Monday, September 9, 2013

Working iPhone 5C handled in a short video

CTech already published a specs sheet for the iPhone 5S, but it seems the site has also gotten hold of a 15 second video showing the cheaper iPhone 5C (recognized by its colored plastic sides) that shows the device being unlocked, a quick peek at the app launcher and then the browser.



Not that iOS 7 is in any way new – you can read our review here. It is possible that Apple will put some exclusive features that are available only on the new generation of the iPhone. Anyway, here's some footage of an operational iPhone 5C (rather than just photos of the chassis or packaging that have flooded the Web).



Apple's event is scheduled for tomorrow and will certainly bring the iPhone 5S. There's a very good probability that the 5C will appear and only an outside chance that the cheaper smartphone will be China-exclusive (for carriers like China Telecom and China Mobile) and appear at Apple's September 11 event. We'll be covering tomorrow's event when we'll get the definitive truth from Apple itself.

Thanks to Arjan for bringing the video to our attention!

Via (in Dutch)


Source : http://www.gsmarena.com/working_iphone_5c_handled_in_short_video-news-6752.php

Alleged iPhone 5S specs show only minor changes

The much awaited Apple event is tomorrow, so it's time for final leaks. Chinese site CTech has dug up the specs of the iPhone 5S, the higher end of the two models expected to be announced tomorrow, and compared it to previous iPhones.

Now, we can't read Chinese (and since it's in an image, Google Translate isn't very helpful) but the gist is pretty clear – the dimensions are exactly the same and so is the screen. The camera is still an 8MP shooter, but now has a wider aperture, F/2.0 (instead of F/2.4), which should have a positive effect on low-light shots. And so would the dual-LED flash.


Alleged iPhone 5S specs

There's a reference to video framerate being bumped to 120fps from 60fps though we're not sure what that's about (the iPhone 5 can't shoot 1080p @ 60fps). Other than that video recording and the front-facing camera are the same.

The rumored fingerprint sensor is mentioned and the battery life is marked as improved to 250 hours of standby, up from 225 hours. The battery capacity is the same, so this is presumably due to the new chipset. The chipset (quite as expected) has been bumped to Apple A7, but there are no details what that entails (quad-core? higher clockspeed?).

Of course, there's no way to confirm any of those specs but since all of them are evolutionary steps, we'd say they are probably close to the truth (or at least not widely inaccurate). You can join us tomorrow and find out the true specs of the next iPhone(s).

Thanks to Kshitiz for sending this in!

Source (in Chinese, note: site is down at the moment) | Via


Source : http://www.gsmarena.com/alleged_iphone_5s_specs_show_only_minor_changes-news-6751.php

Vodafone offers everyone 4GB of free 4G data

Vodafone offers everyone 4GB of free 4G data
Ultrafast and extra data

The 4G war is heating up in the UK and Vodafone has mobilised its troops in an attempt to win more custom, offering an extra 4GB of data every month to pre-existing and new 4G customers.

Its "4GBonus" promotion (see what they did there? Clever) will give anyone currently on a Vodafone 4G plan an additional 4GB on top of the allowance already provided in their contract.

If we look at the SIM-only plans that means you'll now get 6GB for £26 per month, 8GB of data at £31 per month and a whopping 12GB if you are prepared to splash out £36 for 12 months - trumping EE and O2 at every price point.

Get in there soon

For those of you not currently a 4G Vodafone customer you'll need to sign up to a 12 or 24 month plan before the end of the October to take advantage of the offer.

Currently Vodafone's 4G rollout has only hit London making the service pretty limited and the smallest out of the trio of networks, but from September 28 it will arrive in Birmingham, Coventry, Leicester, Nottingham and Sheffield.

We can't help but think the timing of this announcement is a little coincidental, considering a certain Cupertino-based firm is said to be launching a couple of new handsets (the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C if you've been living under a rock for the past months) tomorrow.

O2 and Vodafone are currently in the tricky position which sees their 4G networks unable to support the iPhone 5, so the hope is the new iPhones will be more forgiving when it comes to frequency.


