Samsung reportedly selling edge displays to other manufacturers

Samsung’s edge displays have been a differentiating factor in the smartphone game, not only offering a unique appearance but having some new features to go along with them. But that may soon change, as Samsung is reportedly going to be selling the edge displays to other manufacturers to use in their smartphones.

The companies allegedly in talks with Samsung are Huawei, Xiaomi, and Vivo (above is a leaked image of the Xplay5). The BlackBerry Priv apparently uses a Samsung edge display, and while it doesn’t serve any functional purpose, you have to admit that it looks pretty good.

In the end, it will result in more unique devices and that’s great for the customer. A budget Huawei or Xiaomi phone with curved screen edges sounds great, since the edge displays are only on flagships in the Samsung lineup. What do you think about Samsung giving up a differentiating factor like the curved edge displays? Leave a comment!

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1LrkA76
via IFTTT

ASUS announces Marshmallow rollout plans

ASUS has announced its plans for the Android 6.0 update we know a lot of people are waiting for. Though Marshmallow launched almost five months ago, many companies have still not released the update for their devices. We should be used to this by now, though, as it’s been a trend with Android devices since the OS came out.

ASUS will be updating a bunch of phones to Marshmallow in Q2 of 2016, so June at the latest. Here’s the list of devices to be updated:

  • PadFone S (PF500KL)
  • ZenFone 2 (ZE550ML, ZE551ML)
  • ZenFone 2 Deluxe (ZE551ML)
  • ZenFone 2 Deluxe Special Edition (ZE551ML)
  • ZenFone 2 Laser (ZE500KG, ZE500KL, ZE550KL, ZE551KL, ZE600KL, ZE601KL)
  • ZenFone Selfie (ZD551KL)
  • ZenFone Max (ZC550KL)
  • ZenFone Zoom (ZX551ML)

When these devices do receive the update, the messenger, mail, and calendar ZenUI apps will be replaced with the Google versions. If you’d like to keep the ASUS versions, they’ll be available on the Play Store. The updates are still a few months out, but at least the company isn’t abandoning these devices.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1RBbSm7
via IFTTT

Top 5 most popular Android apps from last week: Kaizala, Speedify

Every week we cover new Android apps with Fresh Meat on Wednesday, followed by Android Gaming on Thursday and Top 10 App Updates on Friday. When Monday rolls around, we look back to see which apps were the most appealing to our audience. Read on for the five most popular Android apps from last week. These apps are ones that are most likely new and haven’t appeared in the top five list more than three times.

1. Battery Time Saver

Battery Time Saver

App info: Extend your battery time to make your battery power last longer between charges with Battery Time, the free app for Android that helps you conserve energy, save power, stop energy leaks and fine-tune settings to optimize and boost your battery time.

//playboard.me/widgets/pb-app-box/1/pb_load_app_box.js

 

2. Rewind: Reverse Voice Recorder

Rewind - Reverse Voice Recorder

App info: Rewind allows you to passively record your surroundings. This app continuously runs in the background and records everything your phone hears, allowing you to save recent recording when you hear something you would like to keep.

//playboard.me/widgets/pb-app-box/1/pb_load_app_box.js

 

3. Kaizala

Kaizala

App info: Kaizala, a Microsoft Garage Project, helps you get your work done by tracking bills, jobs, location and much more – and, it’s as simple as chat.

//playboard.me/widgets/pb-app-box/1/pb_load_app_box.js

 

4. Speedify

Speedify

App info: Speedify is a new kind of VPN that lets you use Wi-Fi and 3G/4G mobile data together for fast, unbreakable Internet no matter where you are.

//playboard.me/widgets/pb-app-box/1/pb_load_app_box.js

 

5. VHS Camcorder

VHS Camcorder

App info: With VHS Camcorder, you’ll make home movies that look and sound like video tapes pulled out of storage after 30 years. Realism: the ORIGINAL and BEST app for simulating old videotape recordings.

//playboard.me/widgets/pb-app-box/1/pb_load_app_box.js

 

Note:  To ensure that all apps receive a fair chance to make the list, we will retire any app that has made the list for three consecutive weeks.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1TioaDL
via IFTTT

‘Monotune’ Android ad results in free monotune album

You may remember the Android “Monotune” ad that recently came out. It featured a pianist playing songs on a regular piano, then playing the same songs on a piano modified to only play the middle C note. It had the tagline “Be together. Not the same.”, which showed off Android’s variety of devices that all work together, in contrast to everyone using the same phone.

