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After a quick name change and some nips and tucks, Samsung has made the Galaxy R official and will start rolling it out, beginning with Sweden, followed by North & Eastern Europe, South East & West Asia, Middle East Asia, and China. The pricing for India is not set since it’s not actually launched here, just announed. My guess would be around 25K, which puts it just below the Galaxy S II and in line with theLG Optimus 2X, which it will undoubtedly destroy. The Galaxy R hasn’t changed much in appearance from the last time we spotted it in a leaked video. Think of it as a scaled down version of the Galaxy S II. Samsung hasn’t completely neutered it though; the only changes include a Tegra 2 CPU and a smaller screen size with a different panel and lower in-built memory and RAM.
Let the games begin!
To avoid eating into the sales of the S II, the video recording capabilities are capped at 720p. To bring the price down further, we have to bid adieu to the Super AMOLED Plus screen and make way for SuperClear LCD. The phone will run Android 2.3 Gingerbread along with Samsung’s TouchWiz UI (possibly 4.0). I wouldn’t be surprised if HTC is quietly prepping something to retaliate. It’s a known fact that their flagship phone is anything but ‘Sensational’, so they really need to bring their A Game if they have to stand a chance. Here are some of the highlights for the Samsung Galaxy R once more -
4.19-inch SC-LCD, capacitive touchscreen
3G, EDGE/GPRS, Wi-Fi, Wi-Fi Hotspot, GPS with A-GPS support
UPDATE: Even as you're reading this, cops from the Oshiwara police station, located in suburban Mumbai claim to have traced the hackers to Hyderabad. Further reports suggest that not only did the hackers manage their entire hack operation from Hyderabad, but were also Nigerian nationals. Their exact location in Hyderabad hasn't been traced yet. Adding to these details, a report in the Mumbai Mirror also states that the usual modus operandi of such a scam would be either placing accomplices at banks and other call centres, or acquire a duplicate security strip, placed at the back of a debit card to get all personal debit card details.
In what comes as a shocker to several Mumbaikars who quite routinely withdraw cash from the Axis Bank ATMs dotted across the city, it is being learnt that the security of the ATM systems of the bank have been compromised. According to a report in the Mumbai Mirror, the first set of complaints has been coming from Oshiwara, located in suburban Mumbai. The ATM in question located in Oshiwara incidentally happens to be at a stone’s throw distance from the Oshiwara Police Station.
Exercising caution..
Over the month, the report stated that several irate customers began filing complaints after they realized that the money withdrawn by them from the ATM and the money, a much larger amount that got actually debited did not match. Apparently, the repeated complaints did not draw much action from the cops, initially but when one of the cops in the station itself (Asst. Inspector, Sanjay More) got duped, the cyber crime cell was called in.
According to a statement that a spokesperson from the bank provided to Mumbai Mirror, it was revealed that the ATM at Oshiwara wasn’t the lone one affected. Several other Axis Bank ATMs across the city are now being speculated to be among those affected. Although the mode, and any other specific details of the hack haven't come through, what is being spoken about, albeit in hushed tones is the use of an external device that records all details of a customers card on swiping. The bank has, as on August 1, 2011 filed an FIR with the Cyber Crime Cell.
With statistics being as worrying as the loss of over Rs. 8 lakh in less than a month, this news of the security being compromised has again raised the issue of lack of security present. Have you been affected by the hack? Do let us know in the comments section below.
Research in Motion (RIM), the maker of BlackBerry has been under adverse market pressure for a while now and one of its key strategies to turn things around was to speed up its release cycle. The RIM head honchos in Waterloo, Canada have probably heard enough ranting about BlackBerry smartphones featuring fairly dated processors and a visibly aging OS.
And of course, nothing makes things crystal clear to head honchos as a dip in market share, which is exactly what RIM has been witnessing globally. Even as I write this, Gartner’s latest data shows that RIM’s market share in mobile phones has fallen from 3.2 percent in Q2 2010 to 3 percent in Q2 2011, while Apple’s has nearly doubled. Of course the once mighty mobile phone leader Nokia has crashed in a far more spectacular fashion, and seeing Nokia’s fate and its own crashing stock price must be making the once-upon-a-time smartphone leader RIM quite wary.
RIM’s response: A whole new series of smartphones with mouth-watering specs have been announced and are being launched in the next few days and weeks. This is the biggest launch in RIM’s history—never before has the smartphone maker launched so many devices in so short a time, but I guess tough times demand drastic, out-of-comfort-zone measures. And the first in the pack is the BlackBerry Bold 9900.
