Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Verizon's real plan for iPhone

Posted on Jan 14, 2011 3:40 pm by Ian Paul, PC World

Verizon didn’t want the iPhone because of its cool technologies, excellent design aesthetics, or massive app store, but because iPhone users are rich and loyal. That’s one way to look at some new numbers from ComScore, anyway. The metrics firm recently published a forecast showing how the Verizon iPhone could reshape the U.S. mobile market. ComScore didn’t draw any conclusions from its data, but the numbers suggested that Verizon and the iPhone stood to do very well in 2011 at the expense of AT&T and Android.

Verizon: Poised for smartphone domination?

Verizon is currently the overall leader among U.S. mobile carriers, with 31 percent of all subscribers. AT&T is just behind Verizon at 27 percent. But when you measure market share just by smartphones, AT&T is the clear leader with 38 percent of U.S. subscribers followed by Verizon at 27 percent.

The problem is things are not all that rosy for AT&T right now. The company lost 7 percentage points of its smartphone business over the past year, according to comScore. Verizon, meanwhile, has surged by 4 percentage points during that same time.

If this trend continues, Verizon’s iPhone acquisition could mean the carrier is poised to surge ahead of AT&T in the smartphone arena.

$50K Minimum

If Verizon does move ahead of AT&T, the carrier will be taking a sought-after demographic with it. ComScore says iPhone users are typically found in some of the most desirable age brackets for marketers, such as 18- to 24-year-olds; 25- to 34-year-olds; and 35- to 44-year-olds.

These people are doing pretty well for themselves, too. About 81 percent of iPhone users in the U.S. have a household income of at least $50,000, and 47 percent earn at least $100,000, according to comScore. iPhone users are also likely to stick around. Nearly 55 percent of iPhone users in the U.S. have had an Apple smartphone for more than three years.


Android going down?

The iPhone’s market share among U.S. smartphone subscribers remained relatively steady during 2010 at 25 percent, while Android held 26 percent, according to comScore. But if iPhone sales are strong on Verizon, Apple may be able to increase its lead and possibly move past Android among U.S. users. The problem for Apple, however, is that Android continues to expand its market share at a rapid pace. Between August and November,Android’s market share grew by 6.4 percentage points in the U.S., according to comScore. I should also point out that both Apple and Android are still behind Research In Motion, which owns 33 percent of the U.S. smartphone market.
There’s little doubt the Verizon iPhone will prove to be a popular draw for new users and those looking to switch from AT&T. But we’ll have to wait a few months yet to see whether Verizon can attract enough people to overcome AT&T’s smartphone dominance.

Verizon: $200 for late Android buyers moving to iPhone 4

Verizon offers credit towards iPhone for buyers!

A new discovery in Verizon's FAQ for the iPhone 4has revealed a promo that shows an expectation that many recent buyers will switch. The offer will give anyone who bought a phone between November 26 and January 10 a $200 Visa debit card if they buy the iPhone 4 at its full price before the end of February. It doesn't amount to a full discount but is worded such that Verizon fully anticipated some Android and BlackBerry users had bought devices only on the assumption they couldn't get the iPhone.

"I just purchased a new smartphone during the holiday season, but if I knew that iPhone 4 was going to be available soon I would have waited," the FAQ question reads. "What are my options now?"

The carrier was known to have been evasive in its language regarding the iPhone this fall but is thought to have done this to protect its existing smartphone sales while it waited for its Apple deal to go public. Significant hints might have led some to hold off and hurt Verizon's holiday sales, even if it could count on a recovery this quarter.

Until this month, Verizon had always been one of the most public advocates of Android and given the platform its full attention. Signs have emerged that it may still be dissatisfied with Google as it has become the predominant OS on the network but hasn't been enough to prevent a rapid slowdown in smartphone sales where AT&T has owed nearly all its fast growth in recent months to the iPhone.

AirView brings AirPlay reception to iOS devices


If you've been looking for device-to-device AirPlay support, the free AirView utility that just debuted on App Store offers a simple solution. Offering a no-frills AirPlay receiver, AirView allows you to watch AirPlay video streams from other devices or, if you have AirFlick installed on your Macintosh, from your primary computer.

As I've written extensively before, I'm not entirely sure why or when you'd use this option (e.g. "Hey, instead of watching that movie on my HDTV, why not use a 3-inch display instead?" or "Want to watch this YouTube video? Instead of handing you my phone or e-mailing you the URL, I'll make both of us sit here while I serve the data to you live!"), but there you have it. It's available for download from App Store, and works equally well on iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch.

