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Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 4, 2013

No phone as Facebook unveils new Home

Watch the launch video for Facebook Home, an app that makes Facebook the landing page for Andriod phones.

FACEBOOK is killing the app.

Its new mobile phone system unveiled this morning has turned Facebook into a home screen, meaning you are never separated from the social network.

Facebook has taken Android's open source operating system and tailored it to make it a "people first" operating system that brings Facebook out of the app and onto your phone.

Its name is "Home".

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that phones today are designed around apps and not people.

"We want to flip that around," he said.

Facebook takes the home screen of your phone and turns it into a visually rich scrolling newsfeed that shows your friends photos, status updates all the time. You no longer have to tap into the Facebook app to respond. You can simply tap your home screen to like a post, or to reply.

Facebook Home

The new Facebook Home screen is both the locked and unlocked screen, letting users quickly check for updates on their smartphone, with other apps hidden behind this home screen.

Facebook will organise the most important updates to appear on your screen, no matter where you are. Users can hide them by simply swiping left or right, or get rid all the latest posts by holding down their finger on the screen and swiping downwards.

Apps can still be accessed through a launcher that users can access by swiping upwards.

Mr Zuckerberg showed off a new feature called "Chatheads" which is a new messaging systems that allows users to manage conversations.

A small pop-up head will appear in the right hand margin, to notify users that they have a new Facebook or text message. That way, the notification does not interrupt what you were doing on your phone before someone tried to contact you. To reply you can simply swipe left and a conversation box will appear on top of previous screen, send it and go straight back to what you were doing.

"By putting people first this is one of the many small but meaningful changes to our relationship with tech over time," Mr Zuckerberg said.

Facebook Home can be downloaded to any Android phone from Google's app store, Google Play and will be available from April 12, at least in the US. No word on when it will roll out to Australia.

Facebook Home screen ChatHeads

The ChatHeads function will incorporate texting and Facebook messages.

Also any new HTC One, HTC One X, Galaxy SIII and Galaxy S4 phones will come pre-loaded with the new Facebook software for Android.

Facebook Home is a bold step for the social network and it's one that was made with the future of technology in mind.

Mr Zuckerberg said that in five to 10 years, people who are currently using feature phones will have switched to smartphones and that we are soon "going to be living in a world where people will never see in their lives what we call a computer".

"Just stop and think about that for a second," Mr Zuckerberg said.

"The definition of what a computer is and should be has not been set for the majority of the world."

"I think that is definitely going to be about people."

More and more we're starting to see a push for ubiquitous operating systems that do everything within the one environment. Google's new Chromebooks are an example whereby it has taken the best features of its Chrome internet browser and integrated it into the computing experience, blurring the line between desktop and browser.

Facebook Home

A screengrab of the new Facebook Home. Users can double click on an image or update to "like" it, or move Home down to view their other apps.

Likewise Facebook home steps away from the app experience with keeps content siloed within the paramaters of an application, and makes it central to the mobile computing experience.

While Facebook isn't killing the app altogether, it is definitely taking a confident step away from it, demonstrating that we might already be making moves to a post-app experience.

"Home" is both the lock screen and the unlocked screen - so when a user glances at their phone, they see a feed of their Facebook friends' photos and comments.

Mr Zuckerberg gave an example of standing in line at a store and looking down at the phone to see photos of friends and family. It'll be possible to flip through the items. If there's something you like, just double tap on it to "like" it. You can also add comments from the home screen.

With this, Facebook doesn't believe you'll need to go to the Facebook app any more.

Mr  Zuckerberg said the company is not building a phone or an operating system. Rather, Facebook is introducing something that's a lot deeper than an app.

Mark Zuckerberg Facebook

Analysts hailed "Home" as "groundbreaking" and a "really big deal for Facebook", with some saying Apple should be worried people will want a "Facebook phone" instead of an iPhone. Picture: Getty

"Why do we need to go into all the apps in the first place to see what is going on with the people we care about?" he said.

Home comes at a time of rapid growth among the number of users who access the social network from smartphones and tablet computers and Facebook's aim to evolve from its Web-based roots into a "mobile-first" company.

