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Selasa, 10 Januari 2017

iPhone - a moment in history

Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone

Ten years ago I was running from San Francisco’s Moscone Centre to a nearby hotel to edit a piece for the Ten O’Clock News when my phone rang.

Those were the days, by the way, when phones were for making calls but all that was about to change.

“Have you got your hands on this new Apple phone for a piece to camera?” shouted a producer in London. “If not, why not?”

This appeared to be an impossible demand.

Steve Jobs had just unveiled the iPhone before an adoring crowd but it was not available for grubby hacks to manhandle.

Then I remembered that we had been offered - and turned down for lack of time - an interview with Apple’s marketing chief Phil Schiller. I turned around and headed back to the Moscone Centre. Having located Mr Schiller I asked whether before our interview I might just have a look at the iPhone.

He graciously handed his over - and rather than trying to ring Jony Ive or order 5,000 lattes as Steve Jobs had on stage, I brandished it at the camera for my Ten O’Clock News piece.

The following weekend a Sunday newspaper columnist described me as having clutched the phone as if it were “a fragment of the true cross”, and some viewers complained that the BBC had given undue prominence to a product launch.

I appeared on the Newswatch programme to defend our reporting and said that some products did merit coverage because they promised a step change in the way we lived - and I mused on whether the Model T Ford would have been a story if we’d had a TV news bulletin back then.

Afterwards, I rather regretted saying that - who knew whether the iPhone would really prove as revolutionary as the arrival of mass car ownership?

But today that comparison does not look so outlandish. The smartphone has been the key transformative technology of the last decade, putting powerful computers in the hands of more than two billion people and disrupting all sorts of industries.

One example is in the photograph at the top of this article. It’s not very good - but then again it was taken by me on a digital SLR camera. In difficult lighting conditions, I struggled to get Steve Jobs in focus on stage.

Compare and contrast with a photo taken 10 years later in Las Vegas last week - it was shot on an iPhone but could just as well been captured on any high-end smartphone such as a Google Pixel, and was the work of the same incompetent photographer.

This 2017 photo could be instantly shared on social media - the Steve Jobs one stayed in my SLR for days.

My point is that the iPhone radically changed the way we thought about photography and a whole range of other activities we could now do on the move.

Of course, there were cameras on phones before 2007, just as there were mobile devices that allowed you to roam the internet or send an email. But the genius of Steve Jobs was to realise that without an attractive user interface many people just couldn’t be bothered to do more with their phones than talk and text.

So, despite my rather British distaste for the hyperbole surrounding the iPhone launch - expressed at the time in a blog - I now look back and feel grateful to have witnessed a moment in history.

Other firms, notably Amazon and Google, are now taking us forward with innovative products imbued with artificial intelligence. But it was on a sunny January morning in San Francisco that the mobile connected era began.

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CES 2017: Nokia Android phone spurns the West

Nokia 6

The first in a series of Nokia-branded Android phones is to be released exclusively in China.

The device will be marketed in partnership with the local internet retail giant JD.com.

The team behind the Nokia 6 phone said the handset's "premium design" would appeal to the local market.

The announcement coincided with the final day of the CES tech show in Las Vegas, where other new mobile phones and gadgets have been launched.

Nokia no longer manufactures phones that carry its name but has instead licensed its brand to another Finnish company, HMD Global.

Until now, the only phones that had been released under the deal had been more basic "feature phone" models.

The Android device had been highly anticipated and marks Nokia's return to the smartphone market after a series of Windows Phone models. Nokia also briefly sold Android-based handsets - known as Nokia X - in 2014.

Microsoft used Nokia's brand for a short time after buying the company's mobile devices the same year, but later referred to the devices solely by their Lumia name.
Mobile World Congress

Nokia once dominated the mobile phone market but struggled after the launch of the iPhone a decade ago, and the subsequent release of Google's Android operating system.

HMD Global had previously indicated it would release several Nokia-branded Android phones in 2017.

It is expected to provide details of at least some of the other launches at another trade show - Barcelona's Mobile World Congress - in February.

"The decision by HMD to launch its first Android smartphone into China is a reflection of the desire to meet the real world needs of consumers in different markets around the world," the firm said in a statement.

"With over 552 million smartphone users in China in 2016, a figure that is predicted to grow to more than 593 million users by 2017, it is a strategically important market where premium design and quality is highly valued by consumers."

