Monday, December 29, 2014

Leak claims one of 2015’s most anticipated Android phones might be unveiled at CES

After obtaining a leaked picture allegedly showing the front panel of one of 2015’s most anticipated Android handsets of the year a few weeks ago, Nowhereelse’s Steve Hemmerstoffer posted an image on Twitter that reportedly shows the press render of the same device, suggesting a launch may be closer than initially believed.
Referred to as the HTC Hima or the HTC One (M9) in reports detailing it, the handset shown in this new leak (image below) will reportedly be unveiled at CES 2015, the most important tech even of the year.
A clear photo of the handset has not been leaked, but the image in this leak seems to indicate that HTC is preparing a special event for Las Vegas.
The company has yet to announce its press events for CES, but Hemmerstoffer said on Twitter the image is supposed to be HTC’s media invitation for the major tech event. Even though the French publication has offered accurate leaks in the past, detailing various unreleased mobile devices, this particular one is yet to be confirmed.
Earlier rumors have said the handset will feature high-end specs on par with what other top Android devices will offer users next year. The HTC Hima is expected to pack a QHD display (2560 x 1440 resolution), Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 processor, 3GB of RAM, 20.7-megapixel rear-facing camera, 13-megapixel front-facing camera, 2840 mAh battery and Android 5.0 Lollipop with Sense 7 UI on top.

Google lists 127 of the best Android apps in the world, and you need to try them all

If you were gifted a new Android device last week for Christmas and you’re having trouble figuring out where to begin, today is your lucky day. In fact, even if you’re a seasoned Android veteran, today is still your lucky day because Google has gone through the hundreds of thousands of apps in its Google Play app store and cherry picked the cream of the crop. The result is a list of 127 Android apps that Google has deemed to be “must-have” apps, and old and new Android users alike should check them all out.
The best part, by the way, is that they’re almost all completely free.
With more than 1 million apps in Google’s Android app store, finding the best apps that Google’s popular mobile platform has to offer can be a chore. Actually, that’s putting it very mildly… it can be a huge pain in the butt.
Here on BGR, we regularly highlight Android apps that we think shine brighter than most, and we have shown you plenty of awesome apps over the years that we think are must-haves. When Google takes the time to put together its own list of must-have Android apps, however, it’s definitely worth checking out.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Google’s developing a program that can automatically caption photos

For all those who have a hard time captioning photos, Google has come to the rescue. The search giant has announced on its research blog that they are building a Neural Image Caption (NIC) Generator which is able to describe an image in a few words.
Citing the use cases of this innovation, the company says that it will make it easier for users to search for images on Google, help visually impaired people understand image content and provide alternative text for images when Internet connections are slow.
NIC is the brainchild of Google’s research scientists Oriol Vinyals, Alexander Toshev, Samy Bengio, and Dumitru Erhan who have published the entire paper on arxiv.org. The program is based on computer vision — which allows machines to see the world — and natural language processing — which tries to make human language meaningful to computers. The latter has also been put to use by Microsoft in its new Skype translate feature.
Two different kinds of artificial neural networks, which are biologically inspired computer models are used inside NIC. One network encodes the image into a compact representation, while the other network generates a sentence to describe it.
In its tests, Google says that NIC was able to come up with rather accurate descriptions of images. The program automatically generated “Two pizzas sitting on top of a stove top oven,” caption which was exactly what the image represented. Another image shared on the blog was aptly captioned, “A group of people shopping at an outdoor market,” representing the scenario shown in the picture.
Scientists still feel that NIC has a long way to go as the model scored 59 on a particular dataset, where humans score around 69. “As the datasets suited to learning image descriptions grow and mature, so will the performance of end-to-end approaches like NIC. We look forward to continuing developments in systems that can read images and generate good natural-language descriptions,” they said.

