2014年4月30日 星期三

Optus first to Xperia the Z2 in Australia

Optus first to Xperia the Z2 in Australia

Sony has been on the warpath with its flagship handset releases. Just six months after it released the Xperia Z1, it's doubling down with the launch of its new masterpiece, the Xperia Z2.


The handset, which combines the waterproof design of previous Xperia Z models with new 4K video recording and noise cancellation technologies, is competing head to head with the HTC One M8 and the Samsung Galaxy S5 for your shiny new-phone dollar.


While we already know this is the best phone Sony has ever built, and one of the best phones in the world right now, it's good to finally get an Australian release.


Beat it, this phone ain't Bad


Optus is the first telco to launch the handset, with the Z2 arriving today on a range of plans. You can expect to fork out $16 a month in handset repayments on a $60 Optus plan though, which includes 1.5GB of data.


Optus is also throwing in a free pair of Adidas trainers worth $190 for customers who get the phone and claim before the end of July.


Vodafone customers can grab the handset from May 7, with handset repayments of $10 a month on the $65 plan, which includes 1.5GB of data as standard.


Telstra customers can register their interest for the handset, although no official release date has been confirmed.


Everyone else can grab the handset outright today for $759 through Sony direct channels.


There's also a spot of good news for Michael Jackson fans, as every Xperia Z2 owner can grab a copy of the late king of pop's new album XSCAPE via the Xperia Lounge app on the day the album is released.


If that doesn't sell you, we don't know what will...



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Game on as Foxtel Play launches on PS4

Game on as Foxtel Play launches on PS4

It was somewhat surprising last month when Foxtel and Sony joined forces to announce that internet-streaming service Foxtel Play was launching on the PS3 rather than the PS4.


But as of today, next-gen Sony console owners can happily enjoy the service as well.


The app, which joins the likes of Quickflix, IGN and Vidzone as part of the PS4's entertainment service lineup, is a free download for PSN users, but does require you to setup a Foxtel Play account to activate. Fortunately, it doesn't require a PS Plus subscription to work though.


Xbox no longer number One?


With the back-to-back announcements for Playstation consoles, it's interesting that we are still yet to hear any word about the streaming app appearing on Microsoft's Xbox One console.


Microsoft was the first company to work closely with Foxtel on a streaming service, launching Foxtel on Xbox for the Xbox 360 back in 2010.


With the Xbox One's focus on being a complete entertainment hub and the previous partnership, we were expecting Microsoft's next-gen console to be a high priority for Foxtel Play support.


It's certainly just a matter of time before it arrives, although given the retail performance of the two next-gen consoles, we hope Microsoft acts sooner rather than later to boost its local IP entertainment offering.





















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BT Sport to stay free for BT Broadband subscribers for a second season

BT Sport to stay free for BT Broadband subscribers for a second season

BT Broadband subscribers will continue to receive free access to the BT Sport channels in standard definition during the 2014/2015 Premier League season.


The telecoms giant, which will once again will screen 38 Premier League games during its second year as a broadcaster, as it seeks to turn up the heat on rival BSkyB.


BT Sport, which also has the rights to the FA Cup and top US sport, is now available in five million homes across the UK, either through free or paid subscriptions.


Three million of those get free or paid access through BT either through set-top boxes, while the other two million pay through Virgin Media, which has a wholesale agreement with BT.


No free access to CL


Those seeking the channels in HD will need to pay an extra £3 a month, but that won't be too much of a stretch for the millions receiving free access to some of the UK's top sporting action.


BT subscribers are now also able to access the service via the £30 Chromecast dongle at no extra cost.


While the second term of free access is great news for BT Broadband subscribers, the gravy train will come to an end at the end of next season.


BT's deal to televise Champions League football kicks in in 2015/2016 and the company has confirmed it will charge all customers to view that content.








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Blip: Google is actually making good on its Pokémon April Fools' joke

No more trawling settings as Windows 8.1 adds natural language search

No more trawling settings as Windows 8.1 adds natural language search

Microsoft has announced an update to the Bing-powered Smart Search feature in Window's 8.1, which aims to make it easier for users to find hard to reach settings on their PCs.


The update, which will roll out in the next couple of weeks, will enable users to type instructions like 'my screen is too bright' rather than dig around for the display settings.


Likewise, if users want to delete an app or add a printer, for example, the can type in those commands to be taken directly to the requisite settings menu.


The company hopes the inclusion of 'natural language understanding' will save users time and effort needed to delve deep into menus before finding what they want to do.


Smarter search


In a post on the Bing blog, the company explains: "Based on the most common tasks people perform on Windows 8, we are taking steps to allow Smart Search to showcase results based on natural language understanding.


"Now when I search for "install a printer", Smart Search will show me that the function resides within "Device Settings" so I can take action with a simple click."


