Thursday 31 January 2019

OnePlus suspends latest Open Beta update after it bricked some 5/5T phones

Oh, boy, that's not good. Due to a critical error with the last Open Beta that ended up soft-bricking some 5 and 5T devices, OnePlus is completely pulling the new build for those phones and for the 6/6T. Oops.

I noticed yesterday that the company had yanked the Open Beta 12 for the OP6, saying only that "The build has been pulled, a new OTA will be available soon." But then, a company rep took to the forums to announce that they had received reports of the OTA failing on some 5/5T units and soft-bricking those affected devices.

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OnePlus suspends latest Open Beta update after it bricked some 5/5T phones was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



26 temporarily free and 27 on-sale apps and games to finish January

The end of January is nigh upon us, but that also means it's time for another round of app sales. Today's list is much shorter than Monday's; better yet, it still has a couple things worth noting.

Free

Apps

  1. All Language-Camera Translator PRO $1.49 -> Free; 1 day
  2. Applock - Fingerprint Pro $4.49 -> Free; 4 days
  3. Binary Calculator Pro $0.99 -> Free; 5 days
  4. Business Calculator Pro $1.49 -> Free; 5 days
  5. Photo Editor Pro – Filters, Sticker, Collage Maker $4.99 -> Free; 6 days
  6. Salesforce Scanner $3.99 -> Free; 6 days

Games

  1. Fractal Space HD $2.49 -> Free; 1 day
  2. PUSH $0.99 -> Free; 1 day
  3. Cubes $0.99 -> Free; 2 days
  4. LASERBREAK Escape $1.99 -> Free; 2 days
  5. GeoMaze $0.99 -> Free; 4 days
  6. HEXASMASH 2 • Ball Shooter Physics Puzzle $1.99 -> Free; 4 days
  7. GORB $1.49 -> Free; 5 days
  8. Stone Of Souls 2: Stone Parts $0.99 -> Free; 5 days
  9. Stone Of Souls HD $0.99 -> Free; 5 days
  10. TD: Goblin Defenders - Towers Rush PRO $0.99 -> Free; 5 days
  11. Fit Toon - Series 2 $0.99 -> Free; 6 days
  12. Hockey Manager $4.99 -> Free; 6 days
  13. The Ball Reach $1.50 -> Free; 7 days
  14. World War 3 - Global Conflict (Tower Defence) $0.99 -> Free; 6 days
  15. Gravity - One tap hardest game ever $0.99 -> Free; 7 days
  16. Sudden Warrior Plus (Tap RPG) $0.99 -> Free; 7 days
  17. Word Rush Pro: Find Words $0.99 -> Free; 7 days

Icon packs & customization

  1. Art Alive: Night 3D Pro lwp $0.99 -> Free; 3 days
  2. Ksana Sweep Watch Face for Android Wear OS $0.99 -> Free; 5 days
  3. Text watchface like pebble $0.99 -> Free; 6 days

Sale

Apps

  1. Wedding Budget Planner $1.99 -> $0.99; 2 days
  2. Learn Spanish Language: Listen, Speak, Read Pro $3.99 -> $0.99; 4 days
  3. Learn Thai Language: Listen, Speak, Read Pro $5.99 -> $2.99; 4 days
  4. Learn Vietnamese - Language Learning Pro $5.99 -> $2.99; 4 days
  5. Camera Mute for Life $2.99 -> $0.99; 5 days
  6. Abi for Twitter $2.99 -> $0.99; 6 days
  7. Call Notes Pro - Notes in Hand $3.99 -> $0.99; 6 days
  8. Graphing Calculator $3.99 -> $1.49; 6 days
  9. PDF Reader, Viewer 2019 Pro $1.99 -> $0.99; 6 days
  10. RemindCall - Call Reminder, Call Notes $3.99 -> $0.99; 6 days
  11. Fenix 2 for Twitter $3.99 -> $1.99; 7 days
  12. Ray Watermark - Watermark with QR, Logo, Text $1.99 -> $0.99; 7 days
  13. Systems of linear equations $3.99 -> $0.99; 7 days
  14. World History $3.49 -> $1.99; 7 days

