Saturday 19 July 2014

Google Glass takes wicked road show to Boston July 26 http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/gRbMzYNuX-8/story01.htm

Friday 4 April 2014

Samsung Gear Fit launched in India for Rs. 15900


Samsung Gear Fit-8 Samsung has launched the Gear Fit in India along with the Galaxy S5, Gear and Gear Neo. Samsung introduced the Gear Fit, the company’s first wearable fitness band at the MWC 2014 last month. The Gear fit has a wide 1.84-inch (432 x 128 pixels) Curved Super AMOLED display. It also has Pedometer, Heart Rate sensor, Accelerometer and Gyro sensors. You can remove the Gear Fit unit easily to change the strap. It has IP67 ratings for dust and water resistance and uses Bluetooth 4.0 LE to pair with your Samsung Smartphone. It also has companion Gear Fit Manager app to manage apps and monitor your fitness data and also control your media on the phone, from the Gear Fit. It has Heart Rate sensor to monitor your heart rate easily and offers offers Notifications for calls, SMS, E-Mails and more, when paired with Samsung Galaxy smartphones. It has a 210mAh battery that promises about 3 to 4 days of battery with average use. The Gear Fit has changeable straps in Black, Orange and Mocha Grey colors and is priced at Rs. 15900 in India. It would go on sale from April 11th.

HTC Desire 310 Dual SIM smartphone officially launched in India for Rs. 11700


HTC Desire 310 Earlier today we reported that HTC Desire 310 dual sim is on sale in India online. The company has officially launched the smartphone in India. It was announced earlier this month and packs a 4.5-inch (854 x 480 pixels) capacitive touch screen display, powered by a 1.3 GHz quad-core processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean). It has a 5-megapixel rear camera without flash and a 0.3-megapixel front-facing camera. HTC Desire 310 It has HTC BlinkFeed, and HTC Video Highlights, similar to other latest HTC Desire smartphones. BlinkFeed recently got offline Reading mode to access articles later when you are offline once you save them. It also has Dual SIM support and 3G connectivity. Commenting on the new launch, Faisal Siddiqui, Country Head, HTC India, said, Everybody today wants a smartphone that can keep up with them, regardless of whether it is a flagship or entry-level model” says “The latest addition to our renowned Desire range combines super-fast processing and premium features at a lower price, offering users the best possible experience in this category. HTC Desire 310 dual sim Specifications 4.5-inch (854 x 480 pixels) touch screen IPS display 1.3 GHz Quad-core Mediatek MT6582M processor Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) Dual SIM (GSM + GSM) 5MP rear camera with 1080p Full HD video recording 0.3MP (VGA) front-facing camera 11.25 mm thick and weighs 140 grams 3.5mm audio jack 512MB RAM, 4GB internal memory, 32GB expandable memory with MicroSD 3G (HSDPA: 21 Mbps, HSUPA: 5.76 Mbps), WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX, GPS, MHL 2000 mAh battery The HTC Desire 310 dual sim comes in Blue, White and Red colors. It would be available across India at a MOP (Best Buy) of Rs 11,700.

Samsung Galaxy S5 pre-booking starts in India


Samsung-Galaxy-S5-photos-19 Samsung launched the Galaxy S5 in India earlier this week. The flagship smartphone is now available for pre-order in India on the official Samsung eStore. The pre-order price is Rs. 1500. Samsung also offers 15% cash back to Citbank credit card customers when they pay the remaining amount. The Galaxy S5 has the 5.1-inch full HD (1920×1080 pixels) Super AMOLED display and runs on Android 4.4 (KitKat). It is powered by a Octa-Core Exynos 5422 (A15 1.9 GHz + A7 1.3 GHz) processor with Heterogeneous Multi-Processing and has 3G HSPA+ support, unlike the LTE variant that is powered by a Snapdragon 801 processor. Samsung-Galaxy-S5-photos-11 It has a 16-megapixel rear camera with LED Flash, Ultra HD video recording at 30fps, and a 2.1-megapixel front-facing camera. It has IP67 ratings for Dust and water Resistance, feature a Finger Scanner built-in heart rate monitor and packs 2GB RAM, 16GB internal storage with expansion slot and a 2800 mAh battery. The Samsung Galaxy S5 comes in Charcoal Black, Shimmery White, Electric Blue and Copper Gold colors and would be priced between Rs. 51,000 and Rs. 53,000. Final pricing would be unveiled when it goes on sale on April 11th. Other Gear devices, Samsung Gear 2, Gear 2 Neo and Gear Fit that were launched along with the Galaxy S5 are not available for pre-order yet.

iBall Andi5T Cobalt2 with 5-inch HD display, 12MP camera launched for Rs. 11999


iBall Andi5T Cobalt2 iBall has launched Andi5T Cobalt2, successor of the first Cobalt iBall Andi 4.7G Cobalt that was launched last year. It has a 5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) IPS display based on one glass solution (OGS) technology, powered by a 1.3 GHz quad-core Cortex A7 processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) (Upgradeable to KitKat). It has a 12-megapixel auto focus camera with LED flash and a 2-megapixel front-facing camera. iBall Andi 5T Cobalt 2 It has flip to mute, auto call recording, smart answer, dial from SMS directly, dial from contact directly, shake to answer, voice control for phone, camera and alarms and more new features. Compared to first Cobalt, the display and the processor has been improved, but the memory has been reduced to 4GB compared to 16GB on the Cobalt and the battery capacity has reduced from 2200 mAh to 1750 mAh. Commenting on the launch Director iBall, Mr. Sandeep Parasrampuria said, Cobalt 2 is package of powerful technology with extremely appealing design and features that every user will cherish and feel happy about. We are sure Cobalt2 will be as much liked as our first Cobalt. It also comes bundled with 4 beautiful interchangeable covers with different colors with stunning rose gold tinted rim. To summarize Cobalt 2 is a terrific performer! iBall Andi5T Cobalt2 specifications 5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD OGS display 1.3 GHz quad-core Cortex A7 processor Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean), Upgradeable to Android 4.4 KitKat Dual SIM (GSM + GSM) 12MP auto focus rear camera with LED Flash 2MP front-facing camera Dimensions: 146×73.5×8.9 mm; Weight 144 grams 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio Full HD 1080p video playback 1GB RAM, 4GB internal memory, 32GB expandable memory with MicroSD 3G (HSDPA: 42 Mbps, HSUPA: 11 Mbps), WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS 1750 mAh battery iBall Andi5T Cobalt2 comes with three replaceable covers in red, blue and white in addition to the original coffee colored cover. It is priced at MOP or best buy price of Rs. 11999 and the MRP is Rs. 12,499.

Samsung launches Buy Back and EMI offers for its Galaxy Tab 3 range


Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 range exchange and EMI offers Samsung has launched new buy back and EMI plans for their Galaxy Tab 3 series, including their latest Galaxy Tab 3 Neo tablet. Back in December Samsung launched Stay New ownership plan for its flagship Galaxy devices that lets users buy flagship Galaxy devices at low EMIs and Easy Buyback offers. The new EMI offer lets users pay just Rs. 725 per month for the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 Neo and also offers up to Rs. 2,500 discount in exchange for old smartphones and tablets. It also offers up to Rs. 3000 discount on the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 7-inch and 8-inch tablets. Check out the details about the offer. Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 plans Customers can buy these tablets through participating banks’ (HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Citibank, SBI, Axis Bank, Kotak and Standard Chartered) credit cards and avail the Samsung’s easy 18- month EMI scheme, at applicable interest rates. This is a limited period offer that would be available till stocks last. The Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 series got confirmed last month and is expected to be unveiled later this month. Looks like Samsung is planning to push out all the stock of the Galaxy Tab 3 series before the Galaxy Tab 4 range arrives.