The Lego Stadium That Would've Cost Around $75,000 To Build

The Lego Stadium That Would've Cost Around ,000 To Build

Meet Paul. The physiology professor is an avid fan of the Ohio Stadium, and like the German Lego stadium-builder from a few years back, he used over a million bricks to create the 1:100 scale build over two years.

Measuring 2.4m by 1.8m, Paul got many of the bricks through second-hand traders' sites, but if he'd bought them brand-new, they would've cost him up to $75,000, he reckons. If you're wondering what a man could possibly do with a 1:100 scale model of a stadium, listen up: Paul plans to put it to good use on his university's campus, using it to fundraise for heart failure and muscular dystrophy research. As the stadium can hold 6,000 Lego people, that could be 6,000 charitable people represented. [Dispatch via Sportress of Blogitude -Thanks, Kris!]

iPad 2 specs starting to take shape

A number of rumors and possible hardware leaks over the weekend are starting to give us a clearer picture of what the iPad 2 might look like and its possible specs. Before the weekend, we'd already heard the next-gen iPad will have a redesigned case with a flatter backside (similar to the iPod touch), and the new iPad is rumored to be shipping in early April, one year after the original's release to market. The next-gen iPad is also supposedly shipping with front- and rear-facing cameras.

Engadget scored an exclusive over the weekend with a well-placed source who confirmed the iPad 2's shipping date, cameras, and case redesign. Their source also claims the iPad 2 will have an SD slot; if true, it will almost certainly be for data transfer and not for expanding the iPad's built-in storage. The iPad 2 may also feature a dual GSM/CDMA chipset that will allow Apple to manufacture a single, unified iPad line for use with CDMA carriers (Verizon, in other words) and GSM carriers (almost everyone else in the world).

Engadget also hinted at a "super high resolution" display on the next iPad, and most of the rumors over the weekend have revolved around that display. Developers picked apart iBooks and found multiple pieces of artwork in the program that appear to be designed for an iPad with exactly double the 1024 x 768 resolution of the current model. This would put the iPad 2's screen resolution at 2048 x 1536, for a pixel density of 260 dpi. This is not quite as pixel-dense as the iPhone 4's Retina Display, which at 960 x 540 and 326 dpi is of high enough resolution that most people with average eyesight are incapable of discerning individual pixels. However, a 2048 x 1536 pixel screen also exceeds the resolution of any other Apple portable by a wide margin; the 17" MacBook Pro's 1920 x 1200 screen pales in comparison.

Such a pixel-dense screen on a relatively small form factor device like the iPad initially sounded implausible to me, but GlobalDirectParts.com has apparently obtained iPad 2 LCDs in advance of the device's launch. This is the same parts reseller which claimed to have "iPhone 5" parts earlier this month; those parts instead turned out to be almost identical to the redesigned antenna band for the Verizon iPhone. GlobalDirectParts is offering the iPad 2 LCD for US$218.19, a significant cost increase compared to the $144.99 the company charged for the original iPad's LCD in June of 2010. While parts resellers are undoubtedly charging more than Apple is paying for the same parts, it still appears the iPad 2's LCD represents a significantly more costly part than the old LCD. A doubling of the screen resolution could account for that price increase.

According to AppleInsider, driving that significantly upgraded display will be a powerful dual-core GPU from Imagination Technologies, the SGX543. This GPU represents a significant upgrade from the current iPad's graphics hardware, doubling its graphics performance; drivers for the SGX543 were discovered in the recent iOS 4.3 beta. The iPad's CPU is also supposedly going multi-core this year.

Taken together, these rumors paint a picture of a massive upgrade for the next-gen iPad. Below is a summary of the iPad 2's rumored feature set, with comparisons to the current iPad in parentheses and italics.

  • Multi-core ARM Cortex-A9 CPU (single-core ARM Cortex-A8)
  • Dual-core SGX543 GPU (single-core SGX535)
  • 2048 x 1536 display at 260 dpi (1024 x 768 at 132 dpi)
  • GSM/CDMA chipset (GSM only)
  • Front- and rear-facing cameras
  • SD card slot
  • Redesigned, flatter case

We still haven't heard anything regarding the iPad 2's RAM or onboard storage, though 512 MB of RAM seems like a bare minimum considering the other hardware upgrades (and the fact that the iPhone 4 already ships with that much RAM). As for storage, I wouldn't put it past Apple to top the line off at 64 GB again, but I'm really hoping for a capacity increase to 128 GB.

Sprint hikes smartphone data rates by $10

Sprint raises smartphone data prices to build 4G



Sprint today said it was raising the prices of data on all smartphones by $10. The "Premium Data" fee it had previously charged only for 4G phones like the Evo 4G and Epic 4G will now count against 3G smartphones for anyone activating a phone after January 30. It raises the minimum cost of using voice and data with a smartphone on Sprint to $80 per month, making it the most expensive.

