Thursday, September 15, 2011

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 4G LTE update coming soon, only bug fixes

Samsung and Verizon are all prepped to start the OTA (over the air) update for the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 with Verizon 4G LTE this week. Sadly the update appears to only be a very minor one that should fix some 4G LTE connectivity issues and a few other bugs.


I know many users (myself included) were hoping this would be an update to Android 3.2 Honeycomb or even the recently released Touch Wiz UX that the Wi-Fi version received but it is neither. This update is a minor software update and nothing more. While I wish we were receiving an update to the stable 3.2 Honeycomb, I’m still happy that they are providing some fixes and hopefully users have a more stable connection following the update.
According to the info provided by Verizon we will see data connectivity enhancements and fixes, then a slew of improvements for email and browsing the web on your Galaxy Tab 10 with 4G LTE. Usually once these update notes appear at Verizon Support the updates shortly follow within a few days so we can expect to see this any time now. I’ll be sure to update once it starts hitting tablets.

HTC Runnymede Sense 3.5 ROM Ported to the Desire S

While HTC Sense 3.5 has yet to make its official debut, the underground Android dev scene has been busy porting the updated user interface to the currently available lineup of HTC devices. The latest port comes on behalf of the upcoming HTC Runnymede and XDA member proxuser. What we see here is a version of Sense that looks slightly different from the one ripped from the HTC Bliss the first phone found to be running the altered UI.

The Sense 3.5 ROM is in its first release for the HTC Desire S and runs on top of Android 2.3.5. Based around the WWE RUU 0.82.401.1, there are still some kinks to be worked out. The ROM is expected to find its way to other handsets in the near future.
[via XDA]

HTC Sensation XE hands-on

The HTC Sensation XE has just been announced by the Taiwanese company and we’ve already had the chance to get our hands all over it, at a showcase for Carphone Warehouse.
The new flagship HTC handset comes rocking Beats Audio, an upgraded processor and a RAM boost. The onboard processor is now a dual core 1.5GHz model and an HTC agent told the RAM had been increased to 1GB as well.
In the hand the new Android smartphone is essentially the same design as the existing Sensation. You get those slick lines and the huge screen that contours slightly at the edges.

A few subtle changes will make it clear to your friends that you have the latest and greatest phone from HTC however.
There are red flashes of detailing on the front: the speaker grill is now red and the backlit control buttons ranging across the bottom of the 4.3-inch display are also red.?Flip the phone over and the three-tone back of the original Sensation is now two tones and of course there is the iconic Beats logo emblazoned on the back.
Fire the Sensation XE up and it is very much HTC Sense as normal. The phone is running Android 2.3.4 and comes with Sense 3.0, but there have been some software tweaks to accommodate Dr Dre's musical aptitude.
Plug in the headphones and when you head into the Sound Enhancer section you’ll find the option to enable or disable Beats Audio. Enabling fires up a Beats icon in the notification bar too, with the option to turn off the enhancement on the fly.

You probably won’t choose to however, as in our tests we found the HTC Sensation XE to sound fantastic. Of course, you’re not just left hanging with regular HTC headphones as you get a set of iBeats in the box, making this an exciting package for the music fan.
The battery has also been upgraded, so the handset promises longer life than before, which to be fair, was never the phone’s strongest feature.?
Whether the performance is much different to its forebear is difficult to gauge from a brief play, however, for those who have recently got themselves an HTC Sensation, you now have something else to crave.

HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 1  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 2  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 3  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 4  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 5  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 6  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 7  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 8  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 9  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 10  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 11  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 12  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 13  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 14  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 15  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 16  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 17  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 18  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 19  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 20  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 21  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 22  HTC Sensation XE hands-on. Phones, Mobile phones, HTC, HTC Sensation XE, Android, Photos 23

LG Optimus S Gets Android 2.3 Update


Won’t be long before Froyo is obsolete. Sprint has released Android 2.3 for the LG Optimus S (which, if you didn’t know, is their version of the LG Optimus One). Sprint’s version of the phone is a slightly modified version of stock Android so you can expect the stock Gingerbread look that has really grown on a lot of people. Find the list of changes below and grab instructions on how to pull the update down here. [Sprint via AC]
LG Optimus S Software Update – Android 2.3 (LS670ZVH)

Enhancements/Fixes:
- Volume adjustment from handset when backlight is off and in a Bluetooth call
- Initiation of a 3-way call in certain markets
- Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)
- Updated color scheme (includesdarker notification bar and black-based menus)
- New on-screen keyboard (supports multi-touch input and a  smart auto-correction function)
- Improved cut-paste functionality
- New integrated download application for ease in accessing downloaded files
- Updated camera application
- Power management and task killer applications

Important Notes:
- The new software version is: LS670ZVH
- Released in stages with 100% of devices having received the update within 10 days
- Refer to the LG Optimus S Software Update blog for install instructions

Google Goggles Updated, Automatically Searches Every Picture You Take



Google Goggles has been updated to version 1.6 with a feature that aims to make your smartphone camera “smarter.” With a new opt-in feature, Goggles will now automatically perform a search on any image you take with your camera, whether you snap the picture using the app or not. The search takes place in the background, and, should any useful results such as paintings or landmarks be returned, a notification will be pushed.

Many might be hesitant of the new feature, viewing it as just one more way for Google to collect information on its users, and Google no doubt hopes to gain from whatever data they uncover, but the feature is stressed as opt-in only. Goggles won’t be googling your images without your knowledge. Automatic image searches could certainly come in handy when it comes to uncovering fun facts or interesting threads of information related to the objects and places you photograph, but for now it still doesn’t do much to elevate Goggles into an app useful on a daily basis. Head over to the Android Market to download or update Goggle now.

Android Market Link: Google Goggles

[via Google]

US Cellular HTC Merge Customers Receive Gingerbread


Gingerbread is all over the place lately, it seems. US Cellular has delivered the upgrade to owners of the oft-forgotten HTC Merge Unfortunately it does appear you may need a Windows PC to apply this yourself as it requires HTC Sync, but be sure to call your local US Cellular location to see if they can do it for you in-store. If you are able to do it yourself, head over to their site to get started with the instructions and download. [via AP]

Google and Intel: Who Needs Whom More?


Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and Google (NASDAQ:GOOG)  forged a deal to tune Google's Android operating system to run well on Intel's processors Sept 13.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini and Google's lead Android creator Andy Rubin stood onstage together at the Intel Developer Forum to unveil the pact. The two showed off a prototype smartphone using Intel's "Medfield" Atom mobile processor to power Google's  Android "Honeycomb" operating system, originally tailored for tablets.
Both companies positioned the deal as mutually beneficial; Google gets another major processor OEM building chips for its platform, while Intel has a nice on-ramp to providing chips for the broadest smartphone platform in the world.
Otellini said Intel's Medfield chips will appear first in Android phones in the first half of 2012 to challenge the popular mobile processors made by ARM Holdings.
Yet most analysts agree Intel, which was late to the mobile processor market after pumping out countless chips for power-chomping PCs and servers, has the most to gain from the relationship.
After all, Intel is now positioned to get its chips into the lush, verdant markets for Android  smartphones and tablet computers, which rely on low power chips that don't burn out as fast. IDC recently predicted smartphones and tablets will grow to eclipse wireline machines such as desktop PCs by 2015.
"Intel needs Google more than the other way around, but Google certainly wants the broadest distribution possible, which is why the company is investing – and has invested in the past – to ensure that Android runs on both ARM and Intel," Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart told eWEEK.
Industry analyst Roger Kay added that Intel needs Google as much as Microsoft needs ARM.
"Google has lots of distribution without Intel," Kay told eWEEK. "But Google gets silicon optimization for its OS.  Eventually, Atom may be a better platform than ARM.  Google has to hedge its bets."
Industry analyst Jack Gold sees the situation a bit differently. Despite Android's momentum, the relationship is crucial to both companies' strategies.
"Android itself has not always been that good a performer, and some of the software choices Google has made are troublesome," Gold explained. For example, the Honeycomb OS has been labeled buggy and blamed for lackluster Android tablet sales.