The Nokia 6 phone runs Android 7.0 - the latest version, also known as Nougat - and features:

    a 5.5in 1080p "full high definition" screen
    a 16 megapixel rear camera
    four gigabyte of RAM memory and 64GB of storage
    two amplifiers supported by Dolby Atmos audio processing, which HMD says creates audio that "seems to flow all around users"

The specifications are mid-range, and so is the price: 1,699 yuan ($245; £200).

That makes it slightly more expensive than Huawei's Honor 6X but cheaper than Xiaomi's Mi 5s.

"Nokia remains one of the most recognised mobile phone brands on the planet," commented Ben Wood from the CCS Insight technology consultancy.

"HMD Global will be hoping it can capitalise on this as it seeks to relaunch Nokia devices in 2017.

"It will be hoping the brand will help it stand out in the incredibly crowded Android smartphone market, which is characterised by cut-throat competition and a sea of design sameness. "

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How to Take Transparent Photos with Mi MIX

 

Social media is a kick-starter for so many photography fads. They are coming and going all the time so you better do not focus on that much. Most of them are alarmingly weird and only a few are creating a positive image of the time it was made in. For example, a recent photography illusion created by Xiaomi fans with a help of Mi MIX. Looks as if you were actually holding a transparent phone. If you already have seen those stunning photos, but were wondering how to do it, we are adding meat to the bones to guide you through the whole process.
Note: original guide suggests that you have two Mi MIX smartphones for the perfect “transparency” effect. But you may own a pair of other Xiaomi devices to implement the idea.
Step 1. Position your hand in front of a nice background and take a picture of it. Check if the proportions of the photograph are correct.

 

Step 2. Zoom in the photo until your photo-trapped hand shows the same as its actual size.

 

Step 3. Drag its position as you like and take a screenshot. Set it as a wallpaper on your phone.

 

Step 4. With Mi MIX in your hand, position it at the same angle and in front of the same background as in Step 1. Now take a photo with another device.

 

There you have it! Such a unique and futuristic photograph. Who would have thought that it could be so easy?

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Sabtu, 19 November 2016

Apple to fix iPhone 6 Plus 'touch disease' for a fee

iPhones

Apple has started offering a service to fix a fault on iPhone 6 Plus phones known as "touch disease".

Touchscreens on smartphones that have this problem gradually become unresponsive.

The fault was highlighted by gadget sites which said it was caused by a manufacturing issue that meant some screen controller chips became loose.

Apple was criticised by one expert who said it was the phonemaker's responsibility to fix it.

Apple is charging $149 in the USA for the service that will only be available on phones that are "in working order".
Loose chips

In a statement on its website, Apple said it had "determined" that displays on some iPhone 6 Plus handsets flickered or became unresponsive if the device was dropped several times on a hard surface and was then subjected to "further stress".

An iPhone 6 Plus suffering this problem, which worked and did not have a cracked or broken screen, was eligible for the repair programme, it said.

The service is available worldwide and costs £146.44 in the UK.

Apple said that customers who had already paid to get their phone cured of "touch disease" should get in touch to be repaid for the amount they spent beyond the programme fee.

The repair programme will run for five years beyond the initial date on which the iPhone 6 Plus went on sale, said Apple.

Stuart Miles, founder of gadget news site Pocket-lint, said: "I think if it's a known defect that isn't caused by the user then it should be the responsibility of Apple to fix the phone free of charge regardless of the age."

The manufacturing problem with the iPhone 6 Plus was first highlighted by gadget site iFixit which said it had seen an "influx of faulty iPhones".

In a blogpost about the problem posted in August, iFixit said there were "pages and pages" of messages from aggrieved iPhone 6 Plus owners on the Apple support site complaining about the fault.

An investigation by iFixit and specialist repair shops found the cause of the fault was the placement of the touchscreen controller chip. Several rough knocks could dislodge this chip making phones unresponsive, it said.

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Selasa, 01 November 2016

Xiaomi Released a Smartphone with Flexible 5.7″ OLED-Display — Mi Note 2

 

“So far this is one of the best products we have made”, Xiaomi founder Lei Jun referred to its latest flagship model Xiaomi Mi Note 2. The first smartphone of the company to bear a flexible AMOLED-display, however, stays as traditional as possible: high-end camera, fingertip reader, slim body... Tech enthusiasts around the world have a lot to be excited about.
Xiaomi Mi Note 2 features a 5.7-inch display with a resolution of 2560×1440 pixels. It covers 77.2 % of the front side and gives iPhone 7 Plus a pause with its 67.7 %. OLED-displays are very demanding in manufacturing. At the same time, they are brighter, reflect less light and consume not so much power.