New Nokia is here! Nokia N1 Intel-powered Android 5.0 Lollipop tablet announced; priced at $249

Nokia announced yesterday that it will be launching a new product today. The black box the company teased yesterday, isn’t a digital player or a satellite box, it’s a tablet – the Nokia N1 Intel-powered, Android Lollipop-running 7.9-inch tablet priced at $249.
Inside the anodized aluminum metal body of the tablet lies one of the most impressive set of hardware. The tablet sports a 7.9-inch IPS display with 2048×1536 pixels screen resolution. Shielded by Gorilla Glass 3, the screen is full laminated with zero air-gap display. Inside the device sits a 64-bit capable 2.3GHz Intel Atom processor Z3580, and PowerVR G6430 graphics card, paired with 2GB of RAM, and 32GB of internal storage.
On the camera front, the device packs an 8-megapixel shooter at the back and a 5-megapixel snapper upfront. On the connectivity side, it supports Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0, and comes with micro-USB 2.0 with a Type C reversible connector. There are two stereo speakers, a digital MIC, and a bunch of sensors.
The tablet runs on Android 5.0 Lollipop, with Android Z Launcher on top. This isn’t the first tablet by Nokia, as the company had launched Windows 8.1-powered Nokia Lumia 2520 last year. But this is the first hardware by Nokia, the part that the company didn’t sell to Microsoft in the multi-billion dollar deal which closed in April earlier this year.
Nokia still cannot use the Nokia branding for smartphones till 2016 but apparently they can make tablets and other devices with the Nokia branding. Last week, Nokia CEO Rajiv Suri had hinted that the company might be interested in licensing the Nokia brand for consumer devices. Nokia says it will bring the N1 tablet starting from China in Q1 2015 and it will tie-up with an OEM partner who will be responsible for not just manufacturing but also distribution and sales.
Nokia will license the brand name, the industrial design and the Nokia Z launcher software layer and IP to the OEM partner on a running-royalty basis.  ”The OEM partner is responsible for full business execution, from engineering and sales to customer care, including liabilities and warranty costs, inbound IP and software licensing and contractual agreements with 3rd parties,” Nokia said in the announcement press release.

Sebastian Nystrom, head of Product Business at Nokia Technologies, presents Nokia's new N1 Android Table at the Slush 2014 event in Helsinki, Finland,


Nokia is back in the fray.
Just months after selling its ailing handsets unit to Microsoft, the Finnish company is planning to bring its brand back to consumers with a new tablet. This time the device operates Android instead of the Windows software that Nokia adopted on its cellphones when it started a strategic partnership with Microsoft in 2011.
Sebastian Nystrom from Nokia's technologies unit said Tuesday that the former global mobile phone leader was "pleased to bring the Nokia brand back into consumers' hands." Using Android, he said, will give Nokia access to some 80 percent of the world's mobile consumers compared with just the 2.5 percent who use the Windows mobile devices.
Five months after completing the purchase of Nokia's handsets, Microsoft last week unveiled its first Lumia smartphone under its own brand name. The company has released a few Lumia models since it bought Nokia's phone business, but those models still carried the Nokia brand.
Since the $7.2 billion sale of its mobile phone unit, the slimmed-down Nokia has become much more profitable thanks to its three remaining operations: networks, HERE mapping services and software. It is one of the few computerized roadmap providers in the world and the only one with a long history of working with automotive companies. HERE has an 80 percent market share for embedded automotive maps.
Nokia said that the 7.9-inch N1 tablet will first be available in China in the first quarter of 2015 with an approximate price tag of $250, before being introduced to other markets. After the announcement, the company's share price was up more than 1.6 percent at 6.31 euros.

Samsung will finally give up on gadget spam next year



Samsung has used smartphone buyers in previous years to seeing a wide variety ofGalaxy-branded smartphone and tablet versions in stores, as the company tried to meet all the various smartphone requirements customers might have, both when it comes to features and prices. While the smartphone spam strategy worked well inSamsung’s favor for a few years, helping the Korean giant get a large share of the Android market by selling plenty of entry-level and mid-range handsets on top of flagship devices, that might not be enough for the company anymore, whose mobile division isn’t as profitable as it used to be.
Samsung confirmed its intention to cut costs in the future, in order to fight declining mobile profits, with Samsung’s head of investor relations Robert Yi revealing during a presentation in New York that the company “would cut the number of models by about 25% to 30%.” A Samsung spokesman on Tuesday further confirmed Yi’s remarks, but Samsung is yet to mention exactly what family lines will get the axe moving forward.
In addition to cutting down costs, Samsung is also making some significant smartphone design changes. The company is getting ready to launch its first metal Galaxy handsets in various markets, and is said to be designing the upcoming Galaxy S6 flagship from scratch, rather than improving on previous designs.