Mr Zuckerberg demonstrated how a user would start with Facebook on the home screen and be able to navigate and switch back and forth between apps, and simultaneously send and receive messages through "chat heads" which are overlaid on the screen.

"I think this is a really big deal for Facebook," said Peter Corbett of the research firm iStrategyLabs.

"We've actually seen Facebook call themselves a mobile company recently and if you look at their analytics, more than half of their users are accessing Facebook through mobile. Now that they have what will essentially be a native branch of the Android operating system that they control and build upon, this is the future of Facebook."

Mr Corbett added that "Apple should be worried to a certain extent" because Facebook will "put this in front of millions and millions of the world's youth who may decide 'I want a Facebook phone instead of an iPhone.'"

Mark Zuckerberg Facebook Home

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg launches Facebook Home. Smartphone users look at their phone more than 100 times a day, and Home will help them instantly stay up-to-date with what their friends are up to, Mr Zuckerberg said. Picture: AP

Analyst Trip Chowdhry said the new software is a potentially "groundbreaking experience" which could help Facebook compete with Google in the market for mobile advertising.

"Since Facebook is not imitating, they will carve a leadership position," he said, adding that "Google missed a huge opportunity in social mobile phones."

The announcement comes with Facebook trying to connect more with mobile users, and - importantly - deliver more ads in the fast-growing segment.

The research firm eMarketer said US mobile advertising spending grew 178 per cent last year to $US4.11 billion ($3.9 billion), a market that nearly tripled last year.

Google took more than half of those revenues, but Facebook's share in growing: eMarketer said the social network accounted for 9.5 per cent of mobile ad revenues in 2012 and is expected to take 13.2 per cent this year.

Last year, Facebook began showing ads to its mobile audience by shoehorning corporate-sponsored content into users' news feeds, which also include updates from friends and brands they follow. Facebook now faces the challenge of showing people mobile ads without annoying or alienating them.

Facebook Home Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook Home will be automatically installed on new AT&T and HTC phones in the US, Mr Zuckerberg said. No word yet when it will be available in Australia. Picture: AP

Clark Fredricksen, vice president at eMarketer, says "there are some clear reasons why a deeper integration with mobile operating systems and handsets make sense for Facebook. At the end of the day, the more deeply Facebook can engage consumers, no matter what device or operating system or handset," the better.

Facebook's announcement of Home came less than a day after an image of what appears to be the long-awaited Facebook phone has surfaced online.

Earlier, tech blogger @evleaks posted an image on Twitter, with the words "HTC first, 2013". The image showed an HTC phone with the words "HTC first" emblazoned across the front. The phone contains only three buttons below the screen.

With AFP

Facebook Home Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks about Home at the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, California. The new system comes as the company is trying to connect more with mobile users. Picture: AP


View the original article here

Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 3, 2013

Samsung unveils Galaxy S4

Plenty of song and dance at the launch of Samsung's newest smartphone, the S4. Here's a snapshot of the live streamed event.

SAMSUNG'S first iPhone-beating smartphone will be replaced with a model that tracks your eyes and fingertips, lets you control it with the wave of a hand, reports on your exercise, and uses eight computing brains for a speed boost.

The South Korean company revealed its highly anticipated Galaxy S IV in one of the world's biggest phone launches this morning in New York, broadcasting its unveiling to Times Square and hundreds gathered at Radio City Music Hall.

More than 300,000 people tuned in to watch the live stream on YouTube.

Samsung Galaxy S4

JK Shin, President and Head of IT and Mobile Communications for Samsung Electronics, presents the new Samsung Galaxy S 4 during the Samsung Unpacked event at Radio City Music Hall, Thursday, March 14, 2013 in New York. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow) Source: AP


The handset, which looks similar to the Galaxy S III it replaces, also features a larger and significantly crisper 5-inch screen, a slimmer body and a larger battery, and sources say it will be available in Australia by late April.

Samsung Australia marketing director Arno Lenior said while the new phone featured a significantly better 5-inch screen, many of its innovations were only evident inside.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

"As much as the phone features new hardware enhancements, there's been a lot of software additions to this smartphone,'' Mr Lenior said.