For some reason, Google decided to release an album based on the ad with the same name. It’s an album full of songs played on the piano that only has the middle C note, so it’s quite a monotonous album. Thankfully it’s free, so you can give it a listen for fun. At least it’s funny.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/21x4Eb9
via IFTTT

¡Los Sony Ericcson de 2011 ya se pueden actualizar a Android 6.0 Marshmallow!

¡Los Sony Ericcson de 2011 ya se pueden actualizar a Android 6.0 Marshmallow!

Una de las grandes quejas entre los consumidores de un smartphone Android es la poca probabilidad de que el mismo se vaya actualizando al software más reciente según vaya pasando el tiempo, y es que tan sólo los buques insignia (y no siempre) de las compañías son los escogidos para estar durante un buen tiempo totalmente actualizados.

Por suerte, existen siempre formas para intentar que esto no sea siempre así, ya que con Android los programadores tienen la libertad de probar a hacer todo lo que quieran con el sistema. Una de esas cosas ha sido crear las exitosas Custom ROM como Cyanogen, gracias a la cual daremos a muchos hoy una buena noticia.

Actualiza tus Sony Ericsson antiguos a Android 6.0 Marshmallow con Cyanogenmod

La gran noticia de hoy es que gracias a esta Custom ROM ya es posible actualizar algunos modelos de Sony del 2011 a la última versión del sistema de Google. Muchos de estos dispositivos se quedaron en la versión 4.1 Jelly Bean y 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich, con lo que jamás se hubiera pensado que volvieran a renacer de esta forma.

¡Los Sony Ericcson de 2011 ya se pueden actualizar a Android 6.0 Marshmallow!

Los modelos que se pueden actualizar con Cyanogenmod son los siguientes:

  • Xperia Arc/ Arc S

  • Live with Walkman

  • Xperia Neo V

  • Xperia Neo

  • Xperia Pro

  • Xperia Mini Pro

  • Xperia Neo L

  • Xperia Active

  • Xperia Mini

  • Xperia Ray

  • Xperia Play

Todas ellas están basadas en la Cyanogenmod 13, que es la ROM basada en Android Marshmallow. Una cosa importante es que hay unos requerimientos mínimos para poder actualizar tu terminal, y es que el mismo deberá poseer como mínimo la versión de Ice Cream Sandwich 4.1.B.0.587 antes de instalar la nueva, además de necesitar una tarjeta SD bastante rápida (de clase 10 o superior), al menos según nos comentan desde Android Community.

Es un gran paso que por fin los móviles más antiguos puedan ver mejoras en su software, aunque es una verdadera pena que tenga que ser gracias a desarrolladores libres. ¿Eres tú uno de los afortunados que podrá actualizar su móvil?

Artículos relacionados

Encuéntralos al mejor precio en las mejores tiendas.

.price-box-title { font-size: 22px; font-weight: bold; background-color: #fff !important; text-align: center; margin-bottom: 20px }.price-box-table { margin: 20px 0; clear: both; width: 100%; border: 0 }.price-box-table tr { height: 40px }.price-box-table tr:nth-child(odd) { background-color: #fff !important; color: #000 !important }.price-box-table tr:nth-child(even) { background-color: #fff !important; color: #000 !important }.price-box-table-store { width: 80px; padding: 0; text-align: center }.price-box-table-store img { width: auto; height: 20px }.price-box-table-price { width: 80px; padding: 0; text-align: center }.price-box-table-buy { width: 100px; padding: 0; text-align: center }.price-box-table-pvp { font-size: 22px; text-align: center; font-weight: normal !important }.button { display: inline-block; background-color:rgb(41,127,184); padding: 5px; color: #fff !important; text-decoration: none; text-transform: uppercase; font-weight: bold }

Sony Xperia Z5 501,05 € COMPRAR
PVP 600 €

¿Y tú que piensas? Pásate por ¡Los Sony Ericcson de 2011 ya se pueden actualizar a Android 6.0 Marshmallow! para dejar tu huella.

