Tuesday, November 25, 2014

BlackBerry will pay you to dump your iPhone for a Passport

By Todd Wasserman

Blackberry

Here's a holiday deal for you: If you trade in your iPhone 6 for a BlackBerry Passport, the company will basically pay you $50.
Starting Dec. 1, BlackBerry will pay customers up to $400 to trade in their iPhones including the 4S, 5, 5C, 5S and 6 models. On top of that, BlackBerry will give an additional $150 (or $200 in Canadian dollars).
In addition, BlackBerry is offering $100 off the purchase of a black $599 BlackBerry Passport. (The markdown doesn't apply to Passports in other colors.) With the discount and the maximum trade-in value for an iPhone, you get $50 along with your new BlackBerry Passport.
In addition, a BlackBerry Z30 goes for $225 on the site, a markdown from the $499 suggested retail price.
The deal is the first of its kind for the holidays, says BlackBerry rep Lisette Kwong.
BlackBerry introduced the Passport in September. Sporting a square display and a width of 3.6 inches, Mashable Tech Editor Pete Pachal called the device "very strange" but also powerful.

After dumping PC business, Sony plans to kill TV and mobile phone line-ups

By Tech 2

After dumping PC business, Sony plans to kill TV and mobile phone line-ups

Japan’s loss-making Sony plans to slash its TV and mobile phone product line-ups to cut costs, counting on multi-billion dollar revenue surges for its buoyant PlayStation 4 and image sensor businesses over the next three years.
Having lost ground to nimbler rivals like Apple and Samsung in consumer electronics, Sony said on Tuesday its goal for TV and smartphones is to turn a profit, even if sales slide as much as 30 percent.
“We’re not aiming for size or market share but better profits,” Hiroki Totoki, Sony’s newly appointed chief of its mobile division told an investors’ conference. A poor showing by its Xperia smartphones has weighed heavily on recent earnings and Sony said more detail on plans for the unit will be unveiled before end-March.
With cost cuts on the way in some divisions, Sony is also not planning to renew its FIFA soccer sponsorship contract next year, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Under its new three-year electronics business plan, Sony said it was aiming to boost sales for its videogame division by a quarter to as much as 1.6 trillion yen ($13.6 billion). It said that will be helped by personalized TV, video and music distribution services that should lift revenue per paying user.
At its devices division, which houses its image sensor business, Sony said sales could increase 70 percent to as much as 1.5 trillion yen. Sony’s sensor sales are already robust, with Apple using them in its iPhones while Chinese handset manufacturers are increasingly adopting them.
In a similar event last week for its entertainment units, the conglomerate said it was aiming to lift its movie and TV programming revenues by a third over the next three years.
Shares in Sony finished 6 percent higher on hopes that the new measures show a greater sense of restructuring urgency, while the Nikkei 225 index rose 0.3 percent.
“There’s a lot of expectation for Sony now, but nothing is sure until there are results,” said Ichiyoshi Asset Management chief fund manager Akino Mitsushige. “Getting out of the mobile market is an option, but they can’t do that now, so they will need to make some fundamental changes.”

Sony Pictures Network Reportedly Hit by Hackers

By Agence France-Presse

sony_logo_shop_reuters.jpg

Sony Pictures' computer network has reportedly come under cyber-attack, with hackers threatening to release key information from the Japanese group's entertainment division.
Sony did not respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. But the news site The Next Web reported that all Sony employees at the Los Angeles unit were ordered home and to stay off the company network.
A source within Sony told the news site that "a single server was compromised and the attack was spread from there."
An image posted on the Reddit social network from an individual claiming to be a former Sony employee showed a page with the words "Hacked by #GOP." It was unclear what GOP stands for, but some reports said the hacker group is called Guardians of Peace.
The posted image said unspecified demands must be met by Sony or important files would be released.
The website Geek.com said the hackers leaked a large file containing with spreadsheets and what appear to be passwords.
"We've already warned you, and this is just a beginning," the message posted on Reddit said.
"We continue till our request be met... If you don't obey us, we'll release the data shown to the world."
The Sony Pictures website appeared to be functioning normally Tuesday.
The Hollywood Reporter said it had confirmed the breach, but said the aims of the hackers were unclear.
A Sony statement to the entertainment publication said: "Sony Pictures Entertainment experienced a system disruption, which we are working diligently to resolve."

