Verizon’s Galaxy S III user agent profile confirms Snapdragon S4 chipset

We’re just a matter of hours from getting all the official Galaxy S III details but that won’t stop a few last minute leaks from dropping on us.  A leaked user agent profile picked up by our friends at Pocketnow has been found and looks to confirm a number of Verizon’s GS III device specifications.  We may be weeks or months from getting the Big Red edition however we’ve got some early details.

Assuming the SCH-I535 proves to be the Verizon Galaxy S III, the smartphone will feature a Snapdragon MSM8960 (S4) processor and run Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.  The resolution is listed at 1280×720 however we don’t know whether it’s a Super HD AMOLED display or something else.

Are you saddened to learn that the Verizon Galaxy S III handset will have a dual-core S4 CPU or is that more than enough for you?

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T-Mobile readying entry-level Prism 3G for early May

T-Mobile looks set to follow up the HTC One S with a budget-based smartphone for first-time buyers.  Designed by Huawei, the Prism 3G is expected to feature a 3.5-inch display, 3.2-megapixel camera, 600MHz processor, 512MB ROM, and 2GB storage (microSD).  According to details obtained by TmoNews, the handset will trickle out to Best Buy and Walmart next week, followed by a larger rollout later in the month.  No pricing or official announcement to share at this time.  Considering the specs remind us of phones from days gone by, we cannot imagine T-Mobile able to ask for more than $50 for this thing.

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Are Macs More Secure?

Q:

Apple claims Macs to be more secure than Windows PCs. In the light of recent malware attacks on the Mac platform, there are several articles on the Web questioning this claim. What is your take on this matter?

A:

Macs aren’t invulnerable to malicious software. No computer is. But the people who produce viruses and spyware have traditionally focused on Windows—and still do, primarily. There have indeed been a couple of recent instances of malware that spread among some Macs in the real world. But bear in mind that, despite the steady growth in Mac sales, Windows still powers the vast majority of the world’s PCs, and, because of that, there are hundreds of thousands of malicious programs targeting it, versus just a handful of known ones for the Mac.

So, my take on this is that while Mac users must be careful where they surf, and Apple will have to step up its game against these attacks, an unprotected Macintosh is still, in daily use, far less likely to become infected than an unprotected Windows PC. How users handle this depends on their habits and their tolerance, both for risk, and for the downsides of constantly running security software, which can sap resources and be annoying. I advise all Windows users to run such software. But I see it as optional for Mac users, at least today. Time will tell if that changes.

Q:

Do you know of any apps that work well with dictation on older iPhones?

A:

One that I have used successfully is Dragon Dictation from Nuance. The same company makes an Android app called FlexT9, which I haven’t tested, that includes dictation, among other features. Both apps work on a wide variety of models.

Q:

I love my BlackBerry for the ease of emailing and maintaining my schedule but not for accessing the Internet. I am a T-Mobile customer. Is there any device that has the good features of the BlackBerry and also easily and comprehensively accesses the Internet?

A:

T-Mobile offers a wide range of Android phones that include very good Web browsers and typically have two email apps: one for Gmail and one for all your other email accounts. They also have calendar apps.

Overall, I prefer these smartphones to current BlackBerrys and find the email experience fine. But people who are used to the BlackBerry for email—especially corporate email—sometimes complain that email on other devices isn’t as fast. This is partly because BlackBerry email is routed through a proprietary system. I’d advise asking friends or colleagues with newer T-Mobile Android phones about their email experience.

Write to Walt at mossberg.@wsj.com.

: http://allthingsd.com/20120501/are-macs-more-secure/

Samsung Aims to Get in Touch With Media Players

Here’s a shocker: Not everyone wants to buy a smartphone.

Parents, for example, often balk at paying high monthly cellular-data bills for their teens and tweens and would rather they stick with simpler phones, if they have phones at all. And even some adults prefer simpler, less costly phones.

