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Friday 31 August 2012

Back to the future: Apple and Microsoft on collision course, again












 Two decades and four U.S. presidents ago, Apple vs. Microsoft was worth watching. Since then it's been a snooze.
That's about to change.
This fall consumers will be able to choose from the widest-yet assortment of smartphone and tablet devices because Microsoft, a company that has been an also-ran in mobile computing for too long, has picked itself off the mat.
In a Lazarus-like revival, Microsoft is winning acclaim for its latest mobile operating systems for tablets and smartphones. No. 1 Apple is not sweating any of this now as it preps for the presumed iPhone 5 and iPad Mini launches this fall. But for the first time in a long while, Microsoft is making a game of it and merits consideration as an alternative to Google's Android for those who eschew Apple. Given recent history, how many of you really thought this day would arrive?
Apple: Up, down, up
When these two companies first locked horns at the dawn of the PC era, Apple and Microsoft more or less were on equal footing, though that did not last long. By virtue of going with Microsoft's DOS operating system, IBM and the clone makers effectively decreed which company was destined to become the tech industry's top dog.
The 1984 introduction of the Macintosh, which Apple hoped would be its breakout consumer computer, made things interesting for a while, but Apple lost its way after sending Steve Jobs packing in 1985. The company proceeded to knock out more expensive computers that people other than creative souls simply did not want to buy.
Before long, Microsoft surged far ahead and the so-called operating system war between Windows and Mac was mostly in the minds of headline-happy magazine editors. In reality, Microsoft had trounced Apple in the desktop business and the only unanswered question was how long it was going to take before Apple went out of business.
By 1997, Jobs was again CEO of the company he co-founded and Apple was back in business, but with a small "b" compared to Microsoft. At the end of its fiscal year for 1997, Apple had lost $1 billion on $7.1 billion in mostly hardware sales. For its fiscal year, Microsoft posted revenues of $11.36 billion with $3.45 billion in net income selling software bits.
But the tables turned with the advent of what Jobs would later describe as the "post-PC era." It was a crucial time period and Microsoft missed the significance of the iPod and later, the arrival of iTunes. Microsoft was also missing in action when Apple unveiled the iPhone in January 2007 -- and then another game-changer in the form of the iPad in March 2010.
While Microsoft continued to dominate the desktop and business markets, Apple went on to lead the pack in mobile, which is where the proverbial puck was heading.
Apple has sold more than 85 million iPhones since its inception, including 26 million in the second quarter of 2012, good for a 16.9 percent share of the worldwide market, according to IDC. Even though it doesn't have the biggest share of the global smartphone market -- that title goes to Google's Android with 68.1 percent, according to IDC -- Apple still extracts enormous profits compared with Samsung and other rivals.
When it comes to the iPad, it gets even better. Apple has more than double the share of the competing Android tablets, according to Gartner. Gartner expects Apple will finish out the year with a projected 73 million units, which would be good for a 61.4 percent share. That, by the way, is in a market segment Apple did not invent (though it certainly made it relevant and wildly profitable.)
But in this second decade of the new millennium, Apple will be in for stiffer competition. Google has armed its partners in a bid to slow the company's mobile momentum. With the iPad Mini allegedly in the wings, Google has even advertised its Nexus 7 tablet on its sacred, advertising-averse home page. Amazon is about to launch a new Kindle Fire tablet, and now, the big dog Microsoft is entering the field with its armada of partners and marketing machine.
Different era, a different Microsoft
Just as this is not the Apple of yore, neither is this the same Microsoft, which has suffered through what Vanity Fair described in a company profile as a lost decade. No kidding. Settling into a complacent middle-age, Microsoft bore little resemblance to that once-scary company that demolished Netscape. Mocked for its slow-paced updates to its core operating system -- for good reason -- Microsoft has been been a joke line when it came to personal technology's two most important and fast-growing markets: tablets and smartphones. Even worse, it was being ignored in the conversation, as per this 2010 think piece about the eventual winner of the "great mobile war."
But persistence is an attribute that has served Microsoft well. This was always a company with deep pockets that won by staying at it through many failing iterations of a product, such as the Xbox, which took years to pay off. History may be repeating. Despite the ne'er-do-well caricature, Microsoft has responded with incarnations of its operating system for phones, tablets, and the desktop that so far has escaped the usual crucification from the tech elite. Some of this may be nothing more than the residue from years of lowered expectations. Also, Microsoft has been out of the leadership discussion for so long that it benefits from being the underdog to Apple's iOS platform and Google's Android.
But this is more than a case of Microsoft engineers inventing products that don't suck. Based on the early reviews, Microsoft's mobile OS is shaping up is a winner. Users will have final say but the early look reveals good technology that's fresh, new and -- very important in our increasingly litigious times -- appears nothing like iOS or Android.
The build-up in advance of Windows Phone 8 -- the next major version in Microsoft's mobile reboot -- began Wednesday at the IFA show in Berlin. Samsung showed off what officially was the first Windows device to run the newer software. Next week Nokia is expected to show off some of its own upcoming Windows Phone 8 devices, (AT&T is rumored to be the lead carrier for them.) And ZDNet reports that HTC is expected to have its own Windows Phone 8 handsets by mid-September.
Not to be ignored is Microsoft's Surface tablet, Microsoft's answer to the iPad, and the ever-growing sea of tablets that run Android. The device, which was introduced at a flashy press conference in Hollywood earlier this year, will land on the same date as Windows 8. One version is expected to be a more price-friendly version running Windows RT on top of ARM chips. The other, likely a bit pricier, will run Windows 8 Pro on top of Intel "Ivy Bridge" processors.
Undoubtedly, the Surface was as much a wake-up call to partners to invent better designs as it was a demonstration of Microsoft's own technology chops. Microsoft might eventually throttle back if its OEMs do engineer Windows 8 devices that are as good -- if not better. But like Apple, Microsoft is confident that it has a winner on its hands.
It's too early to tell how the new Windows will resonate with customers, but this fall is shaping up to be a lot of fun. Apple is well armed in the next few quarters to maintain its momentum. In its last fiscal quarter, ending June 30, Apple had $35 billion in revenue and $8.8 billion in net profit, as well as more than $117 billion in cash and securities. With the iPhone 5 and iPad Mini expected to have fall debuts, Apple will likely have its greatest quarter ever.
This much is clear: the two most important technology developers in the history of the technology industry are set for another collision course. Just like old times. And, the new kid on the block -- Google -- is hoping they are too busy battling each other to notice Android incursions. Get out the popcorn and pull up a seat.