Puedes unirte a nosotros en Twitter, Facebook o en Google+

Publicado recientemente en Andro4all

from Andro4all http://ift.tt/1oK42wY
via IFTTT

Oops! Self-driving Google car may have caused its first accident

A Google car may have caused its first ding. Photo: GoogleA Google self-driving car was involved in a collision with a public bus this month, and it could be the first time one of the company’s autonomous vehicles was to blame for an accident. Google is proud of the fact that since it started road testing its self-driving cars in 2012, none of them have caused an accident. They’ve

The post Oops! Self-driving Google car may have caused its first accident appeared first on Cult of Android.

from Cult of Android http://ift.tt/1T4tr1j
via IFTTT

Motorola offering 16GB Moto G (3rd Gen) for $199

Today is Leap Day, which means that all sorts of deals are available. But Motorola is offering a sale that goes longer than just one day. Until March 7, Motorola is offering the 16GB Moto G (3rd Gen) for just $199. This is $20 off the regular price, which already offers immense bang for your buck. At just under $200, the Moto G (3rd Gen) is a steal, packing in a combination of useful and respectable features.

If you pick up the device, you can expect to find a 5-inch 720p display with Gorilla Glass, 1.4GHz quad-core Snapdragon 410 processor, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage plus microSD card slot, 13-megapixel rear camera, 5-megapixel front-facing camera, 2470mAh battery, 4G LTE support and Android 5.1.1 Lollipop, which has already been update to Android 6.0 Marhsmallow in Europe, with the rest of the world following soon.

The Moto G (3rd Gen) is a fantastic phone with a price that’s easy on the wallet. It’s definitely worth owning if you’re on a budget or if you simply want to have a backup phone in case something happens to your daily driver. Remember, this sale only lasts through March 7, so don’t take more than a couple of days to think on it.

Buy it from Motorola.

Buy it from Amazon.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1LQzUVY
via IFTTT

Google self-driving car gets in first at-fault crash

Google’s self-driving cars have had a spotless driving record so far. After over a million miles of driving in some tough cities (let’s be fair, California drivers aren’t exactly great), there hasn’t been a single crash where the car was at fault. The few times a self driving car has been damaged is either someone running into it or a human was driving it.

Well, that was true until now. A Google self-driving car has gotten into its first crash in which it was at fault. The details are below:

“A Google Lexus-model autonomous vehicle (“Google AV”) was traveling in autonomous mode eastbound on El Camino Real in Mountain View in the far right-hand lane approaching the Castro St. intersection. As the Google AV approached the intersection, it signaled its intent to make a right turn on red onto Castro St. The Google AV then moved to the right-hand side of the lane to pass traffic in the same lane that was stopped at the intersection and proceeding straight. However, the Google AV had to come to a stop and go around sandbags positioned around a storm drain that were blocking its path. When the light turned green, traffic in the lane continued past the Google AV. After a few cars had passed, the Google AV began to proceed back into the center of the lane to pass the sand bags. A public transit bus was approaching from behind. The Google AV test driver saw the bus approaching in the left side mirror but believed the bus would stop or slow to allow the Google AV to continue. Approximately three seconds later, as the Google AV was reentering the center of the lane it made contact with the side of the bus. The Google AV was operating in autonomous mode and traveling at less than 2 mph, and the bus was travelling at about 15 mph at the time of contact. The Google AV sustained body damage to the left front fender, the left front wheel and one of its driver’s -side sensors. There were no injuries reported at the scene.”

It’s kind of a mixed bag. On one hand, it would have been nice if the bus had yielded to a car trying to get around an obstacle. But legally, the bus had the right of way, and the self-driving car should have yielded to a bus coming. Human intuition is one thing, and expecting the bus to yield is reasonable, but the self-driving car should have been more careful.

Thankfully, one crash in the history of the many Google self-driving cars out there still means the cars are far safer than human drivers. This bug can be fixed, and hope in these cars should not be lost.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1Qod4qz
via IFTTT

LEAGUE is the app that’s changing healthcare

Healthcare is a controversial subject in many countries, notably so in the US, which is dealing with a healthcare system that’s proven to be inefficient and costly. Alternate solutions have been proposed, suggesting everything from state-run healthcare to nearly non-existent regulation. But a new solution for the healthcare system is emerging in a different way than many expected.

LEAGUE is a new app-based service that aims to change the healthcare system in both the US and Canada. The service was founded by a team led by Mike Serbinis, the founder and former CEO of Kobo, the e-reader company. I was able to chat with Serbinis last week about LEAGUE, learning more about the service and how it aims to solve parts of the complex issue surrounding healthcare.

Essentially, LEAGUE is a service that aims to personalize healthcare for each user. It began with a focus on prevention, going after the everyday issues that lead to chronic diseases and other health issues. With many health issues stemming from lifestyle diseases, it was shocking to find out that an average of just one percent of spending goes towards prevention of these diseases, with the rest simply going to treatment.

