Category Archives: Tech News

Amazon announces dreadful Q3 earnings – details

Amazon announced its Q3 2014 earnings, showing the largest operating loss in company history of $544 million for quarter 3. However, net sales were up 20 percent to $20.58 billion this quarter.

Operating cash flow was also up for the quarter at $5.71 billion, but that still is in the shadow of such a large loss. Amazon’s Q4 guidance warns of another loss in Q4 to the tune of $570 million.

Their Amazon Fire phone has not sold well at all. This means Amazon is having to write off $170m due to the costs and unsold inventory.

Following this announcement, Amazon’s share price dropped 10%.

Not a good day really and at some point it will need to start turning a profit.

SUPER CAMERA SHOOTOUT – UPDATED – NOW WITH 23 SMARTPHONES – iOS, android, Windows Phone, BlackBerry

SUPER CAMERA SHOOTOUT – UPDATED – NOW WITH 23 SMARTPHONES

Not sure about which phone or brand takes the best photos, then have a look at this super sized collection of photos from all the best smartphones and some budget phones as a comparison.

Apple iPhone 6 Plus – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157647679181549/

BlackBerry Passport – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157648520943848/

LG G3 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157645618979801/

Samsung Galaxy K Zoom – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644532639249/

HTC One M8 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157643265004874/

Samsung S5 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157643875623354/

Sony Xperia Z2 – https://gavinsgadgets.wordpress.com/2014/06/15/sony-xperia-z2-second-impressions-part-2/

Samsung Note 3 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644034132513/

Samsung S4 Zoom – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039495565/

LG G Flex – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644114354349/

Apple iPhone 5S – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035336913/

LG Nexus 4 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039660933/

Sony Z1 Compact Z1 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644028694521/

Sony Xperia Z1 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039246935/

Sony Z Ultra – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644083052095/

Sony QX100 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035811453/

Sony QX10 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035335185/

HTC One M7 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644039700054/

Huawei Ascend P6 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644028833151/

Nokia Lumia 1520 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035105534/

Nokia Lumia 1020 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644035516523/

Nokia Lumia 925 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157634991010769/

Nokia Lumia 620 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/72157644083348093/

To see the sets in one indexed page click here – https://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinfabl100/sets/ – note only the Sony Xperia Z2 is not shown on Flickr

Apple iPad Air 2 and iPad Mini 3 – my reviews

Late night shopping is excellent. Perfect for browsing all the latest and greatest tablets or I should say iPads from Apple.

First up, here is my review of the iPad Mini 3. WOW (sarcastic). It costs you £100 more for a finger print sensor and gold finish if required. So not worth buying if you have an older version of the Mini. Also, if you have the iPhone 6 Plus, the iPad Mini is redundant.

Next my review of the iPad Air 2. So lets salivate over the 6.1mm thickness, a minor reduction in weight, a more advanced screen build which features less air gaps and less reflective, a new A8X processor, new improved 8mp camera and shooting modes, Touch ID and a new gold finish. STOP. No need to salivate. All the spec improvements made no difference to the original iPad Air. The screen and weight and thickness make no difference and are not really noticeable versus the original iPad Air. Let me rephrase that. There is no difference period. The A8X processor is faster. It feels faster on an empty iPad with no apps and games and the 2Gb ram meant more web browser tabs could be left open. But really, unless you use iMovie, GarageBand or similar or are a hardcore gamer, there is no obvious benefit. Touch ID is convenient but not essential. In fact, you lose the mute switch , and battery life tests from early reviews say it is not as strong as the original iPad Air.

So if you have the first iPad or the second model, the Air 2 is a great update. Otherwise, I just cannot recommend upgrading in any way, shape or form!

Apple iPad Air 2 and Mini 3 and available in stores to buy today

So are you stampeding to your nearest Apple store to purchase a new iPad Air 2 or iPad Mini 3. This device is totally not on my radar. So have you ordered one or picking one up today?

Now, the iPad Air 2 is a class leading product but unless your current tablet is faulty or your just in the mood for the latest and greatest, there really is no reason to buy this device. The iPad Mini 3 is really a poor choice since for £100 more all you get is Touch ID. There are no other changes other than the choice of a gold finish.

Apple’s Master Plan to lead with world class apps and games

Let’s face it a month or so ago android apps were equal, slightly ahead or slightly behind in look and functionality with their equivalent Apple iOS app.

But Apple pulled a master plan out of the bag and now is starting to make the app gap greater once again on iOS over android.

How is Apple achieving this? Two fold. iOS 8 with all its new functionality and then Apple launches 2 new screen sized phones, a 4.7 and 5.5 inch screen. Of course all the old apps scaled or zoomed to fit these new screen sizes, but lets face it some apps totally look dreadful all zoomed out. And Apple knew this would happen. It also knew users would mock poorly designed apps. So now developers would have 2 motives to update their apps, whereas previously with a 4 inch screen where was not any massive incentive to update any app or game. But now it is not just the added visuals but the added functionality like share sheet which are making developers apps stand out from the crowd.

But as we are talking about Apple they now have gone one step further and given a cutoff point of Feb 2015 for all apps and games to be supporting iOS 8 and 64 bit or be banished for good.

So now there is a deadline for developers to complete this task. This in turn means developers will produce gorgeous and feature rich apps in a timely manner, instead of as and when.

