ungainly. To solve the pocketability problem, Apple will need enlarge the iPhone's design in one direction and shrink it in another.

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The latest iPhone 5 rumors are giving it a similar form factor to the existing hot-selling iPhone 4 and 4S -- except with a bigger screen. Heck, if Apple doesn't introduce a bigger screen, it will be the biggest mistake in the history of the iPhone.
Apple has to offer up a bigger screen to compete with the Android phones that have huge, gorgeous displays. Size matters. Yet some of the competing smartphones I've borrowed have great big screens but end up overdoing it. They're unpocketable monstrosities.
The Samsung Galaxy series comes to mind. Phones in that line sport screens up to 5.3 inches. These are great for looking at photos and watching video, even reading and surfing the Web. For brief moments of time, I'm jealous of them.
No way I'd pack one of them on a daily basis, though. And if Apple produced a huge iPhone 5, well, I'd buy it anyway -- but only to give it the most scathing review I could ever imagine.



My iPhone isn't my whole life, and I don't want to spend too much time thinking about where I'm going to store the damn thing when I'm on the go. And I'm a guy who wears reasonable jeans and cargo shorts with plenty of pockets. If anything, I want a smaller, lighter form factor -- I want more screen size but a smaller phone. I want my photos to be larger, my Web surfing better.
Unreasonable?
No way. That's why I'm an Apple fan. I know Apple can do these things. The latest rumors about a unibody design -- getting rid of the back slab of glass and creating a stiffer one-piece frame for the phone's guts -- just might make it possible to create a thinner phone. If the phone is thinner and manages to sport a slightly larger -- longer -- screen, it would represent a pretty compelling evolution of the iPhone.
Plus, if the form factor picks up rounded back edges, it could "feel" even thinner. Remember the first few generations of iPhone? They were thick, but the rounded backside made them feel thinner than reality.
And the rounded backside brings better pocketability, too -- fewer sharp edges to catch on clothing seams and a discreet pocket bulge.
So where does that leave us? Is there anything that's super exciting about the iPhone 5? A smarter Siri? Apple's new maps? Both are indubitably desirable, but not super exciting. A better camera, faster processor? Good. A bigger screen? Very important, pretty exciting, but not particularly amazing on its own. After all, the iPhone 5 will still have a smaller screen than the competition. If Apple goes big without getting thinner, Apple will simply be following the competition, not leading it.
No, the more I think about the iPhone 5, the more I believe that Apple's next-generation move has to be insanely small. Buck the Android trend for bulkier phones. The only real way to do that well is to go thinner . . . and still give guys like me a nod toward a bigger screen. Apple's evolutionary process could cement a whole new generation of iPhones and secure its spot at the top of the smartphone hill. Apple would have all sorts of ways to tout its supreme usability. Plus, I'd still be able to essentially use the iPhone 5 with one hand, letting one thumb do most of the tapping action.
Maybe Apple's new smaller dock connector is more critical to the iPhone 5 design than we might think.

What About iOS 6?

The next version of iOS may have a secret feature or a new app still hidden from the public, and while the operating system is key to Apple's success, the company doesn't have much choice here: It has to continue to prove that it can make astoundingly elegant and durable hardware without Steve Jobs at the helm throwing fits when anything is even slightly less than awe-inspiring.
If Apple can do this -- give us a bigger screen in a smaller form factor -- I'll be truly excited about the next iPhone, maybe even excited enough to wait in line for one. Again. 

