Samsung Q1 2013 smartphone sales could be out of this galaxy

Samsung Q1 2013 smartphone sales could be out of this galaxy

The Samsung Galaxy S4 should give Samsung more to boast about next quarter too

Samsung is estimated to have another record-breaking quarter thanks to its smartphone sales during the first three months of 2013.

Normally, impressive sales wouldn't be all-too-surprising for the world's No. 1 smartphone manufacturer.

However, the great feat here is that Samsung managed to top its high-sales Q4 2012 with even more impressive numbers in the low-demand season of Q1 2013.

Breaking down the sales figures, Samsung is expected to have moved 25 million smartphones each month of this year.

With those kind of sales, the South Korean company will exceed 70 million units sold in Q 2013, according to the Yonhap News Agency citing Hong Kong's Counterpoint Research.

Samsung smartphone market share rises

Another boost to Samsung, as indicated by the report, is that it has taken control of 35 percent of the smartphone market share in the first two months of 2013.

Previously, the smartphone leader accounted for 32 percent, going by fourth quarter 2012 statistics.

Samsung's 3 percent increase in the smartphone market share hasn't been at the expense of Apple and LG Electronics, though, said the report.

Apple went from 17 percent to 21 percent, and LG increased its market share by a fraction, from 4 percent to 4.3 percent.

Chinese manufacturers ZTE and Huawei are sitting just ahead of LG, controlling 4.6 percent and 4.4 percent of the smartphone market, respectively.

Galaxy 4 sales to help

Samsung, keeping its record-breaking sales up in a historically negative couple of months, should be able to continue the sales trend in Q2 2013.

That's when the highly anticipated Samsung Galaxy S4 goes on sale throughout the world.

U.K. retailers are listing the unlocked Galaxy S4 at £529.98 ($805, AU$773) with an April 26 release date.

In the U.S., AT&T announced Galaxy S4's pricing and pre-order date as $249.99 (£165, AU$240) with a two-year agreement and April 16 release date.

If this new Samsung smartphone sells as well as the Galaxy S3, then the manufacturer could be in for more than one record-breaking quarter throught the year.


Source : techradar[dot]com

BlackBerry Q10 hits O2's 'coming soon' page, promising a May release

BlackBerry Q10 hits O2's 'coming soon' page, promising a May release

Spring is in the air for BlackBerry

BlackBerry traditionalists, who turned their noses up at the all-touchscreen Z10 smartphone, will be able to grab the Bold-alike Q10 from O2 in May, the network has confirmed.

The handset which is the first running BB10 to offer a physical keyboard arrived on O2's 'coming soon' page on Thursday, promising an arrival sometime in may, but offered no concrete on-sale date.

BlackBerry, which has been focusing solely on marketing the Z10 since both phones were announced back in January, is also yet to confirm an official release date for the handset in the UK.

Last month, the company announced that the Q10 would begin rolling out in global markets from April, while retailer Phones-Unlocked.com recently began offering a SIM-free handset for delivery on April 26.

BlackBerry bouncing back

BlackBerry fans wishing to snap up the handset as soon as it becomes available can be "kept in the loop" by registering their interest on the O2 site.

The BlackBerry Q10 boasts a 3.1-inch Super AMOLED HD touchscreen, sitting above the full qwerty keyboard.

It's also 4G ready, has built-in NFC, an 8-megapixel camera, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage and a 2100mAh battery.

Earlier on Thursday, BlackBerry announced that the Z10 had already shifted 1 million units, helping the struggling company to a surprise profitable quarter. Can the Q10 help the surge to bring the good times back to Waterloo?


Source : techradar[dot]com

Windows Phone has an app problem, but don't tell that to Microsoft

Windows Phone has an app problem, but don't tell that to Microsoft

135,000 apps and games and counting

Since its launch in October 2012, Windows Phone 8 has been a question mark in the mobile OS world. Microsoft still trails Android and iOS significantly in mobile system market share, and stats show it's behind even BlackBerry.

But there are signs of hope for Microsoft's mobile ambitions - this week the company announced that Windows Phones outsold iPhones in seven countries during the fourth quarter of 2012. Granted, those nations included India, South Africa and Russia and not major markets like the U.S., but still, sales are sales.