Check out our quick video review below -
Blackberry 9900
Form Factor At first glance the Bold 9900 reminded me of the Bold 9000, the first BlackBerry to feature the ‘Bold’ brand and which brings back great memories for a BlackBerry regular like me. Trawl any BlackBerry-related forum and you’ll see many users wistfully remembering the Bold 9000 despite two more great Bold smartphones (the 9700 and the 9780) being released in later years.But that’s where the similarity ends. The Bold 9900 may look like the Bold 9000 from the front, but is thinner, slightly smaller and if you compare what’s inside the difference would be as stark as comparing the insides of a Toyota commuter car with a Porsche.
Very elegant design
Touted as the thinnest BlackBerry yet (115 x 66 x 10.5 mm), I think the Bold 9900 looks great—very businesslike and is built like a tank. I don’t like bling and the brushed metal rim with a thin polished edge is the very opposite of bling, as it gently whispers class. The rear battery isn’t faux leather as in the 9780, and is smooth as they come, and with good reason. Under the rear cover is the Near Field Communication (NFC) antenna, so the rear had to be smooth carbon fibre so there would be no signal disruptions. Fortunately, thanks to the gentle protrusion at the rear which is rubberised, the device won’t slip from your hands. Brilliant design!
Weighing in at 130 gms, the Bold 9900 is heavier and bigger than its immediate predecessor. RIM is swimming against the usual flow here, but I think it’s a great decision — I loved the feel of the 9900 in my hands. Incidentally, some informal dipstick surveys I did revealed that the fairer sex may find it a tad too large. Button positioning is a bit different from the standard BlackBerry style. On the right of the 9900 there are now four buttons, as opposed to the usual three. Three are media buttons with a welcome pause button in the middle and the bottom one is a convenience key you can customize as per your liking.
The slimmest Bold yet
Unfortunately, there's no convenience key on the left, a glaring omission I didn't like one bit. There's a micro USB port for charging and sync and a standard 3.5mm audio out slot with a nice contoured design. On the top there's a single lock button which is placed bang in the centre and far easier to click than the top lock button on some earlier BlackBerry smartphones.
The 9900 boasts of a 2.8-inch, 640 x 480 pixel capacitive touchscreen that is incredibly sharp thanks to BlackBerry 7 OS' Liquid Graphics technology. This is the best BlackBerry display yet. The touchscreen is very precise and responsive and the trackpad plus touchscreen combo works great. Even though I prefer QWERTY over touchscreens any day, I found myself intuitively using the touchscreen often. I'm usually not the betting kind, but in this case, I’ll bet large amounts that the QWERTY keyboard on the Bold 9900 is the best on any smartphone. Period. In my opinion, the erstwhile Bold 9000had the best QWERTY keyboard till date, but that great keyboard has finally been dethroned by one that's even more silky soft, slightly larger and is all-in-all, jaw-dropping amazing. Not one wrong keystroke from the get go - it's that good.
Features & Performance As mentioned earlier, what’s inside this baby is very different from your standard BlackBerry. For years, RIM used a processor clocked at 624MHz across 3 generations of Bold devices and finally (yes, F-I-N-A-L-L-Y!), the new Bold 9900 is powered by a swift 1.2 GHz processor backed by 768 MB RAM and 8 GB of onboard memory. If you consider that its predecessor (the Bold 9780) had just 2 GB on onboard memory, you’d realise this is a drastic change for RIM, and a welcome change at that. There’s also support for up to 32GB more via micro SD. Unfortunately the card is not hot swappable, which is a step backwards for the 9900 over its predecessor.
Thanks to the snappy processor, this BlackBerry was a dream to use. Quick and responsive. Even reboots were no longer a pain in the you-know-where.
Office features for the business-person on the go
Some thanks for the boost in performance must also go to the new BlackBerry OS 7, but only some. This was originally codenamed as OS 6.1 and frankly, that’s what it is and RIM should have left it at that, but perhaps RIM marketing felt otherwise. While a definite and welcome improvement over OS 6, this is the best BlackBerry OS yet, but still has some way to go before the iOS and Android fan boys will be amazed, and that way is the QNX way, which is now on the BlackBerry PlayBook and which is expected to be the next big thing from RIM. But till then we’ll live with OS 7.