Friday, November 7, 2014

This great Google app will help you get paid Android apps for free – forever

This great Google app will help you get paid Android apps for free – forever


Android apps started out a bit shaky, but over the past couple of years the quality of applications in the Google Play app store has improved dramatically — and of course, the new look and feel of “Material Design,” which Google introduced alongsideAndroid 5.0, will help developers improve their apps even more.
While Android users were once able to get along just fine without spending a penny on paid apps for their smartphones and tablets, high-quality Android apps are now definitely worth paying for. But did you know that Google has an app that will help you get awesome paid Android apps for free without any limits?
Google’s “Google Opinion Rewards” app has been around for quite some time now, but it recently popped up in a thread on Reddit so we thought it would be a good time to remind our readers about it. With this awesome official Google app, users are asked to share their opinions in new surveys each week, and are given Google Play credits after completing each survey. Those credits can then be used to download paid apps, movies, music or other content for free.
Here’s the app’s description from the Google Play app store, and a download link can be found at the bottom of this post.
Answer quick surveys and earn Google Play credits with Google Opinion Rewards, an app created by Google Consumer Surveys.
Getting started is easy. Download the app and answer basic questions about yourself. We’ll then send you surveys around once a week, although it may be more or less frequent. You’ll get a notification on your phone when a short and relevant survey is ready for you, and can receive up to $1.00 in Play credits for completing it. Questions can range from, “Which logo is best?” and “Which promotion is most compelling?” to “When do you plan on traveling next?”
SOURCE:
REDDIT

With Lollipop incoming, KitKat is now on almost a third of Android devices

With Lollipop incoming, KitKat is now on almost a third of Android devices


Google has posted new Android distribution numbers on its Android Developers site, revealing that KitKat is now installed on almost a third of Android devices that connect to the Google Play Store, just as it’s getting ready to roll out Android 5.0 Lollipop.
Already one-year old, KitKat is far from being the most popular Android OS version, though its share has increased by almost 6% compared to last month, hitting 30.2% at the end of October. Jelly Bean is holding the most market share — 50.9% when combining the three different Jelly Bean builds out there — a drop from the 53.8% registered in early October.
Ice Cream Sandwich and Gingerbread are still around, at 8.5% and 9.3%, respectively, both down since the previous period.
Lollipop is still too young to appear in Google’s Android stats, as the official Android 5.0 release is just being rolled out. Android 5.0 will initially be available on the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9, followed by older Nexus smartphones and tablets, Google Play Edition devices, and various flagship handsets from the main Android device makers.
A graphic showing the current Android distribution numbers as recorded on November 3rd by Google, follows below.
google-android-kitkat-distribution-early-november-2014

10 apps that are killing your Android phone’s battery life


Samsung makes terrific devices but there are definitely things the company does that drive its users crazy, including the laggy performance of its TouchWiz UI and the addition of gratuitous bloatware that hurts devices’ battery life and performance. We mention this because CNET has compiled a list of apps that antivirus software firm AVG has found are the most deleterious to Android users’ batteries… and three of the top 10 were developed by Samsung.
According to AVG, Samsung’s AllShareCast Dongle S/W Update, ChatON Voice & Video Chat and Samsung WatchON Tablets apps are all among the biggest battery drainers among apps that start up when you turn your phone on. Other battery-killing apps include magicApp, Facebook and Path. When it comes to mobile games, meanwhile, AVG says that the top three worst battery drainers are Puzzle & Dragons, Supercell’s Hay Day and Candy Crush Saga.
In addition to tracking battery-draining apps, AVG also tracks apps that hurt your phone’s overall performance (Facebook is No. 1, Path is No. 2 while Instagram is No. 4) and that eat up your phone’s storage space (NY Times’ Breaking News app is No. 1). To check out all the apps that are hurting your Android phone is various ways,check out CNET’s summary by clicking the source link below.

