Rohiggidy

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We reached out to HTC and there's indeed an official statement (in English and not in Google Translate) which basically says exactly the same as the French response: "We can confirm that the HTC One S will not receive further Android OS updates and will remain on the current version of Android and HTC Sense. We realize this news will be met with disappointment by some, but our customers should feel confident that we have designed the HTC One S to be optimized with our amazing camera and audio experiences."

htc_one_s_without_jelly_bean_small.JPG
 

Rohiggidy

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Pebble smart watch announces Best Buy as exclusive retail launch partner, available online today & in stores July 7

Yesterday we noted that Best Buy retail sources indicated the popular ‘Pebble’ Bluetooth smart watch would be landing on at least some of the retailer’s store shelves this weekend. Today Pebble and Best Buy have finally made things official by announcing the partnership that will bring the most successful Kickstarter-backed device of all time to both Best Buy online and across all its U.S. brick and mortar locations.

It’s definitely big news for the company ahead of Apple’s rumored smart watch, as well as Sony and others getting deeper into the space. The exclusive retail partnership with Best Buy also marks Pebble’s first retail launch of the device after raising over $10.2 million from around 68,000 backers on Kickstarter.

[ame=http://vimeo.com/69352543]Meet Pebble: Now at Best Buy on Vimeo[/ame]
 

Rohiggidy

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The Nexus 7 lag dilemma, and why there’s no real fix

Ask anyone who has been using the Nexus 7 tablet about its occasional lag problem, and you’ll be in for an earful. There’s no denying that the Nexus 7 lags, but I did some digging and realized that finding a fix for the issue is unlikely.

The Nexus 7′s best feature is its price. That said, you don’t have to look far to figure out why the $200 Nexus 7 isn’t the best tablet on the market. It’s a Tegra 3 tablet with 1GB of RAM and a variety of storage sizes. The Tegra 3 chipset was never known for stellar performance, despite Nvidia’s insistence that the Tegra Zone games would run best on their hardware. Still, many people remember the day one Nexus 7s and how, unless you were trying to play a game, there was no lag to speak of.

There have been a lot of fingers pointed at a lot of issues in an attempt to find a cause of the lag, but no definitive answers. In an attempt to locate the culprit I reached out to the Android community to find answers.

nexus 7 teardown_03When investigating Nexus 7 lag, I found that there are two main suspects right now. The first is Android itself, specifically the latest iterations of Android. Many claim that their hardware became slower with the latest version of Android, and it has never been the same since. To try and fix this, several ROM developers released tweaked versions of Android.

The other suspect that has been focused on is the use of cheap storage. The assumption here is that the hardware Asus used in the construction of the Nexus 7 was poor and, as a result, storage units are failing or simply becoming unusable after a certain point.

Fortunately, both of these things can be tested. The cool thing about the Android ecosystem is that there’s no shortage of people willing to roll up their sleeves to locate a solution. Unfortunately there’s also a lot of placebo effect in one-off results reporting, as I observed when someone convinced a swath of users to try messing with their entropy pool in order to defeat lag. It didn’t work.

I figured that properly testing the Nexus 7 would require a group of users all performing the test at the same time with their own environments. I asked users to report whether or not they were rooted, what ROM they were using, and the storage capacity of their unit. I then asked them to perform the AnTuTu Storage IO test and report their findings. Afterwards, I asked these same users to completely wipe their tablets and run the test again, without restoring their Google Accounts to the tablet first. I personally performed these same tests on the Google I/O edition Nexus 7 and a newer version I had been purchased from the Google Play Store. Both of these tablets were stock, with no root access or installed ROMs.

Nexus 7 lag

Based on the information I collected, there’s very little to suggest that the Nexus 7′s storage is the problem. When running this same storage I/O tests on a brand new Nexus 7 and a Nexus 7 from the very first batch that was handed out at Google I/O, which is used daily, the read and write speeds were identical. There’s no degradation over time, at least not in the year since the hardware was launched. These read and write speeds are also the same as the HTC One, a phone that has never had these sorts of issues, so clearly the read and write speed of this hardware is not the issue. In the cases where the write speed dipped below half, users reported they had well over 100 apps installed on the tablet at the time. One user — the one marked with “**” — ran the same test moments after reporting the initial result and saw the write speed get considerably higher, around 130 or about 2x the previous number.

One important finding was also an obvious one, at least to mobile enthusiasts. As with any other mobile OS, if you have a lots of apps installed on your machine it will slow down.

This test also demonstrates that the notion that stock Android is at fault and that third party solutions can fix the lag are largely inaccurate. It’s worth noting that the CyanogenMod and Paranoid Android ROMs did demonstrate faster write speeds even when under a significant app load, but in my own testing I found the difference to be imperceptible. In asking the people who participated in this test, who run these ROMs every day, their lag problems have not gone away as a result of using these modified versions of Android. There’s still lag on the Nexus 7 even under these modified ROMs.