As on OS 6, you get application icon views or drawers that can be swiped vertically as well as horizontally through categories like All, Favourites, Media, Downloads and Frequent. My greatest joy is that horizontal swiping can be disabled--I found it annoying since I would keep swiping to the next category accidentally. There's also the familiar drop down notification view, which is now much faster. And of course there's Universal Search that has now been upgraded to being voice-enabled. A few updated icons are also thrown in and there's now some more choice in the Settings menu. All welcome changes, but despite these and upgraded apps I still feel giving the OS a whole new number series is a bit much. Speaking of apps, Documents to Go Premium edition now comes preloaded and there's a new BlackBerry Balance feature for business users where you can automatically separate management of work and personal data. Corporate data can be managed and wiped by BES admins, but personal data is kept separate.
Excellent audio quality
However, OS 7 definitely seems to have some issues when it comes to backward compatibility of apps. My favourite Social app, SocialScope Lite refused to run. Even apps downloaded from the BlackBerry App World available on the 9900 (Burrp! for instance) refused to run and worse, even froze up the smartphone. I believe all apps need to be recertified for OS 7, which is not a great thing. RIM certainly needs to sort out this issue and quickly. It reminds me of the BlackBerry PlayBook application disaster that RIM has still not fixed, though this is of a much lesser intensity considering I faced this problem with only around 4-5 of the 25-plus apps on my BlackBerry. Also, disclosure must be made that I used a pre-release device—commercially available devices may not face this problem.
The 9900 also features an Orientation Sensor (Accelerometer), Digital Compass (Magnetometer) and a Proximity Sensor, which should help it take advantage of BlackBerry 7 OS support for augmented reality apps.
Media Audio on the Bold 9900 is absolutely awesome with exquisitely clear tones and a heavy bass line without a hint of jarring and well-balanced higher and mid level tones. You’ll notice some layers you never thought existed in your favourite music. Audio Boost certainly helps with output and so do the EQ presets. However, we don't recommend peaking the volume, not that you'll ever need to. At 75 percent, the decibel level is high enough to drown out the outside world.
Liquid Graphics make for clear and easy viewing of videos
We also tested it with various video formats. MP4, AVI, 3GP, MOV and WMV formats worked well and it plays up to 720p. 1080p is not supported. However, the 9900 doesn't read MKV or FLV formats.
Connectivity Browser I'd agree with RIM's claims that this is the best browser yet on a BlackBerry. It's not very far from the best browsers in the market, and a larger screen size might have really, really brought it very close indeed, but that's out of the realm of possibility, so let's focus on the possible. There are definite performance gains in terms of web page rendering and pinch and zoom thanks to Liquid Graphics. The excellent resolution makes web pages look great. But when I zoomed in and swiped down, rendering took some time. And there's still no Flash support and that's why I'm not so gaga over some of RIM's improved browsing claims.
Pinch to zoom now avilable for web browsing
NFC I’ve mentioned NFC capabilities earlier, but if you’re wondering what this is all about—NFC or Near Field Communication makes possible transactions, data exchange, and connections with a mere touch. So, you can purchase products and transfer secure information by simply touching devices. For instance, if you're in Mumbai and the Mumbai Metro finally becomes reality before the world comes to an end, you could simply take your BlackBerry close to a reader to pay for the ticket from your mobile wallet. Besides electronic money, other possibilities include file sharing, mobile gaming and more. RIM is one of the first major vendors to actually go beyond talking to deploying NFC on devices and must be commended for that.
Camera The camera is the same 5 MP (fixed focus) one with an LED used on the 9780—the only new feature is that OS 7 now supports up to 1280 x 720 video recording. Do remember though that at those specs a 21 second video I recorded gobbled up 35 MB of storage space on my media card.
Outdoor images look ok but colors aren't retained too well
Photographs clicked in good light were decent and colours were fairly well reproduced, though it wasn’t anything to write home about. Surely RIM could have provided a camera with a higher rating on its top-of-the-line smartphone rather than use yesterday’s camera that was also available on the BlackBerry 9780.
Indoor pictures in slightly low lit conditions are grainy
Battery This is another grouse. There’s nothing really wrong with the thin 1230 mAh battery, but in my opinion RIM should have gone for a thicker 1500 mAh battery like the one on the 9780 rather than sacrifice capacity in the quest for the thinnest Blackberry yet. But that’s my personal opinion. RIM claims OS 7 results in lower battery drain as compared to older OS’ despite the faster processor and the touchscreen. We put the device through our tech2 battery loop test where the first loop consisted of 1.5 hours calling, 2 hours of video, 2 hours of music playback and 2 hours of audio streaming via WiFi. At the end of this tough regimen, the battery still had enough juice to go on standby for 6.5 hours before it finally went dead.
I used the 9900 over BES and as my primary calling device, and it lasted me around a day. We reckon it should last around 24 hours with full usage that would include BIS or BES (push e-mail), BBM use, social networking and web access with a little music thrown in. That’s definitely not bad at all. But imagine what a 1500 mAh battery would do? That’s my only grouse.