Lava Iris 550Q with 5.5-inch HD display launched for Rs. 13000


Lava Iris 550Q Lava has launched the Iris 550Q the company’s latest smartphone in the Iris series. It has a 5.5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) IPS display based on OGS technology, powered by a 1.2 GHz quad-core processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) OS. It has narrow 3mm bezel that makes the body smaller. It packs a 8-megapixel rear camera with LED flash, BSI sensor and a 2-megapixel front-facing camera. Lava launched Iris Pro 30 with a 4.7-inch HD display earlier this year. Lava Iris 550Q Lava Iris 550Q specifications 5.5-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD IPS display based OGS technology 1.2 GHz quad-core processor Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) Dual SIM 8MP rear camera with LED Flash, 1080p video recording, BSI sensor 2MP front-facing camera 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio 1GB RAM, 4GB internal memory, expandable memory up to 32GB with microSD 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS 2600 mAh battery with up to 10 hours of talk time on 2G The Lava Iris 550Q comes in Black color and is priced at Rs. 13000. It also comes with a free flip cover. It would go on sale through national retail chain stores, multi-brand outlets across India and online stores in April.

Lenovo A526 with 4.5-inch display, quad-core processor launched for Rs. 9499


Lenovo A526 Lenovo has launched the Lenovo A526, the company’s latest smartphone in the A-series. It has a 4.5-inch (854 x 480 pixels) capacitive touchscreen display, powered by a 1.3 GHz Quad-core Mediatek MT6582M processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean). It has a 5-megapixel rear camera without flash and a 0.3-megapixel (VGA) front-facing camera. It comes pre-installed Lenovo DOit apps for seamless data sharing, security and syncing. It has dual SIM support with dual standby. Commenting on the launch, Sudhin Mathur, Director-Smartphones, Lenovo India, said Out of the 876 million mobile phone users in India, about 10% of the users own a smartphone. However, today there is an influx of devices specifically targeted at this untapped segment in fast-growing markets like India. With the Lenovo A series range, we are looking at revolutionizing the concept of budget phones in India by offering consumers a superior smartphone experience at an affordable price point. Lenovo A526 Lenovo A526 Specifications 4.5-inch (854 x 480 pixels) touch screen display 1.3 GHz quad-core Mediatek MT6582M processor Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) Dual SIM (GSM + GSM) 5MP rear camera 0.3MP front-facing camera 11.1 mm thick and weight 145 grams 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio 1GB RAM, 4GB internal memory, 32GB expandable memory with MicroSD 3G (HSDPA: 21 Mbps, HSUPA: 5.76 Mbps), WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS 2000 mAh battery The Lenovo A526 comes in Blue color and is priced at Rs. 9,499. It would be available from the official thedostore.com and across 1,400 Lenovo exclusive stores in India from April 5.

Xolo Q2500 PocketPad with 6-inch HD display launched for Rs. 14999


Xolo Q2500 Xolo has officially launched the Xolo Q2500 PocketPad, the company’s latest phablet with a 6-inch HD display in the Q CORE series. It was announced last week and packs a 6-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD IPS display, powered by a 1.3 GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6582 processor and runs on Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) and is upgradable to Android 4.4 (KitKat). It has a 8-megapixel auto focus rear camera with BSI sensor, LED Flash, 1080p full HD video recording and a 2-megapixel front-facing camera. It comes with dual SIM support with dual standby, 1GB RAM and packs a 3000 mAh battery. Xolo Q2500 Xolo Q2500 PocketPad Specifications 6-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD capacitive touch screen IPS display 1.3 GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6582 processor with 500 MHz Mali 400MP2 GPU Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean), upgradable to Android 4.4 (KitKat) Dual SIM (GSM + GSM) 8 MP rear camera with BSI sensor, LED Flash, 1080p video recording 2MP front-facing camera 8.5mm thick 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio 1GB RAM, 4GB internal memory, expandable memory up to 32GB with MicroSD 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth, GPS, USB OTG 3000 mAh battery The Xolo Q2500 PocketPad is priced at Rs. 14,999. It also comes with a free flip cover that doubles up as a stand.

Saturday 1 March 2014

Panasonic P31 with 5-inch display, unique software features launching in March


Panasonic P31 teaser It has been more than four months since we had seen a smartphone from Panasonic India. The Panasonic T31 was launched back in October, the company has started teasing their upcoming Panasonic P31 smartphone with new software features in their new teasers. The phone would come with Gesture Play, a new unlock feature that lets you draw on the screen to unlock the smartphone and POP-I Player, a new multi-tasking video player. It might have more software features. Panasonic did not reveal the specifications of the smartphone yet, but AndroidOS spotted a video teaser that reveals the specifications of the phone, before it was removed. According to the video teaser, the phone would come with a 5-inch (854 x 480 pixels) display with oleophobic coating for a smudge-free screen, 1.3 GHz quad-core processor, 8-megapixel rear camera and a front-facing camera. Panasonic would also offer free content worth Rs. 10,399 with the phone. Panasonic P31 Pop-I Player teaser As you can see on the teaser, the phone would come with a range of pre-loaded applications such as Evernote note taking app, Hungama music app, Readwhere app to read magazines, newspapers, comics and journals, Sony LIV to watch Sony TV Serials and Opera Mini browser. The Panasonic P31 would launch in March, but the exact launch date or the pricing is not available yet.

Sharp Aquos mini SHL24 with 4.5-inch 1080p IGZO display, Snapdragon 800 processor announced


Sharp Aquos mini SHL24 Sharp has unveiled Aquos mini SHL24, the company’s latest smartphone in the Aquos series for Japanese operator KDDI. The smartphone has a 4.5-inch (1920 x 1080 pixels) full HD IGZO screen at a pixel density of 487 ppi. It is powered by a 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 processor and runs on Android 4.2. It has a 13.1-megapixel rear camera with LED flash, BSI sensor and a 1.2-megapixel front-facing camera with BSI sensor. It also has IPX5/IPX7 ratings for water resistance. Sharp Aquos mini SHL24 Sharp Aquos mini SHL24 specifications 4.5-inch (1920 x 1080 pixels) full HD IGZO display at 487 ppi 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 processor with Adreno 330 GPU Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) 13.1MP rear camera with BSI sensor, f/1.9 aperture and LED flash 1.2MP front-facing camera with BSI sensor IPX5/IPX7 for water resistance Dimensions - 63 × 124 × 9.9mm (10.3mm thickest part); Weight: 155g 2GB RAM, 16GB internal memory, Upto 64GB expandable memory via microSD card 4G LTE, WiFi 820.11 a/b/g/n /ac, Bluetooth 4.0 with APT-X, GPS/ GLONASS, MHL, NFC 2120 mAh battery Sharp Aquos mini SHL24 comes in pink, blue, yellow green, and white colors. As a part of KDDI’s spring line-up, which is expected to go on sale some time in March. No word on pricing or global roll out plans yet.

