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Saturday, September 17, 2016

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12:09 PM
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Saturday, August 13, 2016

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10:29 PM

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Samsung Pay lands in mainland Europe starting with Spain

11:06 PM
Samsung Pay is launching in Spain, finally getting a foothold on the mainland after the UK launch.
Research showed that among Spaniards aged 35 to 65, 64% pay with a credit or debit cards for most or even all of their purchases. And they have to carry more than two cards to do it.
At launch, partner banks are CaixaBank and imaginBank, Abanca and Banco Sabadell will join soon. Here are just some of the venues that will accept Samsung Pay:



El Corte Inglés, the biggest department store group in Europe (and 4th worldwide) will be the first in Spain to issue private cards to its customers so they can use Samsung Pay. Samsung has organized an event at the Madrid Chamber of Commerce and Industry to get even more venues involved.
"The Spanish market’s progressive approach to digital payments makes it a logical launch market for Samsung Pay," added Nathalie Oestmann, Director, Samsung Pay Europe. "We believe that the comprehensive support from telecom service providers; networks and processors; and banks and merchants, will help to accelerate mobile payments adoption across Spain."
So far Samsung Galaxy S7 and S6 (including edge and edge Plus) and the Galaxy Note5 are supported. Soon the Galaxy A5 (2016) will be added to this list too.

Pebble Core gains support for Amazon's Alexa

11:03 PM
Last month when it announced its two newest smartwatches, Pebble also made the Core official. This is the company's first non-smartwatch product. It resembles the iPod Nano, and Pebble bills it a "capable fitness device that lets you leave your phone at home", as it comes with built-in 3G connectivity as well as Bluetooth, GPS, and Wi-Fi. It also has a 3.5mm jack to plug headphones into when you feel like listening to music (which it can stream over 3G or Wi-Fi).
The Core unfortunately won't be out until 2017, but when it does ship it will do so with built-in support for Amazon's Alexa digital assistant, Pebble has revealed today. Amazon has recently made Alexa Voice Services available for free to developers and device makers, and Pebble has decided to take advantage of this.
With Alexa's help, you'll be able to use your Pebble Core to play stuff from Amazon Music and iHeartRadio, get the news headlines read to you, order stuff, get weather and traffic updates, set timers, control smart home devices, or get any question answered. Alexa can also tell you jokes or help you review your Pebble Health summary for the day.
If this sounds interesting to you, you can back the Core on Kickstarter. It's currently priced at $79.

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Google Home will be powered by Chromecast hardware, says report

2:39 AM

Google has decided to enter the smart home market with its not-so-recent acquisition of Nest and most recently at Google I/O with the announcement of Google Home. A new report from The Information says that Google has forgotten to mention one detail about Google’s new home assistant.
The report claims that one of the developers of the product has direct knowledge that the device is actually an enclosure with lots of components: microphones, a speaker, and LED lights that are all built around the hardware of a Chromecast.

The Chromecast’s micro computing capabilities proved to be hugely successful in the home theater space. With the right software optimization, high quality components and materials, Google Home has the opportunity to be just as successful as Amazon’s Echo. Google’s Home assistant, though, would be a better match for Android’s Google Now Assistant and the ever expanding capabilities of a simple Google search.
After all, voice commands are processed mostly through servers which make sense of the phrase once it has been uploaded. Using a Chromecast would be beneficial to both Google and the customer because it suggests Google Home may be sold at a lower price than the Amazon Echo (currently going for $179 in the US), and Google can keep development costs low by using existing hardware.

T-Mobile sells most smartphones of any other carrier in the US in Q1

2:38 AM
This is a big deal because just over three years ago, T-Mobile was the number 4 carrier in the US. Nobody even wanted to deal with switching carriers because every carrier, including T-Mobile, had stopped offering unlimited data and their plans become so unclear. While Sprint was the only carrier at the time that offered unlimited data, its network was so bad in some areas, there wasn’t even contest.
T-Mobile has beaten the US largest wireless carrier: Verizon, in the number of smartphones sold in Q1 of the US mobile market. Metro PCS and T-Mobile, combined, sold 22.9% of smartphones while Verizon was just barely short at 22.2% of smartphones. AT&T stood behind the former two at 20.2% while Sprint came in last of the top four US carriers at 16.7%.

Every carrier in the US was doing away with unlimited plans in 2013 and the rise of smartphones frustrated customers who were stuck with 1 – 2 year old smartphones. Though, this was a time where one or two versions between a phone’s life cycle was quite significant. These days, a two year old phone is not the worst thing in the world, at least when it’s a two year old flagship.
The same report also outlined how fast smartphone brands are growing outside of the carrier space. Top 4 grossing smartphone makers in the US (that aren’t sold directly through carriers) are Huawei (421.4% YoY growth) , Asus (300%), Blu (236.3%), and Coolpad (233.3%) are all seeing major growth in sales in the US from a year ago compared to the previous year.












Sony, Nokia, and HTC are all seeing the worst decay in Open Channel smartphone sales. Sony is dead last at -86.7% growth in the US Open mobile market. Sony has already done the work it needs to do in order to turn this around. All it needs to do is advertise the crap out of the Xperia X Series and hope that it performs well without the help of any carriers. Whatever Huawei did, Sony needs to keep a close eye on. Perhaps Sony should really show interest in building Google’s next Nexus device.

 

LG brings G Pad III 8.0 to South Korea

2:36 AM
The LG G Pad III 8.0, which was launched in Canada a few days ago, has arrived in the company's home country of South Korea as well. The tablet carries a price tag of KRW 330,000 in the Asian country, which translates into around $275 at current exchange rates.
Some of the device's key specs include octa-core 1.5GHz processor, 8-inch (1920 × 1200 pixel resolution) display, 2GB/32GB memory configuration, 5MP/8MP camera combo, 4,800mAh battery, and Android 6.0 Marshmallow.
The G Pad III 8.0 is expected to land on T-Mobile and AT&T in the United States.