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Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 February 2014

Apple releases iOS 7.0.5 for iPhone 5s, 5c

Fixes problems with Chinese cellular networks

Apple is now seeding a rare iPhone-only iOS update, v7.0.5. The release is intended exclusively for the iPhone 5s and 5c, and deals with unspecified "network provisioning" problems on some Chinese models. For people who already have iOS 7.0.4 installed, the download is just 35.4MB when fetched via Software Update.
Normally iOS updates apply universally to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. The unique targeting of v7.0.5 suggests that Chinese iPhone users were encountering a serious problem, forcing Apple to act immediately instead of wrap any fixes into a bigger release.

SOURCE:
Read more: http://www.electronista.com/articles/14/01/29/fixes.problems.with.chinese.cellular.networks/#ixzz2sO0PfJmQ

Monday, 20 January 2014

iPhone 5S review

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 - Full phone specifications - VZ News


Available as:
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9000 with 3G connectivity
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9002 with dual SIM card support
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 N9005 with 3G & LTE connectivity
Also known as Samsung Galaxy Note III

iPhone 6 - Innovative Screen


To watch the full video Click Here

Sunday, 24 November 2013

Microsoft Xbox One 10 coolest features

Microsoft's new gaming console, the Xbox One, went on sale in the UK today at a price of £429.99. The Telegraph takes a look at some of its coolest features.

Friday, 22 November 2013

Heads up Apple, here comes 64-bit Android on Intel

News Source : CNET News
Chip giant demonstrates a 64-bit Android platform running on its latest Atom processors at an investor conference.
Apple's A7 chips will feel some 64-bit heat from Intel and Android next year.
Intel is readying a 64-bit Bay Trail Atom platform for Android, according to Hermann Eul, Intel's general manager, mobile and communications group, speaking at the company's investor day on Thursday.
"It's not only about Windows 64-bit, we've been talking about Android as well," Eul said.
An assistant then proceeded to demo on stage "the first ever showing of a 64-bit kernel running on Bay Trail with Android."
Eul continued. "We have 64-bit Windows shipping next quarter and, needless to say, we'll run fast to make this happen on Android as well."
Intel's Bay Trail processor -- which is currently powering a growing number of tablets and 2-in-1 devices from Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and Lenovo -- today is 64-bit but runs Windows 8.1 in 32-bit mode. That will be rectified next quarter when Bay Trail tablets run in full 64-bit Windows 8.1 mode.
Today, Android on smartphones and tablets is a 32-bit affair.
Apple garnered lots of headlines in September when it unveiled the 64-bit A7 processor -- that chip now powers the iPhone 5S, iPad Air, and iPad Mini Retina.


A slide shown Thursday by Hermann Eul, general manager, mobile and communications group at Intel.
(Credit: Intel)
Going to 64-bit allows a device to address more memory -- more than the 4GB limitation in many cases for 32-bit processors.
But that's not all. A 64-bit platform can allow data-intensive applications to handle large chunks of data more efficiently than 32-bit -- and that can have implications in gaming, for instance.
Intel won't be alone, though, making a run at Apple. A report earlier this month said Samsung will launch a flagship smartphone with a 64-bit CPU in 2014.

Monday, 14 October 2013

A worker checks radiation levels on the window of a bus during a media tour at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture on June 12, 2013


Experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency met Japanese officials Monday as part of a mission to assess clean-up efforts at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant.
The UN atomic agency began the nine-day mission at the request of the Japanese government, as it did in 2011 following a powerful earthquake and tsunami that sparked reactor meltdowns at Fukushima.
The plant's operator has struggled to contain radioactive contamination, admitting in July that highly toxic water from the site may have leaked out to sea.
"The international community and the agency in particular are very interested in following the recovery activities in Japan," Juan Carlos Lentijo, director of the IAEA's nuclear fuel cycle and waste technology division, told Japanese officials at the environment ministry.
Lentijo will lead a 16-member team of experts to tour polluted areas near the stricken Fukushima plant, some 220 kilometres (140 miles) northeast of Tokyo
Lentijo told reporters the team hoped to advise on the clean-up as well as ways of dealing with radioactive waste.
Vice Environment Minister Shinji Inoue told IAEA officials: "We have great expectations that you will provide us with significant advice from international and professional standpoints."
A massive earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 devastated Japan's northeast coast and sparked reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima plant by knocking out its cooling systems.
The plant has continued to leak, with some radioactive water suspected of flowing into the Pacific Ocean.
Tens of thousands of people who were evacuated from the Fukushima region are still unable to return to their homes, with scientists warning some areas near the plant will have to be abandoned forever because of radioactive contamination.
 This article was distributed through the NewsCred Smartwire. Original article © Agence France Presse 