Huawei’s HTC One Lookalike and Smartwatch Leaked Ahead of Launch


BhHpOooCMAELzhd.png-large If you’re thinking that the phone in the photo above is a HTC device then you are probably wrong. According to the source, it is actually a device made by Huawei. Along with the lookalike, we also see another device which seems to be a smartwatch. Wearable technology is the next big thing and perhaps Huawei wants to join in on the party before its too late. We’re not too sure about the features yet but from the photo we can understand that it will be able to make/take calls. Like you all, even we can’t help but notice how similar it looks to the HTC One. It looks like it’s larger and slimmer version of the device but seems to lack the curved back design that was popular with the original. Event the front facing cameras and sensor have been designed differently.
We could expect the devices to get announced during MWC 2014 in Barcelona, Spain which kicks off from 24th February. We will be covering the event and will make sure that we keep you updated on more information and possible photos and videos of the devices from the showfloor.

Apple reportedly asked Indian govt to relax FDI policy to open Apple Stores


applestorepa2 Apple is keen on opening up their Apple Stores in India. The Cupertino-based company had asked the Indian government to relax the policy on foreign direct investment (FDI) in single-brand retail, according to a recent report from Business Standard. Latest Indian Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) policy permits 100% stake for foreign businesses, up from the previous limit of 74%, to boost the Indian economy. But current FDI on single-brand retail requires the company to source 30% of its materials locally, for proposals involving foreign investments in excess of 51%. Apple says that iPhones and iPads don’t have much hardware contents and its laptops are assembled, so the government should consider relaxing FDI norms. The government have reportedly ruled Apple’s proposal for now, but it might consider it in the future on case by case basis. Apple has Premium Resellers in India, that operates as franchisee model with partners, including Reliance Retail, Redington India, and also sell Apple devices through multi-brand stores like Reliance Digital, Croma and other Mobile outlets. The company market share is low, mainly due to the higher cost. The company is also looking to increase its exclusive franchisee stores in the country to boost up the sales.

Over 44 million smartphones shipped in 2013 in India – IDC


Samsung Galaxy Grand Duos vs Micromax Canvas HD-1 India’s smartphone market grew 181% year-over-year in 2013, with shipments of 44 million smartphones, compared to 16.2 million units in 2012, according to a recent report from International Data Corporation (IDC). Over 257 million mobile phones were shipped in 2013. The feature phone market grew just 16% YoY in Q4 13 and the overall mobile phone shipments in the quarter stood at just 67.83 million units, that includes 15.06 million smartphones. Smartphone market crossed one billion shipments for the first time in 2013. Feature phone market still has 78% share, compared to smartphones, but it is changing, mainly due to affordable smartphones. Smartphone market in Q4 13 grew tremendously, due to 5 to 6.99-inch screen size smartphones, that grabbed 20% market share. IDC India Market Share Q4 2013 Even though Samsung and Micromax were at the top, as usual, Karbonn, Lava and Intex saw tremendous growth, says IDC. According to the chart, Samsung has 38% market share in Q4 2013, since their smartphone shipments grew about 37% in the quarter. Over 50% of phones sold were entry-level smartphones. Micromax has 16% share in Q4 2013. Micromax A35 and A67 in the Bolt series contributed to the growth. Karbonn has 10% market share, again the top selling produces are from entry-level segment. Sony has 5% share and Lava managed to grab 5th spot with 5.7% share with strong sales of new Xolo A500S, Iris 402 and Iris 349. Nokia missed to grab the top 5 spot this time. Smartphone segment would outpace the overall handset market growth for the foreseeable future with affordable feature-rich, large-screen phones, believes IDC.

Karbonn launches Kochadaiiyaan signature series, to launch dual-boot Android and Windows Phone smartphones by June


Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan series launch Karbonn Mobiles has launched Kochadaiiyaan series in India. These phones went on pre-order in India recently. The Kochadaiiyaan series include, Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan The Legend 2.4, 2.8 and K77 feature phones, Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan The Legend A6 Plus, A36 and S5i smartphones. Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan The Legend S5i, A6 Plus and A36 These Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan phones will have screen savers, images from the film, trailer and the signature tune. These phone would also have Kochadaiiyaan branding on the back and the Karbonn Kochadiyaan Augmented Reality (AR) app that lets fans discover Kochadaiiyaan in the world around them. It lets users scans special images to get exclusive 4D Kochadaiiyaan interactive animations. It also lets you capture photos of Kochadaiiyaan in action. These Karbonn Kochadaiiyaan Signature Series are priced between Rs. 1,990 and Rs. 8,000. Karbonn partnered with Microsoft recently, to launch Windows Phone smartphones in India. In an interview to the Times of India, the company’s chairman Sudhir Hasija said, the company plans to launch dual-OS phones running both Android and Windows Phone by June, targeted at office-going professionals and techies. It has not decided the price range of the dual-OS device yet. Micromax LapTab, the company’s first dual-boot Android and Windows 8.1 device was shown off at the CES back in January, but it is yet to go on sale in the market. Looks like Indian companies are keen to push dual-boot devices in the market, along with their Android smartphone offering.

Samsung Galaxy S5 vs Samsung Galaxy S4: What has changed


The biggest expectation of the MWC 2014 had to be Samsung’s Unpacked 5 event where they were expected to announce the successor of Samsung Galaxy S4 and they did announce it – Samsung Galaxy S5. While a lot of people weren’t convinced about the lack of design change from Samsung Galaxy S3 to Samsung Galaxy S4, even more people joined the skeptical lot as Samsung pulled a Samsung out of the hat and introduced the Samsung Galaxy S5 in a design and specs not so different from the predecessor – Galaxy S4. FoneArena is live from Barcelona and we were there at Samsung’s really packed Unpacked event. After the unveiling, we were able to get a quick hands on with the device and in the short time, we compared it with the Samsung Galaxy S4. You can check out the quick hands on comparison video right below. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-14 Design wise, the Galaxy S4 wasn’t a big step forward from the Galaxy S3, but it did something others couldn’t even think of – Samsung Galaxy S4 came with a bigger 4.99inch display in a body smaller and thinner than the Samsung Galaxy S3. The Galaxy S5 doesn’t do anything of the sort and is bigger and thicker than the Samsung Galaxy S4 and houses just a 0.1inch bigger display in the form of a 5.1inch Full HD Super AMOLED display. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-18 The design language isn’t necessarily a step forward as the Samsung Galaxy S5 looks more like a Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 than a flagship device. Samsung used to use glossy plastic back and it drew a lot of criticism from the mobile reviewers and they did something worth sticking on to with the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 in the form of a faux leather back. They used it in Samsung’s mid-range Galaxy Grand 2, but as to why they dropped it for a perforated back on the Samsung Galaxy S5, I would never understand. The back of Samsung Galaxy S5 was the target of Internet memes, especially the gold color one where it was compared to a band aid. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-4 As a silver lining, Samsung Galaxy S5 is water and dust proof with IP 67 certification. This is a good thing, but it has been on the Sony range of flagships for more than a year now. The microUSB 3.0 on the bottom side of the phone is covered with a flap. Samsung managed to achieve dust and water proofing despite having a removable back cover with user replaceable battery and a microSD card – this is something worth noting. The battery has been bumped up a little to 2800mAh from 2600mAh in the Galaxy S4. These are the changes that one can see outside the phone. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-17 On the inside, the Samsung Galaxy S5 packs the latest 2.5GHz Snapdragon 801 processor alongside a 2.1GHz Exynos Octa Core variant. The 3GB RAM from the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 is missing in the Galaxy S5 and it comes with the same 2GB RAM as the Galaxy S4. Galaxy S5 will be available with 16/32GB internal storage options along with a microSD card slot. Samsung Galaxy S5 runs on Android 4.4.2 KitKat out of the box with a layer of toned down TouchWiz. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-16 One of the biggest improvements from Samsung Galaxy S4 to Samsung Galaxy S5 is the camera module. Samsung Galaxy S5 comes with a 16MP ISOCELL camera unit against the Galaxy S4′s 13MP unit. The new sensor captures more details and comes with a dedicated image processing chip to make it the smartphone with the fastest auto-focus camera. Like the Galaxy Note 3, the Galaxy S5 can now record 4K UltraHD videos at 30fps. The front camera is the same 2.1MP unit and Samsung doesn’t seem too keen on changing it. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-13 In addition to the regular upgrades, Samsung Galaxy S5 comes with a Heart Rate monitor sensor right next to LED flash. samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-s4-photos-3 If you already own a Samsung Galaxy S4, there is not much of a reason to upgrade expect for a better camera. Samsung Galaxy S5 will be available globally across 150 countries on April 11th and the pricing details will be announced when the launch day nears.

