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lundi 14 décembre 2015

Inbox by Gmail Update Lets You Share Trip Bundles, Add Emails to a Trip and Improves Mobile Attachments

Inbox by Gmail Update Lets You Share Trip Bundles, Add Emails to a Trip and Improves Mobile Attachments

The Trip Bundles feature within Inbox by Gmail is receiving a new update this week with the ability to share them with friends and loved ones. Not only this, but a top feature request for Trip Bundles was the ability to add an email to the trip has been added too. Lastly, Google has improved mobile attachments to let you add multiple photos at once.



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Huawei has Plans to Bring Their Honor Brand into the US

Huawei Allegedly Has Plans to Bring Their Honor Brand into the US

Just last week, Huawei’s sub-brand Honor sent out press invites for a CES event. The invite was vague, but the President of Honor Global recently spoke during the Honor 2nd anniversary festival and said that entering the US market is something they have been planning for a while. He went on to say we can expect to hear more about these plans at CES in January.



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Leaked Promotional Images Reveal Details of the Samsung Galaxy A9

Leaked Promotional Images Reveal Details of the Samsung Galaxy A9

The Galaxy A9 looks to be the largest of the devices in Samsung’s A series lineup and today’s leak has revealed more information about it. The A9 is said to have a 6″ 1080p Super AMOLED display, the Snapdragon 620 SoC clocked at 1.8GHz, 3GB RAM, 32GB of storage, 13MP rear camera, a massive 4,000mAh capacity battery, Samsung Pay support (with fingerprint scanner) and Android 5.1.1 Lollipop.



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Pressure-Sensitive Display, USB Type C To Feature on Samsung Galaxy S7

Samsung to Reportedly Add USB Type-C and a Pressure-Sensitive Display to the Galaxy S7

The Wall Street Journal says that according to “people familiar with the matter”, the Galaxy S7 will feature two, possibly three, new additions over the S6. These sources say that the Galaxy S7 will have USB Type-C port for “high-speed charging”, that it will have a pressure-sensitive display (much like Apple’s 3D Touch) and that some variants could have a retina scanner.



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dimanche 13 décembre 2015

Lenovo Releases Android 6.0 Roadmap

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There haven’t been much news regarding Lenovo’s Android Marshmallow plans – until now. A photo with some sort of a roadmap has been captured at one of the conferences. Some Lenovo devices should start receiving Android 6.0 really soon – starting January to be precise. Updating all supported devices should take no more than seven months. That’s a long waiting time. A full list of updates in the article.



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Sunday Debate: Will Huawei Succeed in Western Markets?

huawei

In just a few years, Huawei managed to break into the Android scene with a bang, and after their 2015 line-up which included the revered Nexus 6P, the company is seemingly ready to expand towards new frontiers.

Despite the fact that the company has been around for awhile, it wasn’t until 2015 where Huawei began making both a better impression and a deeper incursion into the perceivable part of the Android iceberg. With their Honor brand, they are also attempting to nab new frontiers with a fresh name and suite aimed at “digital natives”. Huawei has been eyeing Western markets, and while it had a gradual expansion, the company is ready to launch Honor in the U.S., with an announcement expected at CES.

After a year full of phones and even smartwatches, it’s time to begin pondering whether Huawei is ready to not only expand, but perhaps also arrive to our own pockets. With phones like the Huawei Mate S pioneering technologies like “Force Touch” on Android, and products like the Huawei Watch touting the premium potential of the company, can Huawei make it into the aging flagship-centric markets?

  • Has Honor/Huawei caught your attention in 2015?
  • Which kind of products must they continue to put out?
  • How would Huawei stand out against the big industry names?
  • Would an online sales model benefit their inclusion, or hurt it?
  • Do you believe they can offer sufficiently-competitive products?

Food For Thought

Huawei has been determined to expand its sphere of influence for a while now, under the premise of premium products for these traditionally higher-end markets. In the West, many are under the (often unjustified) impression that Chinese manufacturers and smaller OEMs do not offer quality products. Phones like the Asus Zenfone 2 managed to make noise this year even in these markets, but not necessarily because of astounding quality. Huawei’s Android Wear watch proved that the company can do high-end, and it’s also the premium incursion they needed to condition those who never knew of the company until this year. The Mate S grabbed headlines again by incorporating “Force Touch” technology, and finally, the Nexus 6P turned enthusiast heads by providing one of the best pure Android experiences as of yet.

However, there are numerous factors in such a large incursion, and many of them aren’t favorable. By introducing Honor first, a 2-year old and largely unnoticed name, Huawei misses out on some of the reputation the 6P and Huawei Watch brought with them in 2015. The new name and brand is intended for Western markets, but its repertoire and credentials are not as thorough as Huawei’s, and as far as we know, they will mostly focus on releasing international devices like the Honor 7.  Finally, if these phones can’t secure a place in retail stores, and if they can’t adapt around the contract model, they could suffer the same fate other high-end products see as consumers either won’t pay the full price or won’t know about them. Considering the U.S. in particular is still a high-end market, this could limit Honor’s appeal, especially if they must introduce lower-cost or mid-range phones to compete at first.

Debating

In just a short span of time, Huawei became one of the most talked-about OEMs. Their new HiSilicon processor efforts, their revamped focus, their watch, their Honor brand and their Nexus gave us plenty to discuss and look forward to this year. But Huawei still has a long path ahead of it, one which many have failed. So we ask:

  • Has Honor/Huawei caught your attention in 2015?
  • Which kind of products must they continue to put out?
  • How would Huawei stand out against the big industry names?
  • Would an online sales model benefit their inclusion, or hurt it?
  • Do you believe they can offer sufficiently-competitive products?

 



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Console OS: Just a Fork of Android-x86?

Console_OS_Android_OS

Console OS, the platform that promised to you bring us production-grade Android onto our desktops, has been faced with accusations of being a scam. This comes to light after it was found that the source code that Console OS uploaded was nothing but minor modifications to Android-x86. Console OS does reiterate that the entire source code has not been uploaded, but the fact still remains that the backers have yet to receive what they were promised.



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