Apple rubber-banding patent ruled valid, snaps back into place

Apple rubber-banding patent ruled valid, snaps back into place

Not so fast, Samsung

Apple's rubber-banding patent that was crucial in its lawsuit against Samsung, but was ruled invalid two months ago, has suddenly snapped back into place at the U.S Patent Office.

That's fitting for this "overscroll bounce patent," as Foss Patents has nicknamed it.

Officially, it's known by the lengthy USPTO name "List scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display," according to the original filing.

Whatever you call it, though, there's no denying that it was the most important component in the Apple-Samsung trial, which at first awarded Apple a $1.05 billion (about UK£668 million, AU$1.09 billion) victory.

Final ruling not so final

Claim 19 in the patent, specifically, found that more than a dozen Samsung devices, like Galaxy S2 and Galaxy Tab 10.1, infringed upon this Apple patent last year.

However, the USPTO rejected all of the claims of the patent soon after, with "final Office action" upholding most of these rejections in April, according to a timeline by Foss Patents.

While Samsung immediately pounced on this early decision two months ago, Apple knew that the "final" nomenclature didn't live up to the purest definition of the word.

To Samsung's benefit, Apple's billion dollar victory was also not final. Earlier this year a judge halved the original settlement and ordered a new retrial.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Apple may have to rely on Samsung for iPad mini 2 Retina display

Apple may have to rely on Samsung for iPad mini 2 Retina display

The iPad mini 2 could come with Samsung-made Retina displays

It's been rumored for months that Apple wants to cease all its business with Samsung, but a new report claims that the Korean company will make displays for the rumored iPad mini 2 with Retina tech.

Samsung supplies displays and chips for various Apple devices, but the two companies have an ongoing legal spat that's been souring relations.

According to a report yesterday on ETNews, the iPhone maker is having a hard time finding a replacement for Samsung, though.

According to the Korean site, Apple can't find another firm that can deliver the goods with the same quality and consistency that Samsung does.

Divorce is a hassle anyway

Apple and Samsung's ongoing battle has long since stopped resembling a lover's tiff, and these days is looking closer to the two companies' own private World War III.

Most recently, Samsung won a partial import ban on some iPhones and iPads, though it's unlikely to affect consumers any time soon.

Around the same time it was revealed that 80 percent of Samsung's chip revenue comes from Apple devices.

So it seems both companies get something out of the relationship - even if it's a loveless marriage.

iPad mini 2 with Retina rumors

Apple's unannounced iPad mini successor will feature a pixel-dense Retina display, according to the latest rumors.

A story this week also claimed that Apple has multiple new iPhone variations in the works, including different sizes and price points.

Despite the difficulties, Apple may be forced to continue relying on Samsung for now, at last until a better partner can be found.

Keep your enemies close and your frenemies closer, right?

  • Even if it uses Samsung for displays, could Apple really drop it for iPhone 6 chips next year?

Source : techradar[dot]com

T-Mobile Moving to “Phase 2″ to its UNcarrier Effort in July

Apparently what we’ve seen so far with T-Mobile’s UNcarrier approach is just the beginning, at least if the latest rumor proves correct. Supposedly two other phases will eventually roll out bring more changes, with phase 2 likely coming sometime around mid-July.

So what changes will phase 2 bring? Apparently there will be some new no-credit check options for those that either have poor credit, no credit or simply wish to avoid having their credit checked for whatever reason.
This doesn’t mean that you’ll qualify for any purchase plans, it just means that you can get in on a Simple Choice plan by buying your device outright. Basically it will be like prepaid – but not.

Supposedly there is also plans to combine their UNcarrier approach with MetroPCS, and is expected to tie in with 15 additional markets that MetroPCS will be launching in.

As for phase 3? We have no clue at the moment.Either way, these supposed phases are merely rumors at the moment, so take them with a grain of salt. What do you think of T-Mobile’s no-contract approach so far, is a real game-changer or more of a gimmick than anything? Let us know what you think!



Source : mobilemag[dot]com

Former Windows Phone boss out once again at Microsoft

Former Windows Phone boss out once again at Microsoft

Microsoft may have a new plan for VP Andy Lees

Microsoft is once again playing executive shuffle, this time with former Windows Phone chief Andy Lees, whose corporate bio mysteriously vanished from the company roster overnight.

AllThingsD reported Thursday that Microsoft Vice-President of Corporate Strategy and Development Andy Lees appears to have stepped down from that position after only seven months at the helm.

Lees, a Microsoft veteran punted from his previous Windows Phone leadership position in 2011, plans a "sabbatical" with his family in the United Kingdom this summer, but will return to a new, as yet unknown, position within the company upon his return.

The departure appears to be confirmed by the removal of Lees' bio from Microsoft's list of Senior Leaders, although the company has yet to issue a public statement on the matter.

