Showing posts with label smartwatch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smartwatch. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

In Other News: 22/05/2013.


  • Sony are reportedly considering an investors proposal to sell of the movie, music and TV units of their company in a bid to cement the company's financial position!
    Via TheVerge.
  • Google Now has landed in Chrome for everyone! If you update your browser and point it to Google.com then you should see an option to click a microphone symbol in the search bar and there you have it!
    Via AndroidCentral.
  • The guys over at CNet have got some new statistics which show how satisfied smartphone manufacturers are making their customers comparing 2012 and 2013. Apple still lead, but their lead over Motorola is now 4 points and Motorola gained 5 points and Apple lost two over the past year. Then come Nokia in third and all other Android manufacturers just before Blackberry on the bottom of the pile. Obviously this is just for the USA and so Nokia only sell their highest end smartphones whereas someone like Samsung offers a flood of devices at lots of prices, which will affect the results for them!
    Via CNet.
  • Bang and Olufsen's CEO has sat down for a chat with PocketLint to discuss what the future holds for his company! It's an interesting read and is well worth checking out here!
  • The Android app Ingress has received a huge update with changes which include notifications for "Portal under attack," "Portal neutralized," and "@<codename>" messages amongst many other enhancements!
    Via AndroidCentral.
  • HTC's Asia CEO has left the company too! For more details on the company's exec crisis check out this post here!
    Via CNet.
  • If you didn't pick up a Pebble smartwatch then you might be interested in the latested Kickstarter effort from Agent, which is similar, but more fashion focused! Check out the full details here!
And finally, Samsung's WatchOn app has been updated, but the app has seemingly revealed a bit more information than the company intended with added support for the Galaxy 'S4 Mega, S4 Mini and S4 Active'. There's a couple of new models we haven't heard of before and it'll be interesting to see what they turn out to be!
Via SamMobile.


Saturday, 16 March 2013

Sony update the app for the Smartwatch: Brings new clockfaces and functionality!


   Sony have released an update for their Smartwatch app! The update brings quite a few new features as well as a set of attractive new options for your clock faces! 

   AndroidCommunity are reporting that one of the biggest changes is that Sony has offered up another seven new clock faces for your eyes to enjoy! The idea is that the new faces will further let you personalise the accessory to 'match your style' and what that basically that means more colours and some more designs. 

   The picture embedded below gives you a few ideas as to what the update adds. There's nothing spectacular, but it's great to have more options on the Smartwatch! Talking of options Sony have been working on the way the app works on non-Sony smartphones so hopefully SmartConnect and the SmartWatch apps will work just a little bit more fluidly! Other improvements have been made to the battery level indicator which has always been a little out and Sony have finally added notification previews! The final change is the ability to search by categories in the 'Search for new applications' function.
Image Credit: Keith Myers via AndroidCommunity.
   To get access to these new faces you'll have to update the watch controller app which you have to download from the Play Store!



Tuesday, 15 January 2013

15/01/2013: LG clear up Nexus 4 stock reports, Qualcomm thinks smartwatches are better than AR glasses! Plus much more!

LG reply to the Nexus 4 reports!


   If we had a pound for every time we heard from people tipping us or giving us feedback about the lack of Nexus 4 availability we would be very rich bloggers! But, we don't and we don't have a cure for the availability issues either. Until now Google blamed LG for sporadic stock shipments and now LG has come forward and offered a degree of clarity on the matter. Forgive us for the very poor translation, but this is what LG said:
“Our domestic Pyeongtaek manufacturing plant has been producing the Nexus 4 without a hitch. There is no problem in supplying. [The Nexus 5 rumors] are unfounded. The Nexus 4 from LG is significant in that it’s becoming more successful than the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.”
   So there you have it, LG are manufacturing them as they expect, but the device is just proving to be insanely popular! We tweeted out yesterday that there is stock available on Virgin Mobile in the UK and there are some other outlets, like T-Mobile USA and Phones4U!
Chosun via Slashgear.

Qualcomm does think Google Glass is the way forward: They'll vote for smart watches instead!

   At the moment 'connected devices' is a buzz phrase. People want everything to display your latest emails, texts, IM's, social networks and all the information needs to be in one place. Constantly checking your phone isn't convenient enough for our busy lives so people are trying to come up with the best solution for this. Some think the future is wearable glasses, which is useful if you wear them normally, but Qualcomm have a different opinion.

