Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn iPhone. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn iPhone. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 4, 2013

Facebook brings 'chat heads' feature to its iPhone, iPad apps in update

  • facebook chatheads.jpg

Facebook has updated its iPhone and iPad applications to let people keep using its chat feature even when they are doing other things, such as reading friends' updates.

Facebook also said Tuesday that it's bringing its "chat heads" feature to its Apple apps. It's called chat heads because friends' profile photos pop up when they send you a message.

Chat heads is part of a broader integration that Facebook is doing with a new Home app on some phones running Google's Android operating system.

Unlike with Home, iPhone and iPad users will have to stay inside the Facebook application to use chat heads. The update is already available in Apple's App Store, but Facebook says the chat heads feature will roll out in the coming weeks.

The new Android product, which can reside on the home screen of phones powered by Google's operating system, is a family of apps designed around people's Facebook connections. Rather than see a set of apps for email, maps and other services on the screen, users will be greeted with photos and updates from their Facebook feeds.

"We think this is the best version of Facebook there is," Zuckerberg said.

Zuckerberg says users can have an experience on Android phones that they can't have on other platforms. That's because Google makes the software available on an open-source basis, allowing others to adapt it to their needs.

The move coincides with 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.

"What Facebook wants is to put itself at the front of the Android user experience for as many Facebook users as possible and make Facebook more elemental to their customers' experience," said Forrester analyst Charles Golvin.


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Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 3, 2013

T-Mobile to start offering iPhone 5 on April 12

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    March 26, 2013: T-Mobile CEO John Legere said the company will start offering the iPhone 5 on April 12, filling what Legere said was "a huge void" in its phone lineup.AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

  • T-Mobile USA gets iphone 3.jpg

    March 26, 2013: T-Mobile Chief Marketing Officer Mike Sievert holds brochures if competitors' plans as he speaks during a news conference in New York.AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

  • T-Mobile USA gets iphone 2.jpg

    March 26, 2013: T-Mobile CEO John Legere sports an iPhone 5 and a grin during a news conference in New York.AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

T-Mobile USA on Tuesday said it will start offering the iPhone 5 on April 12, filling what its CEO said was "a huge void" in its phone lineup.

T-Mobile, the fourth-largest of the national U.S. phone companies, has been losing customers to the bigger companies, which all sell the iPhone.

"This is a big deal for us," T-Mobile CEO John Legere said at an event in New York.

'This is a big deal for us.'

- T-Mobile CEO John Legere

T-Mobile, a unit of Germany's Deutsche Telekom AG, is charging $100 up front for the iPhone 5, then another $20 per month for two years. That's on top of service fees for voice, text and data that start at $50 per month. The total monthly cost starts at $70 per month, a substantial discount to prices offered by bigger companies.

T-Mobile's network has, until recently, not been able to offer high-speed data service to iPhones. It's now able to deliver high-speed data to iPhones in some cities, and it has lured over 2.1 million off-contract AT&T iPhones, executives said Tuesday.

T-Mobile also said it will start selling the Samsung Galaxy S 4 on or around May 1. That's the successor to the Galaxy S III, which has been the chief competitor to the iPhone.

The announcement comes just days after T-Mobile ditched its conventional contract-based plans in favor of selling phones on an installment basis. It's separating the cost of the phone from the service, and when a phone is paid off, usually after two years, the monthly fee for the phone disappears from the billing statement.

On traditional contract-based plans, the buyer is deemed to have "paid off" the phone after a certain period, at which point the customer becomes eligible for a new, subsidized phone. The monthly payments, however, don't decline.

As before, T-Mobile's prices generally undercut those of the bigger phone companies. The chief weakness is that its data network coverage is poorer in rural areas.

"T-Mobile realizes that they have to change the rules of the game, because under the current rules, they're losing, and they're going to continue to lose," said telecommunications analyst Roger Entner at Recon Analytics. He's skeptical that the plans, alone, can change its fortunes.

"Even if they're $5 cheaper, will that be enough? They're already charging a significant discount to Verizon and AT&T, and they're losing customers," Entner said.


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Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 3, 2013

BlackBerry CEO says iPhone Is passé

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    Is BlackBerry cooler than iPhone now? CEO Thorsten Heins thinks so.AP

BlackBerry has a daunting task ahead of it as it struggles to reverse its declining fortunes in the smartphone market. But the release of its next-generation BlackBerry 10 operating system and the first smartphone to run it have put a bit of swagger back into the company’s step.