If you do not believe this will happen, I have already seen some stunning app updates for my 6 Plus which really make this stand head and shoulders over any other phablet on another competing platform. And this means the iOS app advantage is starting to gain momentum once again.

The new iPads – review embargo’s lifted – this is what everyone had to say so far

Apple’s iPad Air 2 is an entire millimeter thinner than the original iPad Air, has a new A8X processor, Touch ID fingerprint support, an anti-reflective screen coating, 802.11ac Wi-Fi, and an improved 8-megapixel rear camera. So what did the main press say –

Walt Mossberg, Re/code.net:
So when Apple brought out new iPads last week, and I had a chance to test them over the past four days, you might think I’d be pretty excited about them — but I’m not. They are, in most respects, the best iPads ever made. But for average users, they represent only a modest evolutionary improvement over last year’s models, not the kind of big change that the first iPad Air or the Retina display iPad mini did last year. The Air 2 didn’t allow me to hold or carry the tablet longer and more comfortably than the Air. Its weight of 0.96 pounds isn’t discernibly lighter than the Air’s weight of one pound. And its thickness of 0.24 inches is a barely noticeable reduction from the Air’s 0.29 inches.”

Nilay Patel, The Verge.com
The Air 2 has a vibrant, sharp display that looks almost painted on. Apple says the new antireflective coating on the Air 2 reduces glare by 56 percent, but I didn’t really notice it making a huge difference; you definitely can’t use it in bright sunlight. Inside the iPad Air 2 lies Apple’s new A8X chip, which is a variant of the A8 found in the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus with additional graphics capabilities. It’s ridiculously fast — noticeably faster to load web pages and launch apps than my iPad Air, and it has so much graphics headroom that I’m eager to see how game developers take advantage of it.

Darrell Etherington, TechCrunch.com
The 6.1 mm chassis just makes all the difference when it comes to the Air feeling like something that you could comfortably hold for long periods of time, and even for all-day computing, should you need it (and it’s easy to imagine an event coordinator, for instance, needing exactly that). Our review unit came in Apple’s gold finish, and let me just say that on the iPad, that means there’s a lot of gold going on. Apple’s take on this particular metal color is better than most, but this definitely isn’t my favourite finish. The Air 2 in either space grey or silver still looks fantastic however, and the gold is definitely going to stand out in a crowd, especially if you’re also using the iPad as a camera.

Brad Molen, Engadget.com
A thinner profile comes at the expense of battery size. The new Air’s is 5.1Whr smaller than the old one, but Apple still promises that you’ll get the same 10-hour battery life because the A8X is more power-efficient. Real-life use shows that the original Air still rules the roost; after a day of heavy use, I typically went to bed with around 20 percent left in the tank. If you’re only using it moderately — say, for casual content creation or consumption — you should get a little over two days. In our video test, in which an HD movie plays through the life of the battery, the Air 2 squeezed out 11 hours and 15 minutes, significantly lower than last year’s Air and about an hour short of the Samsung Tab S. The Air 2 also doesn’t have a mute switch, which I didn’t think would be a huge loss until I actually found myself trying to use it and becoming frustrated more frequently than I expected. Your new options are to press and hold the volume down button or go into the Control Center and press the mute key; if you used the switch to lock screen orientation, you’ll need to do that in the Control Center as well. A microphone now sits where the mute switch once was; there’s another one right next to the camera.

Joanna Stern, The Wall Street Journal.com
That anti-reflective screen also makes a great, though admittedly ginormous, viewfinder for snapping nature shots with the revamped 8-megapixel camera. It takes much crisper shots than before, and in many cases, ones as good as those I can take with my iPhone 6. But I won’t bring my iPad to some mountain peak, as some Apple promo shots suggest.
Besides, when I set the iPad Air 2 down for a second on a bench, it slid off and hit concrete, shattering the screen. Sure, I’m to blame, but if Apple wants me to climb every mountain armed with nothing but an iPad, ruggedness should be as important as anti-reflectivity.

Harry McCracken, Fast Company.com
The weirdest fact about the iPad Air 2 is that Apple isn’t publicizing (or even acknowledging) one of its best new features. The tablet now has 2GB of RAM, up from the rather cramped 1GB allotment in the original iPad Air. (Some competitors, like the Galaxy Tab 10.1, have even more.)
Doubling the RAM means that the iPad can keep more apps and browser tabs in memory without having to reload anything. That results in a speed boost which which is very apparent as you hop between apps and load new web pages.

Lance Ulanoff, Mashable.com
To get an anecdotal sense of the performance, I installed a pair of console-level games: Asphalt 8 Airborne and Modern Combat 5: Blackout. Each of these games is notable for rich imagery and physics including smoke, water, rain, and reflections. The games looked and worked great on the original iPad Air and worked just as well — if not better — on the iPad Air 2. However, Apple isn’t just blowing smoke when it says the A8X is more powerful. I ran Geekbench 3 on both Airs and found that that Apple’s A8X has 3 cores (the A7 had 2) and that the multicore score for the iPad Air 2 is nearly double that of the original Air. The singlecore score for the iPad Air 2 is only slightly better than that of the iPad Air.

There are other reviews available too, but it shows that if you don’t need the power and Touch ID and prefer longer battery life then stick with what you have got already. Also the iPad Mini 3 hardly gets a mention. If you do buy one please let everyone know your thoughts below.