Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Hands-on impressions of the new iPhones

Hands-on impressions of the new iPhones



Watch this video

Big iPhone reveal has no big surprises

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • CNN's Heather Kelly spent a few minutes with new newly launched iPhones Tuesday
  • 5S fingerprint sensor worked seamlessly, though adding profiles takes some time
  • A slow-motion video looked impressively professional
  • The polycarbonate body on the iPhone 5C feels sturdier than other plastic phones
Cupertino, California (CNN) -- After Apple unveiled a pair of new iPhones Tuesday, Tim Cook & Co. made the phones briefly available for some hands-on (and fingers-on) testing.
Several hundred bloggers and other guests -- including musician Elvis Costello, who had been invited by Apple to play a few songs -- were ushered to a nearby room to handle the phones.
I got to spend some time playing with both devices. An in-depth review will have to wait, but here are my first impressions.

Design of the iPhone 5S
 
Big iPhone reveal has no big surprises
iPhone 5S has finger
The body of the iPhone 5S is the same shape and design at the iPhone 5, but the company has rolled out some new color options. The rumored golden iPhone is real, and a very classy champagne shade of fake gold. The face of the phone is all glass over the screen and surrounding white frame, while the muted gold is only visible on the sides and back.
The 5S also comes in silver and another new color Apple is calling "space gray." The gray iPhone is the only one in the 5S lineup that has a black faceplate instead of white.
Fingerprint sensor
The most intriguing new hardware feature on the 5S is the fingerprint sensor in its Home button. It doesn't replace the old pass code and can even be turned off. The phone can be unlocked by using either a fingerprint or the code, so if you hand a friend your phone while you're driving, you can just tell them what number to enter.
Each phone can record up to five individual fingerprints -- say one for each member of the family you don't mind using it (maybe purposefully leaving out the kids). To add a new print, you first must enter your security code. Pick a finger, preferably the one you use most to press the Home button. For most people, this will be their thumb.
To record a print, you place your finger on the home button until it vibrates and then lift and repeat. This goes on for a number of times as it gets a full image of the finger. It also grabs a few impressions of the sides of your finger for a complete picture.
To open the phone with a fingerprint, you press the Home button down as usual but then keep the finger on the small circle. It will automatically skip the pass code screen and take you to the home screen. You also can use a fingerprint to pay for purchases from the App Store or iTunes.
It worked seamlessly when I tested it, though adding new profiles takes a bit of time. But it's a much faster way to open the phone than entering a pass code, and there is no "reading your print now" type of delay on screen.
Camera
The new camera on the iPhone 5S is packed with a number of legitimately cool new features, the result of software and hardware improvements.
The new burst mode, which takes rapid-fire photos at a rate of 10 per second, is meant for capturing moving subjects such as twitchy children or sprinting athletes. I took 40 shots in four seconds -- so many that scrolling through them created a neat time-lapse video effect.
You can dig through all 40 images yourself to find the winners, but Apple has added a feature that identifies what it thinks are the best in the bunch automatically based on things such as exposure, blur and if the subject's eyes are open. Out of the 40 images, two were highlighted with a small gray dot. In the camera roll, the burst photos were lumped together in one pile so I could easily delete all the extras after I picked my final shots.
With another new feature, I tried making a slow-motion video. The camera can record 120 frames per second, which is helpful for slowing down and stretching out detailed scenes. You scroll to the Slow-Mo setting before shooting the video. After the clip is recorded, you choose what section of it to slow down. The final video looked impressively professional, even though it was just of tech bloggers milling about a room.
The room was a bit too bright to accurately test out the new flash. Apple claims the flash will automatically adjust color and intensity depending on the subject and lighting situation. It has two different colored LED lights instead of the usual one. A better flash would be a welcome improvement over the traditional LED flashes on iPhones (and most other smartphones) that flood scenes with harsh light.
Graphics
The faster processor inside the 5S means everything is zippier, including the graphics. This is the case with every new iPhone, so it's hard to tell how much of an upgrade this one is. But the high-end game apps did look rich.
Apple is calling the the new graphics "console level," so next time we'll have to test it head to head with an Xbox.
iPhone 5C
The lower-priced iPhone 5C doesn't have as many fancy new hardware features. Instead, its pizazz is mostly on the outside. Apple rounded the corners down and encased the 5C in a smooth hard plastic shell instead of metal. Plastic has a reputation of being cheap and breakable, but Apple is pitching this as high-end plastic.
Apple design head Jony Ive even says, "The iPhone 5C is beautifully, unapologetically plastic."
The polycarbonate body does feel sturdier than other plastic phones, and the phone still has bit of weight to it. The entire back side of the phone is one seamless piece of plastic and comes in blue, green, pink, yellow and white. The colors look subdued in press images, but in person the green and pink are a bit more fluorescent and bright.
Apparently Apple didn't think one super bright color was enough, so it also created a line of $29 soft silicon shells for the 5C. The blue, green, pink, yellow, black and white cases have a grid of holes in the back so you can see the original shade of the 5C through them as lines of dots.

