With 20% Growth, Facebook Confirms Africa Is A Mobile Continent

Facebook, which recently opened its first office in Africa, says the service is booming on mobile as it confirms that 100% of its monthly users in Nigeria (15 million) and South Africa (12 million) are on mobile phones. Of Kenya’s 4.5 million monthly users, 95% are on mobile. Facebook also says “60% of all Internet users in Africa are active on Facebook”.

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3 Ways To Step Up Your Cyber Security Game

As IT security threats continue to evolve and expand at an exponential rate, concern over those threats has moved into the board room, said speakers at a conference sponsored by CenturyLink and Alcatel-Lucent and produced by CIO Magazine on “The Future of Security and Compliance in a Hostile World,” held in Washington, D.C., Aug. 26. In response to these threats, chief information security officers (CISOs) must change their approach to enterprise security.

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Tizen-based Samsung Z3 allegedly passes through FCC, coming soon

Tizen found some success with the Z1, now the successor, Samsung Z3, is nearing launch. The project is reportedly overseen personally by the Vice Chairman of Samsung Electronics and passed through the FCC yesterday.

Of course, the US is probably not the primary target of the Z3. A few months ago the scuttlebutt was that Bangladesh, Nepal and India (where the phone was imported for testing) will be the initial stomping grounds of the Tizen-powered smartphone.

A week from now the Tizen Developer Conference kicks off in Shenzhen and it’s expected that the Samsung Z3 will there. It’s possible that it will launch alongside the Tizen-powered Samsung Gear S2 smartwatch.

Those two should bring a new major version of Tizen (v3.0). Other than that, the Samsung Z3 is epxcted to have a 5″ 720p screen, Snapdragon 410 chipset with 1GB of RAM (1.5GB maybe) and 8GB of storage, 8MP + 5MP cameras (or 5MP + 2MP, not certain).

Source |…

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Some of the innovative iPhone features we’ve seen before

The only thing that’s changed is everything. Apple’s iPhone 6s/6s Plus marketing slogan is about as true as they come. Certainly more believable than that other catch phrase “most advanced smartphones in the world”. Only, the changes being advertised are about as new to a smartphone as the wheel is to human kind.

Apple’s list kicks off with 3D Touch, and we’re inclined to vote that one in its favor. Originally conceived as Force Touch (even senior VP of software Craig Federighi let his tongue slip once at yesterday’s keynote), it was already introduced on the latest MacBook Pro and Apple Watch.

Sure, there were developments in the field years ago by Synaptics, but they never made it to mass production. And though Apple was rumored for months to be working on the feature for this generation iPhone, the company was still beaten to market by Chinese heavyweights Huawei with the Mate S and ZTE with the Axon Mini. Obviously, those two won’t come anywhere near the iPhone 6s sales, but timing robbed Apple from being first on this one.

7000 series aluminum we haven’t seen used on a smartphone, and bicycle frames are the first thing that comes to mind, though Apple does quote the aerospace industry as the primary customer. Either way, the aluminum-zinc alloy must be pretty strong.

Whether other phone manufacturers don’t go into specifics on the matter, or Apple is actually the only one to use it, we can’t know. The truth is, not a word would have been heard on the precise type of alloy, had Apple designed a proper frame for the previous generation that negates the effect of stress concentration around the button cutouts.

Sapphire crystal was the next big thing to stand between your display and the adverse outer world, Apple would have had you believe until a while ago. Then the world intervened and Sapphire turned out not to be so easy to manufacture on the scale Apple needed it, so double ion exchange glass is the next next big thing. Which, for all we know, is to be found on the non-S iPhone 6, too.

How exactly the 2nd generation Touch ID is different from the first is unclear. It worked pretty great from the get go, and there was so little room for improvement, that the only PR statement this year is that it’s twice as fast. We don’t buy it.

The “incredible, all-new” 12MP iSight camera is perhaps the easiest target for mockery, and not because it’s bad. We haven’t tested it yet for obvious reasons, but we expect it to be every bit as good as it’s advertised.

It’s just that it took Apple years to acknowledge that the world has moved on from the state it was in 2011, when the iPhone 4s debuted the 8MP camera that stayed on for 4 generations iPhones. Not to mention that the Nokia N8 already had a 12MP camera a year before said iPhone, yet a year later than the Samsung Pixon12, all the way back in 2009.

And that doesn’t even graze the fact that you can buy a brand-name Chinese phone with a more than capable 12MP camera for a tenth of the price of an iPhone 6s. That is, an iPhone 6s that makes any sense, meaning a 64GB version, but that’s an entirely different issue.

And how about 4K video recording. Qualcomm brought the feature to prominence with the Snapdragon 800, which made it to market two years ago with the likes of the Nokia Lumia 1520 and Samsung Galaxy Note 3.

You could argue that Apple didn’t anticipate the competition was working on 2160p recording (hard to imagine them being so oblivious) and had no time to react on the iPhone 5s. Why not then do something for the iPhone 6? Oh, it didn’t have the necessary pixels on the 8MP sensor, which it had to use for a fourth generation in a row.

The front FaceTime camera is now a 5MP unit, Apple is keeping up with the times in this respect. Yes, there are 13MP front shooters, but they tend to be installed in midrange devices and flagships are more conservative. The Retina Flash feature, which fires up the display to assist in the darkest shootng conditions, sounds familiar, though.

Could it be that we’ve seen it before, perhaps on the LG G Pro 2, to name one? And that one had it in its native camera app, but there are countless apps both in the Google Play store and the Apple App Store that do more or less the same thing. Though if front flash photography was all that important to Apple, an actual front flash would have…

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Periscope gains support for landscape video

If you use Periscope to broadcast video from your Android device, you’re getting a new feature to play with today.

Periscope is getting an update to support landscape video. That means that when you tilt your phone sideways, the video sent to all of your viewers will be in landscape mode. Viewers can continue to watch with their phone in portrait orientation if they’d like, but they’ll need to turn it landscape to get full screen video.

periscopelandscape

In addition to landscape video, the new Periscope update adds context for shared videos that appear in your feed. With this feature, you’ll see an indicator showing who shared the video to you. There’s also a mutual follow feature that Periscope promises will make private broadcasts easier by showing you a list of mutual follows — people that you follow and that also follow you — since it thinks that those are the people that you’re likely to invite to your private stream.

You can grab Periscope from Google Play using the source link below.

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