Showing posts with label Mobile. Show all posts

Tuesday 23 September 2014

Owners Report That the iPhone 6 Plus Is Susceptible to Bending

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Apple’s iPhone 6 Plus appears to have a hidden feature, though it’s one you might not want to test out. According to a report by MacRumors, Apple’s latest smartphones are susceptible to bending out of shape if kept in your pocket for too long.

MacRumors’ report is based on posts by two of its forum members. The first forum member, Hanzoh, said that he kept his iPhone 6 Plus in his front pants pocket for about 18 hours.

During that time, he said, he drove to a wedding, danced, and sat down for varying periods. Later, when he took his iPhone out of his pocket, he noticed that it had a slight bend at its midsection.

Bent iPhone 6 Plus


A second MacRumors forum member, DevinPitcher, claimed that his friend’s iPhone 6 Plus bent after his friend put it in his pocket and got into his car. Both Hanzoh and DevinPitcher provided photos of their iPhone 6 Pluses to back up their claims.

As MacRumors points out, past forum members have seen similar problems with the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s. Those owners reportedly received replacements for their bent handsets from either Apple or their carriers.

That the iPhone 6 Plus is capable of bending isn’t out of the realm of possibility. The phone is not only Apple’s largest, but it’s also one of its thinnest.

In fact, Lewis Hilsenteger over at Unbox Therapy tried bending his iPhone 6 Plus after reading reports of its flexibility, and managed to put quite the kink in the handset. Though, it took a good amount of force for him to see any results.


Daniel Howley

Yahoo

Phablet Reviews Before and After iPhone 6 Plus (Everyone Got It Wrong)

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Bigger is better. No, wait, bigger is worse. Well, which is it?
Apple’s newly supersized 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and the jumbo, 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus are a marked departure for the company, which has clung to the same, small screen size for years. It has gone so far as to publicly deride larger phones from competitors, notably Samsung, even as their sales grew to record highs.
Tech reviewers over the years have tended to side with Apple, in general saddling reviews of the Samsung Galaxy Note – a 5.3-inch device that kicked off the phablet push in 2012 – with asides about how big the darn thing was. To be fair, I’m one of them; I called the 6.3-inch Galaxy Mega “preposterous” last year. I also think the iPhone 6 Plus may be more phone than most people will be comfortable with, although the skyrocketing sales seem to point otherwise.
But does Apple have something special? Can its phones succeed where others have … well, already succeeded? And more importantly, are tech reviewers being fair when they review the iPhone 6 Plus? Here’s what some of them said today, compared with how they reviewed earlier phablets and big phones from the competition.