I asked Serbinis about the founding of LEAGUE and whether there was a specific event that began the process. Unfolding from that was an remarkable story, in which Serbinis recounted a trip to Los Angeles where he met two extremely important people: Bill Clinton and Patrick Soon-Shiong. Clinton and Soon-Shiong were engaged in a discussion about “the future of medicine, and in particular, how it would be genomics-based and more personalized.”

Serbinis’ attention was caught, however, by how little discussion there was about prevention and everyday health. There was also little talk of the issues in the healthcare system regarding insurance and how consumers deal with medical providers. From this, Serbinis saw an opportunity to improve and thus, the concept for LEAGUE was born.

What was that initial concept? Serbinis describes it as “extremely broad, transforming the consumer experience so that people could be empowered to be healthy every day.”

From that, the team began to look at the problems that were standing in the way of everyday health. Using the problems that it identified, the team began to solve them and quickly found itself involved in something much bigger than it’d ever anticipated.

Serbinis and team began to build LEAGUE in 2014, with the first launch of the service in Toronto in June 2015. Since then, the company rolled out to its first US city of Seattle with a launch in November 2015. As of the writing of this article, LEAGUE has expanded to Vancouver and will continue to roll out across the US and Canada over the coming year.

Mike Serbinis, Founder and CEO of LEAGUE

Mike Serbinis, Founder and CEO of LEAGUE

What the company recently realized is that it had built something far more expansive than it had ever anticipated. In Serbinis’s words, LEAGUE “built a provider network, a marketplace, an Amazon-like place to go find health and wellness providers, services and products that were rated, reviewed and geo-specific, a consumer experience to discover, schedule and pay, and an employer experience so that employers can easily on-board their employees to use [LEAGUE].”

“When you put all those things together, what you’ve got is an end-to-end way to move money that is far more efficient.”

This sentence strikes at the heart of what LEAGUE is about: efficiency. The service is essentially designed to trim off all of the excess offerings and inefficiency of traditional insurance and healthcare, rather allowing individuals to pick and choose their own personal health needs and then giving them the power to seek out solutions to those needs, without having to go through the complicated and often frustrating experience of using a middleman insurance provider.

LEAGUE is designed to make healthcare “consumer-centric,” which involves removing the system that’s been used by traditional insurance companies. Rather than offering a swath of benefits to employees, most of which are never used, LEAGUE instead allows employers to offer employees an array of choices that they can pick and choose from, ensuring that the benefits package is only offering benefits that are useful to each individual.

By cutting out the other inefficiencies in the process, LEAGUE is able to offer this enormous benefit in a way that offers substantial savings for both employers and employees, while also improving overall long-term health of users by gearing many services towards prevention.

Think of it this way. Perhaps you’re carrying too much weight and you recognize that it’s due, in large part, to a lack of exercise. You don’t know where to start with exercising and you’d like to have a few sessions with a personal trainer to help you get started. Unfortunately, your insurance package from work doesn’t cover personal training or exercise classes, and the cost is too high for you to sign up otherwise.

LEAGUE solves this, because rather than employers telling employees what benefits they have and don’t have, it allows employers to offer spending accounts for employees, who can then use LEAGUE to find and purchase the service that they need. If you need personal training sessions, you can simply find a provider through LEAGUE and purchase it through your employer-provided spending account, no hassle involved.

This ties in to the way in which LEAGUE saves money. With traditional insurance, it requires several rounds of communication, transfers of information and multiple channels all trying to accomplish something as simple as paying for a dental appointment. LEAGUE eliminates all of those excessive channels, and by doing so, saves the immense amounts of money that are needlessly spent during that process.

Serbinis put the process into a good example:

With LEAGUE, what you do is you go to the LEAGUE app, pick your dentist, you say, ‘I’ll take Tuesday at two o’clock for a cleaning,’ and it’s $130. You schedule the appointment, you go in for the appointment and at the end of the appointment, there’s another $20 charge, so now it’s $150. It’s like the first time you walk out of an Uber cab and you have that funny feeling of, ‘Wow, I guess I don’t have to pay,’ because you paid through the app. You walk out of the dental office and your ‘claim’ has automatically been handled and you get a debit against your health spending account for $150 and that’s it. LEAGUE pays the provider and you’re done.Mike SerbinisLEAGUE

Part of the beauty of LEAGUE is that it offers advancements for both employees and employers. An employer can sign up for LEAGUE in as little as 10 minutes, and by the end of that time, it can already begin offering health benefits to its employees through LEAGUE.

