Monday, 31 August 2015

Don't want to make cheap smartphones: Gionee India CEO

Posted on: 08:36 AM IST Sep 01, 2015

New Delhi: Chinese handset-maker Gionee's India chief executive has said the company was not looking to make cheap smartphones or "smart feature phones".

"At Gionee, we don't want to make cheap smartphones as they end up becoming smart feature phones. We have a separate category for feature phones and we would love to expand, innovate in this category," said Gionee India CEO Arvind Vohra.

India CEO Arvind Vohra says, "At Gionee, we don't want to make cheap smartphones as they end up becoming smart feature phones."

"If we enter this category, we are changing the basic specifications of a smartphone and this would not be appreciated by the consumer. We will lose the customer who bought the device to have a smartphone experience as his experience will not be upto the mark," he added.

The company, which currently has a monthly revenue between Rs.150-200 crore, wants to cash in on the repetitive purchase behaviour of the consumer and expand its user base in the country.

Gionee, which sells through 32,000 retail outlets in the country, wants to expand to 50,000 outlets by the end of this year.

"Now that we are holding steady in profits, I want to establish more visibility for the brand and consolidate the sales channel," Vohra said.

"We will add at least 150 service stores, 6,000 Gionee outlets by Diwali and launch a new product every month with new innovation in technology. We have just launched a phone with 5,000mAh battery and a 6,000mAh battery phone is on the way," he added.

Gionee India closed at Rs.2,750 crore last year, after seeing an unprecedented rise in terms of revenue. "We are looking to close this financial year at Rs.5,000 crore which would be mean a growth upwards of 50 percent," Vohra said.

The Chinese handset-maker has been planning a manufacturing plant out of Hyderabad and earlier said that it would invest Rs.300 crore in a phased manner in the plant. "We are looking to export half a million devices to South Asian and African countries from India," Vohra said, when asked about export plans from the plant.


Source: Don't want to make cheap smartphones: Gionee India CEO

Apple iPhone 6S & iPhone 6S Plus Release Date 2015: Sept. 9 Official Launch, Newest Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 and More

Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall smartphone — iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus — launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

The Cupertino tech titan is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple iPhone 6S & iPhone 6S Plus Release Date 2015: Sept. 9 Official Launch, Newest Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 and More

Sunday, 30 August 2015

Just upgraded to a new smartphone? Here are your must-have apps

Just bought your first smartphone or upgraded to a new one? Here is the list of apps, you must have.

SOCIAL NETWORKING

A number of manufacturers now pre-load social networking apps on your smartphone. However, in case your phone does not come with pre-loaded apps, consider the following apps to stay updated with friends and followers on the go.

Facebook

The official Facebook app is free and available across all smartphone platforms. Keep in mind that the Facebook messenger app for chatting is now a standalone app so you will need to install it separately. There is also a Facebook Lite app for Android users who want to save on data cost.

Twitter

Twitter's official app is also free for all platforms and is good enough for new as well as experienced users. However, if you prefer an app with advanced features then we suggest you try out the Falcon Pro 3 for Android users, Tweetbot for iOS users and UberSocial for BlackBerry 10 users.

ENTERTAINMENT

Our smartphones now double up as entertainment hubs thanks to the large high resolution display and built-in music and video players. However, storage is an issue at times and to avoid this hassle, you can use streaming apps.

Streaming music

There are multiple apps available today that let you stream songs over a 3G/WiFi connection. Some apps even offer song download for offline listening via subscription packages. Check out Gaana, Wynk, Saavn and Guvera—all of them have large collection of music available.

Streaming videos

While there are multiple options available for music, for video streaming there are very few apps that work well in India. Check out BoxTV, Wynk Movies, Hooq and bigFlix to stream movies and TV series to your phone. If you prefer live TV, then check out NexGTV, MobiTV and Hotstar.

E-MAIL

The default mail application available on iOS as well as Android are great for most users. However, they may appear lacking when compare d to some of the better options available. BlackBerry 10 scores in this regard as not only is its default mail application well designed, it is loaded with features. Android and IOS users can try out these alternative options.

Cloudmagic

Other than the fact that the app is free, CloudMagic is one of the few apps that support multiple e-mail accounts, third party app integration and does not eat your device resources. Moreover, it offers password lock and the option to remote wipe your data if you lose your device.

Dropbox mailbox

Other than its minimalistic design, the app impresses with its feature set—you can schedule mails, mark them a to-do list and learn how you work with mails. There is even a handy button to reduce mail clutter and that chat conversation view makes reading mails easier.

OTHER USEFUL ONES

Lookout

This one works as a one stop shop for your security needs. It does data backup, theft protection, device tracking as well as remote wipe and lock. The Android version of the app also has built-in antivirus for protection against malware. A premium paid version also adds features for automatic backup, privacy adviser and theft alerts.

Swiftkey keyboard

The default virtual keyboard that comes on BlackBerry and Windows Phone cannot be changed. However, on Android and iOS, you can upgrade to a better and feature-rich keyboard. Swiftkey is our recommended choice as it offers multiple customisation options, themes and supports for multiple languages.

Evernote

If you are looking for something to take notes, you cannot go wrong with Evernote. Not only does the app offer types of notes (text, audio, video, to-do list) but also lets you sync the notes across multiple devices. If you upgrade to the paid premium version, you get better privacy, PDF annotation and unlimited business card scan features.

WPS OFFICE

Most phones do not come with any document editors installed and the free WPS office app is a great option. It is compatible with documents, PDF, spreadsheets and presentations and can also open/edit document stored on various cloud services. Moreover, it even supports wireless printing and Bluetooth keyboards.


Source: Just upgraded to a new smartphone? Here are your must-have apps

Samsung news: New devices called Galaxy Mega On and Grand On revealed in leak

Samsung Galaxy Mega On and Grand On are revealed in leakReuters/Dado Ruvic/Files

A leak recently revealed that Samsung was planning to expand its lineup of smartphones and release a brand new series, the Galaxy O. Now, the leak has been fleshed out, with specs of the two devices in the lineup, arriving on the Internet. In addition, the leak points toward the devices being branded as the Galaxy Mega On and the Galaxy Grand On.

The rumor indicating the full specs of the two devices arrived via SamMobile and it stated that the Galaxy O could ultimately be rebranded as the Galaxy On lineup. As for the two new devices, if their specs are to be taken into consideration, then they would be pretty similar to those already available in the Galaxy J series.

As for the hardware in the Galaxy Mega On, which was spotted with the code name SM-G600, it is said to come with a Snapdragon 410 chipset and a CPU with four cores clocked at 1.2 GHz. As for of RAM, there will be 1.5 GB on board and there will be an internal storage of 8 GB. It is also rumored to have a 13 megapixel camera at its rear and a 5 megapixel camera in front. Finally, it will reportedly come with a 5.5-inch display, which will ultimately put it in the phablet category.

Compared to the Galaxy Mega On, its smaller sibling, the Galaxy Grand On, with the code name SM-G550, will fall squarely into the smartphone category with its 5-inch screen. As for its chipset, the leaked sheet containing the specs pointed toward the Exynos 3475, along with a CPU with four cores clocked at 1.3 GHz. However, this particular device is expected to have only 1 GB RAM. The 2600 mAh battery of the Galaxy Grand On is also smaller than that of its phablet-sized sibling, which comes with a 3000 mAh version.

With Samsung enriching its lineup of smartphones over the past two years, it is likely that despite the O lineup being similar to the devices in the Galaxy J lineup, their design could be entirely different and could possibly now use metal frames.

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Source: Samsung news: New devices called Galaxy Mega On and Grand On revealed in leak

Saturday, 29 August 2015

Apple’s New iPhone 6S & 6S Plus Release Date 2015: September 9 Official Launch, New Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

The Cupertino tech titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall smartphone– iPhone 6S and 6S Plus — launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple's New iPhone 6S & 6S Plus Release Date 2015: September 9 Official Launch, New Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

Apple’s New iPhone 6S & 6S Plus Release Date 2015: September 9 Official Launch, New Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

The Cupertino tech titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall smartphone– iPhone 6S and 6S Plus — launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple's New iPhone 6S & 6S Plus Release Date 2015: September 9 Official Launch, New Features, Full Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

Friday, 28 August 2015

Apple iPhones 6S & 6S Plus Official Release Date 2015: New Smartphones Sept. 9 Launch, Features, Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

The Cupertino tech titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall smartphone– iPhone 6S and 6S Plus — launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple iPhones 6S & 6S Plus Official Release Date 2015: New Smartphones Sept. 9 Launch, Features, Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

Apple iPhones 6S & 6S Plus Official Release Date 2015: New Smartphones Sept. 9 Launch, Features, Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

The Cupertino tech titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall smartphone– iPhone 6S and 6S Plus — launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple iPhones 6S & 6S Plus Official Release Date 2015: New Smartphones Sept. 9 Launch, Features, Specs, Pricing, iOS 9 & More

Thursday, 27 August 2015

Apple iPhone 6S, and 6S+ Release Date 2015: September 9 Launch, New Smartphones with iOS 9, Features, Specs, Price and More

The Cupertino technology titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall iPhone launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple iPhone 6S, and 6S+ Release Date 2015: September 9 Launch, New Smartphones with iOS 9, Features, Specs, Price and More

Apple iPhone 6S, 6S+ Release Date 2015: September 9 Launch Event, New Smartphones with iOS 9, Features, Specs, Price and More

The Cupertino technology titan Apple Inc., has just announced its traditional fall iPhone launch, throwing out invitations to the press and media as well as handful of tech bloggers for an event on September 9th at 10:00 AM PST.

