Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Moto X Pure Edition meets up with Android 6.0 soak

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Patience will serve the pure well. The Moto X Pure Edition debuted back in August with Android 5.1.1. We’ve been let down by Motorola recently for some slow updates, so we were skeptical of a quick Marshmallow turnaround.
But as the clock strikes sixty days since initial release, it would seem that the company has done the opposite of dragging its heels on updating its older and latest star devices.
Motorola’s David Schuster posted on his Google+ page that a stepped 6.0 rollout is underway:
I’m pleased to announce that today we are starting the soak test period of Android 6.0 Marshmallow upgrade for the 2015 Moto X Pure Edition (3rd Gen) in the US. We will monitor the soak for next week and with good results, proceed to full launch.
Good luck to our friends at Verizon who will be waiting a while for the DROID Turbo 2 and DROID Maxx 2 to update.
Source: David Schuster (Google+)
Via: Android Central

What is LiFi and why you should care: the next generation light-based WiFi

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Over the years, WiFi has become an integral part of our lives. It saves us from data overages and often provides us with data where cellular signals don’t reach. Currently WiFi is fairly limited in its spectrum, utilizing mainly 2.4GHz and 5GHz. Each flavor of WiFi has its own benefits as well as disadvantages, but it’s becoming increasingly difficult for WiFi as more devices use the already crowded spectrum. What we need is more spectrum, but that gets into an international quagmire of competing standards and restrictions. What we need is spectrum that’s universally unlicensed. That solution could be LiFi, and its a lot closer that you might imagine

What is LiFi?

LiFi, in its most simple terms, is WiFi using light instead of radio waves. It sounds crazy, and to a certain extent it is – until you realize that light is just another set of frequencies in the electromagnetic spectrum.
SpectrumOver on the left side of the EM spectrum are radio waves and microwaves. The longer the wave is, the further it can travel – but the less data can be carried on the wave.
Over on the right side of the EM spectrum are x-rays and gamma rays – those are the kind that do all sorts of damage to the human body.
Smack-dab in the middle is the visible light spectrum – the colors that we see with our own eyes. The wavelength of light is pretty short, which means it doesn’t travel as far as radio waves and microwaves and doesn’t have the ability to penetrate walls and other obstacles, but it also means that it can carry a lot of data.
How does LiFi work? First off, the technology is currently called SIM OFDM. How it works is similar to how the Infrared emitter works in the remote control for your television. Digital data is converted into a series of light pulses that are then received by a “detector” and converted back into digital data. Infrared emitters are pretty slow, relatively speaking, and use the invisible light spectrum.
What LiFi aims to do is use the entire visible light spectrum to transmit data. Just like IR, LiFi will do this by turning the light off and on again at high speeds – and on various frequencies (or “colors”) – thousands of colors operating in parallel.
irdaRegular incandescent and even fluorescent lights can’t be switched off and on fast enough to make this work. LEDs, however, are ideal. By adding a small circuit board into an LED lightbulb, almost any light socket can be turned into a LiFi access point.
That’s the transmitting side. The receiving side could be your computer, monitor, TV, tablet, or smartphone. All it needs is a receiver, just like the one built into your TV to receive the input from your remote control – similar to the IrDA ports that are on some of today’s smartphones (and most of yesteryear’s PDAs).
Most current smartphones have an ambient light sensor on the front, which could be replaced by a multi-function receiver, or a separate receiver could be added, or the device’s front-facing camera could theoretically be used to receive the LiFi signal.

Blinkin’ Lights!

blue_leds_on_siWith all those lights blinking off and on all the time, won’t we all go nuts? Thankfully, the “blinking” can be done much more rapidly than the human eye can detect. Many LEDs today even switch off-and-on rapidly to save energy and reduce heat, especially those found in flashlights.
Does the light need to be “on” to work? Yes, but the output of the LED module(s) can be reduced very low, so low that the human eye will register the light as being “off”.
Thinking outside the smartphone, modern cars have LED running lights and LED tail lights. Using a LiFi-like technology, cars could theoretically communicate with each other to know relative speeds, braking statuses, lane changes, and more – potentially decreasing driver reaction time and saving lives.
No, LiFi isn’t available today, but the rate at which it’s progressing is promising. We may be getting data via the lights we use every day in the not too distant future.