Next-Gen YotaPhone Follow-Up Unveiled, With Full-Touch E-Ink Rear Screen


Russian mobile-making startup Yota Devices has just unveiled the next generation of its dual-screen smartphone, the YotaPhone. As with the current first-gen model, which went on sale in Russia and select European markets (Austria, France, Spain and Germany) last December costing €499/$684, the handset’s flagship feature is that it’s two-sided — with a full colour touchscreen display on the front and a low-power consuming e-ink display on the rear. yp The next generation YotaPhone, as it’s currently known, won’t go on sale until the end of this year but the company showed TechCrunch a working prototype of the device, ahead of the Mobile World Congress conference kicking off today in Barcelona. It’s also released a full specs sheet — flagging up the forthcoming processor improvements, from gen-one’s dual-core to quad-core; a larger full HD display and a larger, curved e-ink pane; a beefier battery; and more. Full details below. YotaPhone But the flagship upgrade is to the capability and utility of the e-ink screen — which is now a full touch panel, with support for poking and prodding anywhere, instead of requiring users to interact only via a small touch-sensitive pane below the screen (as with the 1st-gen device). This means users of the next-gen YotaPhone will be able to interact directly with content displayed on the e-ink screen, including, for example, responding to messages, calls and notifications, or even using it for playing thoughtful, slower-paced games like chess and sudoku. Another use-case for YotaPhone’s EPD (electronic paper display) is to act as a dashboard for displaying customised metrics — such as your sports’ team’s latest scores, or even to display quantified health info fed in from various wearable devices. Or that’s the vision anyway — if enough developers can be inspired to build for a second screen ecosystem. yota-quantified (There are currently around a dozen rear-screen apps for the first gen YotaPhone — although of course, the handset is a fully fledged Android smartphone too, with Google Play on tap.) “The [full-touch second display] brings the YotaPhone concept to a completely new level,” said CEO Vladislav Martynov, in an interview with TechCrunch. “Now you can not only get the information you need and see it but you can interact with one touch, and you can respond to messages. Or email. Or you can accept a meeting invitation. “The whole user experience with the backside of the phone becomes much better – this is full touch so you can swipe, you can up and down, it’s basically much more intuitive.” The device’s price-tag has not been revealed yet but Martynov said it will be “comparable” or 10-15% lower than premium Android smartphones from the likes of Samsung, HTC and Sony that are on the market at the time it launches. Yota Devices is aiming for the next-gen device to come to 20 markets in EMEA by the end of 2014, and is also working on versions of the device for the U.S. market and for China, also by the end of 2014 or for the beginning of 2015. The startup will continue its strategy of selling the handset directly online — but Martynov said it may look to work with carriers in markets such as the U.S. where the handset retail market is dominated by carriers and carrier subsidies. Owners of the existing YotaPhone will be offered a substantial discount via a trade-in program for upgrading when the next-gen model hits shelves, according to Martynov. He said they will also be first in line to get their hands on the handset. Why add an e-ink screen to a smartphone? What’s the point of a smartphone having a secondary, less colourful, less reactive screen if it has a perfectly good HD AMOLED pane winking at you from its shiny front? Why would a user even bother turning it round to use a monochrome EPD display? Martynov said the key advantage of the YotaPhone concept is that the handset has an always on display that does not destroy the device’s battery life. He argues that a display with visible information constantly pumped to it has the ability to change usage behaviour, by no longer requiring smartphone users constantly wake and unlock their phone just to check in on social feeds or other key content. In other words: it can solve the FOMO problem. “With all this information behind a dark screen you need to wake the phone up, you need to remember about this actually — to check — and even if there are some notifications and reminders they just pop up for a few seconds and you can miss it,” said Martynov. “The YotaPhone frees people from the fear of missing something important which is behind the dark screen. And also remove bad habits where you wake up the phone 150 times a day just for no reason — just to check what is there, in Twitter and Facebook etc… Snubbing people around yourself in favour of your smartphone becomes quite a bad habit.” Arguably Yota Devices is creating a new category of device here — one which rolls the functionality of a notifications’ focused wearable, such as Pebble’s smartwatch, right into the smartphone form factor – without the need for the user to carry and charge up two separate devices after all. And that’s a very neat idea indeed. Two functions, in the same handset. Look around you at the smartphones people are using everyday and it’s pretty plain that current handset hardware has been commoditized, with makers converging along similar form factor lines, churning out touchscreen slabs that focus on maximizing the available screen area and minimizing everything else. Slightly bigger screens — and the rise of a phablet category — is the most notable form factor evolution of recent years (along with the death of physical Qwertys). So it’s easy to assume that single-sided touch-sensitive slabs are the end of the road for handset hardware evolution in the near term — an unchanging constant for years to come. Well, Yota Devices wants to change the perception that a single screen that spends a large portion of its life asleep and unlit, displaying zero information, is the end of the road for smartphone hardware evolution. It’s on a mission to prove that two screens can indeed be better than one. The original two-faced YotaPhone concept (pictured below) was unveiled all the way back in December 2012. That first gen device had a 4.3-inch LCD touchscreen display on the front, augmented by a 4.3-inch e-ink display on its rear — allowing for content to be sent from the primary screen to the back pane for easier-on-the-eyes e-ink reading. yotaphone-02 Other uses for the back screen that were flagged up at the time included customisation of the look