The iPhone 6S launch will get underway at the San Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. That's significantly a new one for the most valuable technology company — and it's a massive venue with a 7,000-person seating capacity, so expect a lot of news from Apple.

Screen_Shot_2015-08-27_at_12.19.17_PM.0

Apple is widely expected to reveal a new pair of high-end premium smartphones: the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Nothing much is publicly known regarding what the new smartphones might offer in the way of incremental upgrades, but it's safe to say that the upcoming devices' displays will incorporate Force Touch — an Apple technology that allows for force-sensitive touches and has already appeared on the Apple Watch and newer MacBooks. It is also expected that the firm will upgrade its iPhone's camera, which has also been rumored, so we'll be looking for that.

There are also rumors on a new iPads might be in the work, including a rumored larger iPad Pro, and a fully revised Apple TV which will be shipped with iOS operating system. And of course we'll be seeing the iOS 9, OS X El Capitan, and watchOS 2.


Source: Apple iPhone 6S, 6S+ Release Date 2015: September 9 Launch Event, New Smartphones with iOS 9, Features, Specs, Price and More

Wednesday, 26 August 2015

With Obi Smartphones, John Sculley Takes Old Lessons From Apple—And Pepsi—To New Places

John Sculley's new smartphones are not coming to a store near you anytime soon.

That's by design. The 76-year-old former Apple CEO—who ran the company in the years after Steve Jobs' ouster in 1985—is cofounder of Obi Worldphone. A large chunk of its strategy for doing well in the remarkably daunting smartphone business involves avoiding the U.S. market altogether.

The Obi SF1 in its packaging

Instead, Obi is launching two Android models aimed at countries where the smartphones that matter most are not high-end flagships such as iPhones and Samsung Galaxy models, but rather budget-priced phones for young, first-time buyers. The $199 SF1 (for "San Francisco") is an LTE phone with a fiberglass body and metal trim; a raised 5" display protected by Gorilla Glass 4; an 8-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 614 chip; Dolby audio; cameras with flash on both the front and back; and a 3000-mAh battery with Qualcomm Quick Charge technology. The $129 SJ1.5 (for "San Jose") is 3G phone with a polycarbonate (aka plastic) case; a 5" display with Gorilla Glass 3; a more basic MediaTek chip; lower-end cameras; and other concessions to economy.

Designwise, both phones look slick and well put-together for their price points. They were crafted by Ammunition Group, the San Francisco consultancy founded by Robert Brunner, who ran Apple's industrial design group starting during the Sculley era and ending in 1997, when Jonathan Ive succeeded him. (Another cohort from Sculley's Apple days, Satjiv Chahil, is consulting on Obi's marketing efforts.)

Despite the involvement of multiple names from Apple's past, Obi's phones don't come off as mundane Cupertino knockoffs. And the company itself sure isn't an Apple wannabe. "We have huge respect, both Robert Brunner and I do, for Apple, because we learned so much in our years there," Sculley says. "Apple is a design-led company. We've said we want to be a design-led company, in an entirely different market than Apple would ever go into."

How much more commodity can you get than sugar water?

I expected Sculley to mention Apple when we talked; unexpectedly, he spent just as much time talking about lessons he learned at Pepsi, where he served as president from 1977-1983—until Steve Jobs famously asked him "'Do you really want to sell sugar water, or do you want to come with me and change the world?"

Today's smartphone market, Sculley says, has much in common with the soft drink biz. "I'm a consumer marketer," Sculley told me. "Most people hate commodity markets. How do you differentiate the technology? But if you're a consumer marketer, you know from experience that there are many ways to differentiate a brand in commodity markets. How much more commodity can you get than sugar water?"

Trimming The Fat

Sculley with Obi phones, in and out of their packagingPhoto: Harry McCracken

Sculley says that the concept that became Obi was hatched a couple of years ago when he and his partners at Inflexionpoint, a global IT supply-chain company he cofounded, put together a bid to buy ailing phone maker BlackBerry. Even after massive layoffs, it still had 7,000 employees devoted to its smartphone business. BlackBerry decided not to auction itself off after all, so the deal went nowhere. But the experience got Sculley and his associates thinking about the cost structures of the smartphone companies that were struggling.

"As we looked at HTC, and looked at Nokia, and looked at Sony, and others who were hemorrhaging money, we realized they had incredibly high expenses: corporate overhead, legacy R&D expenses, big field organizations," says Sculley. "We said hey, you don't build companies like that anymore. You start from scratch. Particularly with the Silicon Valley model."

With Obi, the idea was to create a smartphone company that could succeed with a head count in the hundreds. And though other companies—such as Xiaomi—sell models at the similarly aggressive price points, Obi aims to offer a better phone for the price. Working with Ammunition's Brunner on industrial design is part of that goal.

"The hardest part of the design was not coming up with cool-looking designs," Sculley says. "It was sweating the details over in the Chinese factories, who just were not accustomed to having this quality of finish, all of these little details that make a beautiful design. We had teams over in China, working for months on the floor every day. We intend to continue that process and have budgeted accordingly."

Obi is also trying to set itself apart from the low-price pack by cutting deals for premium parts. "Instead of going directly to the Chinese factories, we went to the key component vendors, because we know that ecosystem and have the relationships," Sculley says. "We went to Sony. It's struggling and losing money on its smartphone business, but they make the best camera modules in the world."

The Obi SJ1.5 is available in multiple colors.

On the software side, Obi had to pick its design battles. "We can only control the user experience to a limited extent, because we're Android-based," Sculley says. So the company focused on areas that consumers care most about, such as photography. For instance, it implemented a feature that takes two photos milliseconds apart—with and without flash—and then blends them into one pleasing picture.

Country By Country

To explain why Obi has no plans to sell phones in the U.S., Sculley references his experience helping to found wireless carrier MetroPCS two decades ago. "The experience we had was that the wireless operators just have a stranglehold on distribution in North America," he says. "Very few people have been able to crack into the U.S. market, where you've got dominant brands, well-established here." With Obi, "our sense was that we ought to go where we know we have a high probability of being successful."

Obi's worldly ambitions are reflected in the apps it's chosen to bundle.

At first, that will mean concentrating on markets such as East Africa, Nigeria, South Africa, Vietnam, Turkey, and Pakistan. The company also plans to dive into India, but not until it's confident it's ready to tackle a market that large.

Unlike typical phones sold in the U.S., Obi's models are designed for affordable international calls, a fact referenced by the "Worldphone" in the company's name. Both models have dual SIM slots, allowing users to mix and match service from multiple carriers. "If you go to Dubai, 87% of the people are from the Philippines, Sri Lanka, India, and other places, and they want to be able to communicate routinely with their families at home," Sculley explains.

Obi's worldly ambitions are also reflected in the apps it's chosen to bundle on its phones. Dots provides free text messaging; GigSky lets people buy short-term data plans in 90 countries; Hoot offers Periscope-like livestreaming optimized for slower networks.

Cola Wars Redux

So how is selling smartphones like selling soft drinks? In part, Sculley says, it's about bringing a product's marketing into the real world until it becomes omnipresent.

"When Pepsi and Coke are competing around the world, the principal way they market is what we call presence marketing," he says. "There's a lot of outdoor boards, there's a lot of signage on walls, there's a lot of in-store display signage. Having a logo that works well on signage is key to building a beverage business."

As Sculley's new company was formulating its brand, it thought in similar terms. "'Obi' was a nice, simple word," Sculley says." It worked in every language. It works spectacularly. It's as good as Coke when you go look at it in-market. "

A year ago, before the phones designed by Ammunition were ready, Obi tested its theories by selling more generic Android phones in the United Arab Emirates. Sculley says that it soon snapped up 5.2% of the market, making it one of the top four manufacturers. "We got real confidence we could run presence marketing," he says. "We knew how to run a business without the overhead, with a much lighter employment model. You combine those two together, and we can actually be profitable at these very attractive price points."