BGR
Jonathan Geller spun 180 degrees thanks to Apple. But he’s decent enough to admit he was wrong.
2012:  Samsung Galaxy Note
The most useless device I’ve ever seen … This is a phone, after using it for a few hours, that feels like it is too big to be taken seriously. That’s the end of it. I don’t care if you like large screens on mobile devices, I don’t care if you love Android, and I don’t care if you love 4G LTE — this is a device fit for use only by such a small subset of the human population that I can’t fathom how AT&T and Samsung are putting so much marketing resources behind it.
– Jonathan Geller
2014:  Apple iPhone 6 Plus
Now that Apple has finally taken the wraps off the iPhone 6 and the iPhone 6 Plus, and Apple fans are going crazy with anticipation over the largest iPhones ever released, something needs to be said. And that something is, “Thank you, Samsung.” We got it wrong.
– Jonathan Geller
TechCrunchTechCrunch wasn’t sure how it felt about phablets at first. But larger iPhones have clearly convinced them.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Unfortunately, you might look a little crazy with that huge thing up to your face. I found that it was really difficult to get comfortable with the device, never feeling like I had complete control over it as I would with a smaller phone. On the other hand, the mobile video experience offered by the Note can’t really be beat.
– Jordan Crook
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
In terms of carrying and holding the device, the additional size makes for a less ‘perfect’ ergonomic quality, something the iPhone 6 definitely achieves, but there’s still lots to love about the industrial design of the 6 Plus … For most tasks, I find the iPhone 6 Plus to be a two-handed device – but I also find that I’m absolutely fine with that.
– Darrell Etherington
The Wall Street Journal / RecodeLauren Goode is singing a very different song – and is willing to admit it. So too Walt Mossberg, who called the 5.3-inch Note “gargantuan” and the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 as “terrific.”
2012:  Galaxy Note 2
It’s still too big for a smartphone … After testing it over the past week and a half, the awkwardness that came with carrying such a large, “notice me” phone outweighed the benefits of it, for me.
– Lauren Goode
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
Maybe I’m getting old, and my eyes are getting worse. Or maybe I’m stuck in Apple’s reality-distortion field (help). But something strange happened this week. I started to like a phablet.
– Lauren Goode
2014:  Walt Mossberg on Galaxy Note and the iPhone 6
That iPhone, and its four-inch successor, the 5S, proved very popular. At first, larger, wider phones seemed weird (I even compared holding the first Samsung Note to your face to “talking into a piece of toast.”) But for many people, especially in certain countries, the iPhone’s screen began to seem too small, as competing models appeared with bigger and bigger screens. At first, larger, wider phones seemed weird … the iPhone 6’s 4.7-inch screen is a catch-up feature. But it’s very well done.
– Walt Mossberg
The New York Times / YahooFor David Pogue, a 4.8-inch Samsung was great, but so big it needed to be ridiculed. A 5.5-inch iPhone “doesn’t seem bigger than the iPhone 5,” however. He’s clearly adjusted to the scale.
2012:  Galaxy S3
This phone is huge. Its 4.8-inch screen is a broad canvas for photos, movies, maps and Web pages. But you can’t have a big screen without a big body, and this one is more VHS cassette than postage stamp. It’s the old trade-off: A big phone is better when you’re using it, but a small one is better when you’re carrying it.
– David Pogue
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are absolutely terrific phones. They’re fast and powerful and well designed. There’s not a single component that hasn’t been improved. These phones are a delight to behold and to be held.
– David Pogue
The GuardianLooks like The Guardian had a change of heart, err hand? At least they’re not above admitting it.
2013:  Galaxy Note 3
The sheer size of the device basically makes one-handed operation impossible. Samsung’s given the Note 3 an entire settings menu dedicated to trying to make it easier to use one-handed, but even with my adult male-sized hands it’s a struggle to reach even half of the screen without dropping the device.
– Samuel Gibbs
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
Too big. This thing’s too big. Waaay too big. It’s … actually, that screen is pretty nice, isn’t it? Wow, you really can get a lot of content on there, can’t you? Hey, my hand’s getting used to the size. It’s quite comfortable, isn’t it?
– Charles Arthur
USA Today
Ed Baig stuck to his guns: Phablets in general just aren’t going to work for everyone, regardless of who makes them.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Screen size is a balancing act, of course, and some will find the large display ungainly. Holding the phone to your ear might feel a bit dorky. I found it could easily fit in a coat pocket or purse, and surprisingly my front jeans pocket as well. But the size is simply not going to work for everybody.
– Ed Baig
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
I prefer the 6 Plus because I like the biggest of the big screens, and like that I have to squint less often. It felt fine in my jeans pocket, but won’t fit every snug purse or small pair of hands.
– Ed Baig
CNetCNet’s reviewer said the Note was a really, really big phone, but a great one. The iPhone is a great phone but a really, really big one.
2012:  Galaxy Note
There’s no way this baby is slipping into my jeans pockets, but it’s fine for my purse … With its huge screen and throwback stylus, the Samsung Galaxy Note is a polarizing smartphone that winks at tablet territory. Those who like their screens XL will find a top-notch device that lets multimedia shine. The S Pen adds some artistic potential, but for some, the phone will just simply be too big.
– Jessica Dolcourt
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is too big for everyone to love it, but it’s Apple’s best phone this year. If your budget and your pocket can make room for it, give the iPhone 6 Plus serious consideration.
– Tim Stevens
The VergeAt first, The Verge was obsessed with the sheer size of the Note. Today size isn’t the same factor it once was.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Human society has yet to evolve to the point where it can witness a person holding up a massive slate of technology to his ear without attempting to make a bad joke about it … It’s only the one-size-fits-none form factor and some software troubles that hold the Galaxy Note back from being a truly memorable mobile device.
– Vlad Savov
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is a big phone because it has to be; Apple made a big phone in 2014 because consumers have demanded big phones. Samsung’s empire is built on gigantic phones that keep getting bigger … and while Apple initially derided screen size as an unworkable gimmick, it turns out that bigger sells … I’m going to buy an iPhone 6 Plus. I’m taken with it; it feels like an entirely new kind of device for Apple, and it has such a killer camera I can’t say no.
– Nilay Patel
InfoWorldGalen Gruman gets the award for consistency — and bluntest statement about the sheer size of modern phones.
2012:  Galaxy Note
The Galaxy Note’s 5.75-inch height and 3.25-inch width fit in my open palm, but without much leeway. Many women and even men won’t be so lucky. … Even two-handed operation can be problematic. In vertical orientation, thumb-typing is quite comfortable on the larger-than-usual onscreen keyboard. But in horizontal orientation, I strained to reach the innermost keys with my thumbs, despite my large hands.
– Galen Gruman
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is too big for me.
– Galen Gruman
Digital TrendsWe can’t very well call out other publications without quoting ourselves. Here is what our Mobile Editor Jeffrey Van Camp thought of the Galaxy Note and iPhone 6 Plus.
2012:  Galaxy Note
I can’t imagine how many times a Note will be dropped because someone is trying to use it one handed … If you have big hands or often use your phone with two hands, then the Note may be a good device for you. Aside from its size, most everything else about it is solid … Samsung hasn’t made a huge mistake with the Galaxy Note.
– Jeffrey Van Camp
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
I’ve never loved phablets. I still don’t … Of Apple’s two new models, we recommend the iPhone 6 over the iPhone 6 Plus, but compared to other (oversized) phablets, this is a fantastic offering … If you like big phones or have avoided previous iPhones because of their diminutive stature, take a fresh look at Apple.
– Jeffrey Van Camp