For a lot of these users, a popular solution has been what’s called a connected media player: essentially a smartphone without cellular voice and data access, and without the monthly cellular bill. And the king of that category has been Apple’s iPod Touch, which starts at $199. A Wi-Fi-only device, the Touch looks like a thinner iPhone, with the same high-resolution 3.5-inch screen. It runs most of the same apps, handles email and Web surfing, and is a very capable hand-held game machine, music and video player, and photo viewer.


[ See post to watch video ]

Now Samsung, Apple’s biggest rival in the smartphone arena, is going after the Touch with a new connected media player sporting a similar-sized screen, the Galaxy Player 3.6. But Samsung is charging about $50 less—$150. And in about 10 days, it’ll launch a second model, the larger Galaxy Player 4.2, for $200. Both devices run on a year-old version of Google’s Android operating system.

Samsung dipped its toe into this market last year with earlier Galaxy Players, but they were mostly ignored by consumers, partly because of bulky designs and high prices. Now, the Korean giant is doubling down with more compact and affordable models.

I’ve been testing the Player 3.6 for the past few days and comparing it with the latest iPod Touch. The Samsung has some advantages, such as a camera that takes better still pictures, an FM radio and expandable memory. But overall, it feels like a cruder device than the Touch. Its much lower screen resolution made text, video and images look grainy compared with those on the Touch, and its bulkier plastic case felt flimsy compared with the glass and stainless-steel case on the Touch, which uses Apple’s latest OS.

Still, for some people, especially parents buying for their kids, the Galaxy Player 3.6 may be good enough, especially since it costs 25% less. Its price advantage is even a bit better, because it comes with a charger, something the Touch doesn’t include. And its included earbuds are the in-ear type, with a microphone and play-pause button, which the included Touch earbuds lack.

PTECHjp

Among the features the Samsung Galaxy Player 3.6 has: FM radio and earbuds with a microphone and play-pause button.

Even though the Galaxy Player isn’t a cellphone, it can make voice and video calls, and send text messages over the Internet when you’re in Wi-Fi range. Just like the Touch.

Samsung insists the $200, 4.2-inch model will be a closer competitor to the Touch. I didn’t get a chance to put this model through its paces. But I did get to play with one for about an hour. Its screen resolution is much higher than its sibling’s, though still well below that of the Touch. It also has front-mounted stereo speakers that sounded great—better than the Apple’s speaker. And some users will prefer its larger screen.

Even the entry-level Samsung model might be considered an alternative to Apple’s, especially by prospective buyers who are price-conscious or prefer Android, or who want some Samsung features the Touch lacks. The Galaxy Player 3.6 is about 34% thicker, 8% heavier than the Touch, and is also longer and wider, but it is still comfortable in the hand and the pocket.

I tried music, videos, photos, games, email, Web surfing and third-party apps like Netflix and “Angry Birds” on the new Player. All worked fine, as did a movie I rented from Google’s online store, recently renamed Google Play from Android Market. To get media from a computer onto the Player, Samsung recommends plugging it in via a cable and dragging the files manually into specified folders on the device. This worked for me, but was tedious.

Samsung offers a Windows and Mac program called Kies that automates the transfer process. But in my tests, only the Windows version was able to work with the Player I was using.

The 2-megapixel rear camera on the Player 3.6 was better at still photos than the one on the Touch, but worse at videos. Still, neither comes close to matching the superb cameras in smartphones like the latest iPhone or the Android-based HTC One.

The Player 3.6 has an unusual feature: It can be paired with a cellphone—even an iPhone—via Bluetooth, and can be used to answer (not place) calls. In my tests, this worked, but I can’t imagine using it very often.

Like the base $199 Touch, the $150 entry-model Player comes with 8 gigabytes of internal memory. But, unlike the Apple, you can expand its memory with an extra-cost memory card, up to 32 gigabytes. Apple offers higher-priced Touch models with 32 GB and 64 GB of sealed-in memory.

I didn’t do a formal battery test, but Samsung claims the Player 3.6 gets 30 hours when playing audio and six hours when playing video. Apple claims 40 hours for audio and seven hours for video on the Touch. In my use, the Samsung’s battery held up nicely, and the battery is removable.