Why Apple hasn't cracked the TV market


Click here for Fortune's look at 11 features Apple TV needs to have.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- After seeing how Apple upended the music and wireless industries over the past decade, cable operators want to make sure that their industry isn't next in line to get an Apple makeover.
Apple (AAPLFortune 500) is widely reported to be in negotiations with cable companies to add live television access to a future Apple TV device -- perhaps an actual TV, but possibly something else. A Wall Street Journal report this week cited sources who claimed knowledge of Apple's attempts to get cable companies on board with an Apple-designed set-top box.
The device would be sold to consumers directly by Apple, and the tech giant would like to take a 30% cut of movies and apps that customers purchase on the box. The cable companies would be in charge of ensuring the viability of the service, including fixing malfunctioning devices.
In other words, Apple wants to be the shiny, user-friendly face of the device and let the cable companies do the dirty, unappreciated work. The industry term for this is a "dumb pipe": a company that is responsible for delivering a service but has no say in what flows through its network and no direct control over the customer experience.
That's exactly what happened to the wireless and music industries when Apple introduced iTunes and the iPhone.
The music industry lost much of its control over how music is sold and marketed to consumers, which contributed to a decade of declines in overall music revenues. With the iPhone, wireless companies like AT&T and Verizon lost the ability to make money on or control app sales, text messages and, increasingly, even phone calls. (If you're using Skype on your smartphone, you're not using voice minutes.) The carriers were forced to build out and support wildly expensive data networks and change their business model to make money on metered data services.
"The iPhone came along and radically changed the industry," AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson said last month at Fortune's Brainstorm Tech conference. "The industry has grappled with getting the pricing model turned."
Comcast (CMCSA)Time Warner Cable (TWCFortune 500), and the rest of the nation's cable companies want to avoid a similar fate, industry experts say.
"History is a wonderful teacher," says Steve Beck, managing partner ofcg42, a boutique consulting firm with expertise in the telecommunications and cable sectors. "Cable companies look at the music industry pre- and post-iTunes and the wireless industry pre- and post-iPhone and the control Apple exerted, and they want no part of that."
Cable companies would also be welcoming a rival -- or, more accurately, rivals -- into their midst if they partner with Apple. In its current form, Apple TV supports Netflix (NFLX)Hulu, MLB TV and other services that compete directly with cable subscriptions.
Right now, the cable giants have a fairly well-defended empire. Verizon(VZFortune 500) FiOS, AT&T (TFortune 500) U-Verse and satellite providers DirecTV (DTVFortune 500) and Dish Network(DISHFortune 500) have lured some cable customers away, but none are breakaway winners in usability, price, customer satisfaction or scale. (FiOS comes the closest.)
If Apple were to make a radically better cable box that works with any provider's service, cable TV would quickly become a commodity. There would probably be an advantage for the first provider to take the plunge, but whatever bump the first adopter received would eventually subside once all competitors began to carry the box. Cue the inevitable price wars.
"It's not surprising that they're looking at this very cautiously," Beck says. "In this industry, the potential uptick of customer acquisition or retention doesn't seem to be offset by the massive risk."
That's not something consumers want to hear. Apple is zooming in on the TV market because it knows there's a huge audience dying for simpler, more elegant solutions. Set-top boxes are notoriously difficult to use, particularly for content discovery, and cable providers' relationships with their customers are usually testy. Consumers consistently rank cable companies among the worst in customer satisfaction in the annual American Customer Satisfaction Index. (Apple, by contrast, has gotten the highest marks in customer satisfaction over the past several years.)
Still, despite all those obstacles, there seems to be something of an inevitability around Apple's entry into the TV space. Cable isn't yet faced with its Napster moment: Cord-cutting is a growing but still relatively contained phenomenon.
But as the companies lose customers to cheaper alternatives, including online streaming, they may begin to look to Apple as a white knight.
"Apple will eventually find a willing partner," Beck says. "The question is only how much that partnership will constrain the original vision of Apple's product. If Apple has to give in, it will be a hobby that didn't live up to the original idea." To top of page

Apple is now the most valuable company of all time


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- As Apple's stock rose to new high on Monday, the technology giant set another record: It became the most valuable public company in history.
Apple's market value -- the price of its stock multiplied by the number of outstanding shares -- soared to $623.5 billion at the market's close. That eclipsed the previous record of $618.9 billion set by Microsoft on Dec. 30, 1999, at the height of the dot-com bubble, according to Howard Silverblatt, S&P's senior index analyst.
Apple shares hit a new record of $665.15 per share. The anticipated September launch of the new iPhone, coupled with rumors of a smaller iPad and a more feature-rich Apple TV have lifted the stock in recent weeks.
It's a stunning achievement for a company that was a struggling also-ran when Microsoft was setting records in the late 1990s. Apple was valued at less than $10 billion as recently as 2004, and at $100 billion just three years ago.
Since 2007, however, Apple (AAPLFortune 500) has been an unstoppable force. Its iPhone business alone now brings in more money than Microsoft (MSFTFortune 500). Even the iPad, which was intended to be a gap-filling product between the iPhone and the Macintosh, has itself become a multi-billion dollar product for Apple.
Apple is on pace to be the world's largest technology company in terms of sales by the end of the year, and it's among the most profitable companies in the world. In the last three months of 2011, Apple made $13 billion -- second only to ExxonMobil's (XOMFortune 500) record-setting $14.8 billion quarter from the fall of 2008, when oil prices were at an all-time high.
The company's lightning-quick growth shows no signs of subsiding. With rumors of new gadgets on the horizon, Apple has crossed the $400 billion,$500 billion and $600 billion marks -- all in 2012 -- as the stock has soared 64% this year.
Despite the fast growth, some say that the company is actually undervalued, since its stock gains haven't kept pace with its earnings. Trading at 15 times this year's earnings forecast, it has a price-to-earnings ratio far below that of some tech stocks, including Facebook (FB),Groupon (GRPN) and even Zynga (ZNGA), whose stock has plunged sharply.
Apple still has one last hurdle to climb: Microsoft still holds the record for most valuable company on the stock market if inflation is taken into account. In 2012 dollars, Microsoft's all-time-high would have amounted to $851 billion.
Apple has quite a way to go before it hits that mark. Its stock would have to reach $908 per share. To top of page

Sunday, August 19, 2012

XBOX 720 TO FEATURE TOUCH-SCREEN REMOTE?



Xbox World magazine has recently published some rather bold claims about Microsoft's upcoming game console in its latest issue. Sources cited by the publication said that the Xbox 720 will support a souped-up controller, which touts an HD touchscreen besides traditional analog sticks and buttons. The design is pretty much similar to the Nintendo Wii U's own tablet controller, though the Microsoft version is said to be of a size that's closer to Sony's PS Vita

According to the Xbox World article, this Xbox touchscreen controller also doubles as a TV remote control, a Web browser, as well as a panel for displaying software buttons and game information. To up the overall gaming experience, the Xbox 720 has also been rumored to offer augmented-reality capabilities, directional sound and an improved Kinect accessory. The new Kinect is able to track up to four players simultaneously with enough precision to pinpoint users' fingers 
Source: Crave Asia via CVG