Games

  1. Meteorfall: Journeys $3.99 -> $1.99; 7 hours
  2. White Night $4.99 -> $0.99; 1 day
  3. Chess Repertoire Trainer Pro $4.99 -> $2.99; 2 days
  4. Sir Questionnaire $2.49 -> $0.99; 2 days
  5. OTTTD : Over The Top TD $6.99 -> $0.99; 5 days
  6. Space Battle $1.49 -> $0.99; 5 days
  7. Arkanoid Defense HD $1.99 -> $0.99; 7 days
  8. BattleTimeOS - Real Time Strategy Offline Game $1.99 -> $0.99; 7 days
  9. Dungeon Adventure: Heroic Ed.
Read More

26 temporarily free and 27 on-sale apps and games to finish January was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



$1299 will get you Meizu's no-port, no-hole, no-button phone on Indiegogo

When Meizu announced its concept Zero smartphone last week, the idea seemed outlandish, even if a logical continuation of the minimalism trend we've been seeing the last couple of years. At the time, Meizu swore the device existed and although we doubted that, it does look like the Zero will soon make its way into production as Meizu has opened up an Indiegogo campaign for it.

I should mention one thing first though: the entry price is $1299.

Read More

$1299 will get you Meizu's no-port, no-hole, no-button phone on Indiegogo was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



Sky's Now TV app for Android introduces offline viewing

Now TV is one of the UK's most popular streaming services, particularly because it's owned by Sky, the UK's biggest pay-TV provider. The latest update to the Android app introduces a long-awaited feature — offline viewing. It was promised before Christmas but is now finally rolling out.

The service allows you to watch some of Sky's best offerings — including True Detective, Westworld, and Alan Partridge's Mid Morning Matters — without going all in on a Sky TV box and the expensive contract that goes with it.

Read More

Sky's Now TV app for Android introduces offline viewing was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



[Update: Out now] Trese Brothers' Star Traders: Frontiers is coming to Android on January 30th

Trese Brothers is a well-known developer made up of two brothers, Cory and Andrew Trese. Their studio tends to focus its efforts on developing mobile strategy games, and over the years the company has built a well-deserved following. Last August Trese Brothers released a new entry in its popular Star Traders series on PC instead of mobile, and many fans were left wondering if the title would ever make its way to Android.

Read More

[Update: Out now] Trese Brothers' Star Traders: Frontiers is coming to Android on January 30th was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



Nimble Stand review: A thoughtful, well-designed wireless charging pad

Want a wireless charging pad that quickly charges your phone and attempts to make the world better? Read this.

Google Chrome to Start Warning Users About 'Lookalike URLs'; Group Tabbing Feature Live in Canary Channel

The latest stable version of Chrome has a "Navigation suggestions for lookalike URLs" flag to confirm the feature.

Huawei and Xiaomi had a stellar quarter in Europe, while the iPhone XS Max dominated the US market

After seeing Strategy Analytics, Counterpoint Research, and the International Data Corporation release various reports of late focusing on different aspects of the smartphone market during the final three months of 2018, it’s now time to hear what Kantar Worldpanel has to say on the same topic.

The self-described “global expert in shoppers’ behavior” has some interesting insight to provide into new industry trends across key regions like Western Europe, urban China, and the US.

The company’s fresh smartphone OS data compiled for the October - December 2018 timeframe reveals, ...

LG delivered big profit in 2018, despite major mobile losses

LG logo CES 2018 2

LG at large has enjoyed a pretty successful year, according to its 2018 financial results. The Korean company reported revenue of 61.3 trillion won (~$54.4 billion) for the year, along with a full year profit of 2.7 trillion won (~$2.4 billion).

The company’s 2018 profit exceeds its 2017 figure which, at the time, was LG’s highest annual profit since 2009. LG attributed the latest results to record performance by its appliances and home entertainment divisions.