The Stateside Situation

Even in the U.S., a nice smartphone that sold for a no-commitment price of $200 would find customers—and would have competition from companies such as Motorola, which are already striving to build inexpensive-but-solid devices. "When people see this, they say 'So why aren't you making it available in the U.S.?," Sculley says. "Because when you're a startup company, you stay focused. We're focused."

Apple is the most admired product.

Though Obi has no plans to sell phones in the U.S., Sculley does note that the market is evolving rapidly. "It's always to the benefit of Apple," he says, mentioning offers such as Sprint's "iPhone Forever" plan. "Why? Because Apple is the most admired product."

Over time, he predicts, "you're going to see e-commerce eventually be a very credible alternative channel to going through the wireless operators, because the wireless operators have gone à la carte and are unbundling the phone. It's kind of inevitable that the U.S. is going to adapt to the way other countries do business around the world."

And maybe someday Obi's business model and the U.S. market could be a better fit for each other. "We've got some remarkable things on the roadmap," Sculley says. "This is just the beginning."


Source: With Obi Smartphones, John Sculley Takes Old Lessons From Apple—And Pepsi—To New Places

Sony Xperia z5 News: Release Date, Price, And All You Need To Know

Sony is not just making PlayStation gaming consoles and Bravia LED screens, they are also known for their Xperia smartphones. But with an intense competition with top smartphone brands like Samsung and Apple, Sony is in need of a new flagship smartphone; enter the Xperia z5.

But not much info has been revealed to the public from Sony, but some sites are sharing some interesting info that could be happening for the new flagship phone.

Please do take note that the info provided are still rumors and are not confirmed to be official, so take it with a grain of salt.

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Design

According the rumored leaked image, the new Z5 will feature a much new design by having an edge-to-edge screen with sharp corners compared to the previous rounded corners of the Z3+. There is even a report that it will have two versions (codenamed Xperia S60 and S70) similar that from the iPhone 6 line where it has the version with a larger screen. The units will also have a fingerprint scanner, with the power button now featuring a flat button instead of the rounded circular button. The S60 will come in white, black and yellow, with the S70 launching in white, black, gold and green.

Screen Display

The Z5 will sport a 5.5 inch display with full 1080p HD with 401ppi compared to the smaller 5.2 inch screens from older models. Though the 401ppi would be inferior that from the 500ppi of LG and Samsung, let's see what Sony can offer with the display quality.

Hardware and Software

Some speculated that it would be running with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 processor, a memory of 3GB and the storage capacity of 32GB, the same specs from the Z3+, but with the overheating reports on the Z3+, there is a big chance that they will be using the second generation of Snapdragon 810. It is even rumored to have the reversible USB Type-C connector and 4500mAh battery. The operating system might be an Android 5.1 Lollipop, but only time will tell as the new Android M is also just around the corner.

phpv5hz5r Camera

With having one of the best camera phones in the market, it's no surprise if Sony will go all out once again for the camera specs. Rumors claimed that the Z5 will have a 20.7-megapixel as its rear camera and 8-megapixel as its front. There are even reports that it will have a much better autofocus feature, it might also include a dedicated camera button.

Price and Release

There is no confirmation yet, but if basing from their Z3+ line up, expect to see the Z5 priced at around $400 and it is rumored to be available this September with a debut at the IFA Berlin- Consumer Electronics Fair in Berlin.


Source: Sony Xperia z5 News: Release Date, Price, And All You Need To Know

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

The new wave of Chinese smartphone brands in India

Which is the top selling Chinese handset brand in India? Well, that's tough to tell, because rankings change every other month. For the first two months of 2015, Gionee topped the charts, according to a shipment report by Infodrive, a firm that tracks export-import data. Come March, it was toppled by Lenovo, the world's largest personal computer maker. By April, it was the turn of Xiaomi, which held the lead through May. But in June and July, Lenovo came in from behind to reclaim the top slot, with Gionee and Xiaomi close on to its heels.

Welcome to the dragon dance in the land of the Elephant. The first half of 2015 has seen a noholds-barred slugfest among the top three Chinese brands in the world's second largest mobile handset market.

Over 26.5 million smartphones were shipped to India in the second quarter of 2015, up 44 per cent from 18.4 million units for the same period last year, according to International Data Corporation's (IDC's) Asia/Pacific quarterly mobile phone tracker released this month. Never mind who's on top and who's not. The Chinese brands collectively stole the show, trebling their shipments year on year and doubling them quarter-onquarter. Lenovo, Xiaomi, Huawei and Gionee alone accounted for 12 per cent of the total smartphone market, two times the share a year ago, says IDC.

"As China started to slow down, most vendors began looking at India as the next big growth market," Kiranjeet Kaur, research manager with IDC's Asia/Pacific mobile phone team, said in a press release. Kaur adds that the key to success of Chinese vendors has been popular flash sales through etailers such as Flipkart, Snapdeal and Amazon.

Flash sales — a business model wherein a website offers a single product for sale for a limited period, which gets snapped up in a few seconds — has surely been the game changer for Lenovo in India. From a mere 32,000 units shipped in the first quarter of 2013, the Chinese brand took a phenomenal leap to take its count to over 11,74,250 units in the second quarter of the current year, according to IDC.

"The product has to be a differentiator. Nobody is going to wait online for an average product," says Bhaskar Choudhuri, marketing director of Lenovo India. Small wonder Lenovo, which had its first flash sale in India in January for the A6000 model, has become the largest selling Chinese handset brand in the country.

Though Choudhuri attributes the success to flash sales, he is quick to point out that the brand doesn't believe in talking about its Chinese lineage. "We don't consider ourselves to be a Chinese brand. We are a multinational brand," he says.

In stark contrast, rival Gionee is proud to flaunt the 'Made in China' tag. Arvind R Vohra, CEO of Gionee India, says he has no qualms in talking about China parentage. "If somebody asks the name of your father, won't you disclose it?" he asks.

Vohra believes that one shouldn't look at monthly figures to judge lead ers. "We had held on to the top slot for more than a year but not being online has led to a stumble in the rankings," he says, adding that Gionee is changing its marketing strategy. The Chinese brand, while keeping its offline retail focus intact, will soon debut online. "We will reclaim our top position in India," declares Vohra.

Marketing experts say that the new wave of Chinese brands in India is more aggressive than their predecessors who came a decade back but not in a Chinese avatar. "The first-gen players were shy of flaunting their roots and got re-branded once they landed on Indian shores," says brand strategist Harish Bijoor.

But the second-gen entrants are proud of their parentage, he adds. However, Bijoor feels that the biggest challenge for these brands is to crack through the high-value segment of the market, where the likes of Samsung and Apple reign supreme. The real big, bruising battle is yet to begin.


Source: The new wave of Chinese smartphone brands in India

The best smartphone in Australia

Australians have a wide variety of options available when it comes to great smartphones in 2015. Shape, size, style, performance and features are all factors that can be considered, and the diversity is endless. So with all this variety available, which model should you buy?

Unless you specifically want a phone with a very large screen, want to run a different operating system like Android or want a cheaper model, we think the Apple iPhone 6 is currently the best smartphone for most Australians, and the one most people should buy. In this article, we'll outline why.

Note: We are also expecting Apple and Google to announce new smartphones shortly, so you may want to hold off on purchasing for a couple of months until we get a better picture on smartphone availability in Australia over the next six months. The iPhone 6 is our recommendation for today. We'll continue to update this article over time as new models are released.

How do you define 'best'?

Buying a piece of technology which you will use as frequently as a smartphone is a highly personalised experience. It's obviously impossible to recommend one single model which will suit everyone. Not only is size a factor — different humans have different sized hands — but there are also many other factors which people take into account when making such a purchase.

The physical style of a smartphone matters more to some buyers, while others will focus more on features. Some will choose a device based primarily on how well it integrates with the rest of their digital life, or for certain pieces of software they want to run on it, while others shop primarily on price.

With this in mind, recommending one smartphone as the 'best' option for all Australians is an impossible exercise. This is not a situation where one size will fit all.

What we can do, however, is recommend one device that will be the best option for most Australians. If you don't have too many specific requirements (you're a mainstream consumer and can afford a 12 or 24 month contract plan), it is possible to recommend a place for most people to start.

With this in mind, 'best' in this article is defined by the best all-round smartphone for most Australians. If you're considering buying a smartphone, we recommend you start with the model we recommend here (and perhaps the runner-up). We'll also provide a few great divergent options for those who our choice won't suit.

