Category Archives: Android

Samsung launches it’s own game controller – the gamepad

The Smartphone GamePad instantly transforms the user’s Galaxy smartphone or tablet into a portable gaming console or even a home console. Through its premium, easy-to-carry design and durable steel frame, GamePad is attachable to mobile devices ranging from 4-inches to 6.3-inches, allowing users to play games wherever they are. Users can also connect Galaxy devices to their TV through an HDMI cable or AllShare Screen Mirroring for video game console experience from their living room.

GamePad easily connects with smartphones and tablets through Bluetooth pairing. The most convenient features optimized for Samsung Galaxy devices running Android 4.3 such as Galaxy Note 3, S4, Note II, and S III enable easy connectivity with GamePad via NFC tag and quicker access to games via the “PLAY” button.

With just a tap of the “PLAY” button, users can easily access the Mobile Console app, Samsung’s new integrated game launching app that opens in conjunction with GamePad to allow users to conveniently browse and purchase game pad supported games. Users can save money by enjoying reasonably priced console-quality games without the expense of additional gaming systems, as Mobile Console features games across a variety of categories including traditional racing titles such as EA’s Need for Speed™ Most Wanted and Gameloft’s Asphalt8 : Airborne, first-person shooter titles such as Gameloft’s Modern Combat 4 : Zero Hour, sports titles such as SEGA’s Virtua Tennis™ Challenge, and action titles such as Ubisoft’s Prince of Persia : The Shadow and the Flame. The Mobile Console app is available for download through Samsung Apps or by tapping the GamePad’s ”PLAY” button, and offers 35 dedicated games at launch with much more to come in 2014.

The GamePad is is currently available in select European markets and will be available in additional regions in the coming weeks. The availability of the GamePad varies by market.

Samsung Smartphone GamePad Product Specifications

Compatibility
Android OS 4.1 more (Optimized for Samsung devices with Android 4.3 more)
Connectivity
Bluetooth® v3.0, NFC(Samsung devices with Android 4.3 more)
3.0 class 2, HID
Control Keys
– D-Pad (8 way)
– 2 Analog Sticks
– 4 Action buttons and 2 Trigger buttons
– Select button and Start button
– PLAY button (Samsung devices with Android 4.3 more)
Dimension
137.78 x 86.47 x 31.80mm, 195g
Battery
Rechargeable 160mA
Colour Black

Personally I would recommend the Moga Power Pro as this can charge you phone at the same time as playing as well as having an amazing feature set.

20131217-215426.jpg

Samsung to launch 4 new tablets at start of 2014

One of SamMobile’s sources claims that Samsung is planing to release a total of four new tablets in the first quarter of 2014 alone in an apparent effort to improve upon the gains that it’s made over the last year in global tablet sales. SamMobile says that it can only say for certain that Samsung will release the Galaxy Tab 3 Lite in Q1 2014, although it suspects the company might also release a 12.2-inch version of its Galaxy Note tablet and a 13.3-inch tablet that may dual-boot with both Android and Windows.

This should come as no surprise. Samsung seems to release a plethora of devices at an alarming rate.

Motorola Moto G – first impressions

20131216-222702.jpg

The Motorola Moto G has arrived yesterday. Actually, I was asked to get some vegetables on my way home, and to my shock horror Tesco were selling the Moto G in both memory sizes, 8gb and 16gb, and both were in stock. So a few carrots and leeks ended up being a bit more expensive.

Tesco sell the Moto G for £99 but it is sim locked to their Tesco Mobile network. £2.04 on eBay and ten minutes later and the sim lock was removed. Then 5 minutes to reflash the firmware with the Moto G default firmware and now I had an unlocked and de-Tesco’d phone. All for £101.04.

The system firmware needs 3gb. So with the 8gb I only had 5gb left. That was enough for about 30 apps, most of which were games. The phone feels comfortable in the hand and isn’t too big. The volume rocker rattles as does the power button. It’s fine just not premium engineering. Everything else about the phone seems ok. In fact the overall build quality is quite reasonable.

If you have this phone especially with the 8gb version you will have to stream everything and use the cloud services that Google and or others provide.