The Bottom Line Yes, this is the best BlackBerry out there and finally something that puts RIM’s offering on par with the best when it comes to a simple spec-to-spec shootout. Of course, BlackBerry fans know specs are not everything—there’s the legendary messaging capabilities, the fearsome security that has governments across the world trying to arm-twist RIM to give them access to the otherwise unbreakable encryption, the unmatched data optimisation and compression strengths (which is why if you receive the same e-mail messages and surf the same websites, your data bill will be lower if you use a BlackBerry as compared to other devices).
Sophisticated and ready for work or play
So, when you put together the looks, the specs, the performance and the price of Rs 32,490 (MRP), you have a great combination. Yes, there are niggles like the dated camera and my wish for a 1500 mAh battery, but when compared with the whole package, they seem small. The Bold 9900 is the top-of-the-line BlackBerry and overall, it lives up to the iconic Bold brand. I expect to see this smartphone flying off the shelves. If you’re in the market for a top-end smartphone, do give this one a good look and if you’re a BlackBerry fan, well, you’d go buy it anyway because there’s no other BlackBerry better than this one.
No matter how hard you try and deny it, we’ve all downloaded something from LimeWire and some point in our lives and why not, it was one of the most popular P2P file sharing programs till last year, when it shut down due to a court order. The tussle between Warner Music Group and LimeWire finally resulted in a settlement in which LimeWire had to cough up $103 million as part of compensation for all the big music labels. The company handed over a $12 million cheque to Warner Music Group last quarter while the rest of the music labels still await their share of compensation.
Damn and blast! (Image credit: Getty Images)
If you think about it, Warner Music and some of the other labels previously stated that LimeWire was responsible for more than $1 billion worth of damages and as per Warner’s operations, this payout amounts to just 1.7 percent of the label's quarterly revenue. AllthingsD also reported that Warner Music actually saw a rise in revenues from digital sales in the last quarter but somehow managed to suffer a $47 million loss. The fact that the file sharing company was able to gather this large sum points to the fact that they were making a tidy profit from their software but whether they’ll be able to pay off the rest of the settlement remains to be seen.
DonanimHaber has once again got their hands on a leaked slide which shows AMDs roadmap for notebook APUs coming out in 2012. The current LIanos APUs will make way for Trinity, the second generation APU that will feature the new Bulldozer cores and a better graphics sub-system based on the VLIW-4 architecture that’s currently used in the HD 6900 series desktop graphics cards. This is still a long way ahead though as the Llanos ‘A’ series notebooks are still hard to find in the market.
Looks promising
The new APUs will fall into different market segments just like the existing ones in the market. AMD will be adding a new flagship APU mostly for high end gaming notebooks which is a 60W chip with four cores. This will most likely compete with Intel’s flagship mobile CPU, the Core i7 2920XM or whatever Intel launches next year. The Trinity APU will also come in two other SKUs with lower TDP values of 45W and 35W and will replace the A8 series APUs. The A6 APUs will make way for Weatherford which will be a quad core APU with two SKUs. As we head further down to the mainstream segment, we find Richland dual core APUs that will make their way in your ‘all-rounder’ notebooks in the 35K-50K price brackets.
Heading further down to the netbooks segment, Zacate and Ontario APUs will be replaced by Wichita and Krishna APUs. Wichita will be used in the 20K-30K range of the netbooks and low-end notebooks while Krishna APU will be reserved for the 10-inch netbooks which will typically fall in the sub-20K price bracket. With the new CPU and GPU architecture and lower TDP, we should expect a solid boost in performance and better battery life. All this is still way into the future though and we’ll know for sure once prototypes start hitting the web towards the end of 2011.
We take a look at some of the most kickass games 2011 offered us so far.
September onward, gamers will be buried under an avalanche of high profile titles all the way to 2012. But before you prepare yourself (and your wallet) for this barrage, we suggest you finish off your backlog as 2011 had quite a few titles worth checking out. Today we list out ten of the best.
Crysis 2 may not have been the game to bring your uber powerful PC to its knees, but it sure was pretty. In fact, Crytek made the game highly scalable so even year-old PCs could enjoy Crytek’s version of post-apocalyptic New York in all its visual glory. The action, like its predecessor, was fast and satisfying, offering players a healthy blend of stealth and all out action. Sure, the painfully dumb AI did hamper gameplay a bit, but at the end of it all, lofty production values and solid gameplay across both single and multiplayer prevailed, making Crysis 2 a must-buy this year.