Bandits Steal Berlin IPhone Cash, Showing Payment Hurdle

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Bloomberg - If bandits rob banks because that’s where the money is, then it makes sense to hold up an Apple Store in Germany on the day after a new iPhone is released -- because that’s where the cash is.

Late Saturday afternoon, with would-be iPhone buyers still queuing in front of Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s marble-and-glass emporium on Berlin’s Kurfuerstendamm, three masked gunmen stormed a security company’s van that was hauling away the pile of euros the store had taken in over the weekend.

One reason the outlet had so much cash on hand: Germans are famously behind much of the developed world in credit- and debit-card payments, with cash still used in more than half of money spent in stores. The iPhone 6, released Sept. 19, presents an opportunity for Germans to move toward a cashless future.

Whereas Americans, Scandinavians, French and Italians can buy a cup of coffee or a pack of gum with a card, it’s rare for Germans to use plastic for such payments, and it can be hard to find a cafe or restaurant in Berlin, Munich or Frankfurt that will accept credit cards.

Just 15 percent of retail payments in Germany are made by credit or debit card, the lowest among seven countries studied by the European Central Bank in a paper released in June. In the U.S., by contrast, 45 percent of payments are made by card.

While it’s easy to use plastic at Apple’s Berlin store, it’s not uncommon to see customers pay cash for iPhones or computers costing hundreds of euros. A staff member who answered the phone at the shop declined to make a manager available to comment. Police declined to say whether they had any leads on the identity of the thieves. Apple declined to comment on matters of security at its Berlin store.

Apple Pay

A key feature of the iPhone 6 is something called Apple Pay. The service, which the company expects to introduce in the U.S. in October, will let customers shop in stores and online by tapping their finger on the phone’s fingerprint scanner rather than paying cash or swiping a card. Apple hasn’t given details about plans for Apple Pay outside its home market.

“Apple Pay has the critical mass to accelerate the transition toward digital payments,” Barclays Bank Plc analysts said in a note released Sept. 19.

Germans have already started moving -- slowly -- away from cash. People in the country used cash for 53 percent of the money they spent in stores in 2011, down from 58 percent three years earlier, according to the most recent data from the country’s central bank, the Bundesbank.

That change, though, won’t accelerate unless German worries about privacy and data security are addressed, said Richard Crone, founder of Crone Consulting LLC, a mobile payments researcher in San Francisco.

Security Breaches

And those concerns give a system like Cupertino, California-based Apple’s an advantage, Crone said. The technology doesn’t reveal a customer’s identity or payment information to the vendor, which means shoppers face less risk from security breaches such as the recent theft of millions of credit card numbers from retailers such as Target Corp. (TGT) and Home Depot Inc. (HD)

“You cannot get rid of this risk until you get rid of the card,” and Apple’s system does just that, Crone said.

Google has its own cash replacement, software called Google Wallet, and Vodafone Group Plc (VOD), Telefonica SA (TEF), Royal KPN NV (KPN) and Deutsche Telekom AG are trying to gain traction for similar services. While the competition will hasten the introduction of new ideas into the market, it could slow adoption by consumers because it could sow confusion in the market.