The screen is great. Battery life is unknown at present. Most of my apps installed ok. So surely there must be a catch. Well 5gb user available memory isn’t much. But you can manage. Sound via the headphones is astonishing. I was expecting it to be crap or poor but it wasn’t. It was well above average. This is achieved using the Equaliser settings. I will report back on the loudspeaker once I have had more time with it.

The Moto G includes an FM Radio, Moto Assist, Moto Care and tips, and all the Google services.

So would I sell my iPhone 5S for the Moto G ? Find out over the course of this week?

Swiftkey 4.5 Beta receives welcome update – details

Swiftkey is one of the leading keyboard replacements on android. It offers great word predictions and the option of swipe text input as well as themes and different layouts.

In its new beta it introduces probably one of the most useful options. Emoji icons support (available on all iPhones ) and an additional row for numbers. No need to switch from ABC to 123.

All I need to do is switch to an android phone to make use of these features 🙂

Samsung merges it’s camera and wireless divisions – viewpoint

Samsung has announced that it has merged its wireless division with its camera division to help share idea, problems and resources. This makes total sense as phones steadily replace standalone cameras including DSLRs.

So let’s hope Sony follows suit. It makes great cameras, but it’s phones aren’t of the same level. For example the Z1 boasts a 20mp sensor, which when I reviewed did not produce consistent results.

2014-15 could produce some really exciting phones with terrific photo abilities.

Angry Birds Go – Race Angry Birds on android and iOS – a game ruined by in app purchases

Rovio has just launched across android and iOS Angry Birds Go, it’s free go kart racing game, supplemented by in app purchases.

Rovio are trying to be honest (pull the other leg) by clearly stating there is in app purchases, a message to parents that the game has social networking links, advertising, product purchases and in app purchases. In fact seeing the warning made me think maybe this game won’t be ruined by in app purchases.

Sadly, it is another game totally ruined by in app purchases. The game loses all fluidity as your characters tire and need time (20 mins) to recharge. This time will increase the more you play the game. But don’t worry you can buy yourself out of this time and recharge straight away. But before you get to this point, you are asked if you want double points for life at £4.99. The cheapest option is £1.99 all the way up to £34.99. And then you go kart isn’t powerful enough. So guess what you can buy yourself out of trouble.

I would pay for this game outright but I won’t be caught playing a game with an unknown cost to finish.

Apple and Google should make developers state what the maximum or typical costs involved for the game. In fact Apple and Google should create a top ceiling allowed for all games. Except they won’t. As they both take a huge cut and make loads of money.

It’s odd that some of my best games on iOS are those before in app purchasing arrived. They are decent games I bought which dont suddenly stop and ask you to cough up more money to keep playing.

I will leave you with my lasting thought on Angry Birds Go. Red Bird is tired and needs a nap. He’s fed up racing down the same slope with marginally different challenges. The first 30 mins were fun but Red Bird is so tired, he has been obliterated off the iPhone!!

Huawei Ascend P7 rumoured specs – but will it overheat like the P6?

Huawei made a stir with the mid priced Ascend P6. I owned one briefly and reviewed it. Refer to review links for my thoughts above.

So it comes as no surprise that the Ascend P7 will be an improvement of the P6, with double the storage up from 8gb to 16GB of internal space along with a microSD card slot. The P7 will include LTE unlike the P6 which didn’t. It will have a 5-inch 1080p screen and 2460mAh battery. Huawei will once again focus on finish with a premium feel similar to the P6. The rear camera will be 13mp and 8mp for the front.

My immediate thoughts is battery. With a 1080p screen it’s not big enough for a power user. I imagine Huawei focused on thinness of practicality.

Next, I would want some reassurance that it won’t overheat with GPS and Bluetooth running at the same time, like the Ascend P6 did every time with me.

Here’s a phone made by Nokia (photos included) that runs android – more details

20131211-194954.jpg

Twitter user @evleaks, revealed another one of its classic leaks. This time the above phone is manufactured by Nokia, except this phone is running android. It is a fully functioning phone.

And sadly, it will never see the light of day. Rumour has it Nokia made this handset to force Microsoft’s hand and purchase their company. If this was the strategy, then it clearly worked. Clever idea too.