Source : http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/vodafone-offers-everyone-4gb-of-free-4g-data-1179283

How much 4G data do you really need?

Now that everybody's rolling out 4G mobile data, it's time to compare data plans - and in particular, how much data you can use each month.

While Three promises all-you-can-eat data when it launches in December, the other operators will cap your downloads according to your data plan, even on the most expensive tariffs.

So which one's best, and how much data do you really need? Let's find out.

Who offers what?

To keep things simple we'll compare each provider's SIM-only 4G plans; if you need a 4G handset too you should of course expect to pay a little bit more.

EE's cheapest plan is £21 per month for 500MB, rising to £36 for 5GB and £61 for 20GB if you sign up before the end of October.

Vodafone's cheapest is £26, but you get 2GB. The most expensive plan is £36 per month and gives you 8GB.

O2's cheapest tariff is also £26, but the data allowance is 1GB. £31 gets you 5GB and £36 gets you 8GB if you sign up before the 31st of October.

Three says its tariffs will be the same as 3G, so that should be around £12.90 for unlimited data.

How much data do you need?

This is a bit of a "how long is a piece of string?" question, because the amount of data you use will of course depend on what you do. If all you use your handset (or tethered tablet or computer) for is checking email and browsing the web, you won't go through much data - but once you start streaming and downloading the numbers soon add up.

It's important to think about what data you might use rather than just look at the amount of data you use now: for example, you might barely bother with YouTube clips or HQ streaming on your current 3G phone because your connections isn't good enough.

Given a faster, more reliable connection, which is what 4G is all about, then your usage may change dramatically.

Here are some numbers to think about:

Music streaming (average quality, 160Kbps): 1.2MB per minute, 72MB per hour
Music streaming/downloading (320Kbps): 2.4MB per minute, 144MB per hour
iPlayer video: 50MB to 225MB per hour
Netflix video, SD: up to 0.7GB per hour
Netflix video, HD: 1GB to 2.8GB per hour
Photo uploading: 5MB per photo
Online gaming: 5MB per hour

[sources: Spotify, BBC, Netflix, Verizon Wireless]

What does that mean in practical terms?

Let's take a real-world example: you stream an episode of your favourite sitcom on the train (50MB), check Twitter whenever you're waiting for the lift (2MB), upload a photo of your lunch (5MB) and stream a few songs as you jog around the park for twenty minutes (24MB at average quality).

That's 81MB in one day. Keep it up every weekday and you'll go through 1,620MB (1.6GB) in a four-week month - and that doesn't include any incoming emails or smartphone app updates.

Maybe you're not so keen on streaming but you're a social media addict. You average five photo uploads per day (5MB each) and spend around fifteen minutes a day clicking on people's Facebook updates and photos (5MB in total). That's 30MB per day, which works out at 840MB if you do it every day in a four week month.

Perhaps you just want to use your 4G phone to tether your laptop, browsing around 30 web pages per day. The average web page is now 1MB, so that's 30MB per day or 900MB per month.

According to Vodafone's figures, which use slightly different numbers to ours, if you don't stream anything but make 12 social media posts, send or receive 12 emails and use 12 websites or apps every day, you'll use 510MB per month. Add 12 minutes of streaming music and 12 of streaming video and you're looking at 2.09GB.

Fancy busting through the 8GB barrier? To do that, Vodafone reckons you'd need to stream 36 minutes of video, 120 minutes of music, make 48 social media posts, send and receive 56 emails and look at websites or apps 30 times per day.

You can minimise those numbers, of course: you might download your music for offline listening, or use Wi-Fi wherever you can (EE, O2 and Vodafone all offer Wi-Fi minutes as well as mobile data). But the numbers give you a good indication of just how much data you might need for everyday activities. As you can see, you don't need to be downloading enormous amounts of data to exceed the cheaper plans' limits.

Are the networks having a laugh?

Left to their own devices, companies will try to offer as little as possible for as much as possible - but once things get competitive, they're usually forced to raise their game or fall by the wayside.