Meanwhile, Gold noted that for all of its prowess of a chipmaker, Intel has a unique ability to make software and particularly OSes that run extremely well.
"While they won't necessarily help Android on ARM, they can certainly make Android run great on the Intel architecture, and it's clear Google wants to be a leading OS provider, including on the x86 platforms (PCs)," Gold told eWEEK. "Any help Intel provides Google for use on x86 will also help Android running on ARM since the technology will be repurposed. So, my bottom line is both companies actually have a great deal of benefit from a tight relationship."
Regardless, Google is doing a lot of hedging around Android it probably never expected to have to do. The company ponied up $12.5 billion to buy Motorola Mobility (NYSE:MMI), a move the search engine provider positioned as a play to grab massive patent portfolio totaling 17,000-plus patents and counting (7,500 pending.)
However, some industry watchers believe, based on Motorola's proxy filing with the SEC, that the phone maker forced Google to purchase it to protect it from gross litigation in the Android ecosystem, where Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) have sued Motorola for patent infringement over its Android handsets.

HTC Sensation XE vs Samsung Galaxy Note


We see if HTC's Sensation XE has what it takes to bring down Samsung's behemoth Galaxy Note

We compare the newly announced HTC Sensation XE to Samsung's biggest handset yet – the Galaxy Note.

Form:
HTC Sensation XE - 126.1x65.4x11.3mm, 151g
Samsung Galaxy Note - 146.9x83x9.7mm, 178g
The Sensation XE uses the same outer shell as its vanilla flavoured cousin. The XE is most assuredly some kind of red flavour with little crimson accents in places, most notably the B logo on the lower rear panel signifying the presence of Dr Dre’s Beats audio technology.
It's a thin, slinky design with very little unused space round the screen, and even the swirly monochrome panel setup on the rear of the handset looks nice. It’s all tastefully done and this can only be a good thing.
We can imagine some might find the Samsung Galaxy Note’s design bland and simplistic. We can see where this argument comes from with its raw, slab-like appearance and uncompromisingly sharp lines. It’s an unadulterated rectangle, essentially.
That’s not our view though, we think it’s looking pretty good. Given all the legal tomfoolery that’s been going on recently Samsung probably won’t thank us for saying this, but the Note really does look like a giant iPhone, and we mean that in a good way.
It has a nice clean visual style. It’s also considerably thinner than its rival at a mere 9.7mm to the Sensation’s 11.3mm.
We like both designs here, each has a premium feel and is pleasing to the eye, but they’re both very different.
Winner - Draw

Display:
The Sensation XE uses a 4.3-inch capacitive S-LCD touchscreen with a resolution of 540x960 pixels and an impressive pixel density of 256 pixels-per-inch (ppi).
The HTC Sense user interface (UI) has been overlaid on the Android operating system and the phone features gyro and accelerometer sensors for screen rotation. The Sensation XE’s display also supports multi-touch input.
Samsung’s Note uses the company’s own Super Amoled display technology combined with reinforced Gorilla Glass for its massive 5.3-inch capacitive touchscreen.
A screen that size deserves a tasty resolution, and the Note doesn’t disappoint at 800 x 1280 pixels. To top it off it’s also got a very high pixel density of 285ppi.
The HTC’s display is well up there and is worthy of some respect, but the Note’s is just something else entirely. It’s approaching the smaller end of tablet territory and with such impressive figures on resolution and pixel density, it’s sure to offer a crystal clear picture on its vast expanse of glass.
Winner – Samsung Galaxy Note