“There are a lot of conflicting technologies out there,” said Thad Peterson, a consultant at Aite Group, a research firm in Boston. “Companies and customers have been on the fence because there has been no technological standard in mobile payments.”

Brazen Heist

The heist was brazen. The Apple store, a former movie palace built a century ago, was flooded with people checking out the new phones and shoppers thronged the busy boulevard outside. The bandits rushed the cash transporter and carried off a chunk of the day’s earnings. The robbers jumped in a Citroen sedan and sped off. A short time later, police say they found the burning remnants of the getaway car in a wooded area about two miles from the store.

Though authorities and Apple haven’t said how much the thieves got away with or whether the money was insured, the hold-up won’t do much damage to Apple, which reported cash and investments of $164.5 billion at the end of last quarter.

Apparently, the bad guys didn’t nab any of the new phones while making their getaway.

China regulator says iPhone 6 in final review stages: Tencent

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(Reuters) - Apple Inc's iPhone 6 is in the final stages of review for approval, with results due shortly, a top Chinese government regulator said in an interview published on Tuesday by Tencent.
The status of the iPhone 6 in China has been a mystery since Apple unveiled the device this month without releasing a launch date for the world's largest smartphone market.
The delay has led to widespread speculation the iPhone has run into difficulty securing regulatory approval from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), with some reports suggesting the launch could be delayed until 2015.
"The iPhone 6 has entered the final stage of the approval process, now it's just a matter of time," MIIT chief Miao Wei told Tencent in an exclusive interview in Beijing. "Netizens, please wait patiently."
Miao declined to offer a time frame for completion of the review, saying only that he expected a result "very soon".

The ministry could not be immediately reached for comment Tuesday.

Apple Plans to Phase Out Beats Music Brand

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Beats Music will eventually disappear as a brand, according to a new report. TechCrunch reports that Apple plans to eliminate the Beats Music streaming service, which it acquired in May, but doesn’t say when. The report is less clear on what Apple plans to do with streaming music. Once source tells TechCrunch that on-demand music could be integrated into iTunes; another source says Apple will make a “significant music announcement” in the first half of 2015.

Engineers from Beats Music have already been transferred to other divisions at Apple, including iTunes, according to the report. As TechCrunch notes, Beats Music CEO Ian Rogers was put in charge of Apple’s ad-supported iTunes Radio product in August and has been splitting his time between the services since then.

When Apple bought the Beats brand for $3 billion, Apple senior vice president Eddy Cue called Beats Music “ the first music subscription service done right .” Though it mostly mimicked existing services from Spotify, Rdio, and others, Beats Music tried to differentiate itself through hand-curated playlists and the involvement of music-industry titans like Dr. Dre and Trent Reznor. But after three months, it had only 250,000 subscribers, compared with  over 10 million  on Spotify. Still, Cue had positioned Beats as a key component of Apple’s music strategy, saying that the company wanted to offer on-demand listening along with ad-supported radio and digital downloads.
All of which suggests that while the Beats Music brand may be going away, on-demand streaming from Apple could easily take another form. If iTunes is remade as a kind of celestial jukebox that combines your MP3s and on-demand streaming into a single place, then the Beats Music brand going away might not be such a bad thing, after all.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


