Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Two mystery webOS phones, Touchstone dock certified


New webOS phones confirmed in certification:

HP's next round of webOS phones edged closer to launch today with a certification for Canada and the US. The P102UNA and P102EWW have both shown at the third-party tester TÜV Rheinland and don't correspond to existing models, such as the original Pre (P100) or Pre Plus (P101). Both may be variants of the Roadrunner HD flagged last month, which would get a 960x640 screen as its centerpiece feature.
Also on show is a listing for a new inductive battery charger. The move hints that the Touchstone will carry on past the current webOS line and will get a redesign, though whether it's to improve functionality or just to fit in with the design of the future smartphones isn't as evident.


Another unnamed device and a car charger are also part of the details.

Timing isn't given away by the appearances, although TÜV certification usually happens just several weeks before a release. Palm was using the CES expo in January to show new phones until it was bought by HP, but that trend may continue as few companies launch major phones at the very end of the year.

Latest iPod Nano's Materials Cost Just $43.73: Half What the First Nano Cost

Latest iPod Nano's Materials Cost Just .73; Half What the First Nano Cost

Six generations on, and the cost of materials has decreased dramatically from thefirst-ever iPod Nano, which cost $89.97—for just 2GB. The 8GB version that came out recently has parts totaling $43.73.
Even the second-gen iPod Nano, which was double the capacity of the first one, cost a whopping $72.24. Of course, this was back in the day when a 4GB iPod Nano cost $199 upfront, compared to the $149 an 8GB-er costs now.
iSuppli has listed manufacturing costs at around $1.37, and while this is the first model to contain a touchscreen component, the screen and Toshiba-originated memory together costs just half of the total materials cost.

Caught on Video: Chuck Norris Solves iPhone 4 Signal Issues




If you’re having weak signal issues with your iPhone 4, and your brand new bumper case just isn’t cutting it, I’ve got some great news for you tonight. Turns out, tough man and living legend Chuck Norris is all you need to cure your somewhat common problem. In fact, his presence is so powerful, he doesn’t even need to be there with you to fix the situation. Just throw down a picture of Chuck next to your iPhone 4, and KA-POW, as fast as you can say Walker, Texas Ranger your signal issues are fixed. Hit play on the video above.

I’m all of a sudden jonesing for an official Chuck Norris case for the iPhone 4. Anyone know if there are any out there I could purchase?

Did you know? Chuck Norris counted to infinity… twice. He can also slam a revolving door.


chuck-norris.jpg


[Via: iPhoneDownloadBlog]

Smartphone Display Shoot-Out

Smartphone Display Shoot-Out


DisplayMate's Dr. Raymond Soneira put the iPhone 4, Samsung Galaxy S, Nexus One, and Motorola Droid through their paces to determine which smartphone's display is truly "super," and which are just so-so.

Introduction and Series Overview

A key element in the success of all smartphones and mobile devices is the quality and performance of their display. There have been lots of articles comparing various smartphone LCD and OLED displays and technologies, but almost all simply deliver imprecise off-the-cuff remarks like "the display is gorgeous" with very little in the way of serious attempts at objective or accurate display performance evaluations and comparisons—and many just restate manufacturer claims and provide inaccurate information, performance evaluations and conclusions.
This article objectively compares the display performance of five leading smartphone LCD and OLED displays based on extensive scientific lab measurements together with extensive side-by-side visual tests, incisive evaluations and comparisons, nicely summarized in this Comparison Table and the Results Highlights below. The term "Super" is marketing puffery being used by some manufacturers, but we have adopted it generically to differentiate the highest performance display technologies. Since smartphones are being used to view photos, videos and a wide range of multimedia content we have evaluated their picture quality on the same terms as HDTVs. In fact, one of the smartphones that we tested has better picture quality than most living room HDTVs—so the bar is already quite high for smartphones. But there is still plenty of room for improvement and we will show and tell you where—we have included images that have been mathematically processed to correct color and imaging errors on each smartphone so you can compare them to the originals.Part II of this series will be on glare, screen reflectance, ambient lighting and sensors, automatic screen brightness controls and using them to improve picture quality, screen readability, viewing comfort, reduce display power and increase battery run time. Now let's see how these leading smartphone's perform.

Results Highlights

For details, measurements, in-depth explanations and analysis see the links below for the individual dedicated articles for each smartphone.

iPhone 4 – "Super" LCD

Since its introduction the iPhone has been one of the wonders of the modern tech world for many reasons – but its display was never one of them – up until the iPhone 4, where it finally got the display it deserved. The iPhone 4 display, nicknamed the Retina Display, is an outstanding "Super" LCD delivering top performance in many of our test categories – it has the brightest and sharpest display, but on the other hand its color gamut is too small, producing under saturated somewhat washed-out colors, and its image contrast is too high, which produces punchier images and also partially compensates for its smaller color gamut. These were most likely intentional tradeoffs made by Apple to increase screen brightness, power efficiency and battery run time. None-the-less the iPhone 4 earned our Best Mobile Display Award in the DisplayMate Best Video Hardware Guide. We include a dedicated comparison with the iPhone 3GS below. "Retina Display" is a great marketing name, and it is the sharpest smartphone display available, but quantitatively it is a factor of two lower than the acuity of the human Retina. Click here for a discussion on the Retina Display. Finally, Part II of this series will discuss some major flaws in the iPhone 4's Automatic Brightness control, which hopefully will be corrected in the near future through a software update.