New hardware in the Galaxy S IV includes a full high-definition Super AMOLED screen for the first time with a greater resolution than the iPhone 5, an eight-core 1.6GHz processor for increased speed, a larger battery and an infra-red "blaster" so the phone could be used as a TV remote control.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

New software features in the phone include eye-tracking technology that determines whether you're looking at the screen and automatically pauses video when you're not paying attention, or lets you tilt the phone to scroll up and down websites when your eyes are looking them.

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch

JK Shin, President and Head of IT and mobile communication division of Samsung introduces the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City. Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

A raft of new Air Gestures will let users control the phone without touching its screen, including waving to right to left to accept a phone call, and waving up and down to move the screen in the same direction.

New sensors combine with a health-tracking app to count how many steps users take, how hot or humid it is near them, and lets users track their caloric intake.

A movement-tracking bracelet, weight scales and heart-rate monitor will also be available for use with the phone.

Rumours of wireless charging and an internet-connected watch proved false, however.

The new smartphone has big expectations to fill after Samsung sold more than 43 million of its predecessor, making it the biggest-selling smartphone in the third quarter of 2012, beating Apple's iPhone 4S. The title has since been taken out by the iPhone 5.

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch

Samsung introduces the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City. Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

Together, Samsung and Apple controlled 52 per cent of smartphone sales in the final three months of 2012, Gartner said, setting up a fierce battle between the technology giants.

Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller this week launched a rare attack on Samsung and Google Android phones, saying the handsets often host old software and are difficult to use.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

"At Apple we know that it's not just enough to have products pumped out in large numbers," he said. "You have to love and use them. There is a lot of data showing a big disparity there."

Despite the comments, Samsung laid claim to being the world's biggest smartphone maker at the end of 2012, according to Gartner, though the Apple iPhone 5 claimed the title of the world's best selling smartphone, Strategy Analytics reported.

Jennifer Dudley-Nicholson Tweets from the Galaxy S4 launch

Plus: See how smartphone fans are soaking up the launch via social media below.


View the original article here

Samsung unveils Galaxy S4 in bid to top Apple

Samsung

A picture purporting to show the new Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone which was leaked by South Korean technology website it168.com. Source: Supplied

ONE of the world's biggest phone launches is unfolding in New York City this morning, as Samsung has taken over Times Square to broadcast the unveiling of its Galaxy S IV handset and let consumers hold the phone for the first time.

The highly anticipated smartphone is expected to boast features including a larger screen, world-first eight-core processor and a significantly improved camera.

Rumours have also circled about the possibility of eye-tracking Smart Scroll technology and even wireless charging.

Samsung's new smartphone will replace the Galaxy S III, which sold more than 43 million handsets worldwide since its launch last May and outsold Apple's iPhone 4S to become the world's top-selling smartphone in the third quarter of last year.

Apple has since won back the title with its iPhone 5, according to Strategy Analytics.

Samsung will reveal its new phone inside New York's historic Radio City Music Hall this morning, with the conference streamed live to Times Square.

Jennifer Dudley-Nicholson Tweets from the Galaxy S4 launch


View the original article here

Samsung unveils Galaxy S4 in bid to top Apple

Samsung

A picture purporting to show the new Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone which was leaked by South Korean technology website it168.com. Source: Supplied

ONE of the world's biggest phone launches is unfolding in New York City this morning, as Samsung has taken over Times Square to broadcast the unveiling of its Galaxy S IV handset and let consumers hold the phone for the first time.

The highly anticipated smartphone is expected to boast features including a larger screen, world-first eight-core processor and a significantly improved camera.

Rumours have also circled about the possibility of eye-tracking Smart Scroll technology and even wireless charging.

Samsung's new smartphone will replace the Galaxy S III, which sold more than 43 million handsets worldwide since its launch last May and outsold Apple's iPhone 4S to become the world's top-selling smartphone in the third quarter of last year.

Apple has since won back the title with its iPhone 5, according to Strategy Analytics.

Samsung will reveal its new phone inside New York's historic Radio City Music Hall this morning, with the conference streamed live to Times Square.