of the phone (by, for instance, displaying photos/wallpapers on the back), as well as offering device utility even after the phone’s battery had died, e.g. by still being able to display content such as a map or mobile boarding pass on the back. The disruptive advantage of e-ink is its very low power consumption — meaning it’s possible to build a dual-screen smartphone that can still deliver a day’s use without requiring a charge. Battery life of the next-gen YotaPhone is much much longer if you only opt to read content via its e-ink pane (circa 58-68 hours). The device will also have a Smart Power Mode that can enabled which turns off the colour display entirely but still allows the user to perform basic functions via the e-ink screen — such as making calls and sending texts. “By doing this you really save the battery,” said Martynov. “It’s one feature of YotaPhone that’s quite relevant for people who like hiking, or for tourists walking around a lot, or people who forget their charger in the morning.” Mixed use of both screens will obviously result in less impressive battery longevity (but still likely eking out a longer useful life than the average single colour touchscreen smartphone), while heavy use of the colour screen will yield battery life that’s “comparable” with premium smartphones, according to the company. next-gen-yp Giving a big idea time to breathe The first-gen YotaPhone finally went on sale at the end of 2013, a year after it was unveiled – and that long lead in time from prototype unveiling to shipping a commercial product is a conscious strategy for the handset startup, which Martynov said it intends to replicate with the next-generation YotaPhone device being announced today. Like the two-sided YotaPhone itself, the reason is two-fold: firstly Yota Devices is relatively new to making handsets, having been spun out of parent company Yota Group in 2012, a maker of LTE hotspots and modems (sales of which part-fund development of the YotaPhone; along with private investors); and secondly because it’s building what amounts to a new category of portable — which means there’s a need to both educate users on the advantages of having a second, e-ink screen at their command, and also listen to other people’s ideas for how to make this new concept really useful. “This is not just a smartphone. We introduced a completely new type of device where user experience is different. The biggest challenge was to educate people what is so cool about second screen?” said Martynov, discussing the length of time from the concept being unveiled to the startup shipping actual product. “We are a small startup trying to win a certain marketshare on a market where big brands are fighting. We can’t do what they do; we need to find our own way — and I strongly believe, with this concept, if we involve broad community of developers, media, bloggers, experts in the whole development process and do a kind of product development crowdsourcing, in a sense, that’s what will make us successful,” he added.yp One area where Yota Devices is relying on crowdsourcing ideas to pour into YotaPhone’s development is on the apps side. Apps are really needed to build out the utility of that second screen. Today, it’s making its previously selective SDK public so any developers wanting to take advantage of the back-side e-ink screen can download it and start building. Currently there are only around a dozen dedicated apps for the rear screen — including apps for reading, maps and navigation, social media/RSS, notebook/to-do list, organiser and wallpaper apps, plus YotaPhone’s own Put2Back software which allows the user to send info and images from the main screen to the e-ink screen. It’s going to need a lot more to really make its big idea shine. Over the past two+ years, Martynov said the YotaPhone concept has been steadily nourished by outside ideas coming in from developers and others inspired by the idea, and also — over the past two months — from YotaPhone’s first batch of early adopters. As with scores of makers taking to crowdsourcing sites like Kickstarter to build products, leaning on a community for feedback and ideas is core to the philosophy of YotaPhone’s smartphone startup — albeit, it’s not taking the direct crowdfunding approach. “When we started YotaPhone two years ago, we had a few examples of why we’re doing this and what the applications might be but during the whole development process, since we unveiled this information, we’ve got tonnes of new ideas and proposals from the community. And we integrated and implemented quite a lot of them in the final commercial product,” he said, adding: “I strongly believe the future of any product development in high tech and devices business and software, any applications, will be crowdsourced.” First prove the concept, then scale How many first-gen YotaPhones have been sold so far? Martynov is not currently breaking out a figure, saying it’s too early days. But presumably the sales of the first device haven’t been huge, considering it such a nascent, recently launched leftfield product with limited market release. “We never target big volumes,” he says, when asked about sales figures. “Because it would be quite naive for a 2.5-year-old company [making] a quite unique smartphone to really hit the big volumes. It would be wrong strategy to do so.” Martynov says the first-gen device is really about proving the concept — to industry, to early buyers, and to Yota’s own investors. The next generation YotaPhone is where things are going to get serious. “Our shareholders and investors they believe and they provide long-term commitment to invest in a second, and a third generation of the product,” he tells TechCrunch, adding that the ultimate vision is an e-ink screen that expands to cover 100% of the back of the device, up from the circa 75% covered by the next-gen handset. Pushing the boundaries of EPD to improve its resolution and refresh rate are other aims as YotaPhone evolves. “We have proved there is a customer demand in many countries, we have proved people love it — for example we had a moneyback guarantee program (30 days you can return back the phone) and we didn’t have a single phone returned so far. And we are already unveiling information about second generation of the phone,” he adds. “The development of this phone is going to go full speed — it’s going to go EMEA, China and U.S. So we are getting into a new phase of our business development. We are moving from amateur into professional league, in this sense. We are building mass product with the second generation of YotaPhone. Where the first generation was more like proof of concept.”