Its mobile unit, on the other hand, delivered a full year loss of 790.1 billion won (~$700.65 million). But the Korean company said its mobile division showed improvements due to “better material cost controls and overhead efficiencies based on the company’s platform modularization strategy.”

LG says it’ll push 5G smartphones and phones with “different form factors” in order to improve its mobile footing. The company adds that it’ll also focus on “key” markets, such as the U.S. and Korea, where the brand is still doing well.

Editor's Pick

LG also touched on its Q4 2018 results at large, noting an operating profit of 75.7 billion won (~$67.1 million). This marks a seven percent decline compared to Q4 2017. The Korean colossus blamed lower sales of mobile devices for the decline. In fact, the firm revealed a Q4 2018 loss of 322.3 billion won (~$289.7 million) for its mobile unit, with sales at 1.71 trillion won (~$1.51 billion). By comparison, the unit’s Q4 2017 loss stood at 213.2 billion won (~$192.3 million).

The company is clearly pinning its hopes on 5G phones and foldable phones, but the rest of the industry isn’t standing still either. Foldable phones in particular represent a radical shift for the sector, and a polished, practical product could certainly put LG in a better position for 2019.

NEXT: Samsung profits plunge as global smartphone shipments slip



Apple's future iPhones & iPads were just detailed: triple-cameras, iOS 13 and 3D sensors

An alleged iPhone XI prototype design

The 2019 iPhone series is still eight months away but this month already we have seen multiple leaks which have revealed two potential designs and quite a few camera details. Today, Bloomberg has published a new report which corroborates some of these leaks and also describes a number of other things.The iPhone XI Max will include a third camera on the rear

Like The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg believes the iPhone XI Max, which is codenamed ‘D43,’ will arrive complete with a new triple-camera ...

The discounted Instant Pot Duo Plus can feed a family of six for $80

Easiest cooking you'll do all day.

The Instant Pot Duo Plus 60 6-quart 9-in-1 programmable pressure cooker is down to $79.99 on Amazon today only. This deal brings it back down to within a few cents of its Black Friday price. It's even cheaper than the smaller version right now. This model adds several functions that most Instant Pots don't have.

The Duo Plus is meant to take the place of up to nine different kitchen appliances: pressure cooker, slow cooker, rice cooker, yogurt maker, egg cooker, sauté, steamer, warmer, and sterilizer. It's large enough to feed a group of four to six people, which makes it great for families and group picnics and office potlucks. It has more than a dozen preset programs, easy-to-use controls, and it's highly energy efficient. It will keep food warm when finished cooking and comes with temperature settings for uses like the slow cooker.

Users give it 4.5 stars based on over 4,200 reviews.

Stuck on what to do with your powerful new cooker? Check out this inexpensive Instant Pot cookbook. You might want to get a clear glass lid so you can see what's going on, too.

See on Amazon



Keep your website at the top of search results with SERPstash

SERPstash Premium

Having a killer website for your startup, web comic, experimental band, or anything you’re trying to promote doesn’t matter much if nobody sees it. SERPstash Premium will help you get as many eyes as possible on your site.

SERPstash gives you 21 different tools you can use to boost your site’s ranking on Google and Bing, including running an audit on your page to find areas that need improvement in terms of SEO keywords, identifying your competitors and the keywords they use, and showing you the top queries that are bringing the most traffic to your site.

You’ll also be able to test whether or not your page is “mobile-friendly,” which affects both user experience (obviously) and how high Google ranks it in search results (less obvious). It’s all about getting your site on the first page of Google’s search results, and with SERPstash, you’ll be there in no time.

Normally a lifetime subscription to SERPstash Premium would run you $500, but right now you can take 94 percent off that price and get one for just $29 by clicking the button below.

The AAPicks team writes about things we think you’ll like, and we may see a share of revenue from any purchases made through affiliate links. To see all our hottest deals, head over to the AAPICKS HUB



Deal: Grab an Apple Watch Series 3 for as low as $279 at B&H

If you've missed the last two Apple Watch Series 3 sales at Best Buy and still looking to buy one, you'll be happy to know that another U.S. retailer offers some decent discounts on Apple's smartwatch.