In the end, it comes back to the processor being used. There are no Tegra 3 devices that are considered especially snappy when put under the same conditions as the Nexus 7. The rest of the Asus tablet line running these same processors have the same issues, and there’s no real long-term solution as a result. We got exactly what we paid for, a $200 Android tablet.

Nvidia hopes to have handled this with the new Tegra 4 line, and from what we’ve seen with Project Shield it certainly seems like they have made great strides.

Special thanks goes out to everyone who volunteered their time and their data to this report.

N7-data-590x159.jpg
 

Rohiggidy

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Google Play edition devices will get prompt updates

Picture-1-590x330.jpg


There’s been a lot of confusion surrounding the update mechanism for the new HTC One and Samsung Galaxy S4 Google Play Edition devices. Where do the updates for these phones come from, and who is responsible for them?

One of the big reasons to get excited about Google Play Edition devices is the speed with which you will receive the next version of Android. It was made clear that these Google Play Edition phones would receive prompt updates, but not where those updates would come from. The assumption by many was that Google would be providing the updates, but there’s a little more to it than that. This may seem like the kind of thing only the most devout Android disciple worries themselves about, but the truth of the matter is when Google announces a new version of Android everyone wants it on their phones as soon as possible.

The update process for the Google Play Edition phones is going to be a little different from the Nexus program, but will be significantly faster than carrier supported phones or phones running manufacturer build variants of phones. This is due mostly to how the updates will be created. Unlike the Sense variant of the HTC One, for example, Google will be responsible for most of the build for the Google Play Edition.

The Android Open Source Project will maintain a fork specifically for all of the non-proprietary software that goes on this version of the One. HTC will then take this and add in the proprietary bits, such as the ImageSense and BeatsAudio software. Once this has been tested, the next version of Android for the Google Play Edition is done and ready to be pushed to supported phones.

HTC One Boom Sound

Let’s compare this process to the process a forked Android phone supported by a carrier goes through, shall we? In the case of a phone like the LG Optimus G, the manufacturer is not responsible in the launch window for a software update. In fact, before a software update happens for that phone the carrier has to specifically request it, which includes essentially buying research and development time from LG to create the update. When that decision is made, the update is built from scratch, tested, and then sent to the carrier for approval. The carrier tests the software, approves it, and then push the update when they decide it is worth it.

Even in environments where the manufacturer takes it upon themselves to make the updates to their phones without a request from the carrier, these updates are built from scratch. The version of Android they use is supplied by the processor manufacturer, not Google’s Android Open Source Project. This process takes months, and often still has to go through separate carrier testing before it is deployed. Samsung has attempted to release updates through their Kies software in the past, effectively bypassing the carrier delay, but users found the process complicated and ultimately stopped these updates from becoming common.

HTC and Samsung may be responsible for the final steps of the updates for the Google Play Edition phones, and that may end up taking a little more time than a Nexus phone getting the update, but a significant chunk of the hard work is already done by Google. As a result, updates for these phones will be happening much faster than the original versions of these phones, if not just as fast as Nexus devices. In other words, don’t panic.
 

Rohiggidy

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Samsung ships 20 million Galaxy S4s since launch, almost keeps pace with iPhone

it's clear the Galaxy S4 is definitely more successful than its predecessors, but analysts had hoped to see Samsung sell its flagship at a world-beating rate. When you compare the S4's performance to Apple's iPhone 4S and iPhone 5, it's clear why Wall Street is a little disappointed. Based on Apple's opening weekend figures and Strategy Analytics' estimates, we can estimate that the iPhone 4S took 79 days to surpass 32 million shipments, while the iPhone 5 reached almost 34 million shipments in 100 days. We'll have to see how long it takes Samsung to announce its 30 million milestone, but it looks like the company will fall short of the pace set by Apple's iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S.
 

Oh1one

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Having my phone automatically go to silent the second I'm at my girls house :ahh:

Even set it up to switch to a picture of me and her as my wallpaper while im there, and switch back once im gone. :troll:

Tasker is :lawd:

I know I'm late Breh's. Still working those iPhone cob webs off of me.

:ohhh:

S4 and Nexus 7 should be delivered in a week. Can't wait brehs.
 

iceberg_is_on_fire

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Having my phone automatically go to silent the second I'm at my girls house :ahh:

Even set it up to switch to a picture of me and her as my wallpaper while im there, and switch back once im gone. :troll:

Tasker is :lawd:

I know I'm late Breh's. Still working those iPhone cob webs off of me.

Sounds like you are rocking tasker, one of the goat apps. I have my phone going to wifi on when I'm at the crib, turn bluetooth on when I'm in the car. I use this shyt everyday and I'm still like :mindblown::blessed::mj: at the shyt that is happening.
 

the cool

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wow gs4 getting updates faster than nexus.


im about to throw this nexus 4 in the bushes
 
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