There's already evidence of that happening: with rivals' 4G launches imminent, EE decided last month to double the data allowances on its £26 per month tariff and up its £51 per month plan from 5GB to 20GB for anybody signing up before the end of October.

As the various networks roll out beyond the initial handful of locations we'd expect competition to become more fierce - and we can't wait to see what happens if Three keeps its promises and offers 4G connections for 3G money come December.

One thing's for sure: the prices and plans available today will look fairly stingy years or maybe even months down the line.

Is it time to sign up? Let's ask consumer magazine Which? its advice: Consumers should "not upgrade" because coverage "is too limited" to make the cost worthwhile. Phone users should wait until "coverage improves outside big cities."

4G? Nope. 3G, in 2004.

  • What's the best 4G network? We pitted EE against O2, Vodafone and Three to find out

Source : http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/how-much-4g-data-do-you-really-need--1176594

EE's 4G network gains pace in the UK, hits one million customers

British carrier EE was one of the first to offer 4G LTE in the UK, and it seems that high speed network availability is in high demand among Brits. EE announced today that it was able to pass the one million 4G customer mark four months ahead of its stated deadline.



Arriving early to the LTE party is paying big dividends to EE, as rival providers Vodafone and O2 have only just launched their own 4G networks less than two weeks ago, while Three won't have theirs up all the way until December.

According to EE, more than 100 cities throughout the UK are able to take advantage of its 4G network, which is allegedly the fastest in Europe, and faster than those in the US and Japan. The UK also has some of the fastest global 4G adoption rates.

Via


Source : http://www.gsmarena.com/ees_4g_network_dominates_in_the_uk_hits_one_million_customers-news-6750.php

LG D820 is CDMA G2 model, not the Nexus 5

Three days ago we told you about an upcoming LG D820 that has already passed the FCC certification. Lots of people thought this might be the next Nexus 5 that is rumored to be manufactured once again by LG. It was even said to have leaked in a photo from the Android 4.4 KitKat announcement.

Unfortunately, according to the notorious evleaks, the D820 model is the CDMA version of the LG G2 flagship and not the next Nexus.

Sorry Nexus fans: LG D820 is just a CDMA G2 variant.

— @evleaks (@evleaks) September 9, 2013

The Nexus 5 is coming though and we'll probably see its announcement next month, but as it turns out D820 is not the model name we are looking for. Move along.

Meanwhile you are welcomed to check our in-depth review of the LG G2 right here.

Source


Source : http://www.gsmarena.com/lg_d820_is_cdma_g2_model_not_the_nexus_5-news-6749.php

Nokia Lumia 1520 springs another leak, new photos gush out

Nokia Lumia 1520 springs another leak, new photos gush out
Campaign to bring back the Bandit starts here (credit: The Verge)

While it may be on the road to Redmond, that's not going to stop Nokia launching its first Windows 'Phablet' in the form of the Lumia 1520 which has come out of hiding in a big way.

The Verge got its hands on an album's worth of photos of the thing, with the Lumia 1520 seemingly boasting a 6-inch screen capable of 1080p Full HD playback.

The tipster responsible also reckons the handset will come with 2GB of RAM, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor, 32GB of on-board memory and an SD slot to expand that out.

Camera talk

Peering at the photos reveals that traditional Nokia Lumia rounded-corner styling, an array of buttons on the edges of the handset, a front-facing camera of indeterminate megapixellage and a slightly protruding rear-facing PureView snapper too.

Nokia Lumia 1520
Credit: The Verge

That camera isn't expected to be quite as heavy on the megapixels as the Nokia Lumia 1020's 41MP sensor.

We've heard tell of the Lumia 1520 before too: the upcoming device was codenamed Nokia Bandit until scourge of mobile phone secret keepers @evleaks let slip that "Nokia Bandit = Lumia 1520" on Twitter.

No official word on when the Lumia 1520 will officially become official, but you might want to keep an eye on September 26.

  • How will the Lumia 1520 measure up to the snap-happy 1020? Prime yourself with the Lumia 1020 review

Source : http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/nokia-lumia-1520-springs-another-leak-new-photos-gush-out-1179199