B&H continues to run its Apple Watch Series 3 sale, but this time it includes the Nike+ line as well, both GPG and cellular versions. As the title says, the cheapest Apple Watch Series 3 that you can get at B&H during the sale cost $279, about $100 cheaper than the list price.

We're talking about the Apple Watch Nike+ Series 3 38mm (GPS + cellular), which comes with a free AVODA ...

Instagram Stories Now Has 500 Million Active Daily Users; Facebook Plans New Products to Improve People's Lives

Instagram Stories was launched as a Snapchat clone back in 2016.

Samsung profits plunge as global smartphone shipments slip

The Samsung logo.

  • Samsung reported declining profits to the tune of 28.7% year on year.
  • Display, Memory and Mobility business most affected.
  • Samsung is counting on future technologies like 5G and foldable smartphones to reverse the trend.

Samsung has reported a drastic plunge in profits amidst a global slump in smartphone sales. The company issued their quarterly earnings report earlier today, reporting an operating profit of 10.80 trillion won or $9.7 billion.

While that might seem like a healthy profit, it’s a drop of 28.7 percent year on year. The slump comes at a time when global smartphone sales declined 7 percent, the fifth consecutive quarter of decline in shipments. Samsung confirmed the decline in profit was due to slowing demand for memory chips used in smartphones and data centers.

In addition to memory, Samsung’s display business was also hurt by increasing competition between panel manufacturers for mobile devices. The last few years have seen an increase in the number of manufacturers for LCD display panels. With an overall slowdown in demand for panels, there is extra pressure on Samsung’s display business. Over the coming year, Samsung’s OLED business is also likely to be affected as more players get in the display panel business and compete with higher quality LTPS LCD panels.

The front of the Samsung Galaxy M10.

The Samsung Galaxy M10.

The IT & Mobile Communications division at Samsung didn’t fare much better as shipments slowed down in light of tough competition from Chinese smartphone vendors at lower price points. Samsung has been finding it increasingly hard to remain their lead in critical markets like India and China. Huawei, Honor, and OnePlus have doubled their efforts across market segments and are making inroads with smaller profit margins. The company’s recently launched Galaxy M10 and Galaxy M20 are part of fresh efforts to reverse this trend.

As global smartphone demand and product dynamics change, Samsung will have to get more aggressive in the entry-level segment while focussing on future-looking technologies for the premium segment.

Editor's Pick

Going forward, the company expects the memory business to remain weak in the first quarter, which is generally a quieter period for Samsung as it builds up to its first major flagship release of the year. Samsung expects sales to improve with the announcement of the Galaxy S10 smartphone series on February 20. Couple that with improvements in the company’s smart assistant, Bixby, and associated products as well as an all-new foldable smartphone, and Samsung’s IT & Mobility division could quickly return to form.

With flagship prices expected to touch $1500 or even higher this year, high-end smartphone sales might not pick up enough to help Samsung’s business. Do you think it will be able to make up for it in the entry-level and mid-range segment? Let us know in the comments section.



Samsung's Q4 2018 smartphone profits were the lowest in more than two years

Global smartphone sales are down (and unlikely to bounce back in the next few quarters), impacting the bottom line of both Apple and Samsung while Huawei somehow continues to defy market trends.

The final three months of 2018 have been particularly problematic for Samsung, as the mediocre performance of the chaebol’s mobile division could no longer be offset by the semiconductor business.

That’s because demand for memory chips is also sliding, a trend likely to continue in the early stages of 2019. All in all, Samsung did manage to generate a solid Q4 2018 operating profit ...

Foldable phones would kill the tablet category

The flexible phone will likely kill the Android tablet

With the advent of flexible and shape-bending phones that hold to potential to pack lots of screen in a relatively slim body, there’s one product category that could be in dire danger - the tablet.