Why should you listen to me?

I'm one of Australia's best-known technology journalists, and I've put hundreds of hours into writing about and reviewing smartphones in Australia over the past five years or so that I've been running Delimiter.

In that time, I've handled dozens of great smartphones. I've reviewed many different Apple, Android, Windows and even BlackBerry smartphones for Delimiter. I'm familiar with all of the major operating system platforms, and have spent a great amount of time with each. On a personal basis, I tend to switch between smartphone manufacturers on a regular basis, so I know how these models handle in practice over extended personal use.

I also know and follow the writing of other mobile phone reviewers, both in Australia and internationally, so I am able to draw their experiences into these kind of 'best' articles to generate a good synthesis of opinion.

I decided to write a series of 'best of' articles regarding Australian technology because I am regularly asked by friends, family, colleagues and others which technology they should buy. These articles are my solution to that problem ;)

What options are there available on the market?

When you examine Australia's smartphone market, it quickly becomes clear that there are really two major classes of devices available: Apple iPhones, and devices from a range of other manufacturers running the Android platform. The most common Android models you will see come from the Asian manufacturers Samsung and HTC.

There are definitely other options available. Microsoft, through its 2013 purchase of the Finnish company Nokia, still sells a variety of devices under the 'Lumia' brand. These smartphones don't run Apple's iOS or Google's Android platform, but instead a version of Microsoft Windows.

And Samsung and HTC also face competition from a range of less successful competitors. LG and Sony still make handsets running Android, and Chinese vendor Huawei is fast making inroads into the Australian market. Other brands include Motorola and even Oppo. In addition, you can also look at Google's own Nexus brand of smartphones, which are popular because they feature a streamlined default version of Android without any additional software bundled on top that you may not want.

The BlackBerry is still kicking around, and it's also possible to import devices from overseas. The OnePlus 2 smartphone is currently making waves in the US, for example.

Cutting down the options

When considering the field, the first thing that becomes apparent that we can remove a number of the options straight away when trying to make an overall recommendation for the 'best' smartphone for most Australians.

The Apple iPhone 6 Plus, Samsung's Galaxy Note line and the Google Nexus 6, for example, are probably too large for most people at this stage of the smartphone buying cycle. They all feature large screens that mostly require both hands — or a stylus — to use. Samsung's Edge devices — which feature a curved display on the sides — are funky but likewise probably too niche for most users.

BlackBerry still makes great smartphone hardware, but we don't consider its devices a realistic purchase at this point due to the immaturity of their software platform and lack of third-party application support. It's a similar case for Microsoft's Lumia models — while the Windows Phone platform is solid, it doesn't have many of the third-party apps that we would like.

apple-test

By all lights, the just-launched OnePlus 2 looks like a great model, but it is likely to be limited by availability in Australia for a while yet.

This leaves us with Apple's moderately sized iPhone 6 and a clutch of great models from Android manufacturers.

The top models from each manufacturer are as follows. We'll examine each to cut down our list further:

Apple iPhone 6

Apple's iOS is the most mature mobile platform available, with the biggest third-party software library. The iPhone 6 is the company's mainstream phone and has a great camera, a beautiful display, and decent battery life. But we're not huge fans of its new design with the lines on its back, and its camera lens protrudes from the case, meaning it does not sit perfectly flat on a desk. Plus, it's Apple, so it tries to lock you into its way of doing everything, and iPhones aren't cheap.

Check out reviews of the iPhone 6 at The Verge, Engadget and CNET.

trial-gs6

Samsung Galaxy S6:

Samsung's reworked metallic design places the S6 ahead of the rest of the Android pack when it comes to device hardware, and alongside Apple. The camera is also very good and the screen is a higher resolution than the iPhone 6, meaning it's a bit sharper. However, like the iPhone 6, the Galaxy S6 also has an annoying camera bump on the back. And Samsung is notorious for adding on its own custom software on top of Android — not unlike the way PC manufacturers used to bundle on unwanted software with Windows. You'll also pay a decent chunk of change for a Samsung unit.

Check out reviews of the Galaxy S6 at The Verge, Engadget and CNET.

m9

HTC One M9:

I don't personally rate it that highly, but many reviewers really like the metallic design of HTC's one line, giving it a high quality rating. Good speakers, good battery life and solid performance round out what is a very good smartphone, but there have been questions over the past few years regarding HTC's camera choices. Then, too, this year's HTC One is quite similar to last year's, spurring questions about the level of innovation HTC is currently achieving with its smartphones.

Check out reviews of the One M9 at The Verge, Engadget and CNET.

z3

Sony Xperia Z3

I really like the Z3's stark, masculine design — it's very Zen. You get features with the Z3 that you don't get on some other models — such as support for a microSD card add-on and very good water and dust resistance, as well as the ability to link up with Sony's PlayStation consoles for mobile gaming. In addition, Sony has resisted the urge to tinker too much with Android. However, the Z3 was released in October 2014, and is starting to look a little long in the tooth at this point.

Check out reviews of the Xperia Z3 at The Verge, Engadget and CNET.

g4

LG G4

The G4 is a recently a funky model with few compromises. It comes with a unique slightly curved display and back (which can be replaced in a variety of fashionable options), as well as the ability to remove its battery and microSD card functionality. Its camera and display are awesome, and it has very good performance. Perhaps the only downside is that the G4 doesn't quite feel as classy as some models to some reviewers, due to its removable back casing, and it has a bunch of add-on software of questionable value which sits on top of Android.

Check out reviews at The Verge, Engadget and CNET.

p9

Huawei P8:

A new entrant into the high-end smartphone wars, the P8 has top-end specifications and performs well, but lacks a bit of that deep polish and component integration which the big brands like Samsung and Apple display. It does, however, make up for what it lacks in quality with a cheaper than usual price, meaning you'll be able to get a quality and high-end smartphone for a few hundred dollars cheaper than the top of the market, if you go with a Huawei model.

Check out reviews of the P8 at Techradar and CNET.

How to judge a winner

At this point, any of the models we've listed above would make a great smartphone for most Australians. They all support the 4G speeds we enjoy through Australian mobile networks, they all feature quite striking designs, they all perform well, they all have decent cameras and they all offer great system and third-party software that the average Australian would want.

But ultimately there are a couple of models which are a tiny distance out in front of the pack.

The iPhone's camera — consistently great in every situation — and its best in class software support give it a leading place. And there are little quibbles that we have with the other Android models that keep them just behind the S6, which Samsung has polished continually over the years with successive Galaxy S releases until it is a worthy rival to the iPhone.

These two models are the two most popular smartphones in Australia for a reason. All of their major features perform excellently — from their camera to their screen to their software — and they don't suffer major battery life problems such as early 4G smartphones did. And because they're so popular already, they get a 'halo' effect — funky cases and cool third-party hardware accessories are also widely available.

We habitually recommend either one to our friends, family and colleagues, and we recommend them to you.

At the end of the day, the iPhone 6 comes out a tiny amount ahead because of our earlier definition of 'best'. The iOS ecosystem is just a bit better established than Android, and Apple also wins points for its integration between its popular iMacs and MacBooks and iOS. While it's true that the company's platforms are often less flexible than competing systems such as Android or Windows, they are also incredibly stable and workable.

iphone6-2

If you want the best smartphone in Australia for most Australians, the iPhone 6 is going to be it. You can be confident when buying it that it will do everything you want to do, without issues. This 'safety' factor gives the iPhone 6 an edge over the Galaxy S6. It's not a large edge, however, and if you don't like Apple's control freak nature, then we recommend you look elsewhere. The iPhone 6 has only just pipped the Galaxy S6 at the post, and for many people it will come down to a matter of preference between the two.

A couple of final notes: We're also currently watching a number of new smartphone releases into Australia. The OnePlus 2 is looking like an amazing phone for a cheap price, so we'll be keeping an eye on Australian availability of that model. And Motorola is also launching new smartphones into Australia, so we're keeping an eye on them.

Furthermore, we are also expecting both Apple and Google to announce new models shortly. So if you can wait, you may want to hold off for a couple of months until we get more clarity on those major launches.

This article will be updated regularly on Delimiter as these events occur, and we pick new winners.

Image credit: Various


Source: The best smartphone in Australia

Monday, 24 August 2015

Leaked images hint at Huawei’s Nexus smartphone; features a bump on rear camera

Speculations have been rife that Google will be releasing not one, but two Nexus phones this year. We even know that LG and Huawei are the two companies which will be making these phones. While the LG Nexus 5 (2015) images have already leaked out, a Google+ user recently leaked what appears to be the Huawei made Nexus smartphone.