Industry sources says to expect the iPhone 6c for February

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The few people left that are holding onto their iPhone 5s or other four-inch iOS device might see another iPhone that can fit their hands soon. We’ve talked about the growth from zero that the idea of an iPhone 6c had gone from vision to concretion. There’s now more support and a countdown clock of sorts coming out of sources from high factories.
Specifically, we’ve gotten word from Foxconn employees of a four-inch, vividly colored iPhone 6c that’s being produced right now in conjunction with the iPhone 6s models.
Bets are on Apple to gather enough inventory for a launch show in February, though that timeline could be pushed back to the middle of the year. Chinese microblog sites claim Apple wants to be as early as possible to tail the Xiaomi Mi 5 launch and while we know Apple is making it big in China, we’re not sure if Apple were to focus on a target competitor in China that it would be Xiaomi.
We’re being told that while 3D Touch might not be a go, Touch ID may finally be. We’re also expecting a debut price between $400-500.
The renders above, though, need a little (official) sprucing up.
Source: TechWeb (Google Translate)
Via: BGR

High Snapdragon 820 single-core benchmark leak bodes well for the Xiaomi Mi5

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So far, the highest Snapdragon 820 single-core score we've seen from the alleged Xiaomi Mi5, or project Gemini, was 2162, which is still a far cry from, say, Apple's breathtaking single-core achievements with the A9 in the iPhone 6s, which can hover around the 2500 mark. 

Yesterday, however, a leakster account known for braking some god insights already, tipped a Snapdragon 820 single-core tally of 2300 points, which, while still not on the level of Apple A9, is still a very high score, and bodes well for the performance of phones with the new Snapdragon inside. One of these phones will most likely be the Xiaomi Mi5, and this 2300 score may have been achieved precisely with it, given that the rumor originates from the Weibo account of the leakster, and the fact that Mi5 tips had popped up from there before. 

In any case, next year's battle for the heart of Android flagships is shaping up to be between Exynos 8890 and Snapdragon 820 - given that the Exynos just scored a record on AnTuTu, while the 820 may be killing it Geekbench, we can't wait for the first phone(s) with them to arrive come January, as the tipster implies.

source: Leaksfly (Weibo) & Geekbench

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Vintage Electric's latest e-bike gives you more retro power

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Vintage Electric's latest e-bike gives you more retro power

Vintage Electric drew a lot of attention when it unveiled its retro e-bikes a couple of years ago: it managed to fuse the classic look of early 20th century board track racers with a decidedly modern electric motor. Well, it's back for another year... and it's clear that the company has learned a lot in a short space of time. Its newly launched 2016 Tracker ups both the performance and the nostalgia quotient. It's 15 percent more efficient than last year's Tracker, but produces 20 percent more torque and carries a larger 70 watt-hour battery good for 35 miles of real-world travel. At the same time, you'll find clever new touches like stainless steel accents and pewter badging.
Taking this trip back in time won't come cheap. You're looking at $4,995 for the standard Tracker (similar to the Cruz), and that's before you consider the custom color options. It might be easy to justify, however. This is one of the few e-bikes that's stylish in more than a utilitarian sort of way -- so long as it handles as nicely as it looks, you may find yourself looking for excuses to go riding.


Nokia's next move is VR with this $60,000 OZO camera

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Nokia's next move is VR with this $60,000 OZO camera

Nokia announced its new hardware a few months ago, and tonight at an event in Los Angeles revealed it's opening preorders for the OZO virtual reality camera. A professional-level device capable of recording its surroundings in 360-degree spherical video, it will require a mere $60,000 -- with $5k down payment up front -- to secure one when shipments start in Q1 2016. The full specs are also out now, revealing it uses eight synchronized 2K x 2K camera sensors, which record to a 500GB solid state drive that can hold up to 45 minutes of footage. Pros like Jaunt are apparently using the new camera for their VR capturing, and now you can too. You can see the full list, along with accessories like its $1,500 docking station on the OZO website, while you ponder what amazing life experiences justify that pricetag.

Samsung replaces its smartphone chief

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Samsung replaces its smartphone chief


Samsung Mobile's top execs held on for a while during the company's troubled time with smartphones, but it's apparently been long enough. JK Shin, in addition to another co-CEO, (Samsung's exec lineup is a... multi-layered one), will withdraw from daily operations, replaced by DJ Koh, a mobile exec who previously oversaw Samsung's barely-nascent Tizen mobile OS and Samsung Pay -- neither of which are international success stories (yet?). At the same time, Samsung's head of TVs and home appliances, BK Yoon, is being moved on to focus on "long-term strategy".
According to the WSJ, both Yoon and Shin will retain their titles as co-CEOs of Samsung Electronics. The mobile head was responsible for misreading demand for the company's top flagship phones, not making enough of its curved Galaxy S6 Edge smartphones -- and making too many of the more conservative S6. The mobile profit hit the Electronics arm enough for it to announce an earnings loss for the entire year.