With the iPad being a solid exception, the Android market has been declining for a couple of years now, to the point where we could probably expect merely one or two more exciting tablet announcements per year. While there are many reasons for this decline, the main one is certainly the fact that phones have been exploding in terms ...

Microsoft launches new Outlook app for iOS devices

Last month Microsoft revealed that its Outlook app for iOS will receive a major redesign, but failed to mention when exactly the new app will be made available to users. The new design was only available to beta testers since December, but starting today, Microsoft is rolling it out to everyone.

The visual changes are quite obvious, as Outlook for iOS now features an all-white design. A blue bar at the top of the app allows users to switch between Focused and Other emails inside the Inbox, which, as Microsoft said, was part of Android.

The new design comes with new animations and ...

Deal: Get two Google Home Mini smart speakers for just $40

Google's Home Mini is the best-selling smart speaker in the low-tier price range, but Apple seems to have gained more revenue selling the Home Pod, which is considerably more expensive. Currently, you can buy one for just $30 at Google Store, but that's because it's on sale for $20 off.

At just $30, the Google Home Mini is a steal, so the fact that you can get it for even less is simply amazing. The only requirement to get the Google Home Mini cheaper than $30 is to buy two instead of just one.

BuyDig via Rakuten now offers a 2-pack of Google Home Mini smart speakers for only $40, ...

YouTube Music is coming to Sonos speakers, but you'll need a subscription

Sonos fans rejoice, as Google has just announced YouTube Music is now rolling out to all Sonos speakers. Google's service is available through the Sonos app, but in order to be able to use it, you'll need a YouTube Music Premium or YouTube Premium subscription.

If you already have a subscription, you'll be able to play official songs, albums, playlists, and artist radio, in addition to YouTube's huge catalog of remixes, live performances, and covers. The YouTube Music app comes with various tabs that give users access to content like new releases, top charts, mixtape, suggestions, and library.

The ...

Samsung's take on the gaming smartphone is bold and peculiar at the same time

The history of gaming phones goes back to the early 2000s when Nokia launched the bizarre N-Gage, which was specifically designed to play mobile games. After a long break, the gaming smartphones are making a comeback with the launch of a new line of more powerful devices such as the Razer Phone and Asus ROG Phone.

Xiaomi has joined the competition as well with the Black Shark, but major smartphone vendors like Apple, Huawei, and Samsung have yet to launch a gaming smartphone, even though some of them tried to advertise their top-tier handsets as such.

Well, it looks like Samsung is ...

T-Mobile has a mysterious announcement to make during Super Bowl LIII

T-Mobile today unveiled that it's getting ready to announce something (possibly important) during Super Bowl LIII. Scheduled for February 3, 2019, Super Bowl LIII will determine the champion of the 2018 NFL (National Football League) season and is expected to be watched by over 100 million American television viewers.

While T-Mobile doesn't want to share too many details about its upcoming Super Bowl announcement, it can tell us what this won't cover. Specifically, the announcement will not be about: T-Mobile's merger with Sprint, the deployment of 5G, or the carrier's ...

Audio recorded from OnePlus 6/6T sounds tinny, distorted and distant on some third party apps

OnePlus 6T users have recently complained about a sharp decline in the battery life of the device. Today, there is another issue being discussed on Reddit and the OnePlus forum (via Android Police) revolving around the poor recording quality of the OnePlus 6 and OnePlus 6T with certain apps. Audio recorded from the last two OnePlus handsets sounds like it is coming from a distant planet when heard over Snapchat, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp and more. The quality is poor, there is a tinny quality to it, and the sound is distorted.

The problem apparently stems from ...

Amazon's Super Bowl ad shows why Alexa shouldn't be on everything



You might recall last year's Super Bowl ad for Amazon that showed company founder, CEO, and richest man in the world Jeff Bezos perplexed after virtual assistant Alexa lost her voice. This was totally fictitious (although Alexa did go down the next month) and Bezos was presented with a number of different celebrity replacements including Gordon Ramsay, Cardi B, Rebel Wilson and Anthony Hopkins.

