Category Archives: Android

Google opens its own store in London

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Google has opened its first-ever branded shop, choosing the Currys PC World on London’s Tottenham Court Road as the location.

The store, to be called The Google shop, will sell the company’s range of Android phones and tables, Chromebook laptops, and Chromecast TV services. The shop will hold tutorials showing consumers how to use the devices and hold demonstrations showing off key Google apps. It will operate as a “shop in shop” within the Currys PC Word. Google plans to open two further areas within Currys PC Worlds in Fulham, west London, and Thurrock, Essex.

The shop will host regular classes and events. These will include tutorials about online security as well as how to use Google devices. It will also hold “Virtual Space Camps” to teach children the basics of coding, and “Open House” events where teachers can test potential educational tools.

Source Telegraph

LG G4 – LG’s new Flagship – photos

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Twitter user @onleaks have been revealing a number of apparent renders of the upcoming new LG G4. The new flagship from LG is meant to feature a metal based body, slightly curved and a overhaul of the LG software package. Some dimensions were also shared, with the LG G4 coming in at 148.9 x 76.5 x 9.9mm. The LG G3 is 146.3 x 74.6 x 8.9mm meaning the LG G4 is larger than the outgoing LG G3. Also the camera looks significantly larger, maybe a 20mp affair.

LG G4 leak @OnLeaks-650-80

So based on the photo renders, would you prefer this to the Samsung Galaxy S6 or HTC One M9?

Google starts rollout of Android 5.1 – details

On the official Android blog, Google stated that the 5.1 Lollipop update has began.

5.1

New features are native dual SIM support, joining Wi-Fi networks and controlling Bluetooth settings directly from the quick settings menu, and HD voice calling. Nexus 6 and Nexus 9 get a new Device Protection feature built in, ie. a kill switch.

Just a shame my Samsung Note 4 (UK official version) is still on Android 4.4!

Source -www.androidpolice.com

Samsung Gear VR (Virtual Reality Headset) – First Impressions

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The Samsung Gear VR (Virtual Reality) headset arrived over a week ago. I have been keen to try this out for ages to see what all the fuss is about.

The Gear VR sits comfortably on your head. The controls are simple. You have a trackpad on the side, a back button and an adjustment for the screen on top. Before you purchase/use the Gear VR, Samsung provides the longest document warning you of all the potential dangers of using this product, the importance of short sessions and plenty of breaks, sickness and all the potential side effects. Enough warnings to put you off using the product!

The Gear VR costs £169 or £199 with the Samsung Game Controller which you will need for some of the games. Starting off you have a screen in front of your eyes giving you access to the special VR store and all the options/games/apps available.

It is really easy to control and select different games and so, just by using the track pad on the Gear VR and/or moving your head.

The experience of using the Gear VR is out of this world. Virtual Reality is clearly the future of gaming. It is hard to describe how dramatic the vision is and how real it feels. At times, I felt like I did not want to move as I would fall off the cliff edge!

But there are the negatives. My Note 4 battery life had the juice sucked out of it at a rapid rate. You really will be using the fast charging mode on the Note 4. The Note 4 does get hot but nothing that worried me. The Note Edge does not fit/work with the Gear VR. Side effects. Samsung mentions sickness as a potential side effect. Temple Run VR is awesome to play, but OMG its super vomit territory. It is one of the worst games for side effects. If you manage to play for 5 minutes without at least feeling really sick, you deserve a gold star. One of my twitter friends James Burland, suggested I tried Titans of Space. That was a great recommendation, so be sure to play that game yourself if you do get one a Gear VR.

At the moment, it really is a developing product and it is definitely one I am excited about. Just note the side effects might impact your enjoyment.

20 million pre orders already for the new Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge

“Samsung received some 20 million pre-orders for the S6 and S6 Edge — 15 million of S6 and five million of the S6 Edge from mobile carriers, worldwide. This is the record,” a top executive at major European carrier told The Korea Times.

Note this is sales to mobile carriers not end customers. However,  this is still a huge quantity of sales.