First Samsung, then Xiaomi – now another big company has ripped off the iPhone

If you thought that just Samsung and Xiaomi might have been significantly inspired by certain Apple products including the iPhone, then you’d be wrong. Lenovo has apparently decided it’s also up to the task of ripping off Apple’s popular smartphone. Despite becoming the world’s third largest smartphone vendor following its Motorola acquisition, Lenovo apparently thinks it has to offer an Android-powered iPhone clone to buyers interested in a new smartphone.
Gizmobic has published several leaked images showing the “Sisley S90″ and some of the company’s marketing images for it, which reveal the S90 is basically an iPhone 6 copy.
The S90 has a 5-inch Super AMOLED HD display, a 1.2GHz quad-core Snapdragon 410 processor, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, a 13-megapixel camera, an 8-megapixel front-facing camera, dual SIM support, LTE, NFC, a 2,300 mAh battery and Android 4.4.4 KitKat. The phone measures 6.9mm thick and weighs 129g, and its design closely resembles the iPhone 6 — just look at the images above and below.
The phone will retail for 1,999 RMB in China, or around $327, which is significantly cheaper than the iPhone 6.
A gallery of images showing the S90 follows below, with more available at the source link. Beyond the design itself, the inspiration for some of these images can easily be found by browsing the iPhone 6 section of Apple’s website.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