 

Under the hood, there is an overwhelming Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 processor with maximum tactical frequency 2.35 GHz. This is the most powerful chipset Qualcomm has developed. Apart from smartphones, it has been used in unmanned aerial vehicles! Mi Note 2 will be available in several modifications: 4GB RAM + 64 GB and 6 GB RAM + 128 GB.

 

Xiaomi Mi Note 2 sports 2 cameras: the main camera uses 22.5 MP Sony IMX31 sensor, records video in 4K format and has a 3-axis digital image stabilization. The front selfie camera has an 8 MP IMX268 sensor and delivers good color accuracy.

 

High-power battery (4070 mAh) with a Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 technology is a perfect match for an active mobile user. USB Type-C port is used for charging and synchronization. Mi Note 2 supports 37 frequencies in LTE-standard which enables to travel with it around the world. AQSTIC HD Audio chip provides a studio sound.

 

3D glass covers front and back of the phone and the sides are framed with aluminum, which is also used in aerospace industry. The design is attractive and a softly rounded form allows the phone to sit comfortably in the hand. Xiaomi Mi Note 2 has two color variations: blue-gray and black which gives a solid and sophisticated look.

 

The front panel contains the screen, front camera, and fingerprint sensor. Back side is taken only by 22.5 MP camera and dual LED-flash. The left side of the phone has a slot for Nano-SIM, and the right side has lock button and volume regulator. Xiaomi Mi Note 2 weighs 166 gram and its dimensions are 156.2×77.3×7.6 mm.

 

Analysts predict strong sales for Xiaomi Mi Note 2. And the misfortunes of its South Korean rival probably deserve a bit of the credit. A new smartphone will not disappoint those who will hop on the Xiaomi train.

 

Pushing Boundaries: Xiaomi Introduced Frameless Smartphone Mi MIX

 

Latest Xiaomi’s official presentation was rich with novelties and surprises. After a rapturous standing ovation, Mi Note 2 received, Chinese giant has rolled another ace out of its sleeve — a frameless smartphone Mi MIX. “Future has already come” served as an unofficial slogan. It was designed by a French arts man Philippe Starck. A large display, that conquered 91.3 % of the front surface, holds the record among all the smartphones.

 

Mi MIX features a sleek ceramic body. It comes as 6.4″ inches with resolution 2040×1080 pixels. We must not fail, however, to point out, that having similar dimensions, its rivals wears only 5.5 ″ display. Trying to make screen field as wide as possible Xiaomi had to practice a few tricks, e. g. the earpiece was replaced with a piezoelectric speaker that uses the phone body to generate sound. 5 MP front-facing camera was relocated under the display. At its rear Mi MIX is equipped with a fingertip sensor and 16 MP camera with dual LED-lights, f / 2.0 aperture and ability to record video in 4K.

 

Xiaomi has a potential to develop its own processors. For now, it seems reluctant to refuse some outside help, especially when it is competent. Mi MIX has a powerful chipset from Qualcomm — Snapdragon 821 with frequency 2.35 GHz. Two memory packs will be available: 4 GB RAM and 128 GB of storage and 6 GB RAM / 128 GB. The latter will have 18-carat gold accents surrounding camera and fingertip reader.

 

Mi MIX bears traditional features for a Xiaomi smartphone, mostly upgraded. It is powered by a 4400 mAh battery with Quick Charge 3.0 support. Connectivity options include GPS, NFC, WiFi 802.11ac and Bluetooth. It will have two SIMs, a popular feature in China, and will be able to work in LTE-networks. It measures 158.8×81.9×7.9 mm and weighs 209 grams.


Xiaomi Mi MIX is a real beauty in all ramifications: beautiful display, sleek body, innovative features and lots.

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Selasa, 31 Mei 2016

Leonardo DiCaprio silent at £11,400 Solarin phone launch



Hollywood stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hardy turned up for the London launch of a new smartphone.

Sirin Labs says its Solarin handset offers such celebrities military-grade security - but its £11,400 price tag may deter others.

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