Jennifer Dudley-Nicholson Tweets from the Galaxy S4 launch


View the original article here

Samsung unveils Galaxy S4 in bid to top Apple

Plenty of song and dance at the launch of Samsung's newest smartphone, the S4. Here's a snapshot of the live streamed event.

SAMSUNG'S first iPhone-beating smartphone will be replaced with a model that tracks your eyes and fingertips, lets you control it with the wave of a hand, reports on your exercise, and uses eight computing brains for a speed boost.

The South Korean company revealed its highly anticipated Galaxy S IV in one of the world's biggest phone launches this morning in New York, broadcasting its unveiling to Times Square and hundreds gathered at Radio City Music Hall.

More than 300,000 people tuned in to watch the live stream on YouTube.

Samsung Galaxy S4

JK Shin, President and Head of IT and Mobile Communications for Samsung Electronics, presents the new Samsung Galaxy S 4 during the Samsung Unpacked event at Radio City Music Hall, Thursday, March 14, 2013 in New York. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow) Source: AP


The handset, which looks similar to the Galaxy S III it replaces, also features a larger and significantly crisper 5-inch screen, a slimmer body and a larger battery, and sources say it will be available in Australia by late April.

Samsung Australia marketing director Arno Lenior said while the new phone featured a significantly better 5-inch screen, many of its innovations were only evident inside.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

"As much as the phone features new hardware enhancements, there's been a lot of software additions to this smartphone,'' Mr Lenior said.

New hardware in the Galaxy S IV includes a full high-definition Super AMOLED screen for the first time with a greater resolution than the iPhone 5, an eight-core 1.6GHz processor for increased speed, a larger battery and an infra-red "blaster" so the phone could be used as a TV remote control.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

New software features in the phone include eye-tracking technology that determines whether you're looking at the screen and automatically pauses video when you're not paying attention, or lets you tilt the phone to scroll up and down websites when your eyes are looking them.

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch

JK Shin, President and Head of IT and mobile communication division of Samsung introduces the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City. Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

A raft of new Air Gestures will let users control the phone without touching its screen, including waving to right to left to accept a phone call, and waving up and down to move the screen in the same direction.

New sensors combine with a health-tracking app to count how many steps users take, how hot or humid it is near them, and lets users track their caloric intake.

A movement-tracking bracelet, weight scales and heart-rate monitor will also be available for use with the phone.

Rumours of wireless charging and an internet-connected watch proved false, however.

The new smartphone has big expectations to fill after Samsung sold more than 43 million of its predecessor, making it the biggest-selling smartphone in the third quarter of 2012, beating Apple's iPhone 4S. The title has since been taken out by the iPhone 5.

Samsung Galaxy S4 launch

Samsung introduces the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City. Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

Together, Samsung and Apple controlled 52 per cent of smartphone sales in the final three months of 2012, Gartner said, setting up a fierce battle between the technology giants.

Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller this week launched a rare attack on Samsung and Google Android phones, saying the handsets often host old software and are difficult to use.

Samsung Galaxy S4

People interact with the Samsung Galaxy S IV, March 14, 2013 in New York City Allison Joyce/Getty Images/AFP Source: Getty Images

"At Apple we know that it's not just enough to have products pumped out in large numbers," he said. "You have to love and use them. There is a lot of data showing a big disparity there."

Despite the comments, Samsung laid claim to being the world's biggest smartphone maker at the end of 2012, according to Gartner, though the Apple iPhone 5 claimed the title of the world's best selling smartphone, Strategy Analytics reported.

Jennifer Dudley-Nicholson Tweets from the Galaxy S4 launch

Plus: See how smartphone fans are soaking up the launch via social media below.


View the original article here

Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Google unveils a pair of talking shoes

A smart sneaker with personality that can broadcast its story to the web.

BECAUSE inventing Google Glass wasn't impressive enough, the tech giant unveiled a pair of talking shoes at SXSW.

Calm down, Google Shoes are not going to be a thing. The experiment was designed to highlight its new advertising platform called Art, Copy and Code.

Google hacked a pair of Adidas sneakers to show "how you can use objects to tell stories on the web today," Aman Govil, head of the advertising team told the ABC (US).