Customers can't be grandfathered in and will see the rate hike even if they simply switch smartphones.

The company justified it as a necessary tradeoff to both maintain its unlimited plans while upgrading its network to "meet the growing appetite" for Internet access. It noted that spmartphone users chew about 10 times more data on average and pointed to AT&T's capped 2GB plans as justification. A truly serious smartphone user would face overages and pay significantly more on AT&T, Sprint insisted.

While its plans are still competitive when text messaging is factored in, AT&T and Verizon customers can now pay as much as $25 less if they don't require significant data or text messaging. T-Mobile also still has unlimited data, although it has a "soft" cap of 5GB beyond which it reserves the right to throttle traffic if the local cell sites are oversaturated.

The move may be to offset the possible fallout from Clearwire's financial troubles. Although Sprint has taken steps to reduce the amount of collateral damage should Clearwire go bankrupt, its dependence on Clearwire to help build its WiMAX 4G network has left it vulnerable should the partner fail out. Sprint itself has only just shown signs of a significant recovering after picking up phones like the Evo 4G and is still losing hundreds of millions of dollars even as it begins to recover subscribers.

Most of its recent success has been credited to Android and the success of its 4G phones in particular. It may still face added competitive pressure from the Verizon iPhone stealing customers and may need to brace its network should a Sprint iPhone become a reality.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The 2011 Brit Awards Nominees

You're looking at the brand spanking new Brit Award, which was designed by Vivienne Westwood. Swanky. It looks like a bowling pin with two strips of bacon wrapped around it.

At any rate, the nominees for the 2011 BRITs were announced today, and as usual there were a few eyebrow-raising choices. For instance, Lip-syncing hag Cheryl Cole is up for British Female Solo Artist and British Single (for "Promise This," which made Chart Rigger's Worst Singles Of 2010 list).

Thankfully there were also nods for Take That (British Group and Album Of The Year), Kylie Minogue and Robyn (both International Female Solo Artist) to offset that travesty.

Totally snubbed: Goldfrapp, whose Head First was album of the year in 2010 in my opinion, and Susan Boyle, who has moved more records worldwide in the past year-and-a-half than Take That and Cheryl Cole combined.

THE NOMINEES FOR THE 2011 BRIT AWARDS:

British Male Solo Artist
Mark Ronson
Paul Weller
Plan B
Robert Plant
Tinie Tempah

British Female Solo Artist
Cheryl Cole
Ellie Goulding
Laura Marling
Paloma Faith
Rumer

British Breakthrough Act
Ellie Goulding
Mumford And Sons
Rumer
Tinie Tempah
The xx

British Group
Biffy Clyro
Gorillaz
Mumford And Sons
Take That
The xx

British Single
Alexandra Burke feat. Pitbull, "All Night Long" (snooze)
Cheryl Cole, "Parachute" (scam!!!!)
Florence And The Machine, "You've Got The Love" (sure, why not?)
Matt Cardle, "When We Collide" (zzzzzz)
Olly Murs, "Please Don't Let Me Go" (zzzzzzz)
Plan B, "She Said" (okay)
Scouting For Girls, "This Ain't A Love Song" (can't remember it)
Taio Cruz, "Dynamite" (should win)
Tinie Tempah, "Pass Out" (will win)
The Wanted, "All Time Low" (puh-lease)

MasterCard British Album of the Year
Mumford And Sons, Sigh No More
Plan B, The Defamation Of Strickland Banks
Take That, Progress
Tinie Tempah, Disc-Overy
The xx, xx

International Male Solo Artist
Bruce Springsteen
Cee Lo Green
David Guetta
Eminem
Kanye West

International Female Solo Artist
Alicia Keys
Katy Perry
Kylie Minogue
Rihanna
Robyn

International Breakthrough Act
Bruno Mars
Glee Cast
Justin Bieber
The National
The Temper Trap

International Group
Arcade Fire
Black Eyed Peas
Kings Of Leon
The Script
Vampire Weekend

International Album
Arcade Fire, The Suburbs
Cee Lo Green, The Lady Killer
Eminem, Recovery
Katy Perry, Teenage Dream
Kings of Leon, Come Around Sundown

Critics' Choice
Jessie J

British Producer
Ethan Johns
John Leckie
Markus Dravs
Mike Pela
Stuart Price

Weak nuclear force is less weak

The force that governs some of the reactions that keep our sun shining is not quite as weak as scientists had previously thought. As a consequence, our estimation of how energetic the sun actually is just went up by a tiny amount.

anuary 13, 2011 By Phillip F. Schewe


Provided by Inside Science News Service (news : web)The evidence for this weak nuclear force comes from the decay of muons, essentially heavier cousins of the electron, one of the building blocks of atoms.