   Qualcomm CEO, Paul Jacobs, sat down with PocketLint to talk about augmented realities. Jacobs revealed that he actually spent/spends a lot of time working on augmented reality options and he said that if you choose something which is fully immersive, like wearable glasses then you tend to suffer from painful headaches. His exact words were:
 "I spent a lot of time on glasses at one point and the issue for me is that the ones that were very immersive I would get a headache from."
   This would obviously pose a problem because they're designed to work all day and you can't go through your days suffering headaches, people simply will choose not to! So with that in mind Jacobs is:
 "More focused on things like smart watches - always-on display on your wrist - those kinds of ideas as opposed to glass... [That's not to say we won't] support the partners working on glass too, it’s just our focus right now is more on the other stuff."
   So devices like Pebble and Sony's Smartwatch (and dare we say their LiveView would fall into this category too) are what Qualcomm has in mind! We know what he means with this argument, the interactive glasses are very distracting (Zeal's Goggle's are very distracting if you're skiing) and smartwatches do seem to be very useful! What do you think is the future? Let us know in the comments below, but bear in mind that  these sorts of things might pale into insignificance with things like Samsung's flexible displays and Yotaphone's come to prominence!
Via PocketLint.

In other news:
  • The Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean update for the original Galaxy Note is hitting at the moment! The update is live in Poland, Samsung's normal test bed and we expect it will roll out across the continent soon after, assuming there are no hiccups!
    Via GSMArena.
  • Sony will make a PlayStation 4 announcement at E3 in either June “or earlier in May” this year! This news comes from Sony vice president of Home Entertainment, Hiroshi Sakamoto. This would announce the next gen console before Microsoft despite Sony having release their PS3 two years after the launch of the Xbox 360! It seems this time the consoles will be going head to head!
    Via Slashgear.
  • Sony will not be including their infamous Timescape app with the Xperia Z, instead they'll rely on other features like 'Socialife' and the other apps on offer for Android devices!
    Via CNet.
  • LG's Optimus G is currently receiving an update to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean!
    Via Android Community.
  • Android's Google Now app will now give you the option to use virtual boarding passes! Google Now will automatically pull down information like flight number, gate number, seat number departure times and weather in your destination without you having to manually request it! Google will provide virtual boarding passes in the future with select airlines but the feature isn't live at the moment!
    Via Phandroid.
  • In case you haven't heard the UK high street store, HMV, is currently in administration. The firm is no longer accepting gift cards and 4,500 staff will face losing their jobs unless a buyer can be found in the next few days!
  • Dell's share price has rocketed over the last few days after rumours that the company will be privatising itself! Their shares are currently up 15%!
    Via Slashgear!


   And finally, we've got a video demo of Blackberry's upcoming Z10 handset. This will be RIM's full touch device and it should be a relatively popular device if everything is well and good! We now have confirmed specs too! There's a 4.2" screen with a resolution of slightly more than 720p, a 1.5Ghz dual-core A9 processor, 2GB of RAM and 16GB of storage which will be MicroSD expandable! Check out the video below and let us know whether you're excited for BB10!
Via Crackberry.

Saturday, 24 March 2012

Sony Ericsson LiveView!

Sony Ericsson LiveView: In depth review.


   Hi guys, I promised a review would be coming soon and I've had a good 3 or 4 days to get to know the Sony Ericsson LiveView inside out and now we get to find out whether or not my initial impressions, which were quite glowing, remain the same.

    First things first, I must say that I genuinely love my little LiveView; some things haven't changed since the day I bought it. As a pre-notifier of a text it is brilliant; I am a textaholic (not many people annoy Orange so much they complain about the 'significant amount' over the fair usage policy I went, by the way not something I'm proud of) but when you receive a text, when paired with my Samsung Galaxy S2 at least, the LiveView vibrates significantly ahead of my phones' notifier and I can have my phone out ready to read my message because of the LiveView. It is also worth noting that the LiveView makes it socially acceptable to read your messages, or have a cheeky glance at your RSS feeds in public, people don't know that your 'watch' is connected to your phone.

    Which leads me on quite nicely to my second point; above anything this device could simply be a watch, if that is all you need, all you want, then you have a solid watch for £15. It does need charging every day (if you use it heavily) but it's great as just that. But, the device promises so much more, which is the reason why I believe people are disappointed. You have the ability to download and install 'plug-ins' something Sony encourages you to do straight away, if you're the type who delve into the user manual. But, this is the downfall; I have had a play with the Twitter and Facebook readers and they really are quite useless, you can keep up with statuses and tweets but on such a diddy screen you have to scroll down after you have read the first five words, something which becomes quite arduous after a while. It is simply easier to unlock your phone and go to the dedicated app which has considerably more functionality than the simple reader on the LiveView.