Hackers offered cash, booze to crack iPhone fingerprint security



BOSTON (Reuters) - Hackers are gearing up for Friday's iPhone 5S release with a contest to crack the device's first-ever fingerprint scanner, a high-tech feature that Apple Inc says makes users' data more secure.
A micro venture capital firm joined a group of security researchers to offer more than $13,000 in cash along with bottles of booze, Bitcoin currency, books and other goodies to the first hacker who breaks the device in a contest promoted on the website http://istouchidhackedyet.com/.
Arturas Rosenbacher, founding partner of Chicago's IO Capital, which donated $10,000 to the hacking competition, said that the effort will bring together some of the hacking community's smartest minds to help Apple identify bugs that it may have missed.
"This is to fix a problem before it becomes a problem," he said. "This will make things safer."
Meanwhile, Forbes.com reported that a 36-year-old soldier living in Spain's Canary Islands, Jose Rodriguez, has already uncovered a security vulnerability affecting iOS 7, which Apple began distributing to existing iPhone and iPad customers on Wednesday.
The publication said that it is possible to bypass the lock screen of those devices in seconds to access photos, email, Twitter and other applications. It included a video demonstration on its website and advice on how users could thwart the bypass technique: http://onforb.es/16IU6Y3
Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller told Reuters that the company was preparing a fix that it would deliver as an update to iOS 7 when it was ready. "Apple takes user security very seriously," she said.
Among those getting ready for the hacking contest is David Kennedy, a former U.S. Marine Corps cyber-intelligence analyst who did two tours in Iraq and now runs his own consulting firm, TrustedSec LLC.
"I am just waiting to get my hands on it to figure out how to get around it first," the founder of the DerbyCon hacking conference told the Thomson Reuters Global Markets Forum this week. "I'll be up all night trying."
WHY WORRY?
Security experts worry about the implications of using the module to grant access to sensitive data on the phone and potentially enabling mobile purchases.
The fingerprint scanner on the top-of-the-line iPhone lets users unlock their devices or make purchases on iTunes by simply pressing their finger on the home button. It has been hailed as a major step in popularizing the use of biometrics in personal electronics.
Security engineer Charlie Miller, known in hacking circles for uncovering major bugs in the iPhone as well as circumventing security in Apple's App Store, said it could take fewer than two weeks for Kennedy or some other smart hacker to get around the new lock.
Once they're in, they could gain access to the cornucopia of data typically stored on a user's iPhone and might potentially be able to buy goods from iTunes and Apple's App store.
Miller declined to comment on the hacking contest or potential security vulnerabilities in the fingerprint reader.
To be sure, experts say they know of nothing intrinsically wrong with Apple's fingerprint reader, based on what the company has so far disclosed. Reviewers this week gushed over its ease of use and reliability.
The reader's sapphire crystal sensor is embedded in the phone's home button and reviews the fingerprint as a user touches it to verify his or her identity.
Data used for verification is encrypted and stored in a secure enclave of the phone's A7 processor chip. No information is sent to any remote servers, including Apple's iCloud system.
HD Moore, a hacking expert and chief researcher with the security software maker Rapid7, said such protections mean "the bar is a little bit higher," but that certainly won't discourage hackers from trying to break the new technology.
"This is definitely something to target and something people will want to go after," he said.
NOTHING PERSONAL
Apple shouldn't take hackers' enthusiasm personally.
All major electronics products are subjected to similar scrutiny as new features are rolled out, including devices from Google Inc, Microsoft Corp and Samsung Electronics Co.
For example, in 2012, Charlie Miller led a team that demonstrated techniques for taking over smartphones running Google's Android software through their use of near-field communications, or NFC, a wireless technology used for sharing data or making purchases at point-of-sales terminals.
Bugs are often disclosed by "white hats," hackers who unearth flaws and report them so manufacturers can repair them, preventing criminal exploitation. The hope is the good guys find them before "black hats" uncover them.
White hats have found multiple security issues with iPhones, iPads and in the App store since Apple launched its first smartphone in 2007. They say that scrutiny has helped make it one of the most secure devices on the market today.
Apple executives said at last week's iPhone launch that the new fingerprint reader, dubbed Touch ID, will help make phones far more secure by dint of its ease of use.
About half of all smartphone users don't bother to use current screen-locking technology because of the inconvenience of keying in multiple-digit passwords. Apple is betting users may be far more willing to avail themselves of a solution that requires a single finger-swipe.
"The technology within Touch ID is some of the most advanced hardware and software we put in any device," Dan Riccio, senior vice president of hardware engineering, said at the event.
Kennedy said he needs to examine the new iPhone to figure out how to best attempt an attack.
He said his choices include hacking the software that analyzes the fingerprint data, or physically opening up the phone and connecting it to a custom-built device that would impersonate Apple's fingerprint reader.
He added that it might be possible to lift a user's fingerprint from elsewhere on the device and somehow make a clone of it.
Rich Mogul, an analyst with the security research firm Securosis, said he planned to use it and expects it to be widely adopted despite the fact that hackers are circling.
"Nobody has gotten their hands on it to see what the weaknesses are and how easy it is to crack," Mogul said.
"We'll have to wait to see."
(Editing by Edwin Chan, Andrew Hay, Cynthia Osterman and Kenneth Barry)
 This article was distributed through the NewsCred Smartwire. Original article © Reuters 2013