According to the leaked images released by Google+ user Tiesen Fu, the Huawei made Nexus smartphone will have a raised up camera section. According to Fu the images were sent to him by a China-based source where the Huawei Nexus smartphone is expected to be manufactured.

On the rear side there is an entire strip on the top portion with the camera module placed on the left most side. This is quite different from what we have seen on Nexus phones in the past or for that matter, flagship phones of the current generation.

On the rear side there is a circular dip which most likely looks like a finger-print sensor.

Last month tipster @evleaks had given out details regarding the Huawei Nexus phone. The Huawei Nexus is likely to sport a 5.7-inch QHD screen translating to 2,560 x 1,440 pixels, a metal body, Snapdragon 820 SoC and a fingerprint reader. The device will start shipping in Q4, he had tweeted.

Recently, details of the other Nexus smartphone – the LG Nexus 5 (2015) – were leaked. According to uSwitch, the new smartphone by LG will offer a rear fingerprint scanner along with a metal frame and plastic rear. In addition, the front panel will showoff dual-stereo speakers. Other rumoured specifications include a 3D camera along with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 chipset.

The report also suggests that the screen will be offered in 5.2 inches and will be 146.9mm high, 72.9mm wide and 8mm thick. It might also be the first smartphone to feature Android M. Google is expected to unveil the new Nexus devices in October or November.

Tags: Google Nexus, Huawei Google Nexus, Huawei Nexus phone, LG Nexus 5 2015, Nexus image leaks


Source: Leaked images hint at Huawei's Nexus smartphone; features a bump on rear camera

iPhone 6S, iPhone 6S Plus camera may be best ever in any smartphone: release date and specs rumors

iPhone 6S, iPhone 6S Plus camera may be best ever in any smartphone: release date and specs rumors

Apple is going to pack a much better and very high quality camera in the next generation iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus. Newer versions of iPhone are merely a few weeks away and despite the fact that Apple is not revealing anything at the moment, we actually know almost everything about the next generation handset from the Cupertino based smartphone maker.

A latest report in the Business Insider claims that the camera of the new iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus is going to be equipped with far bigger sensor compared to the one we have in the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus at the moment. This means that the new snapper in the new iPhones will be actually capable of taking more light and an accompanying lens which will work best with the improved sensor.

While talking about the sensor of the new camera, the Business Insider report claims, "This means we can expect the iPhone 6S to capture higher-quality photos than the iPhone 6".iPhone 7 images

In the meantime there are already confirmed reports that the Apple is actually ordering supplies to make "five-element lenses" for the new iPhone which are designed to come loaded 12 mega pixel snapper.

While further detailing the camera in the new iPhone versions, the Business Insider report further says, "Each of these elements, or layers, actually functions as its own standalone lens. But when they're combined into one lens, they allow a camera to capture more detailed and complex information. So a five-element lens such as the one that's in your smartphone's camera could actually be considered as five lenses crammed into one," the same report said.As far as price is concerned, a report in the Week claims that the entry level price for the 16GB model of the phone could be around $847 (£539).

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Source: iPhone 6S, iPhone 6S Plus camera may be best ever in any smartphone: release date and specs rumors

Sunday, 23 August 2015

5 Smartphone Sequels That Emerged As Return-Hits

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Source: 5 Smartphone Sequels That Emerged As Return-Hits

Asus unveils ZenFone 2 Deluxe Special Edition with 256GB of internal storage (in Brazil)

On the heels of its well-received ZenFone 2 smartphone, Asus announced the ZenFone 2 Deluxe Special Edition, which boasts 256GB of internal storage. This could be a boon for smartphone users who enjoy having large numbers of music, video, and image files on board without resorting to the cloud or streaming. The catch (for now) is that the ZenFone 2 Deluxe was announced in Brazil with no word for other markets.

Asus unveiled the new device Thursday at an event called "Incredible Comes to Latin America" in Sao Paulo. Besides the 256GB of internal storage, the ZenFone 2 Deluxe has two Ergonomic Arc back case designs to choose from: a multifaceted polygonal option ("crystal-inspired Drift Silver") and a textured option ("high-tech Carbon Night"). The rest of the phone's specs mirror the now regular version of the ZenFone 2.

Related: For some reason, someone got Windows 7 running on an Asus ZenFone 2

The new deluxe model will also come preloaded with the racing game Asphalt 8, along with prepaid credit for in-app purchases.

"We are very excited to bring our latest ZenFone models to the Latin American market," Asus CEO Jerry Shen said at the event.

The ZenFone 2 Deluxe will launch in Brazil in September. There's no word yet for release in other markets.

Asus' move to unveil a smartphone with 256GB of storage is sure to grab attention in light of the recent letdown over the absence of a 128GB version of the Samsung Galaxy Note 5 and frustrations over Apple's stubborn adherence to its baseline 16GB iPhone models.


Source: Asus unveils ZenFone 2 Deluxe Special Edition with 256GB of internal storage (in Brazil)

Saturday, 22 August 2015

China's smartphone market is saturated

cracked iphoneAndrew Mager/FlickrA cracked iPhone.

"Saturation" is the new Economic Reality. But this is Worse.

Smartphones conquered even impoverished consumers in desperately poor countries, giving them access to things they couldn't even imagine a few years ago. The devices and the activities they spawned have been one of the world's growth engines. China's consumers adopted them at stunning rates. But even that growth engine is slowing down on a global basis. And in China, it just skidded backwards into the ditch.

Globally, smartphone sales in the second quarter rose 13.5% to 329.6 million units, the slowest year-over-year growth rate since 2013, Gartner reported today. What drove growth were cheaper 3G and 4G smartphones in emerging markets in Asia/Pacific – excluding China – Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. The winners in these markets were Chinese and local brands.

But in China – the world's largest market for smartphones, accounting for 30% of global sales last quarter – unit sales fell 4%, the first decline ever.

Gartner's explanation of the phenomenon, after years of mind-bending growth, featured the very unwelcome S-word:

China has reached saturation – its phone market is essentially driven by replacement, with fewer first-time buyers. Beyond the lower-end phone segment, the appeal of premium smartphones will be key for vendors to attract upgrades and to maintain or grow their market share in China.

It's getting tough in China. "Saturation" inspires fear. It turns a market into a war zone of pricing and innovation, of margin pressures and profit declines. There will be shakeouts and losers. But in China, it's worse: the market actually shrank.

Don't blame Apple. Its large-screen iPhones have been kicking butt in China – and elsewhere. Globally, Apple's market share rose by 2.4 percentage points to 14.6%. Unit sales rose 36% to 48.1 million. Apple saw strong iPhone replacements in all markets, but "particularly in China," according to Gartner. In China, iPhone sales soared 68% to 11.9 million units.

But Samsung, still number one globally, saw its market share drop 4.3 percentage points in Q2 to 21.9%. And unit sales fell 5.3% to 72.1 million.

The chart shows global smartphone sales. The declining sales of Lenovo include those by Lenovo and Motorola in both quarters. Note how super-hyped Chinese maker Xiaomi is falling further behind Huawei and Apple.

global smartphone salesWolf Street

Apple ate their lunch….

Apple's double-digit growth in the high-end segment continued to negatively impact its rivals' premium phone sales and profit margins. Many vendors had to realign their portfolios to remain competitive in the midrange and low-end smartphone segments. This realignment resulted in price wars and discounting to clear up inventory for new devices planned for the second half of 2015.

China dished out a brutal lesson in operating systems. For a company to grow in a shrinking market it must surgically remove market share from other players. And that's what Apple's iOS did, taking share from Android for the third quarter in a row. Android lost out with a shrinking share of a shrinking market.

That debacle in China dragged down Android's global growth to 11% year-over-year. Its global market share dropped 1.6 percentage points to a still phenomenally successful 82.2%.

And Microsoft's operating system? Forget it. Gartner, gently: "In light of Microsoft's recent cuts in its mobile hardware business, we'll await signs of its long-term commitment in the smartphone market." I wasn't quite as gentle when I wrote a few weeks ago, Microsoft Tallies True Costs of M&A Boom: Layoffs, Write-Offs, Shut-Downs, and Economic Decline

The fact that smartphone sales in the world's largest smartphone market declined in the second quarter, for the first time ever, is another warning that the official GDP growth figure of 7% is delusional.

"Saturation" is becoming a new economic reality in China. For years, global companies have been spoiled with hyper-growth. That era is over.

But actually shrinking sales are worse than what could be expected in a merely "saturated" market, which would imply flat or slowly growing sales. It's hard to blame "saturation" for shrinking sales. Something more complex is going on, something that the official figures refuse to acknowledge.

