Wednesday
Jul222015

Dropbox buys communication service Clementine

Dropbox looks like they aim to be a full enterprise solution. This time they acquire communication service Clementine. No details about the deal have been disclosed but Clementine users have been given a heads up that they have until August 31 to transition elsewhere.

Clementine offers chat and conference calling features without users having to exchange phone numbers. They can make calls and even join conference calls. This service joins the likes of Mailbox and Snapjoy as acquired Dropbox companies. Perhaps, it won’t be long until we can make calls right from within Dropbox files.

Source: Clementine | Via: The Next Web

Wednesday
Jul222015

Air Canada to use IBM apps on Apple mobile devices

Air Canada joins around 500 companies working with Apple and its enterprise partner IBM. This partnership was formed to help boost the stagnant sales of the iPad and to help make inroads in the enterprise market. Apple CFO Luca Maestri revealed details of this partnership during a call to discuss the company’s third-quarter earnings.

Maestri won’t divulge how many workers are using the apps. Although, for example, only a few Air Canada flight attendants could be using the Passenger+ app. This app lets them see passenger and flight information via an iPad. Other companies and even governments working with Apple and IBM include U.K. energy provider National Grid, Mexican bank Banorte, and American Eagle Outfitters. The companies are also working with the Japanese government for solutions to help care for its aging population. The partnership has yielded 35 apps and they still seem to be on track to meet the 100 apps they plan to release by the end of the year.

Source: ComputerWorld

Wednesday
Jul222015

Chinese regulator gives us first glimpse of OnePlus Two

Leaks of the OnePlus Two and its design have been circulating for a while now. But as was suspected, those were all just fakes. We now get a closer look at what the device looks like thanks to Chinese regulator TENAA (the Chinese equivalent of the FCC). The device looks rather similar to a Samsung one with its physical home button with silver accent, which we know will serve as a fingerprint scanner. The OnePlus One didn’t have any physical buttons before. There doesn’t seem to be a metallic bezel this time around so you get glass all the way in front. The device itself seems narrower and taller.

It seems the rear-facing camera has been moved further down with its dual-LED flash. There also seems to be a second sensor of sorts, which Cult of Android speculates could be something of a laser autofocus system like the one in the G3 and G4. There also seems to be a small groove on the bottom left of the device, which hopefully means the OnePlus Two’s back cover can be removed easier than its predecessor. There also seems to be a button placed at the left side of the device, it’s not clear yet what that additional button could be. Because it seems the power button might be under the volume rocker located at the right side.

Source: Cult of Android

Wednesday
Jul222015

Wristly Report: Apple Watch user satisfaction at 97 per cent

By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Wristly, an independent metrics company, has taken it upon themselves to measure user satisfaction of the Apple Watch and their findings show that those among the 800 respondents asked who own the Apple Watch are very satisfied with the first iteration of Apple's wearable.

The Wristly survey shows that Apple Watch as a version 1 product has actually gained higher customer satisfaction than the iPhone and iPad first did when they came out. These findings are remarkable for a product that's still very nascent and which is expected to get much more useful once the watchOS 2.0 update rolls out in the Fall. 

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