Mobile Subscription Near Billion Mark

By The Nigerian Observer

LAGOS – Ericsson, an Information Technology software and infrastructure company in Africa, says that Africa has topped 880 million in mobile subscriptions for the third quarter of 2014.

This was disclosed in Ericsson’s Mobility Report, which was launched recently and made available to newsmen in Lagos.

The Ericsson Mobility Report is a comprehensive update on mobile trends leveraging big data from live networks worldwide.
The report quoted Fredrik Jejdling, Ericsson’s President & Regional Head, Sub-Saharan Africa as saying that the increase in mobile subscriptions was due to increased availability of low-cost smart phones in the region.

Jejdling said that these low-cost smart phones had led to a rapid increase in smart phone subscriptions in the region.

“ The increased availability of low-cost smart phones in Sub-Saharan Africa will lead to a rapid increase in smart phone subscriptions in the region, “ he said.

He said that the report revealed that proliferation of mobile technology continued at a rapid pace and would see 90 percent of the world’s population over six-year-old having a mobile phone by 2020.

The Ericsson president said that despite the increased rate of sales, there was still room for growth in the sector as many users had yet to make the switch to the more feature-rich, internet-friendly option.

The report predicted a strong uptake in the coming years as the number rises from 2.7 billion smart phone subscriptions today to the forecasted 6.1 billion in 2020.

It also said that video was the largest and fastest growing segment of mobile data traffic in 4G-dominated networks, which currently constituted 45 percent to 55 percent of mobile traffic.

In terms of future outlook, the report estimated that mobile video traffic would increase tenfold by 2020, and ultimately constitute around 55 percent of all mobile data traffic in the year.

“Video is increasingly appearing as part of other online applications such as news and adverts, and on social media platforms and the devices used are also evolving.

“ Many have larger screens, enabling higher picture quality for streamed video, which results in video being consumed on all types of devices and in higher quantities both at home and on the move,“ the report said.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Google Glass commercial launch postponed to 2015


Google Glass is one of the most anticipated technologies in the market, but it is falling off support in the current times. People’s losing interest in the Google Glass force the company to delay the commercial launch of the device for 2015.
google-glass-active

Google Glass is a smart-wear that has been announced by Google X division and it delivers information through the small glass in front of the right eye. The Google Glass comes with RAM of 2GB and it has an internal on-board storage of 16GB that allows the users to store appropriate data in the device.

The device powered with Texas Instruments OMAP 4430 Dual core processor with 2100 mAh battery and has various sensors such as gyroscope, proximity, magnetometer and other necessary sensors. In order to control the Google glass, a small touch pad as well as voice commands is provided by the Google. It also comes with 5 MP camera and it records video at 720p resolution.
Chris O’Neill, Glass Head of Business Operations, said to Reuters,
“We are completely energized and as energized as ever about the opportunity that wearables and Glass in particular represent. We are as committed as ever to a consumer launch. That is going to take time and we are not going to launch this product until it’s absolutely ready.”
In the Google X division, Google Glass was one of the first products in the range. The other development projects that come under the Google X division also include a self driving car of the company. Although the response for Google Glass has been low in the market, the head of the Google X division, Chris O’Neill is still optimistic about the product and believes that fans would appreciate it once launched.
It can be bought at the price of $1500 but the market launch of the device has been pushed back further. There is a great doubt looming in the company’s mind about the potential demand of the device and interest of the fans and hence, the launch date has been pushed further.
According to a latest survey among the app developers, it has been found out that they have lost interest in the development process of the device since it carries too many shortcomings and moreover, people have a little interest in it. Tom Frencel, the CEO of Little Guy Games group stated, “If there was 200 million Google Glasses sold, it would be a different perspective. There’s no market at this point.”

Google Glass believers losing faith

ALEXEI ORESKOVIC, SARAH MCBRIDE AND MALATHI NAYAK


After an initial burst of enthusiasm, signs that consumers are giving up on Glass have been building.
After an initial burst of enthusiasm, signs that consumers are giving up on Glass have been building.