Overall, the new Galaxy Player 3.6 is worth a look if you’re in the market for a device with many of the features, but not the monthly costs, of a smartphone, especially if you’re on a budget and can live with the poor screen resolution.

Find all of Walt Mossberg’s columns and videos at the All Things Digital website, walt.allthingsd.com. Email him at mossberg@wsj.com.

: http://allthingsd.com/20120501/samsung-aims-to-get-in-touch-with-media-players/

No New Windows Phone Device in LG’s Pipeline

LG is not abandoning Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform; it’s just not particularly focused on it at the moment.

Responding to a report in the Korea Herald that suggested it was “taking a step back from Windows Phones,” LG today said that is an inaccurate characterization.

“At the moment, LG is primarily focusing on developing Android-equipped smartphones,” the company said in a statement. “Contrary to what some articles have said, LG is not giving up on Windows Phones.”

But it’s not exactly throwing its full support behind them, either. There isn’t a single Windows Phone device on the company’s near-term handset roadmap, as the company itself concedes.

“Although we currently don’t have a new Windows device in the pipeline, that is simply because demand for Android devices is so strong,” LG said in a statement to AllThingsD. “We’ve maintained since the beginning that LG will support whatever operating system consumers want but at the moment, our priority is to get our Android devices to a level where we feel we have strong coverage of all the major markets.”

So no, LG is not giving up on Windows Phone. But its commitment to the platform wasn’t all that big in the first place. While it was one of the first hardware makers to support the platform, the company has released only a handful of handsets running the OS.

: http://allthingsd.com/20120501/no-new-windows-phone-device-in-lgs-pipeline/

A Wedding App That Gives the Guests a Part

Lost? Pull out the smartphone and use the Google Maps app to find your way home. Hungry? Open the Yelp app and read ratings for nearby restaurants. We live in an app-obsessed world, yet when couples get engaged, they still make wedding websites to share information with guests.

I tested an idea that aims to change that practice: Appy Couple. It functions as a couple’s official wedding app and guides guests through a wedding. They can use it to track information about the bachelorette party or other pre-wedding events, and on the wedding day to find their way to the venue and post photos that they take. While many existing wedding apps help brides and grooms plan things like seating arrangements, dress selections and registry creation, this app is a mobile aid for guests.

Appy Couple comes from a New York City-based start-up called AppeProPo Inc., and it has a couple of rough edges. For example, users can’t crop uploaded images and it is difficult to navigate the section where virtual Champagne toasts can be posted. The company plans to fix these issues soon.

Last year, I spent weeks making my own wedding website, and very few of my tech-savvy guests used it or visited it more than once—if at all. I only wish Appy Couple had been available for my wedding, where most guests carried iPhones or Android phones.

This app-creating website is currently free to use, and it will always be free for guests to download; they follow an email link or use a provided code to access their couple’s wedding app. Readers of this column can create their own wedding apps on AppyCouple.com using their email addresses and “AppyPreview” as a code, since it is currently usable by invitation-only. In the fall, AppeProPo will start charging couples to make apps: Some designs will cost $49, while limited-edition and designer-series app templates will cost $99 to $200 each. One hundred designs are available now, and 50 more are coming by fall.

Appy Couple works on iPhones, Android phones, iPads, Web browsers and via email invitations.

Couples begin on AppyCouple.com, where a stylish, simple user interface walks them through seven steps for making their wedding app. Each app also comes with a wedding website that will display the same content for relatives or friends who don’t have smartphones.

One of my favorite parts about creating a wedding app was that I could change its design at any time. I started with a yellow-and-gray bubble design and later changed the design to a completely different black-and-gold pattern. With one click, the entire app was updated.

Another useful feature is the Events section. Only guests who are invited to certain events will see those events appear in their apps. So if only 15 friends are invited to the bachelorette party, only they—and not the rest of the guests—will see it. Couples can customize Events to add songs, guest polls, information on dress code, child care, weather, travel and hotels.