Smartphones are not the only consumer item facing this debacle of shrinking sales in China after years of breath-taking growth. Numerous other products are now wading through the same mire. For example, passenger vehicles sales in China, the largest auto market in the world both in terms of manufacturing and sales, declined in June and July from a year ago. But incredulous manufacturers are still building plants and adding capacity.

So Volkswagen, whose sales in China – its largest market – have declined three months in a row, is now busy denying that it's slashing production to deal with ballooning overcapacity; yes, it's slashing production, but for other reasons, it said. Overcapacity is too terrible in the car business. It simply cannot be publicly acknowledged.

And GM has already figured out how it will deal with its overcapacity in China. Read…LEAKED: GM Sees Overcapacity Fiasco in China, Hopes Americans Will Buy Lots of Chinese-Made Buicks

Read the original article on Wolf Street. Copyright 2015. Follow Wolf Street on Twitter.

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    Source: China's smartphone market is saturated

    LG G5 updates: Device to be revealed later this year, will feature iris recognition capabilities

    The LG G4 may soon see its successor, the LG G5, released later this yearLG

    LG has impressed consumers year after year with its G-series smartphone releases. The company has been known to give consumers what they want, in terms of their mobile devices.

    The LG G4 was released earlier this year and was met with positive response from consumers. However, instead of celebrating their success, it seems that the company has already been hard at work on the G4's successor.

    LG is said to be releasing a high-end device later this year. According to speculations, LG will unveil the LG G4 Pro or may opt to introduce the much-anticipated G5 smartphone.

    LG is finally planning to integrate biometric scanning into their upcoming smartphone release. The company has been developing iris recognition capabilities for the LG G5.

    This feature may be necessary for future Android devices in order to keep up with the Google Pay, Apple Pay and Samsung Pay features that will debut in the coming months.

    According to Korean publication WhoWired, LG has teamed up with Irience, a Korean-based firm that specialized in biometrics. Irience had recently demonstrated its retina scanner optimized for a 30 cm recognition range. LG is apparently working on optimizing the algorithmic process to allow retina recognition from a 50 cm arms-length distance.

    Follow us

    LG G5 users will be able to authorize money transfers or log in to websites by scanning their eyes using their smartphone cameras.

    While the G5's specifications have yet to be confirmed, it is reported that the smartphone will feature a 5.6-inch Quad HD display with a Full HD 2560 x 1440 screen resolution and a 545 ppi pixel density. A Sapphire screen will also protect the screen.

    The device will be powered by an octa-core 2.9 GHz Snapdragon Qualcomm 810 processor with 3 or 4 GB of RAM. The G5 may also feature a 4,000 mAh battery, with wireless charging capabilities.

    The rumored smartphone will also have three versions, with either 16 GB, 32 GB or 64 GB of internal memory. A microSD slot will also allow for up to 128 GB of expandable memory.

    The G5 has been speculated to feature a 20 MP rear camera and a 5.1 MP 3D front camera.

    According to PCAdvisor, the upcoming LG phone will use a 3D front camera that is similar to Intel's RealSense camera that allows for facial recognition.

    The G5 will also integrate features that will be compatible with the LG smartwatches. The G5 will also be equipped with the latest Android OS.

    It has been speculated that the LG G5 may be unveiled later this year and scheduled to be shipped to consumers early next year.


    Source: LG G5 updates: Device to be revealed later this year, will feature iris recognition capabilities

    Friday, 21 August 2015

    BlackBerry attempts comeback with Android smartphone, leaked photo shows

    By Lorraine Caballero , Christian Post Contributor

    August 21, 2015|9:36 pm

  • REUTERS / Aaron Harris

    A BlackBerry Passport smartphone is shown at its official launching event in Toronto, September 24, 2014.

  • BlackBerry is not yet dead. A new leaked photo shows the company's new smartphone that runs the Android mobile operating system.

    Just when everyone thought that BlackBerry has waved the white flag, along comes a leaked image of its new smartphone. The upcoming BlackBerry phone still has its trademark QWERTY keyboard, but it surprisingly runs Google's Android OS, according to Mirror.

    The photo, which appeared on Twitter on August 19, seems to convey the message that the Canadian smartphone maker may be doing away with its own BlackBerry OS and replace it with Google's Android operating system.

    Based on the photo, the design of the phone is similar to Samsung's Edge device, but it still has its trademark sliding QWERTY keyboard. However, it also has a touchscreen display that can be used when the physical keyboard is tucked away, Value Walk reports.

    Although there are some who may be delighted with the return of a physical keyboard in a smartphone, there are also many who have raised concerns about its durability.

    Once the leader of the smartphone industry with its business-oriented QWERTY devices, BlackBerry later became the underdog after Apple's iPhone and Samsung's Galaxy devices gained more popularity. But now, the Canadian firm is striving to regain its old glory by taking advantage of the widely popular Android OS, the report details.

    BlackBerry was once criticized for its limited apps, but using Android would give it access to Google Play Store's millions of apps.

    Evan Blass took to Twitter to reveal the upcoming BlackBerry smartphone, which is a sleek, black unit sporting a slide-down QWERTY keyboard. Blass also posted a GIF image of the sliding keyboard in motion, the report relays.

    The last flagship phone the company released was the BlackBerry Passport. Although this phone could load Android apps, users still had to go through Amazon's app store to have access to a limited list of apps.

    While the big switch to Android is a very bold move for privacy-centered BlackBerry, it could also help turn the company around and restore its place in the mobile market, the report predicts.

    The price and the release date of the mysterious BlackBerry Android smartphone are yet to be confirmed. But Value Walk says the new device will be called BlackBerry Venice and will be released this November.


    Source: BlackBerry attempts comeback with Android smartphone, leaked photo shows

    Motorola Moto X Play Release Date: New High-End Android Smartphone Hits Germany, UK Markets

    By David Robertson , Christian Post Contributor

    August 21, 2015|10:09 pm

    Last month, Motorola finally unveiled its new Android-powered smartphones that include the latest flagship, the Moto X (2015), which pack flagship-level specs and features.

    However, there are also other smartphones in the lineup that made some noise, such as the Motorola Moto X Play.

    Now, in a report by GSM Arena, the new Motorola device can now be pre-ordered in Germany and the United Kingdom. In the report, the Moto X Play that has 16GB of built-in memory costs £279 in the UK, while it will be priced at €379 in Germany.

    However, consumers who prefer the 32GB edition will need to shell out an additional £40 or €50 depending on where you will buy.

    In the report, the device will begin shipping on August 26 in the UK, and August 27 in Germany.

    Considered to be a midanger, the Moto X Play offers some pretty impressive specifications. The specs list include a 5.5-inch display with Full HD (1920 x 1080) resolution, 2GB of RAM, 16GB or 32GB of built-in storage, and a microSD card slot.

    Other specs include a Snapdragon 615 chipset, an octa-core CPU that it clocked at 1.7GHz, and a 3,630mAh battery, which should last a day with most users.

    But what separates the Moto X Play from the pack of other midrange 5.5-inchers out there is its 21MP primary camera that is packaged with a dual-tone dual-LED flash. There is also a 5MP front shooter, the usual connectivity options such as 4G LTE, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and NFC.

    Finally, the Android-powered device will run on Android 5.1.1 Lollipop out of the box.

    Unfortunately, release dates and details for other countries are not yet available.


    Source: Motorola Moto X Play Release Date: New High-End Android Smartphone Hits Germany, UK Markets

    Thursday, 20 August 2015

    BlackBerry's Android-Rumored Venice Smartphone Slated for November

    Rumored since June, BlackBerry's first Android phone, called Venice, will arrive in November as a slide phone, according to a report.