Aside from the lag time in boosting numbers following the release of a whole new OS, a lack of competitive apps is no doubt holding Windows Phone back. Whereas Apple has 689,000 apps for the iPhone, the Windows Phone Store owns around 135,000 apps and games. There's still no Instagram, and the Store finally picked up Temple Run Wednesday, though, as Wired noted, not the up-to-date Temple Run 2 or Temple Run: Oz titles.

Curious about Windows Phone plan for success, we sat down with Casey McGee, senior marketing manager at Microsoft, and Larry Lieberman, senior product manager, Windows Phone developer program, at GDC this week to get a read on the OS, what it's done right and how it plans to get where it wants to go.

Dev first approach

Both made much of Microsoft's developer-focused approach to games - we were at a game dev conference, after all - and noted that by allowing game devs to code natively while also giving them middleware like Unity and Marmalade to work with has fostered a robust creation environment.

"Larry and I are a little bit biased because of what we do for a living, but to us it really looks like we're the only ones that created a product with developers in mind," McGee said.

"I don't think anybody took the approach we did where we started over between Windows Mobile and Windows Phone and from day one we said, 'We need to create an amazing developer experience.'"

Developer interest accelerated with Windows Phone 8 as the platform became more open, the pair said. An internal promotion system has also translated to better app sales. While devs are happy making cash off their products, Lieberman said customers are benefiting from the dev-based approach too.

"The No. 1 guidance for Windows Phone since the very beginning has been to create an outstanding end-user experience," he said. "And apps are part of that outstanding user experience.

"We had to bring our developer expertise to the table in order to create that ecosystem that generates those apps, that generates that innovation that people expect and need because it's that long tail, right?

"On other platforms, an app gets installed and it's just an icon somewhere," Lieberman continued. "Most apps get installed and never get used again on other platforms. What we're trying to do is expose apps in contextually relevant ways."

He pointed to Lenses as a prime example of this contextual relevance - users can click on the Lens button to access apps that aren't only readily accessible, they make sense for what users want to use and when.

Clicking Lenses will take users to a set of apps that leverage a Windows Phone 8 handset's camera viewfinder, plus offer a path to the market place for more viewfinder-friendly apps.

It's not a two OS world

Lieberman and McGee aren't blind to the reality of the mobile OS hierarchy - "We understand the reality of the world today," Lieberman acknowledged - but both believe Windows Phone has a better-than-average chance to stake out a healthy place in the mobile ecosystem.

"We have said that our stated goal is to create a vibrant, differentiated third ecosystem in and of itself," McGee said. "And by that we mean something that is self-sustaining, something that is different from what is out there today.

"We went into a market where there [were] two very different ecosystems. You see what Apple is doing, you see what Google is doing. There are very different approaches, and we didn't think that either was quite right. We saw an opportunity for a third, and that's what we've done."

Market share is one indicator of success, he continued, but for Microsoft the hope seems to be generating a robust ecosystem, not claiming the top spot.

"Are you growing in more countries in sales? Are you growing the number of quality apps that people are looking for? Are you increasing customer satisfaction? Are you getting more partnerships, more innovation?" McGee asked. "All of those things are happening for Windows Phone."

Microsoft isn't content to play third fiddle, mind you, but Lieberman admitted the system has some catching up to do even if it is providing a differentiated OS option.

"What we've done is delivered something very different from what other folks have," he said. "We have a whole differentiated offering that gives people an interaction model that they can't get on any other platform."

Personalizing is key to the Windows Phone plot, he explained, as is the ability to access information users want faster than on other platforms.

"By far we're the most personal phone."

For all its plusses, there is still an glaring line drawn by OSes that have come before.

"From a time-based perspective, we launched our phone in 2010 and competitors had really shifted the paradigm around 2007, so there's a time delta there," Lieberman continued.

"[However], I think we have clearly defined ourselves as a third player in the ecosystem right now."

Never 100%

Pandora launched for Windows Phone 8 last week, fulfilling a promise made by Microsoft to bring the music app to life back in October.

Getting the app is a score for the platform, and it's able to take advantage of the filter features of Kids Corner to keep objectionable content out of youngsters' ears, but the absence of a major app like Instagram isn't helping Microsoft much.

Though he avoided specifics, McGee hinted that it and other popular applications could one day find themselves on Windows Phone.