After two years of popping up at high-profile events sporting Google Glass, the gadget that transforms eyeglasses into spy-movie worthy technology, Google co-founder Sergey Brin sauntered bare-faced into a Silicon Valley red-carpet event on Sunday.
He'd left his pair in the car, Brin told a reporter. The Googler, who heads up the top-secret lab which developed Glass, has hardly given up on the product - he recently wore his pair to the beach.
But Brin's timing is not propitious, coming as many developers and early Glass users are losing interest in the much-hyped, US$1500 test version of the product: a camera, processor and stamp-sized computer screen mounted to the edge of eyeglass frames. Google itself has pushed back the Glass roll out to the mass market.
Google CEO and co-founder Sergey Brin models a Glass prototype at Google I/O 2012.
Google CEO and co-founder Sergey Brin models a Glass prototype at Google I/O 2012.
While Glass may find some specialised, even lucrative, uses in the workplace, its prospects of becoming a consumer hit in the near future are slim, many developers say.
Of 16 Glass app makers contacted by Reuters, nine said that they had stopped work on their projects or abandoned them, mostly because of the lack of customers or limitations of the device. Three more have switched to developing for business, leaving behind consumer projects.
Plenty of larger developers remain with Glass. The nearly 100 apps on the official web site include Facebook and OpenTable, although one major player recently defected: Twitter.
Sergey Brin sporting Google Glass at during New York Fashion Week in 2013.
Sergey Brin sporting Google Glass at during New York Fashion Week in 2013.


"If there was 200 million Google Glasses sold, it would be a different perspective. There's no market at this point," said Tom Frencel, the Chief Executive of Little Guy Games, which put development of a Glass game on hold this year and is looking at other platforms, including the Facebook Inc-owned virtual-reality goggles Oculus Rift.
Several key Google employees instrumental to developing Glass have left the company in the last six months, including lead developer Babak Parviz, electrical engineering chief Adrian Wong, and Ossama Alami, director of developer relations.
And a Glass funding consortium created by Google Ventures and two of Silicon Valley's biggest venture capitalists, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Andreessen Horowitz, quietly deleted its website, routing users to the main Glass site.
Google insists it is committed to Glass, with hundreds of engineers and executives working on it, as well as new fashionista boss Ivy Ross, a former Calvin Klein executive. Tens of thousands use Glass in the pilot consumer program.
"We are completely energised and as energised as ever about the opportunity that wearables and Glass in particular represent," said Glass Head of Business Operations Chris O'Neill.
Glass was the first project to emerge from Google's X division, the secretive group tasked with developing "moonshot" products such as self-driving cars. Glass and wearable devices overall amount to a new technology, as smartphones once were, that will likely take time to evolve into a product that clicks with consumers.
"We are as committed as ever to a consumer launch. That is going to take time and we are not going to launch this product until it's absolutely ready," O'Neill said.
Brin had predicted a launch this year, but 2015 is now the most likely date, a person familiar with the matter said.
GLASS SELLING... ON eBAY
After an initial burst of enthusiasm, signs that consumers are giving up on Glass have been building.
Google dubbed the first set of several thousand Glass users as "Explorers". But as the Explorers hit the streets, they drew stares and jokes. Some people viewed the device, capable of surreptitious video recording, as an obnoxious privacy intrusion, deriding the once-proud Explorers as "Glassholes".
"It looks super nerdy," said Shvetank Shah, a Washington, DC-based consultant, whose Google Glass now gathers dust in a drawer. "I'm a card carrying nerd, but this was one card too many."
Glass now sells on eBay for as little as half list price.
Some developers recently have felt unsupported by investors and, at times, Google itself.
The Glass Collective, the funding consortium co-run by Google Ventures, invested in only three or four small start-ups by the beginning of this year, a person familiar with the statistics said.
A Google Ventures spokeswoman declined to comment on the number of investments and said the Web site was closed for simplicity. "We just found it's easier for entrepreneurs to come to us directly," she said.
The lack of a launch date has given some developers the impression that Google still treats Glass as an experiment.
"It's not a big enough platform to play on seriously," said Matthew Milan, founder of Toronto-based software firm Normative Design, which put on hold a Glass app for logging exercise and biking.
Mobile game company Glu Mobile, known for its popular Kim Kardashian: Hollywood title, was one of the first to launch a game on Glass. Spellista, a puzzler released a year ago, is still available, but Glu has discontinued work on it, a spokesman for the company said.
Another developer, Sean McCracken, won US$10,000 in a contest last year for creating an aliens-themed video game for Glass, Psyclops, but Google never put it on the official hub for Glass apps, making it tougher to find. He has quit working on updates.
Still, there are some enthusiastic developers. Cycling and running app Strava finds Glass well-suited for its users, who want real-time data on their workouts, said David Lorsch, vice president of business development. And entrepreneur Jake Steinerman said it is ideal for his company, DriveSafe, which detects if people are falling asleep at the wheel.
PIVOTING AWAY
In April, Google launched the Glass at Work program to help make the device useful for specific industries, such as healthcare and manufacturing. So far the effort has resulted in apps that are being tested or used at companies such as Boeing and Yum Brands' Taco Bell.
Google is selling Glass in bulk to some businesses, offering two-for-one discounts.
CrowdOptic, which uses Glass as portable computers for surgeons and other people out of offices, is currently in use at 19 US hospitals and expects that to grow to 100 hospitals early next year, said Chief Executive Jon Fisher.
Alex Foster began See Through, a Glass advertising analytics firm for business, after a venture firm earlier this year withdrew its offer to back his consumer-oriented Glass fitness company when it became clear no big consumer Glass release was imminent.
"It was devastating," he said. "All of the consumer glass startups are either completely dead or have pivoted," to enterprise products or rival wearables.