Appy Couple connects to Facebook, but only for the purpose of pulling images and names of friends into a section called Key People. It will never display any Appy Couple activity in your Facebook timeline. It also links to Yahoo, Google, Windows Live, AOL, Plaxo, Outlook and Apple’s Address Book for finding friends’ email addresses.

Judging from the many weddings I’ve attended, Appy Couple’s Gallery will be the most-used section on the app. In the test app I created, friends uploaded photos that can be viewed by the couple and other guests, and the app grew richer with their contributions. Images can be uploaded without pre-approval from the host couple, though any image can be deleted by the hosts on the AppyCouple.com website. A “moderation” option will be added to the app to give the couple more control over content.

A guest list can be uploaded to the app, but it must be saved as a CSV (comma separated values) file with columns for each guest’s first name, last name, email address and phone number. Couples who use traditional response cards will likely not also digitally invite guests to their wedding, but casual wedding events might merit a digital invitation.

Appy Couple’s CEO and co-founder, Sharmeen Mitha-Sehgal, wants couples to use personalized apps long after their wedding day. Next up is Appy Life, where people can create apps for events like births, birthdays, new homes and anniversaries.

This app brings useful wedding website content on the go with guests as they attend weddings. If nothing else, they’ll know how to get to the church and when the ceremony starts—even if they forget to bring the paper invitation.

Write to Katie at katie.boehret@wsj.com

: http://allthingsd.com/20120501/a-wedding-app-that-gives-the-guests-a-part/

Why can’t we see this commercial on television? [VIDEO]

Looking back to 2009 and 2010 we recall asking over and over for Google to run some ads on television hyping Android as a platform.  Although it would have been out of the norm for Google to advertise on TV, we remember calling for them to give consumers just 30 seconds of awesome.  In the early days of Android we felt this would have helped counter all the Apple ads in circulation.

Today, at 51 percent market share, Google doesn’t really need to show off the benefits of Android with a TV clip.  Still, that’s not say that the following video wouldn’t make for a compelling reason to buy a Galaxy Nexus or Android product.

What you’ll see here is a Youtube video that shows off how easy it is to sync contacts, photos, music, and more.  How do you do it?  Log in.

Why can’t we see this commercial on television? [VIDEO] originally appeared on AndroidGuys.

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comScore: Android now on more than half of all U.S. smartphones

Android now holds a major stake in the business that is U.S. smartphones.  According to figures from the latest comScore MobiLens report, the Android platform has been found on more than half (51 percent) of all smartphones in the United States.  The data, compiled from during the three month average period ending March 2012, was compiled from more than 30,000 U.S. mobile subscribers.   Up 3.7 percent from the previous quarter, it’s the biggest gaining platform in comScore’s report.

Apple follows in second place with 30.7 percent of the market, up 1.1 percent from the previous quarter.  Other than these two players, everyone else on the survey reported losing ground.  RIM, perhaps coincidentally, lost 3.7 percent share during the three-month period.  Is Android eating up all of RIM’s market or is the BlackBerry platform dying a slow death at the hands of everyone else?

Where do you see Android leveling off?  Will it be in the fifties and sixties?  Higher?  Will it plateau right around the 63 percent mark once it’s gobbled up the remaining RIM slice?

comScore

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Lookout debuts new security measures for side-loaded apps

Lookout Mobile Security this week unveiled a pair of new features designed to help users who like to side-load applications onto their Android devices. For those in the dark, sideloading refers to installation of games or apps from outside of the Google Play Store (Android Market). These two measures, File System Monitoring and Install Monitoring, will keep an eye on things before and after you side-load that next app.

File System Monitoring actively watches your SD card for file changes. When a new app is downloaded to your SD card, but not yet installed, File System Monitoring will alert you in real time if it’s malware.