Monday, 2 September 2013

Vodafone says its Verizon sale talks are advanced

Vodafone says its Verizon sale talks are advanced

Vodafone sign  
 
The deal would be one of the largest corporate transactions of all time if it goes through
Vodafone has said talks regarding the sale of its 45% stake in Verizon Wireless in the US are "advanced" and it has put a value on the stake.
It has confirmed it is discussing selling the stake to Verizon Communications for $130bn (£84bn).
The company said last week that the talks were taking place and the sale is expected to be confirmed on Monday.
But BBC business editor Robert Peston said no UK tax would be paid on the enormous transaction.
He said that as the deal would involve the sale of a stake in a US group, the holding company for which is in the Netherlands, the UK taxman would not be entitled to anything.
This could prove to be controversial, with Vodafone's tax affairs having been subjected to scrutiny in the past.
Second most valuable Vodafone warned there was still no certainty an agreement would be reached.
In a brief statement in response to what it called media speculation, it said: "Vodafone confirms that it is in advanced discussions with Verizon Communications Inc regarding the disposal of Vodafone's US group whose principal asset is its 45% interest in Verizon Wireless for $130bn."
"The consideration would substantially comprise a mixture of Verizon common stock and cash."
If the deal goes through it will be the second most valuable corporate deal, after Vodafone's own takeover of Mannesmann of Germany in 2000.
An announcement is expected on Monday, despite US markets being closed for Labor Day.
It would bring to an end a long-running saga, with both Vodafone and Verizon trying to take full control of Verizon Wireless over the years, but having been unable to agree a price.
Richard Dunbar, investment director at Scottish Widows, said Verizon Wireless was now in excellent shape, with 100 million customers.
He told the BBC: "It has been worth the wait [for Vodafone shareholders]. Previously it [Verizon Wireless] wasn't generating a lot of cash and it wasn't paying dividends to the parent company and the relationship between the managers was a poor one.
"Recently it has been better - and the business has been performing better."
Cash injection Robert Peston says that at least half of the proceeds of the deal will be returned to Vodafone shareholders.
It means tens of billions of pounds being paid to UK investors, which he says is being seen by some as a significant injection of cash into the economy, similar to the Bank of England's quantitative easing programme.
The rest of the money may be used by Vodafone to fund acquisitions in Europe.
Vodafone's ownership of almost half of Verizon Wireless stems from the $61bn acquisition in 1999 of a US company called AirTouch, which later merged its US mobile phone business with that of Bell Atlantic.
The deal is not expected to have much effect on Verizon Wireless customers, with Vodafone having had little say in the running of the company.

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Foursquare deal could be a goldmine for Yahoo

Foursquare deal could be a goldmine for Yahoo


yahoo foursquare Yahoo and Foursquare are reportedly in talks for a data partnership.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Big data is the latest super-hot tech trend, and Yahoo wants a piece of the pie.