It will also be interesting to see if carriers decide to sell or the different memory and colour options.

The UK release date is pegged for April 10th 2015.

CyanogenMod 12 nightlys now available for Note 4 – lollipop based – details

International Galaxy Note 4 handsets with the SM-N910F model number are now officially supported by the latest CyanogenMod 12 nightly ROMs. You can now have lollipop without touchwiz.

CM12 is based on Google’s latest Android 5.0 software, so it delivers features like lock screen notifications, improved multitasking, and significantly better performance and battery life. And because it’s not TouchWiz, you get Material Design as it was intended.

Only nightly ROMs are available right now. This is a non stable software — there will be some bugs and other issues.

I personally would not recommend this, not unless you like experimenting and your Note 4 is not your main device.

Custom ROMs require an unlocked bootloader and a custom recovery, and that means tripping your Knox counter on the Note 4, which voids your warranty. Right now, there’s no way to avoid that, and no way back, so you’re on your own if anything goes wrong later.

If that doesn’t put you off, you’ll find the first CM12 nightly for the Note 4 on the CyanogenMod downloads page linked below, weighing in at 257MB.

Source- http://www.cultofandroid.com

HiRes Audio on a Phone? Where MP3/AAC/FLAC are all so yesterday – details

For most of us we used to buy CD’s but now the trend is more towards downloading music, or even paying a monthly fee for all you can listen to streaming music service eg. Spotify, Apple, Google and others. They all offer a high music quality streaming option, but generally the maximum bitrate is 320mp3. Tidal HiFi is an exception, as this allows for FLAC HiFi quality music files. FLAC files are above CD quality and sound great. But the catch 22 is that the higher the bitrate or quality the more space you need to store your music. Instead of an album taking 100mb at 320 bitrate mp3, the same album recorded using FLAC can be approaching 800mb. The other potential downside of FLAC music files is that poorly recorded tracks sound dreadful and or if you have low quality headphones, these get exposed with high quality music recordings.

I have always thought FLAC to be one of the best audio file types available. But I was wrong. As part of my purchase of the Oppo HA-2 (click here for my review https://gavinsgadgets.com/2015/02/28/oppo-ha-2-portable-headphone-and-dac-review/ ) , I received an album using DSD audio files from a musician called David Elias. The space needed for 9 tracks was 1.9gb. Huge. The same 9 tracks as FLAC files needed 1gb less of storage space. So I copied the tracks across to my Note 4, opened USB Audio Player Pro app for android, went to the directory and started playing the music. My Oppo HA-2 was connected using my Sennheiser HD518 headphones. I have never, ever, ever heard anything quite so incredible. It was identical to having the musicians playing next to you, in your room and hearing all the nuances, with everything so crystal clear in ways that are hard to describe. Even though this was a free offer, I decided to drop David Elias a line thanking him for the free offer via Oppo and express my delights with the high audio quality and his music. David then took the time to explain how everything works, and why DSD audio is the way to go for HiRes Audio. I have included parts of David’s reply to me.

Here is what David said –

“DSD in fact opened up my ears to listening with its birth in the late 90’s. My good friend was piloting the original DSD 2-track Sony workstation with the Sony SACD Project and played some test master tape archive transfers to DSD.

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. It was so much better than anything digital I’d ever heard by far and anything on vinyl by some. It was like being present in the studio during the recording.

So i went on with Gus’s encouragement to self-produce the world’a first unsigned artist SACD as a hybrid 5.1 multichannel and stereo disc recorded in 2002 and released in 2003 called “The Window”.

“The Window” was recorded to the first multitrack Sony recorder later to become named Sonoma. It supported 8 tracks. We used a large pro studio analog mixer to mix the live studio band (up to 7 players) with no isolation to stereo. We captured 2 additional tracks as stereo from the room itself and spot mics to separate tracks on just my vocal, Sally’s dobro, Eric’s bass and Matt’s mandolin.