Samsung Hunts Next Hit With Internet Push as Phones Fade

 

Yoon C. Lee, a Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) executive, is giving a tour of his U.S. home in Oakland. He shows off his living room and foyer, then takes a look outside to check the garden. He considers turning on the sprinkler system before deciding the plants have enough water.

The thing is, he’s not actually in California. He’s 8,000 miles away with a reporter in a Seoulconference room. Lee, a tall, 49-year-old, is at a huge table fiddling with a Galaxy S5 phone that’s streaming live video from the U.S.

This is Samsung’s next big bet as it works to build a future beyond mobile phones, where earnings are tumbling. Lee and his colleagues are trying to create another hit from what’s known as the Internet of things, technology that stitches together phones, cameras, sprinklers and roads. If they succeed, the effort could propel sales of the company’s electronics, appliances and chips for a generation; if they fail, the troubles will likely deepen.

“Imagine if all the dumb things around you can be connected,” said Lee. “For Samsung, this is a big new opportunity, a huge paradigm shift. It will benefit us across all businesses.”

Samsung’s Internet push comes just as Apple Inc. (AAPL), Google Inc. and dozens of others are sizing up the same opportunity. Tech’s giants are all vying for leadership and collaborating where necessary. The market for the Internet of things is projected to hit $7.1 trillion by 2020, according to the research firm IDC.Photographer: Woohae Cho/Bloomberg


In a sign of how seriously Samsung is taking the effort, the company is transferring about 500 engineers from its mobile-phone division and allocating them largely to the Internet initiative, according to people familiar with the matter. The shift also reflects recognition that the Suwon, South Korea-based company needs another hit after smartphones, they said, asking not to be identified discussing internal matters.

“This is a must-have market for Samsung,” said Neil Mawston, executive director of the research firm Strategy Analytics. “The Internet of things will be too big to ignore.”

The mobile-phone unit is faltering as Apple offers bigger screen iPhones similar to Samsung’s marquee Galaxy range and Chinese newcomer Xiaomi sells stylish phones at low prices. In the most recent quarter, Samsung’s mobile profit tumbled 74 percent, dragging net income down by 49 percent from a year earlier.

Shares of Samsung rose 1.4 percent to 1,211,000 won as of 12:24 p.m. in Seoul. The stock has dropped 12 percent this year compared with a 3.4 percent decline in the benchmark Kospi index.Photographer: Woohae Cho/Bloomberg


An employee demonstrates using the air conditioner control function of the Samsung...Read More
Samsung’s Scale

The Internet of things represents the third revolution ininformation technology, after the PC and the Internet, Michael Porter and James E. Heppelman wrote in this month’s edition of the Harvard Business Review. Its implications go beyond the increasing number of smart, connected products in the world and are much more than simply a way to transmit information, they wrote.