Samsung to unveil Galaxy Round flexible display phone -- report


Possibly debuting this week, the phone could steal some thunder from LG's allegedly upcoming G Flex smartphone.


Samsung is reportedly set to announce a curved display smartphone known as the Galaxy Round.
The new phone could be unveiled later this week, Korean news site Asiae reported Sunday. AGoogle translation of the story mentions October 10, but it's unclear whether that's the date forecast for the expected unveiling.
The phone would use a plastic display rather than one made of glass. The Asiae report follows a comment made by a Samsung executive in September confirming such a phone.
"We plan to introduce a smartphone with a curved display in South Korea in October," D.J. Lee, Samsung's mobile business head of strategic marketing, said at an event launching the Galaxy Note 3 smartphone, Reuters reported at the time.
Samsung has already filed for a trademark for the Galaxy Round name itself. The filing doesn't reveal anything about the device, but recent reports claim the phone would offer specs similar to those found in Samsung's Galaxy Note 3. A flexible display version of the Note 3 is rumored to be in the works as well.


Samsung's 'Youm flexible display' smartphones...

LG is also gearing up a flexible display smartphone called the G Flex, CNET recently learned, though that phone may not surface until November.
What exactly is a flexible display smartphone? Those of you who envision bending and flexing such smartphones may be disappointed. The phone's body itself is rigid. Rather, the display is curved although stationary. The curve allows the phone to fit more snugly around the contours of your face.
(Via Know Your Mobile)

Lightning powers mobile phone

The FBI has shut down the notorious online marketplace, Silk Road. The website allowed users to buy illegal drugs and other illicit items.
Augmented reality glasses to rival those being developed by Google could launch next year and a team from the University of Southampton has recreated a lightning bolt to show it could charge a mobile phone.
Nokia, which collaborated with the experiment, has warned users not to try this at home.
BBC Click's Spencer Kelly looks at these and other tech news stories.
Watch more clips on the Click website. If you are in the UK you can watch the whole programme on BBC iPlayer.

Bionic limbs will one day sense the grass under prosthetic feet

With the first thought-controlled bionic leg pioneered in Chicago, the next steps for smart prosthetics are refining them for widespread use and tackling a huge hurdle: sensory feedback.


(Credit: Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago )
It sounds like something straight out of science fiction: artificial limbs that not only move, flex, and feel like their flesh counterparts, but also respond directly to one's thoughts and even translate sensory feedback -- the feeling of grass beneath one's feet or the sensation of a limb floating in space -- straight back to the brain.
Thanks to an aggressive push in funding from the US military in an effort to the improve the lives of injured veterans, those advancements are no longer such farfetched dreams. While the idea of "Blade Runner"-level prosthetics is still a far-off fantasy, impressively capable, thought-controlled bionic limbs are now a modern-day reality thanks to pioneering research between the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (RIC), DARPA, and a growing sector of companies developing the next generation of artificial limbs.