Gus and I mixed from those 8 tracks to 5.1 surround (5.0 really as we elected to avoid the sub channel and simply let the playback system crossover handle that) as well as a separate master DSD mix to stereo.Everything was mixed in native DSD on the Sony workstation using a Sony DSD mixer card and software. There was even no analog conversion and back to DSD for mixing. The result is 100% pure native DSD mastered on the same workstation. Your DSF files are identical.

There are no edits of any kind as the live analog mix and live room capture prevent that. Wasn’t interested in that anyway. What I wanted was to capture the real recording of the band performing together in the same room at the same time. No effects were used either just the natural reverb acoustics in the room (2 DSD tracks recorded) and delay and bleed between mics in proximity to each other (like Matt’s mando getting a little into my vocal mic cause he was sitting close to me and Marc drumming right behind me like in a show).

What you hear like on “The Old King” is a group of musicians carefully applying their craft in a spontaneous fashion. We had only run through the songs together once the night before our 3-day recording session began.

I tell you all this Gavin to help impress upon you the idea that less is more with audio reproduction. To me it takes first and foremost a good performance. Second it takes a great studio engineer or team to get the right mic choices and placement and application of their craft recording. Then it takes the best format for capturing the performance which for me and acoustic or live electric is DSD hands down. Analog tape is good but noisy and prone to immediate degradation on playback as tape wears and is magnetized or aged.

DSD digital is immortal and unchangeable. That’s why Sony and Philips developed it in the first place to archive their aging master stereo tape library.

We are at the dawn of what I hope is a mass revolution of music lovers seeking better quality recordings. We have had our ears compressed to death for 35+ years by CD technology and most digital recording. That started changing in 2000 with DSD but reached few and mostly only audiophiles listening to jazz and classical music, which was fine for them but left others out.

In the past year plus there are perhaps 300 DAC and player products that support HRA and DSD. What a revolution!

Within David’s email there was even more information too. It really has been an amazing insight.

David also mentioned the following places to look for HiRes audio music –

“I am represented along with some incredible recordings on these other websites where you can usually preview samples:

http://www.highresaudio.jp (Japan)
http://www.nativedsd.com (Netherlands)
http://www.highdeftapetransfers.com (US)
http://www.superhirez.com (US and Canada)

And of course my website http://www.davidelias.com

If you do go down this path, one word of warning – you will need lots of storage space or several 128gb memory cards, a purchase of a decent app like USB Audio Player Pro (£5) for android or Onkyo HF Player on iTunes, decent headphones (£100+) and a great headphone/DAC (£150+). The worst part is going back to 320mp3 music recordings, which is what most of my music library is ripped at, since everything sounds cr*p compared to the DSD audio tracks produced by David Elias.

Samsung Note 4 – Camera shots of the Year (so far)

Below are photos taken on my Samsung Note 4. Any editing is done on the phone. Apps used are Camera360, VSCO Cam, Adobe Photoshop Express and Snapseed. I don’t use any other apps to achieve these photos. I also only use the default Samsung Camera app. If you want to see the full resolution, just click on the photo to go to my Flickr account.

The Lighthouse at Plymouth Hoe,  Plymouth #Note4

Par Beach, Par, Cornwall #Note4

3 Seagulls discussing "Where did that Big Black Pole"  come from #Note4

Riverside Mill, Bovey Tracey, Devon #Note4

The English Riviera, Torquay #Note4

Black Berries #macro #Note4

Moody & Dramatic Dartmoor #Note4

A Winters Storm over Plymouth City Centre #SamsungNote4 #awseome #dramatic

11am 31st January 2015, Princetown, Dartmoor #uksnow snow levels building up #samsungnote4

Absolutely breathtaking sunset near Princetown, Dartmoor #Note4 #dramatic #golden

All Aboard - Tamar Ferry at Torpoint, Cornwall #Note4

Sunset views towards Vixen Tor, Dartmoor #Note4

Cracker The Seagull on Patrol Duty #Note4

Sutton Harbour, Plymouth #mirrored #Note4

Power Up, The Barbican, Plymouth #Note4

Dramatic views of Bellever Forest, Dartmoor #Note4