With more everyday things connected to the Internet, products will have expanded capabilities and the data they generate may change how companies compete and the boundaries of competition, Porter and Heppelman said.

The Internet push is one of the first major initiatives under Lee Jae Yong, who has taken more of a leadership role since his father, Chairman Lee Kun Hee, was hospitalized in May. The heir apparent, 46, has to calm investor concerns over the business outlook and his leadership skills.

Though Samsung Electronics is best known for its mobile phones, the Suwon, South Korea-based company makes everything from televisions and computers to washers, dryers and ultrasound machines. It’s part of Samsung Group, South Korea’s biggest conglomerate, that sells insurance, builds ships, makes howitzers and operates a theme park too.
Software Weakness

Samsung Electronics’ latest push is designed to capitalize on its scope and strengths. Software engineers from the mobile unit are able to work directly with the development teams for TVs, vacuum cleaners and other appliances.

“Samsung, Apple and Google are all envisioning a world where things such as mobile devices and household goods surrounding us will speak to each other,” said Ko Seung Hee, a Seoul-based analyst at SK Securities Co. “Unlike the others, Samsung can offer a complete line-up of devices and appliances and that’s Samsung’s biggest strength.”

Samsung’s weakness has been software, which is important because it binds together the Internet of things. Google’s Android operating system, given away to phonemakers including Samsung, Xiaomi and Lenovo Group Ltd., is the most widely used on mobile devices. Apple’s operating system, which it doesn’t share, has most of the rest of the mobile market.
Tizen Development

Samsung has been working with Intel Corp. (INTC) to develop its own operating system, Tizen, though the effort has gained little traction. The Korean company is using Tizen in its smartwatches and cameras as it seeks to reduce its reliance on Google.

“Samsung could divorce Google at some point, but considering their own respective interests, they need to sustain the marriage for a while,” said Claire Kim, a Seoul-based analyst at Daishin Securities Co.

Samsung has also joined Thread Group, led by Google’s Nest Labs, which builds new home automation standards. It also signed a global patent-licensing agreement in February with Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), which holds one of the biggest pools of patents in connected devices, to share technologies over the next 10 years.

Samsung has no illusions about the challenges ahead. Rivals have tried cracking the market for the Internet of things for more than a decade.
Allocating Capital

The Korean company also has an advantage that may help it avoid getting dragged down by falling mobile profits. It’s always been run like an investment company, allocating capital to promising ventures so it can build replacement new businesses for the old ones. It’s managed business cycles for eight decades, picking out the next opportunity as existing businesses fade. Now it sees its mobile-phone fortunes waning and is shifting to the Internet of things.

Acquisitions, new plants and a push to integrate manufacturing are the core of the plan. In August, the company bought SmartThings, a startup that makes mobile applications to remotely control household devices. In October, it also announced plans for a $15 billion chip plant in South Koreato make more advanced chips for wearable and connected devices.
Innovation Museum

To demonstrate the Internet of things, the company is using its Samsung Innovation Museum, a glass-walled building across from its headquarters, about 30 miles south of Seoul. The five-story, 11,000 square-meter structure looks a bit like New York’s Guggenheim museum, painted almost entirely in white with words carved into the walls: ‘smart living’ and ‘inspiring others.’

In an open space on the second floor, booths stand side by side. Each is decorated with different interiors to show off connected life in hotels, planes, shopping malls or living rooms.

In the hotel booth, you can check in by pressing a key-patterned button on an Android smartphone without having to wait in line. Upon entering the room, the window blinds automatically roll up and the television turns on.

In the booth for home technology, lights, appliances and a robot vacuum cleaner are all connected online to mobile phone app. The idea is you can flick on the lights, warm the oven or even clean your living room from your phone before you come home. Samsung has started offering a rudimentary version of the service in Korea and will expand it globally.

“Our first mission is to bring your home to your connected life,” said Lee at Samsung. “At least, you will never have to drive back home for two hours wondering if you have forgotten to lock your door or turning off your gas stove.”