Not only is it fast, but it’s also very useful for employers, as LEAGUE offers data and analytics to employers on what services employees are actually using, allowing employers to see how those services tie in to employee performance and wellness. With LEAGUE, employers can find out the best ways to motivate and improve the health and wellness of employees. These improvements in health will, in turn, likely improve employee performance and in a larger scope, company performance.

The question is, will LEAGUE replace traditional insurance companies? Serbinis says that it depends on the customer. For some customers, LEAGUE will take the place of traditional insurance companies. The company has expanded beyond just health and wellness and now offers a full array of dental, vision and medical benefits, allowing it to cover all of the same categories as traditional health insurance.

For other customers, LEAGUE functions as an add-on to insurance policies that don’t offer health and wellness benefits. With the flexibility of LEAGUE spending accounts, the service doesn’t need to be the exclusive provider for a company, and as such, it can function as an add-on, offering extra benefits that employees can choose to use if they so desire.

LEAGUE is a company that’s been founded to help consumers, which is the base on which all successful companies must be founded. After finishing our chat, I came away enlightened and excited about the future of LEAGUE. Serbinis and his team have struck into something incredible, and if the company’s growth is any indicator of success, LEAGUE is going to forever change the way we think about healthcare.


For more information about LEAGUE, click here.

from Android and Me http://ift.tt/1QnJOnp
via IFTTT

Blusens Smart Beauty, conoce el nuevo phablet low cost español

blusens-movil (1)

Cada día los móviles avanzan más y más. En especificaciones, en diseño, en tamaño, etc. Son muchos los usuarios enamorados de los smartphones de gran formato, aunque encontrar uno a precio reducido en nuestro país no es algo tan sencillo. Si buscamos marcas asiáticas, tenemos phablets económicos hasta aburrirnos, como el Ulephone Be Touch 3, del que hablamos en Andro4all.

Sin embargo, algunos no están dispuestos a comprar un terminal de firma asiática, sea cual sea. Es una decisión que debemos respetar. Si pensamos en algún phablet español inmediatamente te vendrá a la cabeza el BQ M5.5, que analizamos en Andro4all. Pero si nos preguntan por un phablet español low cost, probablemente te quedes en blanco. Es por ello que nace el Blusens Smart Beauty, un gama de entrada interesante a bajo precio.

Blusens Smart Beauty, gran tamaño para todos

blusens smart beauty

El Smart Beauty de Blusens es un gama de entrada que viene a cubrir una brecha en el mercado de los phablets. Nos encontramos ante un terminal económico de especificaciones discretas, para todos aquellos que quieran disfrutar de su terminal sin grandes pretensiones.

Blusens Smart Beauty
Dimensiones 155 x 77 x 80 mm
Pantalla IPS de 5,5 pulgadas con resolución HD
Procesador Mediatek 6735P a 1Ghz
RAM 1 GB
Sistema operativo 5.1 Lollipop, Android Stock
Almacenamiento 8 GB ampliables mediante tarjeta microSD
Cámaras 13 megapíxeles para la cámara trasera y 5 megapíxeles para la cámara delantera
Batería 2500mAh
Precio de salida 139,90 euros

Como puedes observar, el Blusens Smart Beauty es un dispositivo de gama baja para un uso sin exigencias. Es de agradecer que para el software se haya contado con Android Puro y que, a priori, el apartado fotográfico parezca uno de los puntos que no se ha dejado olvidado. Otro aspecto a tener en cuenta es la inclusión de Dual SIM, para poder tener dos líneas de teléfono.

Te recomendamos: ¿cuándo merece la pena comprarse un teléfono Dual Sim?

Tiene puntos flacos, como el almacenamiento. Aunque dentro del propio teléfono viene de regalo una tarjeta microSD de 16 GB. La batería numéricamente puede antojarse corta, aunque hay factores como el MTK6735P y la resolución HD que ayudarán a que el consumo no sea desorbitado.

Conclusiones

Siempre nos gusta conocer firmas en crecimiento, y más aún si proceden de nuestro país. Si quieres un terminal de gran formato, económico y con garantía española, este Blusens Smart Beauty puede ser una opción a tener en cuenta. Si estás pensando en adquirir este terminal, por 140 euros puedes comprarlo en la página web oficial de Blusens.

¿Y tú que piensas? Pásate por Blusens Smart Beauty, conoce el nuevo phablet low cost español para dejar tu huella.

Puedes unirte a nosotros en Twitter, Facebook o en Google+

Publicado recientemente en Andro4all

from Andro4all http://ift.tt/1OJ2bh6
via IFTTT