A Closer Look At Blackphone, The Android Smartphone That Simplifies Privacy


One of the more interesting devices here at Mobile World Congress is Blackphone: a pro-privacy handset being developed by Spanish startup Geeksphone, in partnership with U.S. security company Silent Circle using a “security-oriented” Android build called PrivatOS. “We modified some default behaviours of Android and some security flaws that we found and we call that PrivatOS. It’s just small modifications of the Android core,” said Geeksphone founder and CEO Javier Agüera, demoing the device to TechCrunch. “For example the default crypto engines — there’s a list of crypto engines that the system by default uses… and in the first version of Android the first option was good enough, then they changed it for something that is terrible. So we reverted that to what it was before.” “PrivatOS is 100% compatible. It doesn’t create any fragmentation at all,” he added. ”Also we made performance improvements.” javier-geeksphone The Blackphone will ship in June — with a price-tag of $629 — but the company has already started taking pre-orders via its website, and snagged its first carrier partnership with Dutch mobile operator KPN. PrivatOS will get direct — and frequent — over-the-top updates from Blackphone, with no carrier bottleneck to negotiate. Which is as it should be; a security-centric phone can’t have users waiting around for a fix to a new software vulnerability. “This is one of the most important features because if we discover something we will fix it right away,” said Agüera. He added that new PrivatOS features that get developed in future will also be made available to all existing Blackphone users. The version of the handset on show here in Barcelona is a demo version, with both the handset design and its software set to change before the product ships. “It’s going to be completely different,” Agüera said, adding that the phone may also get some additional features than those already announced, come launch. The pro-privacy feature-set that has been detailed so far includes Silent Phone and Silent Text for secure, encrypted telephony and messaging — using Silent Circle’s secure network — so that only you and someone also using a Blackphone or using Silent Circle’s service on another device are privy to the contents of the messages. Contact data is also protected on Blackphone in the event of the device being lost via a remote wipe feature that does not require a third party cloud service to be involved in the chain. “You have [remote wipe] on other devices but you rely on a third party company with a cloud,” said Agüera. “This company knows where your phone is. We don’t know where your phone is.” Blackphone does not hold any encryption keys for the secure messaging itself — ergo, it can’t be strong-armed into giving up your secrets by overreaching government agencies since it can’t unencrypt your data. Silent Circle of course shuttered its own email service last August in the wake of the Edward Snowden NSA revelations — saying it was doing so to pre-emptively avoid having to be complicit with NSA spying. As for local data stored on the phone, the Blackphone user is given the option to encrypt this — an option that is suggested to them right at the start of the device set-up process, underlining the “optimized for privacy” ethos of the whole project. blackphone Secure cloud storage is included in the cost of Blackphone via SpiderOak, one of the partner services bundled with the device. Blackphone buyers get two years free SpiderOak service included. They also get two years’ of Disconnect (capped at 1GB/month), a secure/non-trackable search product that deploys a VPN to anonymise Internet browsing on Blackphone. Unlimited use of Kismet’s Wi-Fi analyzer product is also bundled into the package. Plus there’s one year of Silent Circle usage to gift to friends/family so you have some people to talk securely with, even if they don’t own a Blackphone. “Disconnect is a very interesting because, as it’s integrated deep inside you device, it can anonymize all your Wi-Fi browsing and it actually secures the Wi-Fi connection,” noted Agüera, demoing the app running on Blackphone. “When you click here [to activate Disconnect] everything you do on the Internet goes through a VPN and that affects all the applications on your phone. And we don’t have to root your device or anything, it’s already there. And it’s already enabled for all the applications you will install.” Disconnect While normal VPN use slows down a connection, Agüera said the opposite is true when browsing on Blackphone through Disconnect. “What this VPN does is it removes all the crap that the websites put — all the advertising, all the tracking cookies, and it’s faster than a normal connection,” he said. Notably there’s no ‘Silent Email’ product on the phone. The security of email is clearly problematic at this point. But Agüera told TechCrunch the future intention is for Blackphone to incorporate the open source encrypted messaging protocol currently being developed by Lavabit — under the Dark Mail banner (Silent Circle is a founder member of the Dark Mail alliance). For now, the focus for Blackphone is clearly on raising the level of privacy the average user experiences by making a suite of security features more accessible and visible to the user. By, for instance, foregrounding switching on local storage encryption by making it part of the set-up mix. “Blackphone is meant for people from all walks of life who are concerned with privacy,” said Agüera. “It can be very expert people but it can be not so expert people. It can be normal users from the street, or politicians or whatever. “There’s an activation wizard so that when you take your device out of the box you’ll configure the device as a security expert will do but in a very easy, simple way.” The activation wizard gives the user a short intro on Blackphone’s pro-privacy ethos, before diving into the set-up process proper — kicking off by requiring them to use at least a PIN or a password to secure their device. Users will also be told how secure their password choice is. After this, the encryption option is offered which, if selected, secures data stored locally on the device — with the key being the PIN/password the user previously selected. Access to/activation of the Blackphone’s bundled third party security services is done by the user scanning a QR code to provision the licenses for those services. Blackphone users can also choose not to use these bundled services, if they prefer. Blackphone owners need to provide a username and email address during the set-up process, which Agüera said is “the only information we keep from you”. “We keep your nickname [username], which is not your real name unless you want to, and that’s the only information we will ever have about you. If you ordered online or in a shop we will have your shipping details but once we give those to the shipping company we delete that data.” Agüera argued that the set-up process, which takes less than five minutes, already puts the Blackphone user in a far more secure place than the average smartphone user. “You have taken some steps that 99% of users don’t make — like encrypting the whole file system,” he added. PrivatOS continues works in the background to push its security-focused agenda, configuring the device with optimal security settings and flagging up app insecurities to the user. “We’ll disable that you can install apps from non-trusted sources by default, we won’t let you connect to an open network when you’re configuring — we’ll remind you that you need to be using a secure connection. We’ll establish firewall policies,” noted Agüera. Users are still free to do less-than-secure things on Blackphone, if they choose — such as download Google apps which are obviously going to try to harvest their data. But the phone will at least raise a flag about certain types of apps and services. “The point of Blackphone is giving you information and choice,” said Agüera. “The point is making a phone that you can use. You can download Angry Birds and we’ll tell you what are the risk you’re taking, what does the Angry Birds application do and then you choose.” More granular security information is pushed to Blackphone users via a Security Centre hub on the phone. This includes updated briefings on recommended best practices for privacy and security. But the main feature is analysing individual app behaviours to see what they’re accessing, and to give users the ability to block certain actions for individual apps. Blackphone security centre “It’s not the permissions that the application says it will do… we actually analyse the application,” said Agüera. “So when you configure your device for the first time we analyse all the default apps so it’s ready to use when you turn it on.” For example, via the Security Centre, a user can go to a location tab and see all of the apps that use location and then turn off their ability to use personal data, or to harvest your Wi-Fi information. “As an example, if you go to a sound recorder app you’ll see it records audio. That makes sense. But it also accesses the Internet. ‘Why should a sound recorder access the Internet? I don’t want that. Switch it off’,” explained Agüera. “Some apps may not work after you do this. We’ll tell you — we’ll say ‘ok, this game that you downloaded, it accesses your contacts list — if you turn it off, it’s not going to work. What do you want to do? Uninstall it or not — it’s up to you.” He also pointed out that some companies are doing Wi-Fi tracking of mobile devices to identify repeat visitors to a particular location, for instance. This can be used, in one example, by coffee shops and restaurants to track visitors and figure out what food/drinks to offer them, based on what they ordered elsewhere. But it can also have less beneficial, more creepy uses to mobile owners — so Blackphone has incorporated a technology into its device that knows when to kill the Wi-Fi to protect the users’ privacy. “Imagine you go to an investment bank for a job interview — what will you think if the person who’s interviewing you knows that you also make the same interview at a competitors’ bank a few streets away?” he said. “That’s a bit creepy and with this technology… developed [by Kismet creator Mike Kershaw] specially for the Blackphone it takes control of the Wi-Fi chip, it learns where your safe locations are — home and work normally — and when you leave your home.. if you’re not in a safe environment it will switch the Wi-Fi off.” P1020524 If you use an open Wi-Fi network somewhere — such as at a coffee shop — that location will still be able to gather data on you at this point, but Agüera said Blackphone is working on techniques that will effectively cloak your presence by randomizing the parameters that they use. ”So even if they detect you, the next time they detect you, you’ll be a different person,” he added. As for the security of the mobile chipset hardware inside the Blackphone itself, that layer is out of the company’s hands to a degree. However Blackphone general manager Toby Weir-Jones told TechCrunch that it doesn’t currently know of any backdoors in the chipsets it’s using, and if it finds any it will commit to telling Blackphone users. Of course the Blackphone is not ‘NSA proof’, as Weir-Jones reiterated. “Bad guys wanting to talk to each other probably shouldn’t be using a phone at all,” he said. But he described security as a spectrum — and said the level of privacy protection Blackphone affords its users is far greater than what the average smartphone user can expect.

Review: Jolla Phone Has Design Flare But Sailfish’s Waters Are Muddied By App Issues & UI Learning Curve