Marissa Mayer & Co. are reportedly courting Foursquare for a partnership involving the startup's valuable trove of location data.
The Yahoo-Foursquare talks are "still fluid," according to the Buzzfeed article, which didn't have details about what such a partnership would look like. Yahoo (YHOO, Fortune 500) and Foursquare declined to comment.
A deal would make sense for both companies: It could provide Yahoo with data that has the ability to improve various products in its vast portfolio, and it would give the often-maligned Foursquare a huge financial opportunity.
Yahoo could easily use Foursquare's data to serve up search results, content and ads based on where is a user is or where they've visited in the past. Microsoft's (MSFT, Fortune 500) Bing.com added Foursquare to its results last year.
Related story: Yahoo beats Google in traffic for first time since 2011
But if a Yahoo-Foursquare deal takes place, Yahoo has the potential to integrate Foursquare's data more extensively than Microsoft has. Foursquare's mapping and mobile technology could prove valuable to Yahoo's dozens of websites, for example.
Yahoo CEO Mayer has tried to re-define Yahoo as a company devoted to personalizing the Web for its users, from content to email to ads. She wants Yahoo products to become part of users' "daily habits," and she's particularly interested in "localization," mobile, social and video. Foursquare clearly fits into three of those four focus areas.
Foursquare, founded in 2009, lets users "check in" to venues like restaurants to receive tips and discounts. It was once the buzziest startup in Silicon Valley, but for the past few years CEO Dennis Crowley has fought the idea that his company is merely just "check-ins and badges."
Foursquare has amassed a whopping 4 billion check-ins from its 35 million global users, and the company has worked to leverage that user-generated data.
On the user side, Foursquare can tell a beer-guzzling Chicagoan who just got off a plane in Hamburg, Germany, where to go for the best brews in the city. For businesses, Foursquare can tell local spots how their foot traffic compares with competitors, whether it's better to keep happy hour going until 8 p.m., and even how well the venue fares when it's raining out. Those finely tuned recommendations, based on deep sources of data that users are happy to turn over, could be of great use to Yahoo.
Judging from past deals, Foursquare could make a boatload on these types of partnerships. Earlier this summer, Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) bought social-mapping service Waze for a reported $1.3 billion. The hefty purchase price shows just how valuable billions of points of location data can be. To top of page

Four confirmed dead after helicopter crashes off Scotland

Four confirmed dead after helicopter crashes off Scotland


  • A helicopter ditches in the North Sea off the Shetland islands, official says
  • Life boats and helicopters are used to rescue most of them oil rig workers
  • It had 18 people aboard; 16 passengers and two crew members
(CNN) -- A helicopter crash in the North Sea off Scotland's Shetland islands killed four people, officials said Saturday.
Fourteen people have been rescued following the crash Friday, Police Scotland said.
"Our sympathies are very much with the families of those affected at this difficult time. All families have been informed and specially-trained family liaison officers are currently providing them with support," said Malcolm Graham, assistant chief constable of Police Scotland.
There were 18 people aboard; 16 passengers and two crew members. It went down Friday evening, police said
Shetland maritime officials first got word from a Scottish air rescue coordination unit that they had lost contact with a Superpuma helicopter, said Sophie Turner of the United Kingdom's Maritime and Coastguard Agency.
Authorities learned later that the aircraft ditched about two miles west of Sumburgh Airport in the Shetland isles, according to Turner.
Most of the passengers are workers on the Borstein Dolphin oil and rig platform, the spokeswoman said.
Nationalities were not immediately known.
Skies were misty with fog when the aircraft went down -- conditions Turner said are not unusual for that area. She added that authorities had yet to identify the cause of the crash.
The Superpuma is a twin-engine helicopter that is often used to transport passengers given its relatively large cabin, according to its manufacturer, Eurocopter.