The shoes can tell the person wearing them what they are doing (or aren't doing) and can relay that information to their smartphone via a speaker in the tongue of the shoe.

The sneakers also house a small computer, accelerometer, pressure sensor, a gyroscope and Bluetooth.

The experiment is meant to work the way many other fitness gadgets do, relaying information about your activity and berating you when you're not being active enough.

"If you put what the shoe knows through an algorithmic logic engine, it can translate it into copy," Govil said. "Now if you give that copy to an interesting copy writer, you could give the shoe personality. One shoe could be the trash-talking shoe."

It's a novel idea but given that it needs a phone to function, there's probably no need for your shoes to be the gadgets that do the talking. All Google really demonstrated was that the sneakers could do what a smartphone is already capable of.

Google shoe

Who hacks a shoe? Honestly. Source: Supplied


 

View the original article here

Google unveils talking shoes at SXSW

A smart sneaker with personality that can broadcast its story to the web.

BECAUSE inventing Google Glass wasn't impressive enough, the tech giant unveiled a pair of talking shoes at SXSW.

Calm down, Google Shoes are not going to be a thing. The experiment was designed to highlight its new advertising platform called Art, Copy and Code.

Google hacked a pair of Adidas sneakers to show "how you can use objects to tell stories on the web today," Aman Govil, head of the advertising team told the ABC (US).

The shoes can tell the person wearing them what they are doing (or aren't doing) and can relay that information to their smartphone via a speaker in the tongue of the shoe.

The sneakers also house a small computer, accelerometer, pressure sensor, a gyroscope and Bluetooth.

The experiment is meant to work the way many other fitness gadgets do, relaying information about your activity and berating you when you're not being active enough.

"If you put what the shoe knows through an algorithmic logic engine, it can translate it into copy," Govil said. "Now if you give that copy to an interesting copy writer, you could give the shoe personality. One shoe could be the trash-talking shoe."

It's a novel idea but given that it needs a phone to function, there's probably no need for your shoes to be the gadgets that do the talking. All Google really demonstrated was that the sneakers could do what a smartphone is already capable of.

Google shoe

Who hacks a shoe? Honestly. Source: Supplied


 

View the original article here

Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 2, 2013

Samsung unveils 8-inch tablet with phone

SKOREA-SAMSUNG-IT-SMARTPHONE

Samsung Electronics Galaxy Note 8.0, the latest version of its oversized smartphone lineup. The new device is expected to take on its rival Apple's iPad mini. Source: AFP

SAMSUNG has unveiled an eight-inch (20.3cm) tablet with phone capability to rival Apple's recently launched iPad mini and to cement its market dominance by offering devices in a variety of sizes.

The Galaxy Note 8.0 features an eight-inch screen and, where it may steal a march on its rival which measures 7.9-inches, the ability to make phone calls.

The new device, now being marketed by Samsung as a ''tablet'', is powered by Google's Android software and will be showcased at the four-day Mobile World Congress in Barcelona beginning on February 25, the company said in a statement.

Like previous incarnations of the Galaxy Note, the device comes with a stylus pen allowing the user to write or draw on the screen, which can be split in two to run various programs at the same time.

Global sales will begin in the second quarter, the firm said.

Samsung is the world's top maker of smartphones and mobile phones in general.

The latest device - the first from the company to feature an eight-inch screen - is set to fill a gap in the firm's wide product lineup, which ranges from the flagship smartphone Galaxy S to the 5.5-inch (14cm) Galaxy Note 2 and the 10.1-inch (25.7cm) Galaxy Tab tablet PC.

The firm has recently shifted its focus to its Galaxy Note, which turned out to be far more popular than the larger Galaxy Tab, offering the Note in various sizes in a move that blurred the lines between smartphones and tablet PCs.

Samsung said the launch of the Galaxy Note 8.0 will "reignite the mid-size tablet category" - a segment increasingly crowded by rival products including the iPad mini that launched last November and Google's seven-inch (17.8cm) Nexus 7.

Samsung and Apple accounted for more than half of all smartphone sales in the final quarter of 2012 - 29 per cent for Samsung and 22.1 per cent for Apple - according to research firm Strategy Analytics.


View the original article here