Storage:
Storage is one of the Sensation’s weaker areas, it actually has 4GB of internal storage but only 1GB is actually accessible by the user.
A microSD card slot allows an extra 32GB to be stored externally and processing power is backed up by 768MB of RAM.
The Note is much better equipped with options for either 16GB or 32GB of internal space and 1GB of RAM. Card support is the same as the Sensation.
The Samsung outperforms HTC’s handset on all fronts here making it the clear victor.
Winner – Samsung Galaxy Note


Processor:
Both devices are quite similarly specced in the processor department, each is dual core and the Note runs a 1.4GHz block while the Sensation XE packs in a fraction more at 1.5GHz.
In Samsung’s handset you’ve got an ARM Cortex-A9 on the Exynos chipset, featuring a Mali-400MP graphics processing unit (GPU) for some visual flair.
Meanwhile, the HTC sports a Qualcomm MSM 8260 Snapdragon processor with an Adreno 220 GPU.
You’d be hard pushed to find a quicker mobile device right now and we reckon it’d be equally difficult to discern a difference in performance between the two handsets here.
Both will deliver astonishingly fast, smooth and responsive performance consistently whether you’re browsing, multitasking between apps, viewing films or playing games.
Winner - Draw

Operating System:
These are both Android-powered handsets and each runs the most recent build of Google’s operating system, Gingerbread 2.3.
It’s a good system and certainly better than its predecessors but it’s starting to lag behind a little and Ice Cream Sandwich is just round the corner, which both these devices will be eligible for.
There’s nothing to compare the two here so we’ll call it a draw.
Winner - Draw

Camera:
Again plenty of similarities here, each phone boasts an 8-megapixel primary camera at 3264x2448 pixels and capable of 1080p video capture.
Both feature autofocus, touch focus, face detection and image stabilisation and they support video calling.
The HTC has a dual LED flash and instant capture. It also has stereo sound recording for video and a VGA secondary camera.
Samsung has given the Note an LED flash (though not dual), smile detection, panoramic capture, multi-shot, scene editing tools and a 2-megapixel secondary.
As with the processors, there are distinctive differences here but overall the effect of having a well-equipped 8-megapixel primary is the same.
Both are going to give a highly satisfactory camera experience and are capable of producing some excellent quality images and videos.
At a pinch we’d say the extra features on the Note are a better package but it really is swings and roundabouts here and we doubt many would be unhappy with the Sensation’s arrangement.
Winner – Samsung Galaxy Note (but only just)

Final Thoughts:
These are both astonishing phones, but just when it seemed like someone had stepped up to the plate of challenging the Samsung Galaxy S2, Samsung only went and moved the goalposts with the Note.
Okay, in some areas the Note isn’t quite as good as the S2 but it’s not at all far off and we’d say at least they’re in the same league.
Generally we’d say the HTC Sensation XE is also on this level, though we do find the storage somewhat disappointing and it’s the main thing which pulls it back.
With the Note, not only do you get something very close to the S2 in performance but you get that epic expanse of high-quality screen space which is virtually unparalleled in the smartphone world.

Verizon 4G LTE reaching another 26 markets tomorrow

Verizon has been on a roll lately with their 4G LTE network roll-out and it appears they aren’t slowing down any time soon. Back in August we mentioned they would be updating additional network markets in September starting on the 15th (tomorrow), but we only reported around 15 or so.


Verizon isn’t taking any chances at anyone catching up because now they’re telling us they plan to add 26 more markets to 4G LTE tomorrow instead of the original 15. They’ve also expanded the reach in many current markets too. With plenty of devices on the way to take full advantage of 4G LTE Verizon has a clear lead over the rest of the pack and it’s only getting stronger.
Over the past few months we’ve seen upgrades about twice a month from Big Red, leading me to believe soon enough they’ll have everyone covered with their blazing fast 4G LTE speeds nationwide. With Verizon also getting ready to release a slew of mid-range and competitively priced phones with 4G LTE like the Samsung Stratosphere and the Pantech Breakout it’s safe to say AT&T has some catching up to do.