YAHOO

Sunday 21 September 2014

Gold IPhones at $3,600 as China Delay Fuels Black Market

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  Bloomberg - Liu Min stands a few feet from anApple Inc. (AAPL) store in Beijing hawking something that can’t be bought inside: the new iPhone 6.
While the device debuted today in the U.S., Hong Kong, Japan andAustralia, there is no release date set for the world’s biggest smartphone market. That creates an opportunity for Liu, who promises two-day delivery of a 16-gigabyte iPhone 6 for 8,000yuan ($1,303) -- almost double the price on Apple’s Hong Kong website.
“It’s going to be a while before the new iPhone comes to China officially, so if you want it now, you have to pay up,” Liu said, pacing outside the Sanlitun district store selling screen protectors. “Give me a call if you want one.”
Liu, who wouldn’t discuss his supply chain, wasn’t alone. Four vendors nearby offered the 128-gigabyte iPhone 6 for delivery on Sept. 20 at the equivalent of about $2,441, compared with the Hong Kong price of about $927.
Related:
Big-Screen IPhones Draw Long Lines at Europe, U.S. Stores
iPhone's 'Fastest Rollout Ever'? Depends on How You Measure It
Tim Cook Interview: Making the Watch, Remaking Apple
Consumers typically waited at least three months for Apple to start selling new iPhones in China, triggering a flood of devices into the country’s black market. As many as 5 million may be smuggled into China before the new models are officially available, said Neil Shah, Mumbai-based research director for devices at Counterpoint Research.
 ‘Sure Bet’
The promise of lucrative returns also has many of Hong Kong’s finance professionals trying to capitalize on one of the biggest arbitrage opportunities in China.
“This is a sure bet to make money,” said Ronald Wan, the chief China adviser at Asian Capital Holdings Ltd. in Hong Kong. “From a 50 percent to 150 percent markup, it’s better than the stock market.”
The benchmark Hang Seng Index, the world’s fourth-largest stock market, has gained 4.3 percent this year.
The Apple delay stems from the fact that the new iPhones have cleared just two of three regulatory steps, the official Xinhua News Agency reported yesterday. The devices still need network access licenses from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Xinhua said.
Carolyn Wu, a Beijing-based spokeswoman for Apple, declined to comment on when the new models will be available in China, what impact smuggling will have on the market or on the status of the government applications.
Wu repeated previous statements that the iPhone 6 “will get here as soon as possible.”
China Mobile Ltd. (941), the world’s largest carrier by users, doesn’t know when the iPhone 6 models will be available in the market, Chairman Xi Guohua said this week.
Breaking Laws
Outside the Apple Store in Hong Kong’s IFC mall, two young women were reselling the new phones for double the price. One foreigner held up a sign saying, “Need an iPhone 6.”
Su Ling, 32, who works in the wealth-management unit at a European lender in Hong Kong, bought two devices through Apple’s small-business website for about HK$6,400 ($826) each and anticipates selling them for about HK$10,000.
“Everyone in my office who could get on the site bought a pair,” Su said. “I plan to go to Shenzhen to sell on the streets” if custom checks entering the border city aren’t too strict, he said, declining to name his employer because he’s not authorized to speak to media.
The phones are multiband devices that will work anywhere. Yet anyone selling a device on China’s black market breaks at least two laws -- the requirements to pay hefty import duties and to only use mobile phones sanctioned for sale by the government.
Trailing Xiaomi
Last year was the first time Apple’s phones were available in China on the same day as the global debut. Previously, the typical three-month lag helped fuel smuggling of about 20 million iPhones into China annually, said Jun Zhang, San Francisco-based analyst and head of China equities research at Rosenblatt Securities Inc.
Apple got $5.9 billion of sales in the fourth quarter from the Greater China region, including Taiwan and Hong Kong. That is about 16 percent of the company’s total. The iPhone is well behind market leaders Xiaomi Corp. andSamsung Electronics Co. (005930), ranking sixth in China with about 6 percent market share, according to International Data Corp.
“Chinese consumers will still find ways to get their hands on the device, regardless of the delay,” said Sandy Shen, a Shanghai-based analyst with Gartner Inc. “I think the lag may even fuel the enthusiasm for the device.”
‘Joining Fun’
Zhang Limin, an investor adviser at China Securities Co. in the northeastern city of Harbin, said he’s willing to pay as much as 20,000 yuan for a device. The 30-year-old currently uses an iPhone 5 and a second handset from Xiaomi.
It’s not just in mainland China where people are looking to profit from the delay. At the computer-store complex in Hong Kong’s Wan Chai district, vendors offer the gold iPhone 6 Plus for between HK$18,000 and HK$28,000.
“Many, many people are asking -- from mainland, from Hong Kong,” said Chen Xiaoming, a 29-year-old worker at the “Well Go Telecom” store.
In the Mong Kok district, a popular shopping destination for tourists, an electronics store offered to buy an iPhone 6 for at least HK$10,000 and an iPhone 6 Plus for HK$12,000.
“It’s not just organized resellers trying to benefit from this iPhone demand in China, but even a lot of individuals are hoping to make a buck in this reselling business,” said Kiranjeet Kaur, a Singapore-based analyst with IDC.
One of them is Zhong Chenyan, a 28-year-old working in Hong Kong’s marketing industry. She bought two gold, 128-gigabyte devices online and plans to sell one to an acquaintance for the equivalent of $1,546. She plans to resell the other for about $1,950.
“Many people around me are doing this, and I wanted to join the fun,” Zhong said. “If I could get the phone and sell it, great.”