Wednesday
Jan152014

China Mobile's iPhone orders in the multi-millions

"We see this as bringing the world's best smartphone to the very largest and now the fastest network in China," Apple's CEO Tim Cook said in a recent CNBC interview together with China Mobile's Xi Gouhua. China Mobile is the world's largest mobile phone operator with over 760 million subscribers, it is also one of the fastest networks in terms of data speeds. The iPhone 5s and 5c are set to launch in China on Friday and there have been a reported 1.2 million totla preorders for Apple's latest handsets. Coming to China Mobile in the near future are WiFi + Cellular versions of the iPad Air and iPad mini.
Source: CNBC
Wednesday
Jan152014

HP gunning for mobile market with two new phablets

HP's long hinted that it may get back into the mobile market post-webOS. Now that they've sold off Palm's mobile operating system to LG, HP is betting on Android to power their Slate 6 and  Slate 7 tablets which feature voice calling. Looks like HP is shooting straight for the supersized smartphone market where it can make a dent. The new Jelly Bean powered slates are coming to India first but we'll hopefully see them come to North America sometime soon.

Source: Re/code

Tuesday
Jan142014

TELUS and Koodo Moto G's getting KitKat 4.4.2 update 

It looks like the humble yet over achieving Moto G has something its more powerful sibling, the Moto X, doesn't. At least here in Canada, the TELUS and KoodoMoto G's are getting the huge Android OS 4.4.2 update promised during launch late last year. This brings the latest, greatest version of Android to the Moto G and brings a new dialer, the highly touted full-screen mode, imrpoved battery life and the end to the blue on black interface that harkens back to the days of Honeycomb and Ice Cream Sandwich. For the full list of features, kindly go check out this link. As for the Moto X, word has it that we'll the long awaited update before February. 

Source: TELUS

Tuesday
Jan142014

YouTube unveils Comments Page to answer for user complaints

 

YouTube received flak for requiring users to have Google+ accounts to comment on videos and when they moved the comment notifications to Google+ notification page. Google’s video streaming service seemed to have listened to its large user base and introduced at Comments Page to help video creators manage, view and respond to comments in one place.

At the moment, the users will be required to click on the video page and reply to the comments there. But the company intends to allow for inline replying and expanding all replies on the Comments Page soon.

Source: YouTube Creator Blog