PayPal for Android completely refreshed


The newest version of PayPal for Android is out, and it sports a refreshed interface, complete with the "Holo" styling typical of apps designed for Android 4.0 and above. All of the main navigation is at the top, with the familiar dotted menu button sitting on the top-right of the Action Bar.
With all of PayPal's core features now split into three tabs -- Account, Send, and Request -- PayPal 4.0 is easier than ever to use. Plus, it now looks and feels more in line with its sibling PayPal Here, the company's answer to the Square Card Reader app.

Assassin's Creed III








Assassin's Creed III is an upcoming historical action-adventure open world stealth video game being developed and published by Ubisoft for PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii U,and Microsoft Windows. It will be the fifth major installment and the third numbered title in the Assassin's Creed series. The game is set for worldwide release for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, beginning in North America on October 30, 2012, with a Microsoft Windows version following on November 20, 2012. A release date for the Wii U version is yet to be announced as the console's own release date has not yet been confirmed. Ubisoft has said that the game will be bigger than any of its previous installments.
The main portion of Assassin's Creed III will be set before, during and after the American Revolution from 1753 to 1783, featuring a new protagonist: half-English and half-Native American, Connor Kenway, birth name Ratonhnhaké:ton (pronounced "Ra-doon-ha-gay-doon"). In addition to the historical period, the game will also feature the "present day" setting, where series' protagonist Desmond Miles must endeavour to prevent the 2012 apocalypse, as his story will develop and then reach a conclusion. Players will also experience more Desmond than in any previous titles.
Work on Assassin's Creed III began in January 2010 (almost immediately after the release of Assassin's Creed II) by a senior team of Ubisoft developers. The title has been in development for 3 years and has the longest development cycle since the first Assassin's Creed. When Ubisoft first revealed Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood in 2010, as new details came to light, there was some confusion within the gaming community as to whether this would be Assassin's Creed III. According to the developers, Brotherhoodwas not Assassin's Creed III, and the third installment will not star a "pre-existing character." Ubisoft Montreal's developers stated in their interviews that Assassin's Creed III will be released eventually.
Jean-François Boivin of Ubisoft also stated that each numbered title in the series will introduce a new lead character and a new setting. Patrice Désilets, former series' creative director, said that the series has always been planned as a trilogy. He also commented on the story of Assassin's Creed III, saying that it will focus on Assassins' quest to prevent the end of the world in 2012, and their race against time to find temples and Apples of Eden built by "Those Who Came Before". Desmond will be searching for clues as to the locations of these temples, by exploring memories of one (or more) of his other ancestors.
In October 2011 Alexandre Amacio, creative director of Assassin's Creed: Revelations, announced that the next installment of the franchise was to be released before December 2012, however, Amacio himself would not be directing the game. This comes from the idea that Desmond Miles, the modern day protagonist of the series, was to finish his tale by December 2012. Amacio said that gamers should not have to play a futuristic game after the time period in which it is set.