Just last month, the RIC announced that its research in bionics has yielded the first thought-controlled robotic leg. The research had already seen its fair share of headlines -- including a climb of 103 flights of stairs on the single prosthetic unit -- but the team led by Dr. Levi Hargrove waited to conclusively publish its findings in the The New England Journal of Medicine. The bionic hardware, which was more than eight years in the making, was coupled with a groundbreaking approach --targeted muscle reinnervation surgery -- that empowers the brain to move parts of the bionic limb with nerves that are rerouted to healthy muscles.
But thought-controlled limbs are only the beginning. With a goal to one day provide lower-cost, sensory-enabled limbs that may use implants to generate even more precise movement, bionics research is on course to fundamentally change the world of prosthetics over the course of the next decade.
TMR: Controlling your ankle with your hamstring 
In 2009, Zac Vawter was in a motorcycle accident that resulted in the amputation of his right leg below the knee. It turns out that, at roughly the same time, the RIC and Northwestern University were developing a procedure that would allow researchers to rewire nerves from damaged muscles to healthy ones, using the still-intact neural impulses to reroute movement.
Called targeted muscle reinnervation, or TMR, the surgery -- first developed in 2009 by doctors Gregory Dumanian and Todd Kuiken -- has worked for bionic hands and elbows, which can userewired nerves placed onto larger muscles like biceps and pectorals to translate contractions in those healthy muscles to wrist and arm movements.
So the now-32-year-old Seattle native volunteered to undergo TMR and become a part of a multiyear research that's backed by $8 million in funding from the US Army and additional financial support from DARPA, another big player in prosthetics that has helped foster cutting-edge bionic arms with its Revolutionizing Prosthetics program and advance the science that enables their movement with its Reliable Neural-Interface Technology program.

World's first thought-controlled bionic leg (pictures) ( More Pictures From CNET.COM )


So how exactly does TMR work with respect to Vawter's condition?
"We take nerves that would have gone down to his ankle and rewire them to his hamstring," said Dr. Annie Simon, a biomedical engineer on Hargrove's team at the RIC.
That means that when Vawter, post surgery, thinks of moving his ankle, the rewired nerves force his hamstring muscle to contract. Over-the-skin electrodes that are placed within the molded plastic that connects the bionic leg to the residual limb pick up on that contraction and translate it, through RIC's algorithms, into precise movement below the knee.
"It learns and performs activities unprecedented for any leg amputee, including seamless transitions between sitting, walking, ascending and descending stairs and ramps, and repositioning the leg while seated," Hargrove said.
Because Vawter's amputation was below the knee, he was left with healthy nerves that made him a perfect candidate for TMR. "If the nerve is healthy, it still carries that information that would have went to the missing joint, even 10 to 20 years post-amputation," explained Simon.
However, because the use of electrodes over the skin is noninvasive, even those with more complicated amputations that have not undergone TMR surgery can use the RIC's bionic leg. "If you have the surgery you can control the ankle a little bit better," Simon said, stressing that someone who has undergone TMR will have a few more sensors and a more precise nerve network to work with.
Hargrove and his team at the RIC think their bionic leg will available for home trials in three to five years. Currently, the RIC has only one device -- developed over an eight-year period by Vanderbilt University -- capable of being controlled with one's thoughts, and Vawter has yet to push its boundaries such as using it in the home.
"If there is a difference between what he intended to do and what the prosthesis does, we want it to just be the equivalent of, say, stubbing your toe," said Simon. Vanderbilt and prosthetic manufacturer Freedom Innovations are currently working on a second iteration of the leg that will near consumer-level quality and robustness.
Still, Vawter -- who uses a regular mechanical prosthetic for everyday use -- is optimistic. "For the first time since my injury, the bionic leg allows me to seamlessly walk up and down stairs and even reposition the prosthetic by thinking about the movement I want to perform. This is a huge milestone for me and for all leg amputees," he said in the RIC press release.
Sensory feedback: Technically possible, but still a long way off 
"I think you'll see bionic legs become very popular within 10 years," Hargrove said. But, he added, "the way that they're controlled will be variable."
Hargrove points out that there are already a number of high-tech prosthetics on the market, ones that forgo nerve rewiring and rely on simple electrodes and internal motors. For instance, the Bebionic3 is a prosthetic arm that comes with a multitude of grip patterns and the ability to move independent fingers with such precision that it's been called the "Terminator arm."