Shuffling the deck

Prior to landing the corporate strategy gig, Lees held a more vague role under Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer, with previous tours of duty in worldwide sales and marketing as well as Microsoft's server and tools division.

"I have asked Andy Lees to move to a new role working for me on a time-critical opportunity focused on driving maximum impact in 2012 with Windows Phone and Windows 8," a Ballmer corporate memo explained at the time.

The report notes former Lees lieutenant Marc Brown will now handle corporate development, while Charlie Songhurst remains as head of corporate strategy, who will report to Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood.

The question now is, what kind of role will Andy Lees return to later this year? TechRadar has requested comment from Microsoft and will post an update as details are made available.


Source : techradar[dot]com

iOS 7 is the Frankenstein's monster of the smartphone world

iOS 7 is the Frankenstein's monster of the smartphone world

iPhone: now with Android Inside

I've reviewed dozens of phones and tablets for TechRadar over the years – each time putting them through their paces in the most unbiased, rigorous way possible.

But as well as being a professional, I have a love/hate relationship with tech, and that's what these columns are all about: the passionate howlings of a true fanboy. Tell me why I'm right, wrong or a hopeless idiot in the comments below or by tweeting @techradar or @phillavelle.

Hey Apple fans, what's new? No, seriously: what is new with iOS 7?

In the absence of a new iPhone Cupertino had to give us all something to drool over when it launched iOS 7, rebooting our iPads and iPhones into sparkling new devices, covered in Jony Ive-juice.

Thing is, I've seen it all before – and not because I was invited to Cupertino for a sneak preview. I've been seeing this stuff for years. A bit like The Oracle in the Matrix. And just like that movie, all I had to do was plug into a computer.

The vitriol between Apple and Android fans is at an all-time high, as each defends their own sacred brand against charges of ripping the other off. It's all very tribal, and nobody is going to win that argument because the other side will never entertain the thought that their favoured OS is a knock off.

OK, OK, so, the aesthetics of iOS7 are a pleasant novelty – Ive is famed for his appreciation of simplicity - but the actual bones of the system is all stuff we've seen many times before.

Jailhouse rock

Of course, by we, I mean jailbreakers. For the legion of fans who think multitasking with cards is an Apple creation: it's not. I've been using Aero for a while. SB Settings and Activator have been saving me swipes for years, allowing me to toggle things on and off, and now Apple has deigned to give this functionality to the average user through Control Center.

iOS 7

As for flat icons, there's been no shortage along these lines on Cydia since forever. Difference is, you can have as many variations of the flat icons as you like that way. Not flat enough? Not a problem.

Apple needs to admit that it's just gone in and nabbed all the good ideas from jailbreakers, thrown some translucent sheen on, and pretended that it was all invented in Cupertino.

There's a certain amount of hypocrisy here: Steve Jobs threatened to go thermonuclear on Google because he felt Android was a stolen product.

Yet Apple took the idea of the notification center from Android. And Google nabbed it from the iOS jailbreak community. Are you sensing why I'm so bored of seeing all these things?

And what's this multitasking with cards? That's blatantly lifted from Palm's defunct WebOS. Or maybe it's not classed as stealing if you're picking the pockets of a dead man.

Secret affair

Apple likes you to think that jailbreakers are the scum of the earth, soiling an otherwise untainted product line. But the division appears to be getting weaker. Cupertino's hired (or tried to hire) many a Cydia-loving dev and brought them on board to make its OS better, and never has that been more apparent than in iOS 7.

That's not to say Apple hasn't done a good job, giving them a lick of paint and making them a core part of the OS. But no matter how much decoration you put on them, they're not original ideas.

Jonny Ive is a great designer. But if you think he's invented a lot of what you see on iOS7, you're fooling yourself. That system has more authors than a literary festival.

Some say Apple has run out of innovation. I've certainly lost count of the amount of one-time Apple die-hards I've spoken to who are now jumping (or have already jumped) to the HTC One or Galaxy S4.

But Apple is getting back to what it's good at: not innovating, but taking what's out there, and improving and refining it. The colour vomit of iOS 7 aside, it's actually pretty easy to use (although I can see myself hating the animations that flick between apps in the same way I've grown to loathe them on Windows Phone).

So yes: iOS 7 could be seen as a Frankenstein's monster, taking choice cuts from of a number of platforms and plopping them together. Except this monster would grace the cover of a glossy magazine, rather than being run out of town by the villagers. Who cares if you're new when you can be beautiful?


Source : techradar[dot]com

10 Best Nokia Lumia 620 Apps

10 Best Nokia Lumia 620 Apps

The cheap, chunky and usually quite cheerful Nokia Lumia 620 is one of the more affordable ways to get into the Windows Phone 8 universe, with Nokia and the networks managing to get it into the hands of buyers for around £150 on PAYG SIMs.