March on Washington: Throngs mark 'I Have a Dream' anniversary

March on Washington: Throngs mark 'I Have a Dream' anniversary


The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses a crowd near the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in Washington, on August 28, 1963. On the 50th anniversary of this historic civil rights event we take a look back through rarely seen color photographs from the day. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses a crowd near the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in Washington, on August 28, 1963. On the 50th anniversary of this historic civil rights event we take a look back through rarely seen color photographs from the day.
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Two of Martin Luther King Jr.'s children will speak at event
  • Obama, former presidents Clinton, Carter headline a second march Wednesday
  • March passes King Memorial
  • Al Sharpton: Marchers want action, not nostalgia
(CNN) -- Standing on the spot where 50 years earlier the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. made "I have a dream" the clarion call of the civil rights movement, a broader call for equality rang out Saturday.
Thousands rallied at the National Mall to mark the 50th anniversary of the historic August 28, 1963, March on Washington.
Leaders from civil rights, religious and civic organizations paid tribute to those who fought and continue to fight for racial equality, but the slate of demands today has expanded to other hot-button issues.
Income inequality, discrimination based on sexual orientation and mistreatment of immigrants were all themes espoused by the dozens of speakers.
"I am a daughter of the civil rights movement, and as a daughter I am a beneficiary of all the good that resulted from the hard work, the sweat and tears, and the blood that was shed by the leaders and doers of that movement," Jennifer Jones Austin of the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies told the crowd. "And as a daughter and a beneficiary, I am now the burden-bearer of this generation's civil rights movement."
That burden, she said, includes equal rights for gays and fights against poverty and gun violence.
Attorney General Eric Holder credited King's famous words for providing a foundation for the progress of the civil rights movement.
"Our focus has broadened to include the cause of women, of Latinos, of Asian-Americans, of lesbians, of gays, of people with disabilities and of countless others across this great country who still yearn for equality, opportunity and fair treatment," he said.
Many speakers invoked the killing of Trayvon Martin as an example of where they see a lack of justice for African-Americans.
Martin Luther King III, son of the civil rights icon, said his father's vision was a nation without racial discrimination. "But sadly, the tears of Trayvon Martin's mother and father reminds us that far too frequently, the color of one's skin remains a license to profile."
In 1963, "we could not have imagined we'd be here 50 years later with a black president and a black attorney general, but that's a measure of how far we have come," civil rights activist Julian Bond said. "But still, we march."
August 28, 1963, was one of the most important days for the civil rights movement. Over 200,000 people gathered on the National Mall in Washington to hear Martin Luther King Jr. deliver his famous "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Magnum photographer Leonard Freed (1929-2006) was there documenting that historic day. August 28, 1963, was one of the most important days for the civil rights movement. Over 200,000 people gathered on the National Mall in Washington to hear Martin Luther King Jr. deliver his famous "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Magnum photographer Leonard Freed (1929-2006) was there documenting that historic day.
Leonard Freed's March on Washington
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Photos: Leonard Freed\'s March on Washington Photos: Leonard Freed's March on Washington
50 years after MLK's freedom call
Minorities have never wished their way to freedom, he said, but have worked their way up, and must continue to do so.
"While I'm elated that we've come today to march on Washington, we must not only march on Washington. We must stand for a genuine living wage and jobs. We must stand to end the 'stand your ground' laws. We must stand against stop-and-frisk, must must stand against voter suppression," Bishop Darin Moore of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church said.
Another theme repeated throughout the event was outrage at the Supreme Court decision that threw out a key part of the Voting Rights Act.
The court in June invalidated the formula used to determine which states or local jurisdictions -- mostly in the South -- could remain under special federal oversight, requiring approval from Washington before they can change voting procedures.
That blunted much of the government's enforcement power in states and localities with a history of discrimination at the polls.
"We didn't forget the price they paid," the Rev. Al Sharpton said, referring to those on the front lines of the civil rights movement. "We've fought too hard, our parents shed too much blood, there was too many nights in jail, for you to take our vote from us now."
Sharpton said organized protests to demand a reinstatement of the provisions are forthcoming.
Kathleen Johnson and Jean McRae were at the first March on Washington 50 years ago, and as the crowd grew on Saturday, they reflected on the span in between.
"It was a wonderful experience (in 1963) because prior to that there were many things going on in the United States that were not right," Johnson said.
The injustices that existed in 1963 convinced Johnson and her family and friends to attend the march.
"We had to be there. We had to be a part of it," she said.
The fight for equality that the original march embodied remains a work in progress, McRae said, which makes Saturday's event so important.
"We need this, especially now," she said.
Both women wore buttons from the march in 1963.
Saturday's event is the first of two rallies to mark the anniversary.
President Barack Obama headlines another event Wednesday, the exact anniversary of the March on Washington, where MLK delivered the now-famous speech at the Lincoln Memorial.
The Wednesday event will include a longer march through Washington and speeches by Obama and former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.