    BlackBerry is expected to launch its first Android smartphone later this year, as it continues to fight to gain market share and new customers in a global smartphone market that Apple and Samsung dominate.Dubbed Venice, the smartphone will run an unknown version of Android and will be available from the big four mobile carriers in the United States—AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon—sometime in November, according to an Aug. 20 report by The International Business Times. The information for the report came from a leaked video and several leaked photos, as well as an Aug. 19 Twitter post by well-known news tipster Evan Blass, whose Twitter name is @evleaks.Blass' post was straightforward. "BlackBerry Venice confirmed for November release on all four national U.S. carriers," he wrote, along with an additional tweet with leaked images.The handset will be a slider phone, the report states, with a 5.5-inch quad-HD display that has curved glass edges on both sides. It will be power ed by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 processor and include 3GB of RAM, according to the report. A full QWERTY physical keyboard will be positioned below the sliding display, while the smartphone will also include an 18-megapixel rear-facing camera and dual LED flash. Also included will be Optical Image Stabilization (OIS) and phase-detection auto-focus, as well as a 5-megapixel front-facing camera, the story reported. Rumors about an Android-equipped BlackBerry smartphone solidified in June when Reuters reported that four anonymous sources had discussed the upcoming phone. BlackBerry, which has stood fast with its own operating system for its products for years, would be making a huge shift by releasing an Android phone, but it is in a position of having to try something new to remain relevant as a smartphone maker. Richard Windsor, an analyst with Edison Investment Research, told eWEEK in an Aug. 20 email that BlackBerry's pending release of an Android phone is clear evidence that the company has lost its hardware mojo."Experiments like this and the Passport [smartphone] clearly indicate that BlackBerry should stop making hardware and instead focus on BES as a highly secure system for the mobilization of enterprise data," wrote Windsor. The fact that the company is even considering "yet another experiment that looks almost certain to fail should begin to hammer home the reality that BlackBerry has no future in hardware."That would essentially make the Venice smartphone "a commodity device with a hardware innovation that the smartphone buying market clearly no longer cares about," wrote Windsor. "The real value in BlackBerry is in its highly secured email service, its device management service, BlackBerry Enterprise Server, and its overall reputation for enterprise-class security."By unveiling a phone with Android, "BlackBerry is putting its reputation for security at risk," which will likely hurt it overall, he wrote. "Furthermore, I very much doubt that this device will be anything more than an oddity as users are now very accustomed to typing on touch-screens and don't really require physical keyboards anymore."This isn't the first Android news from BlackBerry this year. In March, BlackBerry announced its plans for a new BlackBerry Experience Suite that will adapt much of its BlackBerry software to run on Android, iOS and Windows smartphones and tablets as it looks to broaden its reach into the enterprise even when companies are using competing devices. The BlackBerry Experience Suite, expected to be available by the end of 2015, aims to help enterprises and small businesses bring enterprise-class applications to their end users from a trusted partner such as BlackBerry, according to an earlier eWEEK report.In March, BlackBerry launched a surprise smartphone, the Leap, which replaces the traditional BlackBerry physical keypad with a modern touch-screen aimed at getting the company's devices into the hands of younger mobile professionals. This device can now possibly be viewed as a bridge to an Android device as the company continues to tweak its product line to draw in more customers.Still, any move to build and market a smartphone containing an operating system other than BlackBerry would certainly be a disturbing blow to the company's long history of building its own secure and sturdy enterprise operating system.BlackBerry's fall from dominating the enterprise smartphone market has been swift and stunning. In early 2006, before the first iPhones appeared from Apple, half of all smartphones sold were BlackBerry models. By 2009, though, its share of the global smartphone market was down to 20 percent. The company continues to face growing competition from Apple, Samsung, Google and others.  In the first quarter of 2015, BlackBerry's worldwide ma rket share fell to 0.3 percent, compared with 78 percent for Android and 18.3 percent for iOS, according to a recent report from IDC. Windows Phone has a 2.7 percent market share.BlackBerry spent much of 2012 and 2013 trying to shake off the image that it was finished, especially compared with five years earlier when its devices were the "enterprise gold standard" for mobile business communications.
    Source: BlackBerry's Android-Rumored Venice Smartphone Slated for November

    Moms, let go of your smartphone guilt: Every time technology makes our lives easier, we invent ways to make motherhood even harder

    The contractions woke me at 2 am. "This is definitely starting," I said to my half-asleep husband. "Mmmpbh," he agreed. Then I reached for my smartphone. But not to call my OB. Instead, I launched my phone's clock app and tapped the stopwatch function to measure the seconds between contractions. I turned on my out-of-office notification for my work email account. And in the meantime, I fired off text messages to my mom and my sister: Smally launch, engage! (And then a few minutes later, yes, I did actually call the OB.)

    Fast forward a week. My daughter is a newborn, and I'm a newborn mom. Breastfeeding is not the effortless, snuggly experience I was promised, and I am pretty much stapled to a chair for most of my waking hours, exhausted and trying to nurse. Because we're Americans, my husband got two whole days of paternity leave. My family lives across the country. I'm alone, and immobilized.

    But I've got my smartphone. And I can use it to search for helpful listicles like "7 Things to Try When Breastfeeding Hurts," and to read what's happening in the world on my news app, and to make to-do lists on ­my productivity app, and to start a historical horror novel about motherhood on my notepad app, and to order food for the house on my grocery-delivery app, and to order the jumbo case of diapers (and the nursing cream, and all the other essentials I didn't think I would need but really really do) on my everything-but-the-baby app. And of course, to text with friends and scroll through Facebook while the baby sleeps. Technically, yes, I'm alone and immobilized with a newborn and without any help—but I'm never more than a finger swipe from human contact and crucial reinforcements.

    Smartphones have completely transformed what it means to be a mother, and the bona fide miracle of same-day diaper delivery is just the beginning. Friends have never been easier to keep up with, play dates have never been quicker to arrange, important messages from our children's educators and health care providers have never been faster to arrive, solutions for everyday parenting dilemmas from sleep training to teething have never been simpler to find. Playground benches are now mobile home offices, where a mom can take a few minutes to catch up on email, order groceries, call in to the office, bang out notes for a chapter, or just sail through a sea of Instagrams. (All of which means you also have a convenient pretext, should you require one, to ignore other playground moms who may not be exactly your cup of tea.)

    But the iPhone and its ilk are only the latest in a series of technologies we now take for granted that have utterly transformed the everyday lives of millions of women—and specifically, mothers. Put another way, you're living (and possibly mothering) in the midst of a period of technological change that cultural critics will probably study for decades to come. And as much as smartphones have changed the way news is disseminated, the way work is done, and the way Saturday night plans are made, there is probably no one group of humans on Earth for whom the smartphone has created more everyday life-change than mothers…Who are, of course, precisely the humans on Earth who are supposed to feel the most guilt about using them.

    Moms and Smartphones: Forbidden Love

    Moms lead the smartphone market both in hours spent and in consumption of media on devices, according to a 2014 study. Mothers are also more likely than the average consumer to use their smartphones for purposes other than calling—on the night I went into labor, I used my smartphone for a few other applications before finally calling my OB, but I'm far from alone in using my smartphone as a kind of digital-age Swiss Army Knife. For a busy modern mother, a smartphone is a camera, a photo album, an alarm clock, a timer, a day planner, a newsstand, a public transportation timetable, a nutrition consultant, a weight-loss tool, a recipe box, a meteorologist, a career advisor, a headhunter, an accountant, a neighborhood map, a personal shopping assistant, and a bank. And of course, an escape hatch.

    So why are we mothers so ambivalent about our smartphones? Why are we so quick to judge the mom with her phone out at the playground? Why are we made to feel so guilty about grownup screen time? Why all this approving attention paid to studies that purport to prove that "smartphone-addicted moms" are crankier, more distracted, worse than moms who came before us? (Because we're certainly past the point of comparing moms who own and use phones to those who don't—recent numbers suggest that 92% of American moms have a mobile phone.)

    All the hand-wringing women performed as part of the weekly laundry in the pre-washing machine era (more on that in a minute) is nothing compared to the hand-wringing we do about using our smartphones, when we should be paying scrupulous, nonstop attention to our children.

    In researching that historical horror novel about motherhood that I started on my smartphone when my daughter was a newborn (yep, not a joke), I found a number of striking parallels between the 1910s, when part of the novel is set, and the 2010s: The early 1900s were a period of huge change in America, and in particular, in the everyday lives of women and mothers in America—a lot like now. The technology people used in their homes was making huge advances (just like now); professional and educational opportunities for women were changing (um, sort of like now); and it was also a period in which the way Americans raised their children was a subject of intense cultural debate (hello, original "mommy wars").

    It got me to thinking about other eras in which home technologies experienced a great leap forward—the most obvious and most-studied example being the 1950s, when American postwar abundance led to a decade of gorgeous, high-tech, technicolor domesticity, immortalized in countless cultural artifacts from advertising to television shows to film.

    And it led me to a theory. Here's where I think our smartphone guilt really comes from: Coincidentally or not, periods of technological advancement in the home tend to be accompanied by simultaneous cultural shifts that encourage an increase in the amount of time and effort women spend on childcare.

    It's a pattern: During eras when motherhood has been made easier by technology, our culture has demanded that motherhood itself get suddenly, drastically harder.

    Enough with the Hand-Wringing

    Let's take a leap here that's only going to seem like a big one at first: Consider the washing machine, introduced in America in 1914. Before the advent of this literally life-changing technology, generations of women grew up dreading "wash day," which, as Susan Strasser writes in Never Done: A History of American Housework, "consumed staggering amounts of time and labor:"

    "One wash, one boiling, and one rinse used about 50 gallons of water—or four hundred pounds—which had to be moved from pump or well or faucet to stove and tub, in buckets and wash boilers that might weigh as much as 40 or 50 pounds."