Jolla is a very small fish trying to make headway in global smartphone waters dominated by the whale-sized Android OS. In its plucky attempt to make a splash, building its own phone hardware as well as floating a new software platform, the Sailfish OS makers have crafted a device that’s different — sometimes refreshingly so — but the Jolla phone’s difference can frequently manifest itself as difficulty. The device asks its users to row against the current, requiring they accept a lot more that’s rough than smooth. Basics 4.5-inch, 960x 540, 245ppi display 16GB storage Dual-core 1.4GHz processor, 1GB RAM 8MP rear camera, 2MP front camera 4G/LTE, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi Bluetooth 4.0 MSRP: €399/$540 unlocked, off-contract Product info page Pros Can run Android apps Interface navigation can work well one-handed Impressive attention to smaller design details Swappable NFC backplates for extra colour & function modding Cons Very few native apps Android app compatibility/stability issues Interface has significant learning curve & navigation can be confusing Mid-range hardware; unspectacular performer jolla-main-table Design In recent years, smartphone hardware design has converged to adopt mostly the same slab-shaped template — unsurprisingly so, being as the interesting stuff is what a large enough, responsive enough touchscreen acting as a canvas for the software running on it lets you do. Any alternative hardware form factors — sliders, physical Qwerty keyboards and so on — just get in the way or put a limitation on the software. The main smartphone design trend over the past few years has therefore been for screens to get bigger to allow for more prodding. Jolla’s first phone, for all the startup’s talk of doing things differently, does not buck this trend — presenting the user with a rectangle slab of touchscreen glass to act as their playground, albeit one that’s relatively modest in size by current palm-stretching standards. It’s still a little larger than the current crop of iPhone screens, though. The main hardware design flare here is the sandwich form factor of the slab, created when the backplate is pushed onto the body of the phone. The edge where the two pieces meet leaves a continuous seam which give a little extra grip as you hold the phone. The test device I was using came with a white backplate, contrasting with the black front for an attractive two-tone look. Jolla If brightly coloured phones are your thing there are options to select a more boldly coloured Other Half (as the backplate is known). The first batch of Jolla handsets, launched by Finnish carrier DNA, had a bright pink rear. Jolla has also now started selling an aloe green Other Half via its website, along with a black option for those that want a less stand-out look. The backplates aren’t just about adding a splash of colour; they include NFC to support a link with the software, allowing a particular colour backplate to also change the theme colours of the OS (for instance). And potentially support other implementations, such as being preloaded with digital content such as a music album. Or those are the sort of use-cases Jolla is hoping to encourage. It has also released the 3D files for The Other Half as an SDK to encourage developers to get modding the backplates. And with a power (and bus) connector incorporated into the back of the phone where the backplate snaps on, it would be possible for an Other Half to include sophisticated additional hardware functionality, such as a Qwerty keyboard or e-ink screen. (Not that either of those possible Other Halves have been built yet — but the hooks for extending the platform in such ways are ready and waiting). jolla-interior The handset casing is plastic front and back — so does not feel as premium as metal/glass clad devices like the iPhone or HTC’s One device. But Jolla’s attention to detail in aspects of the hardware design, such as its mixture of rounded edges with smooth blunt ones, and a gloss logo invisibly inked on the matt backplate that jumps into reflective view when you tilt the device, give the design a confident, sure-footed air, and help to elevate the overall look and feel beyond the plebian plastic Android hoards it’s attempting to disrupt. Similarly aesthetic touches are evident in aspects of the software too, whether it’s Jolla’s calendar app with its subtle flip animation that turns Sunday to Monday as you scroll, or the dual-dial interface in the Jolla clock app for setting a timer by positioning two glowing beads within two concentric circles, or the understated double tap gesture that can be used to wake the phone from sleep. A distinct design flare is evident. Size-wise (and weight-wise), Jolla’s phone is a good middle ground, with enough screen to showcase whatever content you’re playing around with, without being so big the actual device becomes unwieldy. That said, if you’ve already pushed past the 5-inch phablet mark for your personal mobile device you’ll probably miss the extra space. So the one-way-street of mobile phone screen inflation goes. OS What’s really new here is of course the Sailfish OS — which carries on the MeeGo heritage that Jolla took from Nokia when the startup’s core team left to carry on developing the platform Nokia was abandoning in favour of making the leap to Microsoft’s Windows Phone. As a platform MeeGo had plenty of promise but its timing was terrible. Even when Nokia outted the N9 (way back in 2011) Android was pushing ahead of the rest of the field. Now, for Jolla, it’s not so much a gap between Android and everyone else as a gulf. Even the industry’s third placed OS, Windows Phone, (which has been kept afloat by Redmond’s deep pockets), remains a bit-player in an Android-saturated universe. Realistically Sailfish stands no chance of achieving mass market penetration — but then it’s not really being positioned for that. Jolla’s appeal has mostly been about serving the non-mainstream margins; aka the fringe folk who are dissatisfied with vanilla and are looking for a less orthodox flavour. People who are bored by the functional similarity of Android and iOS, and don’t see a Microsoft-branded alternative as an non-mainstream alternative. jolla-apps-main That is necessarily a smaller and more modest market. Indeed, it may be more of a niche than a market but that remains to be seen. Outside Jolla’s native stamping ground of Finland, where national pride and Nokia-fuelled nostalgia may help to buoy up Jolla’s little boat, Sailfish’s greatest chance for building scale is likely to be out East in China — a region that was an early focus for the startup. However, Jolla has concentrated the launch of this its first handset on Europe (and indeed, on Finland thus far), and appears to have rowed back from talk of a strong early push into China — with no follow up to its 2012 announcement of a distribution deal with Chinese retailer D.Phone. So momentum in the East is not a story it can currently tell, beyond the implied potential of the previously announced Hong Kong-based Sailfish alliance. Ergo, Sailfish’s Eastern promise also remains to be seen. Features What exactly is different about the Sailfish OS? The Jolla phone interface is built around a series of gestures — pulling down on the screen typically brings a contextual menu into view, and simultaneously incorporates a selector bar so the same fluid movement is used to both point to and select the action from the menu — depending on when/where you release your finger. So, for instance, in the email app, the ‘compose new email’ or ‘update’ actions reside just off-screen, in the pull-down menu. The advantage of this type of drag interface is you can perform actions with the same (single) finger movement, without having to lift off and tap. So there are potentially some time/efficiency savings, plus the ability to control more of the OS with a single digit, rather than being forced to use two hands to navigate. For certain groups of users with dexterity issues or a disability affecting their hands/arms Sailfish navigation could therefore be a bit less challenging than the tap-happy mainstream mobile options. Another aspect of the Sailfish navigation is built around swipes. A swipe up from the bottom of the screen brings up an events/notification screen. Swiping in from the left or right is used to close the app you’re currently in — or partially close it (if you pause the gesture mid way through), by allowing you to peek back at the home screen. You can then either reverse the gesture to go back into the app, or follow through to minimize it and land back on the homescreen. Why would you want to peek at the homescreen? Because it contains a series of minimised apps that are displayed like a deck of cards, each containing glimpses of active content allowing you to see if there’s a new email in your inbox, for instance, or a glimpse of the latest content on a website. For native Sailfish apps, such as the built in Jolla browser, there is support for functional interaction right from the homescreen card itself — so you can refresh webpages or trigger a call to open up a new webpage just by dragging your finger left or right on the browser card itself. Similarly you can pause/play music from the media homescreen card, and so on. JollaAt this granular point, the Sailfish interface can resemble a Russian doll of nested gestures. For a user who takes the time to get to know all these short cuts, the interface certainly has the potential to feel fluid and productive. But, on the flip side, all these gestural layers and incremental short-cuts can end up piling a confusing amount of possible navigation options atop the OS, resulting in a steep learning curve for the Sailfish newcomer. Beyond the user-education challenge, Sailfish’s reliance on gestures is not without other problems too. The main problem with the side-swipe gesture is that it can mis-register as one of the back/forth swipes also used to move between multiple menu screens in apps. And vice versa. So you can end up closing an app, when you were just trying to get to the next screen. Or doing the reverse. Misregistered actions like that serve to confuse a navigation system that is already at a disadvantage because it’s different to mobile’s mainstream, and therefore involves the aforementioned disadvantageous learning curve. Knowing when you can swipe or pull down to reach other menus also isn’t always obvious, so the user has to know to be on the look-out for Sailfish’s visual cues — either a glowing bar at the top of the screen, or small glowing dots that indicate the number of additional screens available for swiping to. jolla-breadcrumbs Add to that, at times, when — intuitively — you feel you