"It's a work in progress," he said. "We're adding hundreds of titles every day. We find the majority of Windows Phone customers are buying the apps they're looking for, and they've gotten a great experience on Windows Phone.

"There are additional apps that we would love to add, and we're talking with a lot of folks."

Microsoft has a decent cache of exclusive content, he added, giving Windows Phone users experiences completely unique to the OS. And of course, nobody's perfect.

"At this point we feel that we've got just over 90 percent of the apps that people look for on both competing platforms," McGee said. "Those that we don't have, we've got our eye on. We'd love to bring those over as quickly as we can.

"But nobody has 100 percent of anybody. Nobody has every app that we've got. Apple doesn't have all the apps that Google has and vice versa. So it's important to calibrate for what's right for the platform.

"But taken as a whole, we feel we've got a good percentage of the sigfnificnat apps on other platforms as well as apps that behave better and differently on Windows Phone that you can't get anywhere else."


Source : techradar[dot]com

Samsung Galaxy S4 Confirmed for Sprint and MetroPCS?

Samsung Galaxy S4


Nearly every major carrier across the country seems to be picking up some version of Samsung’s hottest new flagship device, and both Sprint and MetroPCS do not appear to be any exceptions. Versions of the new Samsung Galaxy S4 for Sprint and MetroPCS have showed up in the FCC filings.

The SPH-L720 bound for Sprint and the SCH-R970 enroute to MetroPCS both come equipped with the usual slate of compatible radios, including CDMA and EV-DO, as well as 4G LTE. However, there are some differences between the two. The Sprint model gains HSPA 3G for world roaming compatibility, whereas the MetroPCS model expands its LTE to quad-band support. This is presumably meant to support other US carriers like US Cellular.

With the Galaxy S4 launch just around the corner, it’s curious that we would see the MetroPCS and Sprint versions before the versions destined to even heavier hitters like T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon. They’re bound to be coming, of course.



Source : mobilemag[dot]com

Samsung Building an Arsenal of Patents

Samsung

A new report just released shows that mobile patents make up 25% of all patents registered in 2012, and guess who has the largest share? That’s right Korea’s very own Samsung.

The Korean tech giant and current ‘winner’ at all things Android, has been heavily stocking up on mobile based patents during 2012 in the hopes to avoid lawsuit trouble, should they have to do battle in court again in the future. Samsung now apparently has more mobile patents than both Nokia and Microsoft, two companies who started stocking up way back in the mid 90′s. 

What do you think of this whole ‘patent war’ culture that has become so big in the last couple decades? Are you sick all of these companies grabbing up patents and then trying to sue one another or is it just the way the business world has to work?



Source : mobilemag[dot]com

Sony Xperia Z versus Samsung Galaxy S4

When the Sony Xperia Z was officially unveiled, most of us in the tech community were pleasantly surprised. Not only did the Z have exceptional build quality, it actually seemed to get quite a few things right in the hardware department as well.

This sparked tons of articles on the net asking things like “Is Sony making a comeback”, and so forth. The Sony Xperia Z is an attractive handset with some reasonably decent specs, but how does it compare to the de facto Android standard, the Samsung Galaxy line?

When it hit, the Xperia Z might have been able to outdo the Samsung Galaxy S3 without a hitch, but the S4 seems to be a whole new ballpark. Let’s take a look at how the two handsets compare on paper first:

As you can see, at first glance, the Galaxy S4 beats out the Xperia Z in just about every way. That said, a phone isn’t good just because of ‘on-paper’ specs.

Build Quality and Design

While I like both Samsung and Sony, it is hard for even the most hardcore Samsung fan to deny that the plastic-bodied design of the Samsung Galaxy S4 is a bit too much like the GS3 and not nearly as ‘premium’ looking as other high-end handsets, the Sony Xperia Z included.

Both phones are about the same size and weight (give or take a little), but the designs of the two flagships are clearly night and day.

The Galaxy S4 has rounded corners, a hardware button, two capacitive buttions and a polycarbonate backing. In comparison, the Xperia Z has a bit more of a boxy design, though it does still have rounded edges. It also features glass on the back.

Personally, I think that there is something more ‘premium’ about the way the Sony Xperia Z presents itself, but it comes down to taste. Some of our readers are going to prefer the outer-look of the S4, others will prefer the XZ.