Just as biologists sometimes study the tiniest and most ephemeral of organisms such as fruit flies, which live for barely a day, to learn things about human disease, so physicists often study the properties of particles that last a fraction of a second to learn about the universe.

The muon lives only about 2 millionths of a second -- 2 microseconds -- far from the realm of human sensation but long enough for scientists to make detailed measurements. The state of digital electronics is so advanced that measurements far shorter than this, even down to trillionths of a second or less, can easily be made.

Watching muons decay is not like propping up a Geiger counter next to a box full of radioactive uranium. That's because muons are so short lived they have to be made anew, as if they were medical isotopes. At the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland a dedicated was used to create muons amid collisions with a graphite target.

Researchers then gathered a fine spray of muons, directed them and stopped them in their own metal target which was surrounded by a detector that could track the muons' demise. The decay of over 2 trillion muons provided the best yet value for the average muon lifetime. It comes out to 2.1969803 microseconds.

"This is the most precise lifetime determination of any state in the atomic or subatomic world," said David Hertzog, one of the leaders of the experiment and a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle.

This lifetime, known to an uncertainty of one part per million, is so precise that it can be used to make a new determination of the intrinsic strength of the weak nuclear force, which operates over only a very short range inside the nucleus of atoms.

Scientists know of four physical forces. Gravity, a form of mutual attraction, keeps the Earth going around the sun and keeps us from floating into space. The electromagnetic force is responsible for holding atoms together, for bonding atoms into molecules, for impelling the movement of electrons through wires in the form of electricity, and for light waves. The strong nuclear force holds nuclei together and is responsible for some kinds of radioactivity.

The weak nuclear force, the fourth and last force to be discovered by physicists in the twentieth century, helps to turn protons into neutrons inside the sun, a necessary step in converting those into heavier elements like helium and releasing the radiant energy that makes its way to Earth. The also acted billions of years ago inside exploding stars known as supernovas to make the elements such as oxygen and carbon found in our own bodies and other natural things on Earth.

The strength of the weak force is encapsulated in a number called the Fermi constant, named for the Italian-American scientist Enrico Fermi. Hertzog said that the new value for the Fermi constant is about 0.00075 percent greater than the previous value. Thus the weak force is just a tiny bit stronger than we thought.

William Marciano, a scientist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y. was impressed by the muon experiment.

"It was a difficult but beautiful measurement carried out by a very experienced and talented group of researchers," Marciano said.

Marciano also points out that muons, short lived as they might be, are interesting in their own right, and actually practical. Muons were used to study the pyramids in Egypt. Muons can be created in the atmosphere by incoming cosmic rays, mysterious streams of particles from deep space. Because these muons can penetrate great amounts of material without stopping, even during their short lives, they were used as a sort of "medical scanner" for probing for hidden cavities inside the pyramid by setting up detectors above and in the basement.

Marciano said that muons might also be useful for medical imaging and for scanning cargo containers for hidden nuclear materials.

Another expert on the weak force, University of Wisconsin professor Michael Ramsey-Musolf, considers the muon experiment to be a tour-de-force piece of work. The important thing for him is that the uncertainty of the muon lifetime has now dropped by a factor of ten. But he also said that a more precise lifetime and a more precise knowledge of the strength of the weak nuclear force tells us just a bit more about nature.

"This implies that the sun does indeed burn more brightly and that the decay of nuclei is somewhat faster," Ramsey-Musolf said.

The new muon results are scheduled to be published in the journal.

iPad 2 Believed to Be Launching In Early April

We've seen a lot of new Apple hardware come our way over the past year. While many tech pundits are still sounding off on what was Cupertino's greatest achievement of 2011, others are smacking their chops in anticipation of what 2012 may have in store. With the Verizon iPhone a certainty, the buzz for the upcoming year has come to focus squarely on what's next for the iPad, with many speculating that the iPad 2 will be released to consumers on either April 2nd or April 9th.

The German Apple enthusiasts over at MacNotes.de are reporting that a trusted source has informed them that Apple's second generation iPad will be available in American Apple Retail locations and online in early April, and will not be exclusive to the company's corporate outlets for the first six months on the market before being offered through other retailers. As with the first version of the iPad, Apple aficionados living outside of the United States will have to plan a trip to America in order to get their mitts on an iPad 2 if the early adopter boasting-rights to go with it, as the tablet's release to new markets will once again be slow going.