Thursday 30 August 2012

Apple targets 8 Samsung phones for sales ban


Following last week's court ruling in the trial between it and Samsung, Apple this morning laid out which Samsung devices it wants banned from sale in the U.S.
There are eight in total out of the 28 that were included in the case. Those include:

• Galaxy S 4G (T-Mobile) review
• Galaxy S II (AT&T) review
• Galaxy S II Skyrocket (AT&T) review
• Galaxy S II (T-Mobile) review
• Galaxy S II Epic 4G (Sprint) review
• Droid Charge (Verizon) review
• Galaxy Prevail (Boost Mobile) review
• Galaxy S Showcase (C-Spire, Cellular South)
In its filing, Apple outlined the specific patents the devices were found to infringe in the trial, which went on for a month and wrapped up last week. The device with the most infringements is the Galaxy S 4G. It was found to infringe two of Apple's design patents, three utility patents, and two claims of trade dress:




IPhone 5 Rumor Roundup

After unveiling a marginally improved iPhone 4S in 2011 instead of a radically different iPhone 5, Apple has returned to its development labs to cook up (no pun intended) the next iteration of its popular phone. In 2012, we're fairly certain that the real iPhone 5 will roll out of Apple's gates and that the device should be a bigger leap forward than the 4S was.
That's why after taking some time off at the end of last year, we've resurrected CNET's iPhone 5 rumor roundup to cover the new tidbits from 2012. So join us again in watching the rumor mill churn. We'll add to it until we get the real thing; please let us know if we've left any gossip out.
August 29, 2012
French Web site Nowhereelse.fr posts photos of what appears to be a new and unreleased iPhone. Yet, the shots don't tell us much beyond showing a larger screen size of four inches. A bigger display has been a persistent rumor all year.
August 28, 2012 OK, scratch that thing people said about the NFC chip To NFC or not to NFC? Apparently, AnandTech thinks it's a no-go. The tech review site reported that because the iPhone's backside is metal and because there's only a small amount of space at the top and bottom of the phone, an NFC chip would not be able to fit. Instead, the site speculates that the small space seen before on the presumably new iPhone might just be space for a touch and display controller that'll accommodate the device's new touch screen.
August 27, 2012 There's space for an NFC chip In a recently leaked photo of the supposedly new iPhone, Apple.pro spotted what could be a small space designated for a near-field communication (NFC) chip. The area is next to the front-facing camera, and it matches the size of some current NFC chips. Though no one can say anything for sure, a Japanese blog, Macotakara, also speculated that a hole near the next iPod Touch's camera also hints at an NFC chip.
August 22, 2012 It may sport a 4-inch display from LG Reuters reported that LG has started mass producing a display that integrates "in-cell multitouch technology." Both LG and Samsung are known suppliers of iPhone and iPad parts, so it's easy to understand why this new touch screen may be destined for the iPhone 5. The new display would relinquish the need for sensors and glass, which will make the device even lighter.
August 21, 2012 One more month until it's here...no really Citing a "trusted Verizon employee," TechCrunch received more evidence that the September 21 unveiling date for the new iPhone may be true after all. Verizon employees are forbidden from taking vacation on September 21 through 30, and while the company gave no explanation, these particular dates support the rumor that the iPhone 5 will most likely be released on the 21st. No word yet on how certain Verizon workers, whose birthdays happen to fall on those dates, plan to "call in sick" anyway.
 August 15, 2012 It will be a hit Based on numerous news reports pointing to a September launch of the iPhone 5, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster estimates that Apple will sell 26 million to 28 million devices overall. So yeah, a lot of people should buy it. LTE in Korea The rumor of 4G LTE support in the next iPhone is nothing new, but here's a little more fuel for that fire. The Korea Times says Apple has been negotiating with two Korean mobile carriers, SK Telecom and KT, to provide the iPhone 5 through their LTE networks. Though readers in other countries may be asking, "What about me?," chances are good that if a 4G iPhone comes to Korea, it will land in other markets, as well. August 14, 2012 Again, a thinner screen A patent awarded to Apple covers a new LCD screen technology that integrates the touch sensors with the actual display circuits, reducing the space taken up by the screen. The new technology is an improvement over the current technique, which places the touch sensors on top of the screen and naturally leads to a thicker display. This "Touch screen liquid crystal display" could eventually lead to thinner and lighter displays.

August 13, 2012
Sept. 12 means preorders, too
While it has already been rumored that the new iPhone may be unveiled on September 12 (with a retail launch on September 21), iMore reported that preorders of the new device may also begin on September 12 as well. International orders are anticipated to begin later, on October 5. Customers are expected to receive their new handsets nine days later.
August 12, 2012
Say hello to a smaller SIM card
Leaked photos posted on the user forum WeiPhone purportedly show the new iPhone's motherboard/logicboard with a smaller SIM card slot. According to 9to5Mac, these photos would be the first "real-world appearance" of the nano-SIM that Apple has already been pushing for as the standard.