Nokia and Microsoft have already done a pretty decent job of pre-loading the Lumia 620 with loads of awesome apps. Nokia's Maps location tool is useful, its integrated Drive satnav software helpful, plus the excellent Nokia Music and the... interesting City Lens, so new smartphone buyers can find some top drawer stuff on the 620 to amuse them for the first few days of loving exploration.

But that's still not enough. Microsoft's app shop is expanding at a massive rate as Windows Phone adoption increases among users and developers alike, with the listings featuring some great, and usually free, ways to make your MS-powered smartphone smarter still.

These are ten of the best apps that help improve your Lumia 620's existence.

UC Browser

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

No offence to Microsoft or its big dream of world domination, but there's still a little bit of shame attached to using Internet Explorer these days, even when it's the new mobile version that comes as part of its Windows Phone OS.

UC Browser

Plus, due to the Lumia 620's rather limited RAM, using IE on the 620 can be a bit of a clunky experience. UC Browser's a little lighter and quicker and, although not flawless, may work better with some of the mobile sites you frequent.

Plus it's stacked with options to play with, like a screen-altering Night Mode, incognito browsing, offline caching of embedded videos and more.

BBC iPlayer

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

After much waiting and literally millions of angry internet comments demanding to know its whereabouts, the BBC has finally pushed out a version of its mobile iPlayer app for Windows Phone users.

The app's only compatible with phones that run Windows Phone 8, meaning owners of older phones are a little bit stuffed, but at least it means Nokia's cheap WP8 model has one very large selling point.

You get 3G and Wi-Fi streaming here, the full seven day archive of shows and background radio playback, but sadly no option to download stuff to watch when offline.

Lomogram

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

Lomogram

Windows Phone is lacking any form of official support from beloved hipster lunch-sharing photography app Instagram, but that's kind of OK as there are heaps and heaps of alternative photo editing and sharing apps available on WP8.

Lomogram's one of the cutest options, letting users choose from loads of lighting effects, filters and frame borders, then chuck the edited results up to all of today's popular social networks.

BT Wi-Fi

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

Make the most of your Lumia 620's Wi-Fi support by instructing your phone to always connect to an active BT Wi-Fi hotspot with this clever little app. It sits on your phone, waiting for you to walk through or sit down within the range of any BT Wi-Fi (previously known as BT Fon) hotspot, then instantly connects on your behalf.

No logging in, no web sites asking for passwords or £5.99 for an hour, just instant internet without fuss. Life = a bit better for BT internet subscribers.

Viber

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

Viber

One of the many data-based voice chat tools out there, Viber's popular thanks to being free to use, cross-platform so you can talk to your smug iPhone and Android using mates.

Plus, like amazingly commonplace rival WhatsApp, it reads through your Lumia's contacts list, finds anyone else who's using the service, and lets you call them direct - cutting your network's calling time limits out of the equation.

KIK Messenger

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

If you'd rather us a more text-based messaging tool, try KIK. It's even closer an experience to text chat darling WhatsApp, letting users share photos, set up group chats and receive visual confirmation that your target has received your message, all presented in a clean and tidy style that's right at home within WP8's slick layout.

And it's free. It's a no-lose situation.

Wikipedia

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

Wikipedia

The enormous encyclopaedia doesn't have an official Windows Phone 8 app, but that's not really an issue as this indie option is absolutely superb.

The developer has incorporated live tile support, voice searching, an offline mode, article revision history viewing and much more into this app, making it the best way to scan for possibly true facts via your Lumia. But be careful.

There are a few crappy "Wikipedia" apps on the WP8 app store and some terrible paid search tools, so check the user feedback before installing.

Netflix

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

One of the blowing-up big names of the mobile world has been available on Windows Phone 8 for some time, offering subscribers of the streaming film service a simple way to user their mobiles as a miniature portable TV.

Obviously it's useless without a subscription, mind, although newcomers signing up today qualify for a one-month free trial, along with unlimited access to the site's archives.

Sleep

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

Sleep

As well as the high-profile, Triple-A monster apps, there are also a fair number of quirky little things to play with on WP8. Sleep describes itself as a "sound mixer" tool, playing "soothing" music to the user under the pretence that it may help him or her get to sleep.

It's more likely to remind you your phone's there on the beside cabinet at 3:45am and encourage you to wake up and check your emails and go on Twitter for a bit, but still: that's also quite useful in itself.

Mixtapes

Download from the Windows Phone Marketplace

For music fans after something a little off piste, there this. Mixtapes is built around user-generated playlists of tracks pulled from YouTube's enormous directory of tunes, letting players stream endless mixes put together by others.