Samsung Galaxy S – "Super" OLED

The Galaxy S has Samsung's next generation premium OLED display marketed as a "Super AMOLED" display. The AM stands for Active Matrix, but all smartphone displays have that. What is particularly impressive is how rapidly Samsung has been improving their OLED technology, and the Galaxy S delivered top performance in many of our test categories. Some of areas where it fell short were the result of manufacturer calibration and OS issues rather than fundamental problems with the OLED technology itself. Google confirmed that some of the display problems we discovered are caused by Android 2.1. While OLED is still a relatively young display technology that has not yet been perfected to the performance levels of the very best mature LCDs, the Galaxy S is already an impressive display for an upcoming and rapidly evolving technology, so it earned our Best New Mobile Display Technology Award in the DisplayMate Best Video Hardware Guide. There are comparisons with "Super" LCDs and "non-Super" OLEDs below. Part II will also discuss problems with the Automatic Brightness control on the Galaxy S, which should also apply to other Android phones.

"Super" LCD versus "Super" OLED

All of the tested LCDs were considerably brighter than the OLED displays—however, that may change in the near future as OLEDs continue to improve. While "Super" OLEDs have roughly 50 times the Contrast Ratio of "Super" LCDs, when a display is set properly to its optimum screen brightness that superior Contrast Ratio is visually insignificant except under dark ambient lighting, which is seldom the case for mobile displays. While OLEDs love to flaunt their vivid colors and large color gamut, that produces gaudy and over saturated pictures—someday they will turn those down and get it right. While the iPhone 4's sharpness is something of an overkill (it's that high for App compatibility) the PenTile arrangement of the OLEDs has only two sub-pixels per pixel instead of the usual three, so it sometimes appears more pixilated than its stated resolution implies—it's excellent for photographic images but is noticeably degraded for colored (red, blue and magenta) text and graphics. While all OLEDs behave considerably better with changes in viewing angle than "Super" LCDs, smartphones are primarily single viewer devices and the user can easily orient the phone for the best viewing angle. LCDs are currently more power efficient for brighter images and OLEDs are more efficient for darker images. But for typical web and app content, which typically use bright backgrounds, the power balance is still decisively in the favor of LCDs by more than 2 to 1 in our tests—again, that should change as OLEDs continue to improve. The big question remaining for OLEDs (and not covered by our tests) is whether the previous uneven aging over time for the red-green-blue OLED sub-pixels has been solved.

"Super" OLED versus "non-Super" OLED

"Super" OLEDs do indeed perform considerably better than "non-Super" OLEDs. What is particularly impressive is how rapidly Samsung has been improving their OLED technology. The "Super" OLED is a much more refined display with many fewer artifacts and a much better factory calibration. Samsung advertises that the Galaxy S Super OLEDs are 20 percent brighter and use 20 percent less power than "non-Super" OLEDs, and have a screen reflectance of just 4 percent, down from 20 percent for "non-Super" OLEDs. In our lab tests the Galaxy S has a screen reflectance of 4.4 percent, is 25 percent brighter and uses 21 percent less power than the "non-Super" OLED in the Google Nexus One—meeting or exceeding all of Samsung's specs. Particularly impressive is the very low screen reflectance, which is among the lowest we have ever measured—outdoors it can have a significant impact on screen visibility. The over-saturated gaudy colors are still there—they need to be properly managed and can be used constructively in a calibrated fashion to counteract the effects of glare from ambient light (Part II).

iPhone 4 versus iPhone 3

The iPhone 4 display is a tremendous step forward over the iPhone 3GS and earlier models. It has double the resolution, a 26 percent brighter screen, 24 percent lower screen reflectance, and 64 percent greater Contrast under bright ambient light, plus it has 8 times the Contrast under dim ambient light. On the other hand, the iPhone 4 has the same reduced color gamut as the iPhone 3GS, producing under saturated somewhat washed-out colors. The iPhone 3GS has very low image contrast, which adds to the display's washed-out appearance. The iPhone 4 has gone to the other extreme and has too much image contrast, which gives its images a punchier look and also partially compensates for its smaller color gamut. Lastly, the iPhone 4 display consumes only half the power of the iPhone 3GS display.

Motorola Droid – "Super" LCD

The original Droid, launched in October 2009, remains the number one smartphone in terms of overall picture quality and accuracy, close to what you see in a calibrated studio monitor and actually better than most living room HDTVs—just a lot smaller, but still impressive none-the-less. It earned the Best Mobile Picture Quality Awardin the DisplayMate Best Video Hardware Guide but only for Android 2.0. Google confirmed that the some of the display problems we discovered afterwards were caused by upgrading to Android 2.1.