Has Samsung really sold 10 million Note 3 smartphones in 2 months?

Samsung broadcasted yesterday that it has sold 10m Samsung Note 3 smartphones. But is this figure accurate and what does the number really mean?

First it is worth remembering that Samsung’s sales numbers are sales to mobile carriers and or distributors. They are not actual phones sold to you or me or members of the general public. So it is quite realistic to expect stock to be sitting in carriers and distributors warehouses, all unsold.

So is Samsung being naughty with its numbers? No. It has no other sales figures to disclose and therefore that makes it difficult to compare directly to Apple who sell directly to the public and therefore can disclose actual phone sales. But Apple also count sales to carriers etc in their figures, but their sales figures are more accurate due to the nature of manufacturing on demand.

So, how many people actually bought a Samsung Note 3 ? That is totally unknown, but I would conclude we are probably looking circa 5-7m which may appear a high figure but when you examine the facts available in the public domain it represents only 10% of Samsung sales of premium smartphones.

If you recall, the Galaxy S4 has continued to sell far short of Samsung’s initial expectations. So in November, at an investor conference intended to calm the concerns of its investors, a Samsung executive outlined that the company expected to ship a combined total of 100 million premium handsets in its Galaxy S and Note lines.

That figure revealed the first solid proof that the majority of Samsung’s “smartphone sales” this year were actually very low end devices, because it means only one third of the company’s overall shipments are premium phones that could be compared to an iPhone.

Based on Samsung’s numbers it reveals that its big screen Note 3 phablet will account for only a tenth of one third of its 2013 smartphone sales. This highlights that oversized phones are not nearly as popular as is often assumed. The majority of Samsung’s Note phablets sell in Asia, primarily within South Korea itself. Half of the Note 3’s current shipments had occured by then end of October.

IDC defined “phablets” as phones with screens as small as 5 inches, which would also include the Galaxy S4. In total, the research company stated that Android’s premium phones made up just 21 percent of the “smartphone” market, indicating that the remaining 66 percent of Android devices are very low end products with an Average Selling Price of just $214.50.

No wonder Samsung executives are slightly concerned. As a comparison, in the first weekend of sale, Apple sold 9m phones of its 5S/5C.

Smartwatch is dead already, long live the Smarty Ring

The Smarty Ring seems like a great idea and far more practical than a watch.

The Smarty Ring frees you from searching in your bag for your phone, or from reaching into your back pocket, just to find no new notifications. Its bluetooth 4.0 technology lets you always get real time updates.

Incoming & outgoing call notifications, Alerts for Text and E-Mail messages, Real time updates from Facebook,Twitter, Hangout & Skype, Remote control.

Control your phone without touching it, Accept or reject incoming calls, Make outgoing calls to preset numbers, Trigger camera, Control music, Change profile, Clock at your finger tips.

Have a clock capable of checking up to five time zones, and more, in an attractive ring. Not everyone likes watches, so a ring enabled with a clock and more is a fashionable option. Smarty Ring is not only a clock, but a stop watch and countdown timer!

Track your phone, Never forget your phone again AND prevent theft! Alert your phone when you lost in the crowd, Alert goes off even if your phone is in silent mode, Beeps when your phone is more than 30 metres away from you.

The Smarty Ring is a high quality piece of tech-jewelry made from allergy free, surgical quality stainless steel. The simple elegance of this piece makes it suited for both men and women, at an occasion.

The exterior of the Smarty Ring is not only fashionable – but waterproof. Take a Smarty Ring anywhere – even where your phone can’t go! Perfect for humid climates or to stay connected on vacation. This makes a great companion for a business professional on vacation who needs lives updates even while swimming!

The dazzling LED display is great for day and night use. Not only is it a charming conversation starter, but you’ll have your friends gawking at this cool gadget!

Charge your smart phone and Smarty Ring at same time. No plugin hassles, just place your Smarty Rings and smart phone over the charger to get it charged!

Damn this looks such a cool concept. Let’s hope this gets built.

20131211-053454.jpg

20131211-053504.jpg

20131211-053515.jpg

20131211-053522.jpg