Taking a gamble with new IPs in this day and age is a risky proposition, one that paid off real well for developer Visceral Games. Dead Space was a game that combined action and horror to near perfection, offering players a chilling ride, playing as an engineer forced to face his fears aboard a derelict ship. With the sequel, Visceral expanded upon what we loved about the first game, introducing some truly impressive set pieces along with a multiplayer mode reminiscent to the one from Left 4 Dead 2.
The Dirt series was Codemasters’ attempt to move from pure rally (the Colin McRae Rally series) to all-round off-road racing, which they did well in Dirt 2. But the fans still wanted rally, so in Dirt 3, it made a return and comprised 60% of the game, alongside the other event types from previous games. The responsive car handling, the well-designed tracks, the slick menus and the stunning EGO engine-powered visuals – all hallmarks of Codies games – were in evidence as well. The game also add split-screen racing and several fun online modes, making this one of the best off-road racing games ever.
Fight Night Champion (Xbox 360, PS3) Tech2 Review: 8/10
Lights out
The Fight Night series was struggling, and EA had to take drastic measures to keep it alive. Fight Night Champion gave the boxing franchise a new direction, and it couldn’t have done a better job of it. While the roster of pro boxers from earlier games remained, the main focus of the game was its new cinematic story mode that included slick cutscenes, great characters, an engaging story, and some very intense gameplay scenarios that constantly kept you on your toes. Throw in a little bit of bare-knuckled, no-hold-barred brawling, and this game had everything a fighting game fan could want.
It’s hard to put a finger on what exactly makes Infamous 2 a great game, because many of its core elements are carried forward from the first game. There aren’t too many sweeping changes this time around, but it’s the little things that Sucker Punch has done that together combine to make this one of the most fun games of the year and one of the best open-world games in a long time. The new city of New Marais has a ton of character, the missions (and side missions) are well designed, and the morality system, however superficial, works brilliantly. Infamous 2 doesn’t exactly break new ground for the franchise, but when it’s this much fun, who cares!
Killzone is one of the most popular first-party PS3 franchises; right up there with the likes of the God of War and Uncharted. After the success of Killzone 2, expectations for the next game were sky high, and Guerrilla Games didn’t disappoint. The explosive single-player campaign was packed with cinematic set pieces, massive bosses, large, varied environments, and lots and lots of intense FPS action. Of course, multiplayer is a massive draw in Killzone games too, and the developers rebuilt the multiplayer from the ground up, addressing the issues from Killzone 2 and adding more features and brand new maps, while keeping the signature Killzone experience intact.
In what can be described as a radical departure for Rockstar Games, L.A. Noire was a story-driven whodunit, where players spent their time solving cases as opposed to embarking upon killing sprees across urban America. The star of the show, without a doubt, was the game’s wicked facial animation system that tied into gameplay, allowing players to catch lying suspects based on their facial reactions during interrogations. The game was initially released on consoles, but PC gamers will also be able to have a go at it when Rockstar brings L.A. Noire to PCs later this year.
What started out as a cutsey little platfromer, became a whole different beast with LittleBigPlanet 2. While the first game gave players powerful tools to create and share their own levels, this time around, you can create whole new games of any genre within LBP2 itself, complete with cinematics, characters and narratives. These creation tools were also put to brilliant use by the developers themselves for Sackboy’s new story mode adventure, which as before, can be played solo or by up to four players in co-op. LBP2 is great for all ages, but don’t let the cute art style fool you; it’s a game that’ll challenge even the most seasoned gamers.
Portal 2 was a tiny little game bundled with The Orange Box that garnered cult status thanks to its sharp writing, sarcastic humor and innovative gameplay. For the sequel, Valve turned it up to 11, with a fully fleshed out single player campaign as well as a separate and equally awesome co-operative campaign, in addition to some of the best voice acting we’ve come across all year. Portal 2 was also used to launch Valve’s online service, Steam, on the PS3, allowing cross-play between Portal 2 owners on PS3 and PC.
The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings (PC) Tech2 Review: 8.5/10
Don't mess with Geralt
You probably wouldn’t expect a stellar RPG from a relatively unknown Polish developer, but you’d be wrong. The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings greatly improved upon all aspects of gameplay laid down by its predecessor. You had gorgeous visuals, improved combat, and a riveting story that sucked you in till the very end. Be warned though; the game is not very noob-friendly and can appear pretty intimidating (even on normal difficulty) with its erratic difficulty and steep learning curve. But if you’re the patient type, there’s a vibrant, dangerous and exciting world ripe for exploration.