HTC Android Wear smartwatch back in play

After failing to deliver an Android Wear smartwatch in 2014, a new rumor claims that HTC is working on a new smartwatch. Codenamed Halfbeak (named after a fish, like most other Android Wear devices), the HTC smartwatch is said to feature a 360 x 360 round display, giving it the same resolution as the second generation Moto 360. The size of the display and other internal specifications are still unknown at this point, but the HTC Halfbeak should feature the same Snapdragon 400, 512MB of RAM and 4GB of internal storage, which are common in nearly all Android Wear devices.

We don’t know when HTC will release its first smartwatch, but it’s conceivable that the HTC Halfbeak could show up on store shelves just in time for the holiday shopping season.

Do you thin HTC’s design team will deliver an Android Wear device that can compete with the likes of the second generation Moto 360 and Huawei Watch?

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HTC working on an Android Wear watch called ‘halfbeak’

HTC is looking to catch the next big trend wave – VR headsets (now delayed), smart bands (cancelled maybe?) and now, perhaps, smartwatches. The company has been listed as an Android Wear partner since Day 1, but hasn’t produced anything yet.

According to some anonymous info, HTC is developing a smartwatch with a round 360x360px display. The watch is codenamed halfbeak. The company has an event on September 29, presumably for new flagships but we may get a watch too.

Even if HTC can move that fast it will still be behind others, which flooded IFA with watches. Also, keep in mind that this isn’t the first HTC smartwatch rumor and the previous one didn’t pan…

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A Samsung Exynos 8890 chip breezes through GeekBench inside a Lucky-LTE device

Samsung’s semiconductor division grew to the top of the Android realm over the course of only a few years, and there’s little doubt that the Exynos 7420 is the reigning performance champ. The company appears to be working to diversify its SoC range and a new model has appeared in GeekBench listing.

The spotted chipset is reported as “universal8890”, meaning it may be released as Exynos 8890, instead of the Exynos M1 designation that’s been mentioned. The SoC features an octa-core processor, clocked at 1.38GHz, but its Processor ID is none of the familiar ones. The ARM implementer 83 is neither the known Exynos 7420 (ARM implementer 65), nor the purported Snapdragon 820 (AMR implementer 81). That suggests we may very well be looking at Samsung’s own Mongoose cores here.

They’re scoring quite high, too, though not on par with the existing 7420, which is typically around the 5200 mark in the multi-core test. The low clock rate may be key in this respect, as 1.38GHz is significantly below the rumored 2.3GHz maximum.

The tested unit packs 4GB of RAM, though if it is a flagship chip indeed, we may see it coupled with 6GB, considering the direction the industry is headed. Another interesting point is that the chip is implemented inside a device, codenamed LUCKY-LTE. You could speculate that it goes to indicate Samsung finally adopting its own modem, instead of using a Qualcomm solution.

Source |…

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Bamboo Spark, el cuaderno digital que copia en la nube

Wacom se pasa al papel, pero no nos malinterpretes, ya que sigue manteniendo la esencia stylus. El último producto de la marca de las tabletas es un cuaderno de papel, con la peculiaridad de que posee una superficie de EMR (resonancia magnética) que …

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The Work Smarter-Not Harder Back-To-School Shopping Guide

Like any professional, a student’s occupation is that of a professional learner.  If you can grasp this perspective, then it’s not hard to assume that there are there are smarter, more efficient ways to do his/her job. Of course, working hard is often expected and valued but to direct all energy to just working harder every minute of the day is unrealistic and in the end, unproductive. Here are some tools and strategies that can help kids to work smarter, that is, to learn more efficiently and enjoyably.  Granted that no tool is perfect as every learner has different needs, considering the features of these products will help you figure out what to look for when shopping to help your child work smarter, not harder.

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