   This is where Sony missed the point. The device should not have gone that far; it should display incoming calls and messages as well as functioning as a remote for music control and playback. The other plug-ins offer a less than satisfactory experience. They tackle aspects of your smartphone which don't even need to be on an accessory, the LiveView is an overview device, not a smartphone replacement. It is a nice concept but it just doesn't need to be done and isn't practical on this particular device.

   Here I feel I should pause and just reiterate that I love the LiveView, it is fantastic, it just frustrates me that Sony has tried to push the boundaries and has failed, whereas they could have stuck within them and been hugely successful. Which is why the simplicity of the music controls on the LiveView are spectacularly good. You simply have to hold down the button top right, it will connect to the phone, open the music player and push the same button once more and boom, we have music playback. It just works every single time and the four capacitive buttons have a dedicated task each; left- skip track back, right- skip track forward, up- volume up and down is volume down. So simple, so brilliant and it genuinely wows people. My friends are happy to sit there and watch my phone sitting on a table and me wirelessly controlling the music, it's great. There is also endless fun that can be had simply laying my phone on the kitchen table and then when one of my unsuspecting flatmates sitting next to it, I start a song at full volume next to them, it is hilarious. But, aside from practical jokes, it is just a useful thing to be able to do when you're out and about and you fancy a change from streaming Kiss FM, it removes the step of you retrieving your phone from your pocket to skip that annoying Mika track you forget to delete.

   I do, however, have one major gripe with the device and  a second which is comparably minor. The major gripe is time after time, after time, after time..... the Bluetooth connection will drop when the phone is in your pocket and you will literally have to turn Bluetooth on and off, the LiveView on and off, the nearest lightbulb on and off and close and open the curtains (you get the idea) just to get the LiveView to reconnect, it's a pain and a very large one at that. I literally have tried everything to find a simple solution but I'm not sure one exists. I have noticed that sometimes the disconnections are because the LiveView app has 'Force closed' on my phone and so the app has to be restarted and the LiveView reconnected and everything will be good again, but sometimes it just does not want to work. I have had issues when I had the phone in my right trouser pocket and have been walking around a shop, gone to pick something up off a shelf and the device goes out of range. For some reason this isn't an issue when the phone is on my desk and I pop into my flatmates room, a good five metres away, perhaps it is something to do with the way Bluetooth technology works, all I know is that it's annoying, because you then have the reconnection issues I described earlier. There is no obvious way around this but perhaps Sony could have used the battery on the LiveView to increase the receiver strength, but then I suppose you have to trade battery life for constant connection and I don't know which is best.

   The second issue is the battery indicator. By that I literally mean the little indicator that shows you how long the battery has left and not the battery life. The device will comfortably get you through a day if you use it every ten minutes or so, but if you are very easy on the device and remember to power it off at night(!!!!) then you will get a solid two, three or maybe four days usage. But, the indicator has no idea how much battery the device has left in it, your guess is literally the best guess. If you use it a lot you'll be running out by the end of the say and if you haven't used it much you'll be alright for a few days. The only way to actually know your battery is beginning to run out is when the device shows that it has come off of full battery, then you know it's beginning to run out of juice. It's annoying that it can't just work, but it's by no means a deal breaker, I think it's just a case of using your common sense.

   Plug-ins are another options but for the reasons I've explained earlier I really have no use for them and they seem to become a burden, to me at least.

   The accessories which come with the LiveView also need consideration; inside the box is a noticeably cheap looking wrist strap. Although, despite it's outward appearance it does it's job and you just clip the LiveView into it and the hold is strong and it won't fall out on you. So much so in fact that the only way I have found to get the LiveView out is by pushing my pen-knife into the gap to prise the device loose when it needs charging. The second accessory is a little clip; Sony suggests the idea is to clip it onto your work folder so that you can see notifications as they arrive, but I can't see most people using the device in that way, the wrist strap seems to make a lot more sense. For those of you who are interested, the box also contains a charger, which is a nice, solid and good quality charger actually, none of this here is a USB and a plug, make your own, as well as 2 user manuals/guides.   

   I must admit, had I paid £70 for the device I would be a bit peeved, I would have expected the LiveView to be perfect in every way, but I didn't which is perhaps why I have a much more favourable opinion. £15 for an accessory which genuinely is useful, is fun and is actually surprisingly cool and futuristic is a fair price given the couple of drawbacks I have highlighted above. The thing is if you go into using the device expecting the world to peacefully coexist on your wrist, you have another thing coming and you will be disappointed, but of you simply use it as a watch, message reader and call alert you will be pleasantly surprised. I know now that it's not just a toy which is going back in it's box, I will wear it on it's cheap strap until it doesn't work and if you think you can live with the downsides head to your shopping destination of choice and give it a chance, you might be surprised too.

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