AP EXCLUSIVE:Myanmar profits of Rohingya exodus





A Rohingya boy wades through the water carrying a basket of fish at The' Chaung refugee camp, on the outskirts of Sittwe, Myanmar. The small wooden boats leave the shores of western Myanmar nearly every day, 
MYIN HLUT, Myanmar (AP) — The small wooden boats leave the shores of western Myanmar nearly every day, overloaded with desperate Rohingya Muslims who are part of one the largest boat exoduses in Asia since the Vietnam War.
Helping them on their way: Myanmar's own security forces, who are profiting off the mass departure of one of the world's most persecuted minorities by extracting payments from those fleeing. A report to be released Friday by the Bangkok-based advocacy group Fortify Rights, and reporting by The Associated Press, indicate the practice is far more widespread and organized than previously thought, with Myanmar naval boats going so far as to escort asylum seekers out to larger human trafficking ships waiting at sea that are operated by transnational criminal networks.
"Myanmar authorities are not only making life so intolerable for Rohingya that they have to flee, they're also complicit in the process — they're taking payments and profiting off their exodus," said Matthew Smith, director of Fortify Rights.
Rakhine state spokesman Win Myaing dismissed the allegations as "rumors," saying he has not "heard of anything happening like that." He said any naval boats approaching such vessels were likely aiming to help fishermen in need.
More than 100,000 Rohingya have fled Myanmar's western shores by boat since Buddhist-Muslim violence erupted in Rakhine state two years ago, according to estimates provided by experts tracking their movements.
Chris Lewa, director of the advocacy group Arakan Project, said increasing desperation is behind a huge surge since Oct. 15, with an average of 900 people per day piling into cargo ships parked offshore. In Rakhine state, an aggressive campaign by authorities over the last few months to register family members and officially categorize them as "Bengalis" — implying they are illegal migrants from neighboring Bangladesh — has aggravated their situation.
The deepening crisis comes ahead of a visit by President Barack Obama to Myanmar next week for a regional summit, his second in two years. Obama, who has repeatedly pointed to democratic changes in Myanmar as a foreign policy bright spot, called President Thein Sein recently by telephone to express concerns about a reform process analysts say has been backsliding for months.
Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation of 50 million that is still struggling to emerge from half a century of military rule, is home to an estimated 1.3 million Rohingya, and most are considered stateless. Though many of their families arrived from Bangladesh generations ago, almost all are denied citizenship by Myanmar as well as Bangladesh. In the last two and a half years, attacks by Buddhist mobs have left hundreds dead and 140,000 trapped in camps where they live without access to adequate health care, education or jobs.
Smith said authorities in Myanmar have been profiting off the Rohingya for decades, and extracting money from those departing was only one way. If Rohingya residents attempt to travel to neighboring villages without permission from local authorities, they risk being arrested and forced to pay bribes for their freedom, he said. The restrictions are so intense that even those who repair their own houses — which often crumble during the rainy season — can be fined if they do so without permission.
Many of those fleeing today have been forced to sell everything they have, including precious belongings — land, cattle, gold — to human trafficking brokers who typically charge $2,000 for passage to Malaysia, a Muslim country. Many end up in secret jungle camps in Thailand, where they face extortion and beatings until relatives come up with enough money to win their release.
Thai authorities have also been accused of colluding with traffickers, but have denied the allegations. "It's draining them economically," Smith said. "This is one of the poorest communities in Asia, one of the most abused, and this whole process is taking the little resources that they have left in exchange for even more abuse."
According to Fortify Rights, the brokers may collect sums averaging $500 to $600 per small boatload of asylum seekers, usually numbering between 50 and 100 people, and hand those payments to officials from Myanmar's police, navy and army. Police also have collected payments directly from passengers, the group said, adding that the Myanmar navy once demanded $7,000 from a trafficking ship offshore to allow them to leave.
The small boats transport the Rohingya to larger ships further out at sea that can carry as many as 1,000 people. The Fortify Rights report said the vast majority of those fleeing are routinely deceived, finding themselves "in the custody of abusive human trafficking and smuggling gangs, who detain them in conditions of enslavement and exploitation .... nearly all endure or witness torture, deprivation of food and water, confinement in extremely close quarters and other abuses throughout their journeys."
The Associated Press has documented similar accounts in Rakhine state. The family member of one Rohingya broker — since arrested on drug trafficking and other charges — said his boat set off from a small creek inland and had to pass a police post on the way to the sea where an obligatory payment had to be made. The family member spoke in Myin Hlut town on condition of anonymity for fear of being arrested.
The family member also recounted navy ships escorting Rohingya asylum seekers out to sea, as well as chasing them to extract more bribes. In another instance documented by AP, a dozen Myanmar soldiers boarded a vessel filled with Rohingya in the Bay of Bengal, bound their hands and bludgeoned them with wooden planks and iron rods before finally extracting money and letting them go.
Smith said the reason Myanmar authorities were exploiting trafficking networks themselves was simple: they can make tremendous money doing it. "Assuming that just half the 100,000 who have fled in the last two years have been forced to pay $2,000 each for passage to Malaysia, we're talking about a trade worth $100 million, he said. "That's why we see government complicity. There is a perverse and disturbing economic element to all of this."

spani's ebola nurse leaves hospital mourns dog



MADRID (AP) — A Spanish nursing assistant who recovered from Ebola credited health care workers with saving her life and offered Wednesday to donate blood to help cure others.

Still, Teresa Romero slammed Spanish officials for killing her beloved dog, saying the mixed breed named Excalibur was unnecessarily "executed." The 44-year-old Romero issued a statement as she was released from Madrid's Carlos III hospital after spending 30 days there, most of it in quarantine.
Her husband, Javier Limon, read Romero's remarks about Excalibur as she listened at his side, saying his wife was too emotional to talk about the dog that was like the childless couple's own child. Madrid health officials euthanized Excalibur on Oct. 8, saying the dog posed a potential public health risk for Ebola transmission. But the dog of a nurse who got Ebola in Dallas was simply quarantined and then later reunited with its owner.
Killing Excalibur "wasn't necessary," Romero said in her statement. "The worst part of all of this is that our dog was not given a chance." Romero said she still feels weak but praised her treatment team, hoped her recovery could help doctors figure out a cure for Ebola and offered to donate blood. Plasma from an Ebola survivor was among the treatments she received.
"If my blood works to cure people, I'm ready to give it to the last drop," she said. Doctors said Romero, who was critically ill for about a week, received various treatments and they were unable to say what ultimately worked.
Romero helped treat two Spanish missionaries who died of Ebola in August and September after they were flown back from West Africa. Doctors have said Romero told them she might have become infected by touching a protective glove to her face. But Romero said she did not "know what went wrong, or if anything went wrong."