should be able to simply reverse the swipe action you just did to reverse your path and return to the screen you were just on, you find you can’t — and instead have to pull down to retrace your original steps via the contextual top menu. There is a logic there, but it’s not exactly taking the path of least resistance from the user’s point of view. So the interface can sometimes feel as if you’re being made to do something not because it’s better/easier, but just because it’s different. Which can be irritating. The navigation also doesn’t do away with taps entirely — which does mean that when you need to tap on something to confirm an action, rather than pulling down to bring up the contextual menu, it’s not always clear that’s what you need to do to proceed. Ergo, more confusion. The functions supported by the homescreen cards also take some getting used to, especially as non-native Sailfish apps (such as the Android apps that are compatible with the device) don’t include support for gestures. And those native apps that don’t have any additional gestures sometimes resort to signposting that lack — with a written instruction on the card to ‘tap to continue’ — to avoid further user confusion about whether they support gestural interaction or not. But having to do that is rather sub-optimal (and potentially introduces further procedural confusion where apps don’t include such signpost text). JollaThe card-based homescreen is a potentially richer alternative to the icons of iOS and Android. However the size of the cards can limit their functionality as portals into what’s going on elsewhere in your apps. The Jolla phone supports a deck of up to nine cards displayed on screen at once. When there are more than four cards their size shrinks so the text/content displayed on them can be tricky to make out. The cards are far more useable when larger — so when there’s between one and four on screen (as pictured left) — allowing for content to be displayed more comfortably, and gestural interaction to be less fiddly. As a ‘glanceable’ interface, the Jolla phone homescreen shares something with BlackBerry 10 — with its panel of ‘Active Frames’ — or Palm’s WebOS. Or, to a lesser extent, with Windows Phone’s info-displaying Live Tiles. Sailfish’s support for gestural interaction with its own take on homescreen cards does take things a little further than Live Tiles. Whether that ability adds significantly to the interface, or is better described as more of an incremental benefit, depends on which apps you use, and the sort of actions you regularly perform. If, for instance, you’re often checking in on a particular webpage or regularly refreshing your inbox for new content, then being able to perform such actions right from the homescreen without having to dive into the app itself may be a boon. But it’s a little hard to shake the feeling that the usability benefit here is relatively incremental. If you have a new email, you’re going to have to fire up the inbox to read it anyway — and even iOS, with its static icon-based homescreen, sticks a little red digit on your email icon telling you when its time to go check in. One area where Jolla has delivered a really usable slice of software is the native Sailfish keyboard. The touchscreen keyboard incorporates a scrollable next-word suggestion bar above the Qwerty layout which offers an evolving rack of words to choose from as you’re typing. jolla-keynboard-close The typing time-savings can be considerable here as multiple word suggestions can fit on the screen so the chances of the right one cropping up before you’ve finished spelling it out are good. Plus, even more words lurk just off screen where you can pull them in with a quick swipe on the bar. It’s a great use of available (and implied, i.e. off-screen) screen real-estate to support a smarter kind of touchscreen keyboard. Better than the static old iPhone keyboard? Absolutely! Apps Jolla has built a series of what it terms “essential apps” for the phone that you can download during the set up process, or snag direct from the Jolla Store later on. These include basics such as a media player, email, maps (powered by Nokia’s HERE), calendar, clock, notes, calculator, documents viewer etc. This is Jolla filling in the Sailfish platform gap itself, as — being the new kid on the mobile block — it’s unable to rely on a substantial third party developer ecosystem to do that for it. Jolla apps Essential here is a synonym for ‘basics’. These Jolla-made Sailfish apps really are the bare-bones that any mobile user would expect to get as standard on a smartphone. If you want more ambitions apps — and really, which modern mobile user doesn’t? — from ephemeral messaging to insanely frustrating gaming, well, Sailfish isn’t going to be able to deliver. Not yet, and perhaps not ever on its own. There are a handful of native Sailfish apps made by developers other than Jolla available for download on the Jolla store. But, including Jolla’s essentials, there are less than 200 apps in total on the Jolla Store in total right now — and that includes plenty of very simple stuff like an age calculator app, and kitchen timer and torch apps, plus some apps that have evidently been ported from Android. The Sailfish app ecosystem clearly remains very nascent. Jolla’s solution for this app gap — or more accurately this ‘app gulf’ vs Android and iOS — is to add a pipeline into the Android ecosystem to allow for a sub-set of apps to be siphoned off via platform compatibility with Android. The preloaded hub for Android apps on the Jolla device is Yandex’s app store – which holds some 85,000 Android apps for downloading and extend the device’s functionality.Yandex Jolla users can also download other Android app stores (i.e. in addition to the Yandex store) to get access to additional Android apps, although Google’s Play ecosystem is obviously off limits. Jolla’s line in to the Android app ecosystem is an inelegant fix for a platform that wanted to provide an entirely alternative mobile reality. But when your platform lags the mobile category leader by circa one million+ apps then it’s a necessary compromise. And that pragmatism means Jolla’s device gets a much needed leg up in the app stakes vs other smaller players also trying to crack the Android/iOS duopoly (such as Mozilla and its HTML5 Web apps approach with the Firefox OS). It is not a trouble free compromise though. The main problem with this approach — ignoring the core philosophical one of having to incorporate the very thing you dislike (including having to tolerate Android navigation keys cropping up within Android apps to sprinkle additional confusion over your alternative navigation system) — is that Android apps don’t always run smoothly in the Sailfish OS environment. This was true when I did a hands-on with the Jolla phone back in November. And it’s still true now, although the big bug evident then, of the Android runtime sometimes spontaneously taking over the interface, appears to have been sorted now. App compatibility issues are an ongoing problem, though. Many Android apps — including the Yandex app store — run sluggishly, with noticeable lag. Some Android apps are also unstable after installation — Skype for instance stopped responding after a moment’s use (although, to be fair, the Skype app is pretty universally terrible, regardless of the mobile platform you’re accessing it from). Plus, certain actions within Android apps aren’t supported within Sailfish — which triggers a dialogue box when you try to do something you can’t, informing you that such and such an action isn’t possible. Such is the price of compromise. But, when the Android apps do work, their line in to a dominant ecosystem does help to expand the Jolla experience for its users, providing access to a lot more app ‘essentials’ — whether that’s Facebook or Twitter or Cut The Rope. Whatever your particular app poison. Just so long as you don’t expect the next Flappy Bird viral hit to be natively spawned on the Sailfish platform. Performance Some performance issues on the Jolla phone are clearly directly associated with its Android emulator feature, such as the laggy apps discussed above. More general handset performance issues that affect the Jolla phone likely relate to what is effectively (on paper) a chunk of pretty mid-range smartphone hardware. The handset is not a powerhouse in the processor stakes — certainly not by today’s flagship phone standards (which is one of the problems with having a long development time to get your debut device to market, as Jolla has). This relative lack of horsepower translates to overall performance that has a tendency to feel a bit plodding. There are times when the interface has noticeable lag — such as when taking a photo and watching the shot you’ve just snapped slide off screen and onto the (off-screen) camera roll. The delay isn’t huge but it’s noticeable. Likewise, the browser can feel a little underpowered when tackling certain websites. And seem a little slow to scroll and respond to taps. Transitions from one type of content to loading another also require a spot of micro-patience from the user. The response time lag is more pronounced when running (some) Android apps, as noted above. jolla-twitter-app-loads Native Sailfish apps fair better, as you’d expect, but there it’s not so much overall performance that’s the issue but the aforementioned paucity and scarcity of app quantity and quality. Elsewhere on the performance front, the handset’s rear camera is distinctly mid-range. Photos lack crisp clarity, and the lens struggles with variable light levels. Likewise, the handset’s qHD screen is far from pin-sharp. Again, these aspects of the Jolla phone are distinctly mid-range. Battery life at least does seem pretty good, both on standby and for active use. The phone should easily manage a day’s normal use without needing a recharge. Bottom Line The Jolla phone’s gesture-based interface has a steep learning curve for newbies, and considering how embedded most mobile users are with Android/iOS navigation paradigms that’s inevitably pushing water up hill. Floating a whole new platform so long after Android and iOS set sail also means Sailfish can’t hope to compete on quantity of native apps — or indeed on attracting hoards of developers, so it’s a tough ask for it to deliver high quality third party native apps either. That huge app gap means Jolla has been forced to tether its dingy to the very Android leviathan it’s trying to circumvent — to extend the reach of its dinky Sailfish ecosystem in the hopes of building sustainable momentum. It’s a practical and pragmatic strategy but it’s also an ongoing compromise that muddies this new platform’s clear blue waters. jolla1