Still, thought-driven nerve control with the help of TMR is the ideal future for artificial limbs if science is to realistically replicate the functionality of a human hand or leg. To go even further, Hargrove suggests, one must imagine the use of implanted electrodes that could enable sensory feedback and employ substantially more natural neural interfacing.
"What we're not doing as well at yet is providing feedback to users about where the arm or leg is in space or the type of ground that they're on," he said, adding that sensory feedback is a growing area of research that still has a long path ahead to clinical use. "In order to get these advancements, we would need cutting-edge sensors that could perhaps be implanted in the body that could directly interface with the nerve."
Despite the breadth of the remaining ground to cover, Hargrove -- very much like the test subject that wears his team's bionic leg -- is ready for the future. "They'll continue to work better and better and better," he said.
"We hope we're laying the foundation here."




Unu Plays 3 Ways to the Android Gaming Crowd

By Peter Suciu
TechNewsWorld 
10/12/13 7:00 AM PT

It remains to be seen whether any microconsole-type device can get much traction in the near term, said Lewis Ward, IDC's research manager for gaming. "Not only are there several other microconsoles out there competing for much the same market, but with the PS4 and Xbox One waiting in the wings, I think a lot of the marketing oxygen around games will be sucked up by Sony and Microsoft."

The Android gaming market is becoming increasingly crowded, but on Thursday Sunflex announced a fresh contender: the Unu, a combination console, tablet and home entertainment device that will arrive at retail next month.
Sunflex Unu
The Unu offers the promise of bringing virtually any game from Google Play to the living room TV via a TV-connected dock. The tablet device can also be used independently, offering living room as well as mobile gaming options.
"We built a custom smart TV user interface and two different controllers to match up with every entertainment experience found on the Google Play store," said Nicki Repenning, Sunflex's vice president of business development. "That's how Unu was born."
Unu Times Two
The Unu will be available in two versions, both providing full access to more than one million games and apps from the Google Play store. The Unu Media Edition will ship with a TV docking station and an air mouse controller with keyboard for US$199.99, while the "fully loaded" Unu Gaming Edition will provide players with an advanced game controller that supports tens of thousands of video games for $249.99.

The tablet device features a 7-inch full HD 1080p display and runs on Android 4.2; docked to a TV, it transforms the set into a smart TV. The Unu is powered by a 1.6GHz quad-core processor and connects via Bluetooth to an air mouse, the back side of which also includes a keyboard for browsing the Web, typing emails and texting.
Unu is now accepting preorders through GameStop, which lists the release date as Oct. 29, and Newegg, which notes a Nov. 8 release day.
A Sunflex spokesperson was not immediately available to provide further details.

Competition in the Marketplace

Sunflex is bringing out its system in a very competitive marketplace, and next month will see the release of big-name next-generation video game hardware from Microsoft -- with the Xbox One -- and Sony, which will bring out its PlayStation 4.
The market for Android devices has also increased with the release of the Green Throttle in April, Ouya in June, Nvidia Shield in July, GameStick in September and with Mad Catz M.O.J.O. scheduled for December.
"I'm skeptical that any microconsole-type device like Unu will get a lot of traction in the near term," Lewis Ward, IDC's research manager for gaming, told TechNewsWorld. "Not only are there several other microconsoles out there competing for much the same market, but with the PS4 and Xbox One waiting in the wings, I think a lot of the marketing oxygen around games will be sucked up by Sony and Microsoft in the U.S. in particular for the next six months."
Then, too, there's the fact that the ability to run on Google's relatively open Android platform makes for a "lower barrier of entry right now," noted independent video game industry analystBilly Pidgeon. "This is an interesting play, as they are going to a mid-priced option."

Diminishing Over Time

The Unu "could be squeezed when the new versions of Google TV or Apple TV arrive," Pidgeon told TechNewsWorld. "Unu has a cool interface that could make it stand out for a time, but the conversation to smart TV features that this device offers is only going to diminish as more smart TVs come out."