Bing Smart Search was introduced alongside Windows 8.1 in October as a universal search tool for documents, apps, photo albums, cloud files and favourite websites.





















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Lenovo plans to raise $1.5 billion

Lenovo plans to raise $1.5 billion

Lenovo plans to raise $1.5 billion to generate working capital and for potential acquisitions, according to a company filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Lenovo recently agreed to acquire Motorola Mobility from Google for $2.9 billion (about £1.88bn, or au$3.12bn) and IBM's server unit for $2.3 billion (about £1.36bn, or au$2.48bn).


Lenovo recently underwent a corporate restructure in order to diversify its product line. The changes, which went into effect April 1, restructured the overall business into four divisions: PC, Mobile, Enterprise, and Ecosystem and Cloud Services. The Motorola Mobility and IBM server division acquisitions better enable the company to transition its reputation from strictly a PC maker to an enterprise and consumer technology company. Lenovo rival, Acer, also recently stated its desire to move away from its reputation as a PC company.


Last month, Lenovo made an additional investment in mobile technology, including a $100 million acquisition of 21 patents related to 3G, 4G, and other mobile technologies. Lenovo was rumored to be considering purchasing Blackberry in October, two months after a Lenovo exec said the company was looking for opportunities to expand its mobile business.


Servers and international intrigue


Lenovo purchased IBM's server infrastructure division to diversify its product line-up. However, it was recently reported the acquisition might be on hold because of IBM's relationship with the Pentagon and FBI. According to the reports, the US has been banning Chinese hardware firms from government contracts. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US is investigating the acquisition.


Lenovo's 2013 revenue was $33.9 billion (about £20bn, or au$35.5bn), an increase of 13% compared with 2012. Net income improved to $631 million (about £374m, or au$680m) in 2013, a 34% increase year-over-year.





















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Canonical confirms it's no longer hot on Ubuntu for Android

Canonical confirms it's no longer hot on Ubuntu for Android

Ubuntu for Android was an ambitious project, but now it's all but over, Canonical has confirmed.


Following reports that Ubuntu for Android isn't "in active development" anymore the Ubuntu maker sent a statement to Android Authority confirming as much.


This rumor initiated when Canonical designer Matthew Paul Thomas posted a bug report, since taken down, on launchpad. It read, according to OMG Ubuntu:


"[The website] describes Ubuntu for Android as "the must-have feature for late-2012 high-end Android phones. Ubuntu for Android is no longer in development, so this page should be retired, along with [the features section]."


From the maker's mouth


Canonical's own statement says the company still believes that Ubuntu for Android was "a great product concept and that consumers would welcome the feature," but "to take the development further requires a launch partner in order to make the necessary modifications on the Android side."


"We are currently not in concrete discussions with launch partners, but we are still very much open to such a partnership," the statement continues. "We are focused on Ubuntu for Phones at the moment, therefore we are not actively pushing for Ubuntu for Android.


"However, if a prospective partner steps forward, we are very much open to launching Ubuntu for Android."


Everybody needs somebody


Introduced in 2012, Ubuntu for Android sought to make high-end Android handsets into hybrid devices that would transform into full-fledged Ubuntu desktop computers when plugged into a monitor.


It worked in part because Ubuntu and Android are both Linux-based operating systems, but it never caught on, apparently in part thanks to a lack of interested parties on the Android side of things.


With Canonical focusing on Ubuntu for Phones, it may be a very long time before we see another hybrid Android/Ubuntu effort - if ever.





















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Hands-on review: Apple CarPlay

Hands-on review: Apple CarPlay

Imagine racing to an appointment you're already running late to and suddenly realizing you forgot how to get there. Thankfully, you have Apple CarPlay running, so you can snappily ask Siri to pull up directions.


"I didn't find a place called 'doorstep,'" Siri robotically replies after the third time you ask it to get to find your new doctor's office. You yell obscenities in frustration, only be coolly met with, "I'm sorry you feel that way."


This scenario never happened, but it's just one of the nightmarish vehicular vignettes I imagine living if I were to use CarPlay in its current form.


I went hands on with CarPlay installed in a 2015 Mercedes-Benz C-Class at the automaker's research and development facility in Sunnyvale, Calif. I need to note the CarPlay shown was an engineering development set-up. The nuts and bolts were there, but the system has a long way to go before it's consumer ready.


iPhones


The set-up as it was left much to be desired and was rudimentary at best. Siri was way off base when it responded to voice commands, and the app offering is limited. A few more apps are due down the road, including Spotify and Podcasts, but for now CarPlay is stuck with Maps, Phone, Messages and Music - the barest infotainment essentials.