On the build quality front, you do have to give the Xperia Z some extra props though for having a dustproof and water-resistant design, which allows it to be submerged for up to 30 minutes in water without any adverse effects.

Display

The Samsung Galaxy S4 and Sony Xperia Z both have 1920×1080 displays with 441ppi ratios. The big difference between them is that the S4 has a 5-inch Super AMOLED display, the Sony Xperia Z has a 5-inch TFT display.

Honestly, both displays seem to provide great image quality, making it hard to really consider one or the other better in this regard.

Cameras

Samsung and Sony both put very similar cameras into their devices, with Sammy’s front camera being 13MP, Sony’s being 13.1MP. The back cam on the Sony is a 2.1MP, the back cam on the Samsung is a 2MP.

Of course there is always more to the story than just what the MP rating says. Until more comparisons of the pictures between the two devices show up on the net – it’s hard to say which is really the better of the two. Traditionally? Sony usually has better cameras, but again, we can’t say for sure at this point.

Other Hardware

Now it’s the Samsung Galaxy S4′s time to shine. The phone features a Exynos 5 Octa SoC (international) you get the power of four high-speed A16 cores, alongside four high-efficiency A7 cores. There is also a three-core PowerVR GPU. In the North American version, the Galaxy S4 has a Snapdragon 600.

Regardless of which version of the Samsung Galaxy S4 you pit against the Sony Xperia Z, the S4 is probably going to win without any trouble. While the Xperia Z’s Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro isn’t a bad chip by any means – the mobile tech world moves quickly and the S4 Pro certainly isn’t the leader of the pack anymore.

Additionally Samsung has a lot of special hardware features like an IR blaster that allows you to use your phone as a remote. Bottom-line, the Sony Xperia Z is a solid phone in the hardware department, but the Samsung Galaxy S4 redefines the definition of excellence thanks to its cutting edge specs.

The Battery

The Sony Xperia Z packs a 2330 mAh battery, the Galaxy S4 has an even bigger battery at 2600 mAh. The life between the two devices should actually be rather similar, but the Samsung really wins here in one regard: it can be removed.

That means you can keep spare batteries around if you are going to be away from an outlet for an extended period of time.

Android

Sony’s Xperia Z comes with Android 4.1 and uses Sony’s custom overlay on top. The interface is tightly integrated with Sony media services and is a capable enough build.

That said, Samsung wins here. Not everyone loves the TouchWiz interface, but with Android 4.2 and TONS of custom software features – what’s not to like? From AirView to Smart Scroll. Samsung Knox to Group Play, Samsung has you covered with tons of special features added to their custom Android Jelly Bean build.

Conclusion

I’m going to use the easy out here first: “Both phones have a lot to offer in different ways, it really is up to your own personal tastes”.

Expanding that: If you really care most about cutting-edge hardware on the inside, but don’t really give a damn about the premium outer-look, the Galaxy S4 is the best choice. Heck, some of you might even prefer the Galaxy S4 look, especially if you are a Samsung fan.

For those that want a more durable build with dustproof/waterproof capabilites and a more stylish outer-appearance, the Sony Xperia Z is going to satisfy, at least as long as you are okay with your flagship device having the not-so-new S4 Pro over the Snapdragon 600 or other ‘newer’ chips.



Source : mobilemag[dot]com

BlackBerry may be back in black, but it's shed a chunk followers

BlackBerry may be back in black, but it's shed a chunk followers

Back in Black(Berry)

BlackBerry looks like it's managed to finally turn its ship around as the Canadian firm returns to profitability, but it's come at a cost.

According to the firm's financial results for the fourth quarter (Dec-Mar) it has seen revenue fall 2 per cent on the previous quarter and 36 per cent year-on-year, although the dramatic cost cutting measures which have been brought in has seen BlackBerry turn a profit.

The results also note that BlackBerry subscribers now stand at 76 million, which means the firm has lost customers as it was apparently nearing the 80 million mark towards the back end of September 2012.

Handset question marks

During the fourth quarter BlackBerry managed to ship 6 million smartphones, of which 1 million were handsets running the firm's new BlackBerry 10 software.

BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins claimed demand has been greater for the flagship BlackBerry Z10 than for any of its previous handsets, but it's worth remembering that shipping isn't the same as sales, so the actual number of BB10 handsets in people's hands could be much lower than that 1 million mark.

And spare a thought for the BlackBerry PlayBook. It's still bumbling along and a whole 370,000 were shipped during Q4 - although it remains to be seen if they are still sitting in warehouses.

Lazaridis Leaves

As part of the earnings announcements it was also noted that co-founder and former CEO Mike Lazaridis will leave BlackBerry on May 1, relinquishing his position as vice-chairman to focus on a new venture.

While Lazaridis may no longer be in charge, his decision to leave will prompt some to assume he's jumping off a sinking ship and possibly looking to distance himself before things get even worse - although there's been absolutely no mention of that from Lazaridis himself.


Source : techradar[dot]com

iPhone 5S release date, news and rumours

iPhone 5S release date, news and rumours

Could the 5S be just around the corner?

The iPhone 5 may only be around six months old, but we're already hearing information about a successor. In keeping with Apple's naming convention this should end up being called the iPhone 5S.

The early arrival of the iPad 4 and the iPad mini - just eight months after the release of the iPad 3 in March - has meant that Apple still has the ability to surprise and we could well see an iPhone 5S appear earlier than expected.

Nevertheless, it's more likely that the iPhone 5S will hit stores in the latter part of 2013, following the trend set by the iPhone 5 and 4S. It's even possible that Apple will skip the iPhone 5S and hop right on to the iPhone 6, though there is little suggestion that this would be the case.

And, as for the software, we're expecting that to be revised too. Some developers contacted The Next Web in early January to say they had seen a new iPhone6.1 identifer in logs - a device running iOS 7.

Apple's past 'S' models have featured the same shell as the core model, though with different features and slightly different tech specs.

The iPhone 5S isn't expected to differentiate itself from the iPhone 5 too drastically, though a better camera and slightly faster processor will surely be part of the package.

One analyst has claimed Apple could use the iPhone 5S to increase its margin for iPhones as a result of falling profitability.

One thing is for sure, with the release of such super handsets as the Samsung Galaxy S4, Sony Xperia Z and HTC One, the next iPhone will have to seriously up its game.

iPhone 5S release date

That means the iPhone 5S release date could be as early Spring 2013. However, we believe it's still likely that we'll see another iPhone later in 2013.

But that's not what everybody thinks: many sources claim that full commercial production of the rumored iPhone 5S has begun already. That's borne out by further rumors suggesting a March manufacturing start date, followed by a mid-year release - probably in June, a date backed up by Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster and others. A cheap iPhone could also appear later, possibly in September.

Digitimes reckoned in 2012 that the iPhone 5S release date would be a little later, citing predicted sales targets of relevant component manufacturers. "Apple is expected to introduce its next-generation iPad and iPhone series around the middle of 2013... Component orders placed by Apple, which climbed to high levels prior to the iPhone 5 rollout, will rise again between March and April, the observers indicated."

iMore rumours in early March pointed to the 5S being out in August 2013, something Digitimes then agreed with in late March 2013. It came up with the startling revelation that the new handset would appear in Q3 2013 (probably September). As our own Kate Solomon puts it, "in other news, night to follow day, Tuesday to follow Monday and bears to continue using largely wooded areas to take care of business".

The International Business Times said in March that production had been delayed to make up ground on the progress made by other handset manufacturers. That wouldn't be at all surprising considering how far behind its rivals the iPhone 5 has fallen - in terms of raw specification, at least.

iPhone 5S display

iPhone 5S or iPhone 6 will include a Super HD screen display and camera according to new reports in December 2012. The China Times says a 'Touch On Display' panel is being developed by Taiwanese supplier Innolux with 10 point multi-touch and a 0.5mm thickness. Apparently the site spoke to sources inside Apple's supply chain.

iPhone 5S casing

According to further rumours, the iPhone 5S might not be the only Apple handset we see this year - rumours abound about cheaper, plastic iPhones, while Apple could be readying an even bigger smartphone to launch in June, apparently called the iPhone Math.

Reports suggest that a cheap iPhone 5S would mean Apple diversifying manufacturers from Foxconn, perhaps leading it to turn to Pegatron. An analyst estimates Pegatron could be responsible for 75 percent of low-cost iPhones.