"The Unu is distinct in that one of the two bundles ships with a unique, pre-paired controller and docking station, and the company has a stronger European orientation," said Ward. "But until I see competing products/services like GameStick or Ouya break trough and make significant inroads from a sales perspective, I'll remain equally skeptical on the prospects for Unu."
The Unu's pricing may not help it, either.
"It is $50 less than the Nvidia Shield or a PlayStation 4, and it really can't even be a replacement for the PS3 at this point," said Pidgeon. "This is more for the consumer who isn't in that hardcore gaming arena."
At the same time, "that's the problem with gaming-centric tablets, because other things can come in that market a lot cheaper," he added. "That gaming-centric consumer might not be satisfied with this device."

Saturday, 12 October 2013

iPhone 6 release date: When will the iPhone 6 be launched?

Here's where we look as some possible iPhone 6 release dates and new features


The iPhone 5S is upon us so we're naturally wondering when the iPhone 6 will come out. Here's all you need to know about the rumoured iPhone 6 release date, specs and new features. See also: iPhone 5C vs iPhone 5 comparison review.
For the last iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c rumour round-up (see page 2) we correctly reported on - and predicted - the addition of the colourful iPhone 5c, the fact that the iPhone 5s would come with a fingerprint scanner, dual flash (true tone), improved battery, we even brought you leaked images of the iPhone 5c new cases long before Apple wanted you to see them. What we're trying to say here – other than blatantly boasting – is that our release date and rumour round-up articles tend to get a lot of things right. Take a look at: The best phone you can buy in 2013?

iPhone 6 release date 2014

History repeats itself people, so guess what? That's exactly where we are going to look for a first clue as the when we might see the iPhone 6.

Previous iPhone release dates:

iPhone 1st gen June, 2007
iPhone 3G July, 2008
iPhone 3GS June, 2009
iPhone 4 June, 2010
iPhone 4s October, 2011
iPhone 5 September, 2012
iPhone 5s/5c September, 2013
While the history books suggest that there will be an new iPhone 6 release date around September/October 2014, we have a gut feeling that Apple might – just might – shake things up a little bit and launch an iPhone 6 earlier than expected, just like it did with the iPad 4, which was launched just eight months after the iPad 3 (previous iPads were release 11-12 months apart). But for the record, the smart money goes on an iPhone 6 release date of September/October 2014.
iPhone 6 release date

5 features Apple could/should add to the iPhone 6

Rumours for the iPhone 6's specs are pretty thin on the ground right now - in fact, we can't find any of note yet - so instead we thought we'd bring you five areas where Apple has deliberately distanced its iPhones from the rest of the high-end smartphone market.
iPhone 6: NFC
The mobile world is crying out for the iPhone to join the NFC movement and give contactless payment on smartphones the boost that both NFC and iPhone need.
iPhone 6: Bigger screen
Is it time for an Apple iPhablet? A 5/6-inch and above screen could be just what Apple has up it's sleeve for the next iPhone. Apple already has two different sized smartphones and tablets and has dodged the fragmentation bullet masterfully so far. An iPhablet with bespoke Apple apps would be a force to reckon with in the business world.
The latest rumour suggests that the iPhone 6 will feature a 5in screen - that's an inch bigger than it is now. The news comes via Apple Insider which cites Brian White of Cantor Fitzgerald who said: "Given today's meeting, we are confident that a larger iPhone (approximately five inches) will become a reality in 2014,"
iPhone 6: Expandable storage
This is a contentious issue, because Apple have both a very successful pricing structure based on storage options and also an ever developing iCloud. But expandable storage is still the most popular way and unrestricting way that the majority of people would chose to expand the storage capabilities of their smartphones. An iSD card and slot would be a great way for Apple to tackle this current flaw of the iPhone. It almost definitely won't happen though.
iPhone 6: Wireless Charging
This is almost too Apple, it's almost shocking it hasn't been included yet. Apple's big rival,Samsung, already has the feature and other smartphones are sure to catch up soon also.
iPhone 6: Flexible screen
A flexible screen, that's crazy talk! Apparently not. Those chaps over at Samsung are already making noises suggesting that there will be a smartphone with a flexible smartphone coming out in 2014. If it's a hit, then it won't be long till Apple joins the party. God knows enough people have smashed their existing iPhone screens.
Follow @davidcourt86 and on Twitter and add David Court to your Google+
Go to the next page to see our 2013 iPhone 5s/iPhone relase date round-up.

Target to trim price of iPhone 5C to $50

Customers can slash an additional 5 percent off the price tag by using a Target REDcard.