In terms of how CarPlay fits into the in-car experience, it feels more like a frill than an enhancement. It's cool to ask your car to pull up directions to some unfamiliar destination, but CarPlay neither felt absolutely necessary or the best option I could have turned to for my navigation, music or communicating needs.


Simple (too simple?) plug ins


CarPlay requires users to plug their iPhones into the car. It's as simple as that; you're basically tethering your iPhone and accessing a few of its (very basic) apps through your car's system.


My demo involved an iPhone 5S standing up in a disc-shaped port near the cup holders, but Hamza Lakhani, a manager of embedded software at Mercedes-Benz Research & Development, said one day users will likely connect their iPhone via a Lightening cable coming from inside the car's center console. That way, you could store your iPhone in the console without worrying about it falling on the car floor or spilling a drink on it.


Music


Once your iPhone is hooked up, CarPlay boots up and is ready to rumble. Sound channels through your car's speakers and its interior microphones relay your voice commands.


Other than the medium change, you're not getting a whole lot that you don't already have on your iPhone. Not inherently a bad thing, but it means CarPlay is actually just an extension of your phone, and that's not exactly thrilling.


Siri is not a good co-pilot


One of CarPlay's selling points is that drivers have a co-pilot(!) in voice-controlled Siri. Let's just say that in my time with the digital companion, I would have kicked it to the curb.


To be fair, tech demos on location can often be hindered by poor connectivity and other environmental factors, so sometimes miscues can be forgiven.


Still, Siri was laughably inept at understanding basic voice commands.


A request to find coffee initiated a response of, "I couldn't find a place called 'Call me.'" This was just one of several potholes Siri found itself stepping in. Siri has a bad rap on the smartphone personal assistant streets, and since CarPlay essentially uses the Siri found in your iPhone, you can imagine it didn't have any luck on a larger, car-size scale.


Knob improvements to come


The plan is to eventually optimize when voice commands are used and eliminate touch as much as possible. Lakhani told me that Mercedes plans to implement touchscreen controls in the main control knob you use to control CarPlay, but that feature isn't available yet.


Mercedes' dashboard CarPlay display doesn't support touch either, and Lakhani explained that at least in its case, the company felt it was too distracting to be gazing at and leaning forward to fiddle with a screen at eye-level. Instead, the car maker wants drivers to have a screen they can glance at comfortably while controlling it from a "lean back and drive" position.


Knob


The knob itself is sleek and shiny, and it's situated right where your right hand would rest if you're not a religious 10-and-2 driver. Twisting and pressing the dial makes selections, and differently timed presses do different things. For example, if you're deep in the Music app, a short press will take you back one step while a long press will take you back to the main menu.


Lakhani explained that eventually, drivers will learn how many know twists and turns it takes to control CarPlay. In much the same way you learn where letters are positioned on your phone's keyboard so you can text without looking at the screen, it should become engrained in drivers' brains that two turns of the knob to the right lands on Maps, and so on.


Calls, texts and the dreaded Maps


I found CarPlay's call and text capabilities left much to be desired. When a new text message came in, for example, the little red bubble with the number of waiting messages would appear with no audible alert. If you're zoned out on the road listening to Drunk in Love, you'd easily miss the new message.


The message can be read aloud, and then you have the option to reply or leave it alone, but it all felt cumbersome and as though Apple didn't put much effort into optimizing the exchange for the car.


Do you trust me?


We never hit the road with Maps, but with Siri's inability to decipher vocal commands and Apple Maps' shoddy reputation, I wouldn't trust the system to get me where I needed to go, at least not to start.


One nice feature is that a thumbnail image of your Maps route stays fixed to the upper left-hand corner of the tablet screen if you move into other apps. It's a pleasant reminder CarPlay hasn't forgotten it's directing you where you're steering to.


Early verdict


Sticking a spoiler on a car's rear may be a fun accent, but it's not going to make it go faster or the brakes more reliable. In much the same way, CarPlay isn't going to vastly improve life on the road, at least not in its current form.


Apple has time to get CarPlay right, but it has a long way to go. Lakhani said Mercedes is pushing to have CarPlay in its cars as soon as possible, but he wouldn't specify when the first CarPlay-equipped cars would show up at dealerships.


Unfortunately for the system, it's wholly dependent on your iPhone 5S, 5C or iPhone 5. In other words, you don't magically get more car-specific functions just by plugging in your phone. What you have on there is what you get. Currently, that not a whole lot.


To make matters worse, CarPlay itself is wholly dependent on Apple. Lakhani said any new app additions are up to Apple's discretion, and I got the sense car makers are hamstrung by Cupertino's control. It's the company's infamous walled garden, now in your car.


The pervasive feelings of restriction and limitation don't make CarPlay feel sexy or revolutionary. That's a shame when your sitting in a shiny new Mercedes, ready to hit the open road.




















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