    And that's before you started in on the sorting, soaking, sudsing, rinsing, wringing, rubbing, boiling, re-rubbing, re-rinsing, re-wringing, dipping, re-re-wringing, and hanging required…for every single load. More than any other invention of the early twentieth century, the washing machine freed American women from days of intense labor every week. Days. And what did women do with those extra days? Some women took advantage of the opportunity to bring in alternative paid work. Most women just got other things done. And a few may have had a bit of extra time to devote to a little cause called Women's Suffrage.

    The washing machine, like a lot of inventions that change things, was part of a bigger story. It represents the crest of a distinct historical wave in home technology that revolutionized women's everyday lives. 

    In the early years of the twentieth century, concurrent with the rollout to American homes of electric and telephone wires, canned goods and packaged foods, indoor plumbing, and machine-operated wringers and washing machines, American culture underwent a major sea change in its expectations for American childhood. In urbanizing, industrializing Victorian America, children were no longer considered mere cogs in the wheel of the family economy. Increasingly, children were viewed as precious resources to be nurtured and educated, a change in cultural attitudes often referred to by historians as the "invention" or "discovery" of childhood. Periodicals, advertising, and advice publications developed to reinforce this new view of child-rearing as intensely focused on the child's physical and psychological development. Meanwhile, child labor laws and an evolving public education system helped create a system of protections for the American child—a system that we've all undo ubtedly benefited from."By 1915," Thomas Schlereth writes in Victorian America: Transformations in Everyday Life, "middle-class children were the subject of a profusion of public and private institutions to promote their welfare."

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    The people who were expected to direct all this nurturing, educating, and rearing of American children were, of course, American mothers—and not necessarily because we didn't have anything else to do, now that we were no longer hand-wringing the wash. As the historian Ruth Cowan shows in her book More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave, as homekeeping technologies improved and became more widespread, American housekeeping standards rose, and so did the amount of time women were expected to spend on childcare. The early years of the twentieth century saw a huge proliferation of published information directed at mothers, who were seen to be the crucial nexus of two industrial-age American obsessions, a healthy home and a healthy child. Victorian American moms, for their part, relished the opportunity to master new home technologies while embracing their children's well-being. But "at every step along the way," as Cowa n writes, "there was more work for middle-class housewives to do in their homes." Mother's Day, as a national holiday, was invented in 1914 to commemorate the all-encompassing role of the American mother: Psychologist and technologist, caregiver and caretaker, hearth-warmer and machine operator.

    It's Nice to Be Modern

    In the mid-twentieth century, the Second Wave of mom-focused technologies gave us toaster ovens, refrigerators, and electric washing machines, all specifically marketed to women, who had by then assumed their place at the forefront of America's exploding postwar consumer economy. Even though electric washing machines were originally developed for commercial use, American housewives "owned" electric washing machines long before most of them ever actually owned one.

    Washing machines and vacuum cleaners were technologies that women, and mothers in particular, were expected to desire, often in hilariously sexualized ways. The most casual search for images of women in mid-century advertising offers thousands of examples of home-keeping technologies marketed to housewives in the interests of helping them save time, save money, build a better home, and create an atmosphere of love. A young mother quoted in Walter LaFeber's The American Century: A History of the United States Since the 1890s put the postwar housewife's love affair with new technology in neat terms: "It's nice to be modern. It's like running a factory in which you have the latest machinery."

    And again, just as women with kids at home started being able to shave precious hours off the clock thanks to some massive housekeeping technology upgrades, the philosophy of child-rearing in America got an upgrade, too—and again, childcare was expected to consume more time rather than less. A postwar baby boom, combined with a dramatic rise in the standard of living, plus the introduction of a host of technologies that reduced the amount of labor required to keep house, all combined to create the cultural juggernaut that was Dr. Benjamin Spock's Baby and Child Care.

    Dr. Spock's book, which sold by the millions in the late 1940s and 1950s, introduced an even more intensely child-centered approach to childcare than the parenting philosophies that had guided early-twentieth-century mothers. The book's central message for mothers is an encouraging, even empowering one, from its very first lines: "Trust yourself. You know more than you think you do." And yet, in its meticulous attention to the minutiae of parenting, as well as in its overall admonition to mothers to be guided by their children's personalities and desires (and not, say, by what might be more doable for others in the family), Dr. Spock's great work fostered a standard of motherhood that would prove difficult for many women to sustain, especially women who lacked the time, leisure, and technological comforts of the postwar middle class.

    Because if the laudable message of Dr. Spock's wildly influential book boiled down to: Pay careful attention to your children if you want to care for them well, the dark echo of that message became: Unless you pay careful attention to your children—at all times, and all the time—how can you ever hope to care for them well?

    How Good of a Mother Are You?

    At least twice, then, since the turn of the twentieth century, American mothers have benefited hugely from surging technological advances in the home. But at the exact same time that homekeeping technologies were changed by breathtaking advances, cultural expectations for child-rearing also developed in such a way that childcare was expected to become more and more of an intense, full-time pursuit.

    Each time, technology was targeted to mothers in a way that raised the emotional stakes of consumption: Good mothers bought coal stoves, bought formula, bought detergent, bought sanitizers, bought toasters, bought refrigerators, bought whatever new technology made their home run better, safer, and cleaner for their children. At the turn of the century and again in the postwar years, the message connecting motherhood and technology was clear: Good mothers bought—and used—technologies that helped their families.

    How different from the way we're encouraged to see smartphones and other digital technologies. Smartphone releases are followed breathlessly in the news for the benefit of "early adopters," most of whom are assumed to be young single men with disposable income to spend on technology. But no one consumer group truly adopts their phones into family life like modern parents. And no one consumer group feels more guilt about being "plugged in" than parents, especially mothers.

    And that's the compelling irony of this Third Wave: In part because we're not encouraged to see digital technologies as being primarily for the benefit of women, women are burdened with guilt about how incredibly useful they are in our day-to-day lives. Despite how helpful smartphones are, mothers, more than any other type of user, are more apt to waste precious time apologizing for how much we use them. Of course, moms aren't the only ones taking advantage of the efficiency of their smartphones to multitask while parenting—dads check email at the children's museum too, and with noticeably less guilt. But even if using a smartphone helps moms take better care of themselves or their homes, any time we spend on a smartphone is considered time stolen from childcare—because a smartphone is not considered a permissible caregiving tool for mothers. In fact, it's considered the opposite.

    No one would ever tell a modern family to stop washing its laundry in a machine and start pounding their clothes with a stone down by the river. But a striking number of voices can be heard insisting parents should unplug—at least in part because doing so would be consistent with the heartfelt and well-intentioned beliefs that now constitute the ideal of "good parenting." Good parenting, as it is currently defined, urges us parents to do nothing more or less than slow down and enjoy our children, however difficult that may sometimes seem. Family dinners. Face time and not screen time. Experiences and not toys. Child-centered play. All of these are good things. But they take time, love, and care, and of those ineffable commodities, time is the only one that most parents don't have in abundance—and the only one that a smartphone can help parents conserve. Hours spent scrolling through Facebook aside, smartphones stand to help mothers save hours of precious, precious time, in countless practical, real ways, from job hunting to meal planning, from depositing checks without a trip to the bank to checking the hours for the carousel in the park.

    It's not true, of course, that we moms would feel less guilt about spending time on our smartphones if only digital technology was marketed in such a way that defined women as its primary consumers, as was the case for the washing machine and the refrigerator. (And no, slapping a pink or a pastel case on a smartphone—or anything else for that matter—doesn't count as respecting women consumers.) But that is certainly one key difference in the way the current wave of life-changing everyday technology is framed, both for and by the moms who use it most. You're a good geek if you live by your smartphone; you're a good employee or a good Instagrammer or a good Yelp reviewer. But you're not considered a good mother if you live by your smartphone, even if it makes everything you need to do as a mother easier. Today, a good mother is no longer the one who makes the most of the technologies available to her. A good mother is the one who most successfully ignores them.

    But should we really be lamenting how plugged in we are, when we recall the way it used to be? I'm all for less hand-wringing. I think most of us are.

    Siobhan Adcock is digital editorial director at All You magazine, and she has also written for HuffingtonPost, XOJane and The Daily Beast. Her novel "The Barter," a ghost story about motherhood set in contemporary and historical Texas, is just out in paperback from Plume. More Siobhan Adcock.
    Source: Moms, let go of your smartphone guilt: Every time technology makes our lives easier, we invent ways to make motherhood even harder