It's basically a personal radio station you compile then share online, or a great way to root out online rarities and collect them for listening yourself without the hassle of downloading/buying/uploading them individually.

Background playback and live tile support make it feel like a posh new WP8 experience, too.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Office Mobile hits iPhone - but no iPad for now

Office Mobile hits iPhone - but no iPad for now

Just doing some important work...

Office for iPhone has hit the App Store, meaning that Office 365-subscribing iPhone users can now create, read and edit documents on the go.

The mobile version of the Windows document editing suite comes with Powerpoint, Excel and Word on board, and offers an experience that Microsoft describes as "similar" to Office Mobile for Windows Phone.

There's no OneNote or Outlook included in the suite though; OneNote is already available as a standalone iPhone app, while Outlook Mobile is exclusive to Windows Phone. You'll just have to make do with Exchange ActiveSync and the existing Mail app, email fans.

Format

It promises that formatting of documents won't get messed up despite the app optimising everything for the smaller screen, and promises built-in sharing (although this seems to amount to not much more than email and SkyDrive access).

No word on whether or not we should expect an imminent release of Office Mobile for iPad, unfortunately - Microsoft recommends that you use Office Web Apps on your iPad for now, or you can scale up the iPhone app if you really, really want to.

What's more, today's Office for iPhone release is only news for US iPhone-owning Office 365 subscribers, although Microsoft promises that the international roll-out should happen occur over four-to-five days.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Have we just zoomed in on the aluminium Nokia EOS?

Have we just zoomed in on the aluminium Nokia EOS?

Taking some cues from the 925?

The Nokia EOS is expected to bring its 41-megapixel sensor to fingers at its July 11 New York event, but for those of you who just can't wait the extra month, we've seen some more pictures that both entice and confuse in equal measure.

These snaps, courtesy of mysterious Chinese sources, give us a few more angular views on the EOS over the images that dropped recently.

However, even more interestingly suggest that Nokia may be going for an aluminium casing in the style of the Lumia 925.

What we'd seen in leaks so far shows a polycarbonate design, but we can't be certain as to whether Nokia has settled on aluminium or if it's just a prototype.

Nokia gets another powerful alloy

Nokia EOS

The photo-focused handset is expected to bring a 41MP camera like that found in the 808 Pureview, strongly hinted at in the Nokia invitation which is headlined "Zoom. Reinvented."

It's also expected to land running Windows Phone. While the camera sticks out a little, the rest of the body looks on par with the Lumia 920's slim figure.

Nokia has only just launched the Lumia 925 and Lumia 928, so it's good to see the Finnish company making good on its promise to bring out the big guns this year with a large range of offerings.

TechRadar will be at the July 11 event in New York to bring you the news as soon as it breaks.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Samsung Galaxy S4 update to install apps to SD hits the UK

Samsung Galaxy S4 update to install apps to SD hits the UK

S4 x 4 = 16GB

The memory-freeing software update for the Samsung Galaxy S4 that allows users to install apps to SD cards is rolling out across the UK.

The update means that all those memory-hungry apps can be safely squirreled away on the external memory rather than taking up valuable bytes of the handset's measly 9GB of available storage.

Technically, the S4 comes in a 16GB size, but as a BBC Watchdog report pointed out, only around 9GB of that is actually available for users to host their stuff on.

Update time

This software update should ease the pain. However, it's worth remembering that not all apps can be installed to SD so you may still need to allow space for some on the phone's internal storage.

The software update also comes with some camera firmware spruce-ups, gives the S4 the ability to record HDR video and a couple of other bits and pieces like a semi-transparent status bar.

We're still waiting patiently for Samsung to confirm that the software is rolling out so we can't tell you exactly when you'll get it - it may well be network dependent too - but here's proof that some users, at least, are getting involved.

samsung galaxy s4 update

Thanks Elliot!


Source : techradar[dot]com

Razer: No plans for a gaming phone

Razer: No plans for a gaming phone

Razer phone - unlikely

Razer may have taken its first foray into tablets with its Edge, but the gaming hardware giant has no plans to head into the phone world.

Speaking to TechRadar at E3, Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan explained that the minimal screen size was a compromise too far.

"One of the common questions I get all the time is are we building a gaming phone," he said

"I really think mobility is important - but to sacrifice quality of gaming, I don't think that's something our customer base is happy with."

Crushed

So what does Tan believe is a good game for a phone? He's a little embarrassed to say...

"I play a lot of mobile games. Embarrassingly enough, I play Candy Crush. I'm going to lose some street cred, but I play some Candy Crush and all that kind of stuff.

"But it's just not as engaging as a World of Warcraft or games like that.

"So I don't think it will ever replace what we're doing, until such a day comes when we're able to have cloud gaming, or stream it across to a smaller device and keep that quality and that level of engagement."


Source : techradar[dot]com

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