Google Nexus One – "Non-Super" OLED

Its "non-Super" OLED display got lots of attention when it was introduced in January 2010, but in terms of objective picture quality and overall display performance it behaves like a rushed and unfinished prototype for early adopters instead of a production quality display. Decidedly in last place for the five smartphone displays tested. Google confirmed that some of the display problems we discovered are caused by Android 2.1.

And the Winner is:

There is no decisive winner as each of the three "Super" displays significantly outperforms the others in more than one important area and significantly underperforms in other areas. The iPhone 4 by far has the brightest and sharpest display and is the most power efficient of the displays. The Motorola Droid by far has the best picture quality and accuracy. The Samsung Galaxy S by far has the lowest screen reflectance and largest Contrast for both bright and dark ambient lighting, and the best viewing angles. On the flip side, the iPhone 4 has a weak color gamut and viewing angles, the Motorola Droid has weak screen reflectance and viewing angles, and the Samsung Galaxy S has lower brightness, excessive color saturation, higher power consumption and some sharpness issues. Each of these "Super" displays is none-the-less impressive and deserves an award: the iPhone 4 performed better overall so it earned the DisplayMate Best Mobile Display Award, the Motorola Droid earned the Best Mobile Picture Quality Award, and the Samsung Galaxy S earned the Best New Mobile Display Technology Award. Each of these displays has lots of room for improvement and can leapfrog the others in their next iteration with appropriate action.

The BlackBerry 'PlayBook' Tablet: Summary of Stories



RIM introduces PlayBook -- the BlackBerry tablet (via Engadget)


The BlackBerry PlayBook Tablet: 10 Things You Need to Know (via Gizmodo)


Ultimate Tablet Showdown: iPad vs. PlayBook vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Slate (via Gizmodo)


So, what can I say about The Blackberry Playbook?
Here's a quick list of my opinions on this new RIM gadget.
  1. And everyone was making fun of the name of the iPad, PlayBook sounds even worse. Just saying.
  2. RIM has finally brought the goods. Their attempt of actually creating a phone that can compete with the iPhone 4, The Blackberry Torch, failed miserably in that it couldn't even compete (hardware and software wise) to the iPhone 3GS. Just because they updated to a webkit browser, finally, doesn't make the Blackberry OS better. I am really impressed with what RIM is showing off as their new OS. IT looks absolutely amazing. The question is, will it really deliver?
  3.  Price? The 7" Samsung Galaxy Tab does not have a set price in the U.S., but outside, it has a MUCH higher prices than the iPad. The question is, can the price compete? $499 sounds like it should be no problem, but we'll have to wait and see.
  4. Battery Life. Say what you want about the iPad, but there's one thing you can't argue with and that is its battery life. The iPad battery life, according to tech reporters and blogs, lasts an average of 12 hours. 2 more hours than Apple has said on its site. This seems like the biggest issue that this Blackberry Tablet will have for three reasons:
    1. 1 GHz Dual Core ARM Processor, 1 GB RAM, and Flash (need I say more).
    2. Screen resolution is higher than the Galaxy Tab (same size screen), so I'm guessing the screen is a little bit better, but that also means battery life will wane ever so slightly more.
    3. Since it is MUCH smaller AND thinner than the iPad, the battery in this won't even be that big.
Again, these are just predictions. I could be wrong, but I don't think so.


However, at the end of the day, RIM finally brought an amazing concept (it's not a product until there is a price, firm release date, and real review units) that is making everyone talk about them for the better, and that hasn't happened to them in a long time. I hope you are all excited about this as I am.


Bring it on!

Please comment below to share your opinions as well.

New Blog Design!

To all the readers of this blog, I hope you all noticed the new Blogger Design. I really like it. I actually noticed I have readers. It's a little strange.

If you have anything to say, please leave a comment.

Also, I past the planning phase of an AWESOME Podcast about Technology.

I will let you guys know ASAP.

I am also going to redesign the logo too.

Have a good day.

- T.

Ultimate Tablet Showdown: iPad vs. PlayBook vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Slate


Ultimate Tablet Showdown: iPad vs. PlayBook vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Slate









The iPad's finally got some competition; in the past few weeks, the HP Slate made a brief appearance, the Samsung Galaxy Tab debuted, and just BlackBerry unveiled its business-minded PlayBook today. Here's how they all measure up:
Ultimate Tablet Showdown: iPad vs. PlayBook vs. Galaxy Tab vs. Slate










It should be noted that there are still some things we don't know about the PlayBook, and the HP Slate specs are taken from a leaked internal document that hasn't yet been officially confirmed.
Still, the battlefield's a lot more clearly defined than it was when we first compared tablets—both real and rumored—back in January. And as its rivals catch up, the iPad's looking increasingly outgunned.
That's just on the hardware side, though. Apple's still got three major advantages that opponents haven't made up much space on: iOS, the App Store, and a huge head start. It's going to take more than a pair of HD cameras to overcome that.