The smartphone revolution is complete! Sales top feature phones for first time

The smartphone revolution is complete! Sales top feature phones for first time

Samsung has helped to put smartphones on top for the first time

In our tech-focused minds its sometimes easy to forget that not everyone is packing a cutting edge, top of the range smartphone in their jeans pocket or even wants one.

So when IDC announced on Friday that sales of smartphones had overtaken feature phones for the first time ever, our initial reaction was 'wait is that just happening now?'

Apparently so, according to the research company 51.6 per cent of the 418.6 million handsets shipped during the first three months of 2013 were smartphones.

The figures state that smartphone shipments went up a whopping 42 percent compared with the same period of 2012, bringing the figure to more than 216 million in total.

Samsung way on top

"Phone users want computers in their pockets. The days where phones are used primarily to make phone calls and send text messages are quickly fading away," wrote said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC.

Naturally, it's Samsung who've driven the lion's share of the increase, with an incredible 32.7 per cent of all smartphone shipments during the quarter.

That's nearly double Apple's tally of 17.3 per cent during the same period, while LG was way back in third place, according to IDC's figures.

So now smartphones have finally taken the lead over their call-and-text happy low-spec rivals we can finally stop talking about the smartphone revolution. Which brings us to the next question.... What's next?


Source : techradar[dot]com

LG Optimus F5 to begin European roll out in France on April 29

LG Optimus F5 to begin European roll out in France on April 29

French to get the first crack at the Optimus F5

LG's Optimus F5 handset has been sitting tight since its unveiling at Mobile World Congress in February, but the company is finally ready to unleash it on the world, or at least parts of it.

The mid-range, LTE-enabled handset will arrive in France on April 29, the company announced in a press release this weekend, before heading around other unspecified parts of the continent.

The Android 4.1 device has a 4.3-inch IPS display, 1.2GHz dual-core processor, 5-megapixel camera, 8GB of internal storage, 1GB of RAM and a hefty 2150mAh battery

The handset is primarily aimed at new 4G LTE markets to enable those on smaller budgets to reap the benefits of faster speeds, without spending the earth on the handset.

US or UK on the launch list?

Following the French launch, LG says roll outs in Central America, Asia and South America will follow.

Whether a UK and US launch will also be on the agenda remains to be seen, but the Korean giant recently said it was hoping to re-enter the UK market with 4G-enabled phones with a quickness.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Weird Obama bug is the latest issue to plague Apple's iMessage app

Weird Obama bug is the latest issue to plague Apple's iMessage app

Another iMessage bug spotted

The Apple iMessage client for iPhone and Mac OS X is apparently experiencing a strange bug which omits the last word of a sentence when specific phrases are in use.

Oddly, any message involving President Barack Obama or the phrase 'The best prize is a surprise' will leave out the last word of the message for both the sender and recipient.

Instead of the word there'll be a series of spaces, however if users copy and paste the message rather than typing it, the message appears as it should.

Strangely enough, it seems the issue is not affecting the iMessage client for iPad users.

Series of issues

This isn't the first issue to plague the Apple-to-Apple messaging service in recent months. There have been a number of iCloud outages which have rendered the service useless for hours at a time.

Just last month we reported on an issue that saw certain iOS developers targetted by DDoS attacks that forced the iMessage app to crash.

Another security loophole allowed the entire iMessage archive to be accessed simply by placing the sim card in a different iPhone.

Earlier this month, on the other hand, one expert stated that iMessage was so secure that not even the authorities could decrypt messages.

This latest instance is certainly the least serious of those listed, but we can imagine leaving the last word off any message may alter the meaning of such texts. Especially those involving the president!


Source : techradar[dot]com

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