un panel adopts land mark climite report


Steam and smoke rises from a coal burning power plant in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. After an all-night session, the U.N.'s expert panel on climate science is scrambling to finish a report on global warming that's

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — The United Nations' expert panel on climate science on Saturday finished a report on global warming that the UN's environment agency said offers "conclusive evidence" that humans are altering the Earth's climate system.
The document, which combines the findings of three earlier reports, was adopted after all-night talks that went on until 5 a.m. Saturday by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The scientists and government representatives on the panel, who jointly approved the document line by line, then rested for a few hours before resuming the session in Copenhagen to finish the document. The report is scheduled to be released to the public on Sunday.
A remote-controlled roving camera camouflaged as a penguin chick in Adelie Land, Antarctica. The device is so convincing that penguins don't scamper away and sometimes even sing to it with trumpet-like  


WASHINGTON (AP) — The newest tool for biologists is the baby penguin robotic spy.
It's pretty darn cute, and so convincing that penguins essentially talk to it, as if it is a potential mate for their chicks. Emperor penguins are notoriously shy. When researchers approach, these penguins normally back away and their heart rate goes up. That's not what the scientists need when they want to check heart rate, health and other penguin parameters.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

OnePlus wants to sell one million smartphones by the end of 2014

OnePlus has had its ups and downs throughout 2014, but as we reach the end of the year, the company still has high hopes for the intriguing OnePlus One. The Android smartphone was initially available only to consumers who managed to secure an invite, but OnePlus opened sales to the public for a limited time during a special preorder promotion last week. Unfortunately, it was a bit of a mess, but it helped propel the One to over 500,000 sales.
In an interview with Forbes, OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei talked about his goals for the company going forward and how OnePlus is going to survive in an increasingly competitive market.
OnePlus wants to sell one million units before the end of the year. Pei knows that nearly doubling sales in less than two months is “going to be hard,” but he thinks it’s possible. Looking at what OnePlus has done so far, it makes sense that Pei would remain optimistic — OnePlus has sold over half a million phones with a $300 advertising budget. HTC spent $1 billion on a single campaign and still can’t gain any traction.
When it comes to selling gadgets, word of mouth can be even more effective than Iron Man.
Pei also talks about how OnePlus will stay profitable, considering the fact that the margins on phone itself are miniscule.
“We’re making a single-figure dollar amount on each phone,” Pei told Forbes. “That’s not the way we’re going to make money in the future, it’s just to keep the operation going.” Pei believes that accessories will be a huge part of OnePlus staying in business. He thinks people will want to stay within the ecosystem when they pick up cases, screen protectors and headphones.
If OnePlus can keep its servers up and running during the next preorder event later this month, it might be possible for the company to begin approaching that one million unit watermark. Until then, it doesn’t look like anyone’s going to be picking up a Nexus 6 in the meantime.

India to foregin CEOs: were wating for you

Indian Minister for Human Resource Development Smriti Irani, right, speaks during a panel discussion at the India Economic Summit in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2014. Business leaders, government, civil

NEW DELHI (AP) — India's finance minister is urging foreign investors to help plug enormous gaps in the country's infrastructure blamed for holding back growth.
"We are waiting for you," Arun Jaitley told a roomful of international and Indian CEOs attending the India Economic Summit, one of the World Economic Forum's satellite summits held around the globe. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has enchanted Indians with his vision of a country crisscrossed by modern roads, high-speed trains, dozens of high-tech smart cities and universal Internet cables.