Starting Sunday, Target buyers can pick up the iPhone 5C for $50.
The retailer's new 5C price presents a savings of $30 off the former $80 price. The new price is good at Target Mobile centers across more than 1,500 Target stores in the US and requires the usual two-year contract with the carrier of your choice.

Consumers will also find discounted deals at other retailers. 
Walmart offers the 5C for $45while Radio Shack rewards 5C buyers with a $50 gift card.Customers equipped with a Target RED cardcan reduce the price an additional 5 percent. Target also offers an electronics trade-in program that doles out gift cards in exchange for used phones, tablets, laptops, cameras, and other gear.

LG G2 Smartphone

Featuring an intuitive rear-key placement and a 2.26 GHz Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ 800 Quad-Core Processor. LG G2—our most advanced smartphone yet. 

With LG, it's all possible.

Available as:
LG G2 D802 for UK
LG G2 D802TA for Australia
LG G2 D803 for Canada

G2 is an experience-driven, dynamic smartphone intended to meet your individual needs. With superior hardware and an impressive instinctive design, immerse yourself with it's unique and intuitive suite of contextual user experience features. 

From the socially connected youth who will use it for its fast-paced performance and sharing abilities, to family-oriented individuals who will enjoy the advanced camera and guest mode function—G2 is the phone for them all.

GENERAL2G NetworkGSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G NetworkHSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100
4G NetworkLTE 900 / 1800 / 2100 / 2600 / 850
SIMMicro-SIM
Announced2013, August
StatusAvailable. Released 2013, September
BODYDimensions138.5 x 70.9 x 8.9 mm (5.45 x 2.79 x 0.35 in)
Weight143 g (5.04 oz)
DISPLAYTypeTrue HD-IPS + LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size1080 x 1920 pixels, 5.2 inches (~424 ppi pixel density)
MultitouchYes
ProtectionCorning Gorilla Glass 2
SOUNDAlert typesVibration, MP3, WAV ringtones
LoudspeakerYes
3.5mm jackYes
 - Dolby mobile sound enhancement
MEMORYCard slotNo
Internal16/32 GB, 2 GB RAM
DATAGPRSClass 12 (4+1/3+2/2+3/1+4 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
EDGEClass 12
SpeedHSDPA, 42 Mbps; HSUPA, 21 Mbps; LTE, Cat4, 50 Mbps UL, 150 Mbps DL
WLANWi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, dual-band, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, Wi-Fi hotspot
BluetoothYes, v4.0 with A2DP, LE
NFCYes
Infrared portYes
USBYes, microUSB v2.0 (SlimPort), USB On-the-go, USB Host
CAMERAPrimary13 MP, autofocus, LED flash, check quality
FeaturesSimultaneous video and image recording, geo-tagging, face detection, optical image stabilization, HDR
VideoYes, 1080p@60fps, HDR, stereo sound rec., video stabilization, check quality
SecondaryYes, 2.1 MP, 1080p@30fps
FEATURESOSAndroid OS, v4.2.2 (Jelly Bean)
ChipsetQualcomm MSM8974 Snapdragon 800
CPUQuad-core 2.26 GHz Krait 400
GPUAdreno 330
SensorsAccelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
MessagingSMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS
BrowserHTML5
RadioStereo FM radio with RDS
GPSYes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS
JavaYes, via Java MIDP emulator
ColorsBlack, White
 - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- SNS applications
- MP4/DviX/XviD/H.264/H.263/WMV player
- MP3/WAV/FLAC/eAAC+/AC3/WMA player
- Photo viewer/editor
- Document viewer
- Organizer
- Voice memo/dial/commands
- Predictive text input
BATTERY Non-removable Li-Po 3000 mAh battery
Stand-byUp to 790 h (2G) / Up to 900 h (3G)
Talk timeUp to 16 h 30 min (2G) / Up to 17 h 30 min (3G)
MISCSAR US0.50 W/kg (head)     0.69 W/kg (body)    
SAR EU0.41 W/kg (head)     0.47 W/kg (body)    


TESTSDisplayContrast ratio: 1495:1 (nominal) / 1.976:1 (sunlight)
LoudspeakerVoice 65dB / Noise 62dB / Ring 66dB
Audio qualityNoise -91.9dB / Crosstalk -91.3dB
CameraPhoto / Video
Battery lifeEndurance rating 62h
 

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