According to the hit-and-miss China Times wesbite the iPhone Math will carry a sizable 4.8-inch display and an 8MP camera.

The new, larger, lower-cost handset could be aimed at emerging markets such as China.

However, it remains likely that the iPhone 5s will simply use the iPhone 5 shell given Apple's penchant for doing this with the iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4S.

iPhone 5S camera

In January 2013 iLounge received information that indicated the handset would sport the same design as the iPhone 5 with the key difference being a beefier camera and larger flash on the back.

That's hardly ground breaking from Apple, with the touted 13MP camera on the 5S hardly bucking the trend considering the Sony Xperia Z already has this and we'd expect the Samsung Galaxy S4 to offer up something similar.

New rumours from January 2013 pointed towards the iPhone 5S having a 13MP camera as well.

Have we already seen the iPhone 5S?

It was reported on 6 December that images of a purported next-generation iPhone have surfaced on French website Nowhereelse.fr, revealing an exterior virtually identical to the current iPhone 5 but with slightly different internals.

iPhone 5S
It appears little will change inside the next iPhone [Image credit: Nowhereelse.fr]

Phones Review suggests that a dual-SIM iPhone 5S could be released, hot on the heels of a rumoured Samsung Galaxy S4.

More parts appeared in photos shown by BGR towards the end of January 2013.

iPhone 5S NFC

Rumours have abounded for years that the iPhone will incorporate NFC at some stage, but this has proved unfounded. Indeed, Apple decided to incorporate Passbook into the iPhone 5 and iOS 6 as a way to provide a similar, if different, feature.

Now, according to the often-wrong China Times, Apple is rumoured to be equipping the 5S with NFC in addition to a fingerprint scanner for added security. We're really not sure about this one, though rumours of fingerprint scanners and NFC support in Apple's devices trace back to last July when Apple bought mobile security firm AuthenTec for $356 million (UK£238 million, UA$346 million).

It's possible, then.

iPhone 5S wireless charging

According to CP Tech, Apple filed a patent application last month for Wireless Power Utilization, a wireless charging system with near-field magnetic resonance (NFMR). That means we'll get wireless charging at last.

Needless to say, TechRadar will be keeping a close eye on all the iPhone 5S rumors and will bring you the latest developments as they emerge - on this very page.

Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster believes the 5S will also have a feature originally destined for iPhone 6: a fingerprint reader.


Source : techradar[dot]com

All aboard the Galaxy S4 pre-order train

All aboard the Galaxy S4 pre-order train

If you want it, come and get it

Retailers and networks now have their pre-order pages live for the Samsung Galaxy S4, and to no one's surprise it ain't cheap.

On contract you'll need to shell out £41 per month for two years if you want to get the Galaxy S4 free, while it will set you back around £530 SIM-free.

We'll keep you updated on all the offers and release date news in our Samsung Galaxy S4 release date: when can I get it article.

Blips are TechRadar's new news nuggets that you'll find percolating through the homepage - or you can see them all by hitting the blip keyword below.


Source : techradar[dot]com

EE's 4G roll out: 50% installed

No doubt it's high-fives all round over at the EE office as the UK's first, and only, 4G network celebrates bring its superfast network to 50 towns, meaning it now reaches half of the population.

As EE pushes out 4G in another 13 towns and cities today, it notches the milestone of 50 per cent population coverage - keeping it on track for its goal of 70 per cent of the people covered by the end of this year.

Those lucky new locations are, in no particular order other than alphabetical, Bradford, Bingley, Doncaster, Dudley, Harpenden, Leicester, Lichfield, Loughborough, Luton, Reading, Shipley, St Albans and West Bromwich.

More where that came from

EE plans to bring the number of covered towns and cities to 80 by the time June rolls around - and it will be eager to offer 4G to as many as possible before the likes of Three, O2 and Vodafone get their rival services online towards the end of 2013.

Among the frenzy of back slapping and party popping, the folks over at EE towers still have a job on their hands to win over a large chunk of consumers who simply believe the service is just too gosh darn expensive.

Obviously EE is quick to point out the additional benefits which comes with its service, plus there is a need to recoup the money it splashed on rolling out its LTE service ahead of its rivals, but we're still waiting to see a properly affordable 4G price plan.


Source : techradar[dot]com

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