Install Monitoring give you the option to scan apps at the beginning of a side-load app installation process. When you tap on an .apk package to install it, Install Monitoring will prompt you to optionally scan the app before installing. If an app checks out as clean, installation proceeds as normal without any inconvenience to you. You can even set this as a default behavior so that Lookout will automatically conduct scans on all future side-load installs!

 

New Anti-Malware Features Offer More Points of Protection

 Today we’re excited to tell you about two new features in Lookout for Android: File System Monitoring and Install Monitoring. These free features provide added protection from malware and spyware, especially for people who like to download apps from a variety of different sources. Like Lookout’s core security functionality, these new features are powered by Lookout’s Mobile Threat Network.

If you download apps from alternative markets or other sources such as discussion forums (commonly referred to as “side-loading” apps), File System Monitoring and Install Monitoring add an extra level of protection for you. While Lookout already protects users from these types of applications by scanning them immediately upon install, these two new features offer unique ways to detect threats before they are installed on a device.

The ability to download apps from a variety of sources is considered one of the unique strengths of the Android platform. However, we generally advise people to use caution when “side-loading,” or downloading an app outside of the official Android Market (aka Google Play) in order to minimize the chance of encountering malware. We know a lot of our users like to explore everything on Android, even if that means downloading apps from a source you’ve never even heard of before. For these cases, File System Monitoring and Install Monitoring are here to protect you.

File System Monitoring

File System Monitoring actively watches your SD card for file changes. When a new app is downloaded to your SD card, but not yet installed, File System Monitoring will alert you in real time if it’s malware. This active monitoring is a much better watchdog for your SD card than a scheduled file system scan, and we’ve designed it in a way that won’t impact your battery life. A file system scan scheduled for Tuesday won’t tell you about the malware you downloaded on Wednesday for six days!

Power users, take note! Because File System Monitoring relies on its ability to ‘watch’ the SD card for changes, it works great for most methods of side-loading, such as when you download an app from the web or from email directly on your mobile device. In cases where you un-mount your SD card to transfer apps manually, File System Monitoring won’t be able to scan any new apps you may transfer. This is where Install Monitoring comes in…

Install Monitoring

Lookout for Android is the first security app to feature Install Monitoring, giving you the option to scan apps at the beginning of a side-load app installation process. When you tap on an .apk package to install it, Install Monitoring will prompt you to optionally scan the app before installing. If an app checks out as clean, installation proceeds as normal without any inconvenience to you. You can even set this as a default behavior so that Lookout will automatically conduct scans on all future side-load installs!

Note that when you get apps from Google Play, they’re automatically downloaded and installed on your device, so Lookout’s existing security scanning is still an essential facet of mobile protection for users.

If you are an existing Lookout Free or Lookout Premium user, install the latest update of Lookout for Android to access these features. You can turn off automatic File System Monitoring in Settings>Security in the Lookout app. You’ll also be able to set preferences for Install Monitoring the first time you install a side-loaded app through Android’s standard intent selection dialog, and thereafter through the ‘Launch By Default’ section of Lookout’s App info page in system settings.

We think that these new features really add an important new level of security for power users – they’re like monster tires for off-roading on your Android! Let us know what you think!

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Samsung can’t learn from Sony’s mistakes, patents a dual-screen tablet

Remember the Sony Tablet P? Yea, neither do a lot of people. It was clunky, impractical, hard to use, and most of all, really served a purpose to nobody. Aside from a tiny niche market, the Sony Tablet P flopped like a salmon that got caught by a four-year-old and left on the docks.

The tablet patent concept shows 2 screens that are flatter and larger than the bulky Tablet P concept, making it much more laptop-ish than tablet-ish. There’s also a removable controller / pointer that slides into the hinge, making it even more awkward. The dual screens can work together as one (bad, thanks to the hinge in the middle) or separately (better, but still weird).

Samsung, we here at AndroidGuys are questioning this patent, and we’re questioning it hard. Granted, there’s no mention of what OS will be used here, but in this writers opinion, this is going to leave a sour taste in the mouths of consumers who purchase this, especially at the price it’s sure to come out at (read: expensive).

source: androidcommunity

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