It seems that while BlackBerry has its head down, focused on executing its turnaround plan, it’s not above raising it to talk smack about its rivals.

In an interview with the Australian Financial Review, BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins said that Apple’s iPhone is not the state-of-the-art smartphone it once was. In fact, it’s starting to look a little dusty.

“The rate of innovation is so high in our industry that if you don’t innovate at that speed you can be replaced pretty quickly,” Heins said. “The user interface on the iPhone, with all due respect for what this invention was all about, is now five years old.”

The rate of innovation is so high in our industry that if you don’t innovate at that speed you can be replaced pretty quickly.

Read more at AllThingsD.


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Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 3, 2013

Apple vs. the world: In a battle of inches, can iPhone compete?

In smartphone land, everyone agrees: Bigger is better. Everyone except Apple.

Analysts expect the Cupertino-based company to release the iPhone 5S later this year, a refresh of last year’s model that will likely include minimal changes. That means the only new Apple phone in 2013 is likely to have a 4-inch display.

Meanwhile, every other phone is growing like a hormonal teen.

'I wish they had made a wider version [of the iPhone 5].'

- Apple founder Steve Wozniak

Larger phones dominated this year’s Consumer Electronics Show and Mobile World Congress; nearly every Android flagship released in 2013 will have a 5-inch display. Samsung, Sony, Asus and LG all have 5-inchers in the works. That single inch translates into almost 50 percent more screen real estate than the iPhone 5 -- more screen for watching videos, more for browsing the web, more for reading the latest e-book.

But why stop at 5-inches? Huawei unveiled a 6.1-inch beast in January. And even if these kinds of sizes are stretching the limits of traditional pockets, well-made “phablets” have been warmly received. Samsung’s 5.5-inch Galaxy Note 2 reached 2 million in sales in less than a month. Half a year later it’s closing in on 10 million.

Samsung announced an 8-inch version of the tablet in late February. 

"It's a little too wide to hold comfortably in one hand, which is especially comical here because the international version of the Galaxy Note 8 will be usable as a phone," wrote PCMag.com's Sascha Segan. "Yes, you can hold it up to your head, in theory, although that's really silly. We tried. It was silly."

Still, users prefer bigger phones, and they become more active once they get them. Given the luxury of a bigger screen, browsing the web and watching videos becomes less tedious and more enjoyable, according to a study by Kantar Worldpanel ComTech.

When the iPhone first came out, it offered its customers just that. By transitioning to a touchscreen display and dropping the physical keyboard, Apple instantly doubled the size of its screen, transforming the smartphone from email to a true multimedia device. Today, the iPhone 5's screen is the smallest of all its competitors even as our mobile Internet needs have grown.

This leave Apple and its legion of fans as cramped as a basketball player flying coach. CEO Tim Cook reiterated the firm’s careful approach in January, explaining why the iPhone 5 has the “right” screen size for you thumb.

“The iPhone 5 offers a new Retina Display and is the most advanced display in the industry,” Cook said on the company’s 4Q earnings call. “It also provides a larger screen size without sacrificing the one-handed ease of use. We put a lot of thinking into screen size and we believe we have picked the right one.”

Following the release the phone in September, the company ran a series of ads to defend its philosophy.

Not everyone is convinced, however, including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. “Part of me wishes Apple had not been so arrogant and feeling like "We're the only one with the right clue," he told TechCentral in an interview. "I wish they had made a wider version [of the iPhone 5].”

That leaves Apple users with two options: stick with the smaller screen or switch to Android and its myriad of size choices. "Not all people want the same thing,” Woz said. “A lot of people really like big screens.”

This may be one reason sales of the iPhone 5 have been decelerating faster than expected, according to a morning note by Jefferies analyst Peter Misek. Apple has cut its build orders by 25 percent to 30 million.

Even so, the iPhone 5 regained the mantle of number one smartphone in the world after outpacing the formidable Galaxy S3 in the fourth quarter of 2012.

The company also continues to get hammered on Wall Street, hitting a new 52-week low last week as it faces growing competition from all angles. Samsung will look to continue its good form when it reveals its latest Galaxy S phone in the coming weeks.

And it’s not just Android phones that Apple has to be worried about. BlackBerry new Z10 is reportedly outselling the iPhone 5 and Galaxy S3 at Glentel stores in Canada, which owns 330 retail outlets across the country. Half of those sales have been made by users switching from other platforms, mainly iPhone and Android.