With many Analysts and pundits predicting that Apple will unveil the iPad 2 within the next few weeks, we won't have to wait long to see if MacNotes's source is in the know or not.

Who Wants to Live in This Giant Slinky With Me?


Who Wants to Live in This Giant Slinky With Me?









Don't fret that I'll cramp your style in our giant slinky—there's enough room for 10,000 people. From the deft hand of Russian architect Alexander Remizov comes "The Ark," which he believes could be the future of housing.

Either that, or emergency housing for those evacuated from their homes (can we get some 3D printers to whip up a batch for Queensland, Australia, please?)

Whether they reside on land or water (shown below), his Arks could be assembled quickly and cheaply owing to its prefabricated structure. It'd be as green as possible, with a wind power generator, solar panels, and in the aquatic version's case, draw upon thermal water energy.

My only concern is how I'd hang artwork on those curved walls. [Spiegel via CNN]

Who Wants to Live in This Giant Slinky With Me?

Send an email to Kat Hannaford, the author of this post, at khannaford@gizmodo.com.

Average Facebook user doesn't know a fifth of friends

By
Anna Leach
on January 13, 2011

1566top.jpgIf you've ever gone through your 300 friends and been baffled by why you're friends with someone called Barry whose face you don't recognise, you're not alone. The average Facebook user doesn't know a fifth of their friends. So if you've got 500 of them that's a whopping 100 people that can access your profile that you don't actually know.

The research from GoodMobilePhones surveyed over 1,522 Facebook users and found out the slightly worrying statistic.

20% seems to be a bit of a magic number as far as Facebook friends are concerned - that's also the percentage of Facebook friends that people regularly talk to and interact with.

So it's a bit like this:
One fifth of your Facebook friends are your Real Friends
Three fifths of your Facebook friends are acquaintances you know but don't really talk to
One fifth are people you can't frigging remember.

The main reason people gave for being friends with people they didn't know was politeness (54%) and then the desire to look more popular by having more friends (34%). I understand both those reasons.

I must admit, it has got easier to place random people now with Facebook's new Friendship pages - you can see mutual friends, the date you added them and events you've both attended - which could all serve to jog your memory.

IOGEAR Unleashes Wireless Keyboard Remote For TV PCs

Throw away that universal remote people, IOGEAR is leading the charge to transform our computing with an inventive on-lap wireless keyboard. For all its comfy design and tons of features, the IOGEAR people couldn’t give it a cool name. Hence we’re left with the awkward digit-intensive handle of GKM571R-581R 2.4 GHz.

Iogear keyboard remote

The ovoid GKM571R-581R 2.4 GHz is quite a piece of work, allowing wireless connectivity for laptops, HTPCs, HDTVs and your favorite game consoles. As if this weren’t enough, it’s been contoured to fit anyone’s lap and is studded with clickity-click buttons for clicking.

Seriously now, the GKM571R-581R 2.4 GHz (man, is the product’ name a tongue-twisting mouthful) has a 1,000 DPI trackball, left and right mouse click buttons, a scroll wheel, and a USB port for recharging its NimH batteries or uploading new content. There’s also a USB 2.4 GHz receiver with 33 ft. range.

The GKM571R-581R 2.4 GHz is compatible with the latest Windows OS and costs $74.95. Every purchase of the GKM571R-581R 2.4 GHz includes the keyboard (well, duh), a charging cable, a couple of NimH batteries, and a USB RF receiver. If your fingers and palms are itching to grab a hold of this, then go visit IOGEAR.

Via Gizmag

Think You'll Put a Verizon iPhone on Sprint? Think again

With the announcement of the Verizon iPhone, we felt bad for our Sprint bretheren, who've been left out of the party. So we wondered if the CDMA phone could be taken over, much like how many jailbroken iPhones have found homes on T-Mobile. After a bit of research, we discovered the truth, which may make some Sprint customers consider the switch.

According to a Sprint sales chat, the iPhone (or any CDMA device from another carrier like Verizon) will not work on the Sprint network due to slight differences in the way the CDMA networks are set up.

When we asked about putting a Verizon CDMA device on the Sprint network, the salesperson said, "Sprint devices use our all digital Sprint PCS and Nextel iDEN networks. Unfortunately, devices from other carriers are not compatible and would not function on our network."

When questioned again (just to make sure), another salesperson stated, "No, you can not use any other service provider's phone with Sprint."

So, unless someone can figure out the differences from the Sprint PCS network and Verizon's, we may be unable to see an iPhone be placed on the Sprint network with a simple unlock or jailbreak app.

Of course, now would be the perfect time to start the Sprint iPhone rumor. Any takers?