Of course, there are still plenty of people who will agree with Cook’s assessment. There is such a thing as too big, for instance when HTC starts making small phone accessories for huge phones.

And with the historically secretive Apple, Cook’s words must be taken with a grain of salt. The late Steve Jobs famously bashed smaller tablets, claiming that the iPad was the perfect size. Soon after, Apple released the Mini. Rumors of a larger, cheaper iPhone to complement the impending 5S are already circulating.

For impatient users already burned once left disappointed after waiting for the 5, switching no longer means a compromise in quality as competitors have long caught up. What they will have, however, are options.


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Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 3, 2013

Android, iPhone? Nope. The new battle is to be number 3

Remember when the high-tech hype came from trade shows focused on consumer electronics and computers? Today, it's shifted to mobile phones and wireless devices, and Mobile World Congress currently underway in Barcelona.

And some of the most interesting new introductions are aimed not at well-heeled techno-geeks but at regular folks with budgets and responsibilities.

Just last year, analysts and reviewers were ridiculing the new wave of phablets or super phones being announced at the 2012 Mobile World Congress. Those are the oversized, big-screen smartphones that were even mocked on Nickelodeon's teen sitcom "iCarly." Samsung proved the critics wrong, ushering in an era of phones with 4.5-, 4.7-, and even 5-inch screens. 

The company recognized that since we rarely use phones to make phone calls any more, larger screens are better for surfing the Web, posting to Facebook, and finding your way to the nearest Starbucks.

However, this year the big news is the fight not to be number one in the market or even number two. Google and Apple have already nailed down those positions. No, the battle over the next 12 months is going to be for the number three spot.

Blackberry has already announced its touch-screen BlackBerry Z10 model, which will launch in the U.S. in a few weeks. But while the company still has a foothold with some business users, the Z10 is expected to be priced at around $200, with a contract commitment. That's in the same pricing wheelhouse as high-end Android and iOS handsets; tough competition indeed. Those prices may also subvert BlackBerry's goals as other companies rush to cut prices.

For example, another former star of the cell phone galaxy, Nokia, is introducing an inexpensive Windows Phone 8 at the show. The snazzy Lumia 520 will cost roughly €140 in Europe, without any subsidies. So that means when it rolls out in the U.S. later this year on T-Mobile it will be probably be free -- with a contract, of course.

And then there's the Chinese firm Huawei, which is rolling out its own inexpensive Windows Phone 8 model, the Ascend W1. Priced at €120 without a contract, it will doubtless be subsidized as a free phone in the U.S. (The company will try to burnish its brand with a high-end model, too, that supports the LTE Cat 4 high-speed wireless standard with a theoretical download speed of 150Mbps -- depending on the network.)

Can you get cheaper than free? Maybe.

Web browser killer, Mozilla, announced in Barcelona that it will introduce a slew of Firefox OS-based handsets around the world this year. Firefox is already the number two browser behind Microsoft's Internet Explorer; now it's taking aim at the smartphone market.

In its announcement, Firefox said more than a dozen companies have promised to support the new OS, including Sprint Nextel in the U.S. and Deutsche Telekom, the parent company of T-Mobile USA. LG and Huawei plan to make Firefox OS phones, and an early Alcatel model looked sleek and simple. Companies like Twitter have already outlined their plans to make specific apps for the phone.

Mozilla is a non-profit company. And the apps for Firefox OS will be based on HTML 5, the Web language that promises to break open Apple's App store and enable a new generation of software. It could also mean lower costs for developers and the rapid introduction of supporting apps.

A non-profit company competing in the smartphone space?! After the Firefox announcement, I'm betting people at Microsoft were spewing a stream of expletives. How can they compete for the third spot against a(nother) company that essentially gives away its software for free. They must be thinking, "What kind of a &%#@ business is this?"

It's a mature business, that's what it is. That means Windows Phone 8 and BlackBerry 10 may be too late. There are already a billion smartphones in use around the world. The competition now is how to put the technology into the hands of the next billion users. Price is likely to be the major factor.

Some analysts may see this trend as a familiar phenomena in mature electronics and technology markets: the race toward the bottom. But that's a good thing for consumers. You'll no longer have to pony up hundreds of dollars for a smartphone that's obsolete in six months. 

Now if only the major carriers would lower their prices, too.

Follow John R. Quain on Twitter @jqontech or find more tech coverage at J-Q.com.


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