Today, Amazon released its Super Bowl ad for this weekend's big game between the L.A. Rams and the New England Patriots (will head coach Bill Belichick throw around his Surface ...

Quirky foldable phones you probably forgot about


All fingers point toward a certainty that’s no doubt fresh on the minds of consumers. Foldable phones are coming – and they've been the talk of the town over the last few months. LG, Motorola, and Xiaomi are said to have foldable handsets already in development, while Samsung’s foldable smartphone is allegedly pegged for an official unveiling as soon as next month.

But there's still a bit of doubt about foldable phones and their potential to become mainstream. Just recently, during CES 2019, we got to see the flexible Royole FlexPai ...

AT&T Mobility's fourth quarter looks sad compared to T-Mobile and Verizon

AT&T reported its fourth quarter earnings today, and the company fell short of analyst's expectations for its wireless operations. For the three month period that ran from October through December, AT&T added 134,000 net postpaid phone subscribers; Wall Street expected a gain of 208,000 customers for this category. Churn was 1%, up 11 basis points from the .89% recorded during the same quarter in 2017. The carrier added 13,000 postpaid pre-paid phone net additions.

Jonathan Chaplin, an analyst with New Street Research, blamed the increase in churn on the heavy ...

Future Nokia smartphones to offer high-quality display and video performance

HMD Global, the Finnish company behind Nokia smartphones, has just announced it has expanded its partnership with Pixelworks, a major player in the visual display processing and advanced video delivery solutions industry.

The first product that benefited from the collaboration between the two companies, the Nokia 7.1 boasts an impressive PureDisplay screen that enhances the viewing experience. This is also the first smartphone that uses Pixelworks' last-gen Iris processor and Qualcomm's mid-tier Snapdragon 636 chipset to deliver exceptional visual performance on an LCD display.

The ...

Google+ consumer accounts to be discontinued on April 2, some features killed off in February

After discovering a bug that impacted 52.5 million users, Google announced more than a month ago that it has decided to shut down Google+ earlier than it originally planned. So, instead of killing off the service in August 2019, the search giant confirmed Google+ consumer accounts will be discontinued in April 2019.

Today, the Mountain View company confirmed Google+ for consumer accounts is shutting down on April 2, 2019. Moreover, some of the service's features will be discontinued starting early next week.

For example, beginning February 4, if you have a personal Google+ account, ...

Apple's future iPhones & iPads were just detailed: triple-cameras, iOS 13 and 3D cameras

An alleged iPhone XI prototype design

The 2019 iPhone series is still eight months away but this month already we have seen multiple leaks which have revealed two potential designs and quite a few camera details. Today, Bloomberg has published a new report which corroborates some of these leaks and also describes a number of other things.The iPhone XI Max will include a third camera on the rear

Like The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg believes the iPhone XI Max, which is codenamed ‘D43,’ will arrive complete with a new triple-camera ...

T-Mobile and Sprint post-merger plans include building five customer experience centers

T-Mobile and Sprint have just issued a common statement on post-merger plans promising to build five customers experience centers. As soon as their proposed merger to become the New T-Mobile will close, the new carrier will build these so-called Customer Experience Centers around the United States, each creating an average of 1,000 new jobs.

Besides creating 5,000 new American jobs, these Customer Experience Centers will offer consumers T-Mobile's TEX (Team of Experts) service, a more personalized support that uses a dedicate Care team to provide customers with the best service.

The ...

Pie is finally served to the Verizon Samsung Galaxy S9/S9+

Yesterday, we told you that Samsung Galaxy S9 and Samsung Galaxy S9+ users belonging to Xfinity Mobile subscribers were making history. They were the first with U.S. carrier-locked versions of the 2018 flagships to receive the Android 9 Pie update along with the new One UI interface. Today Verizon announced that it is pushing out the update to its Galaxy S9 and Galaxy S9+ handsets. The software version for the former is PPR1.180610.011.G965USQU3CSAB, and for the latter that number is PPR1.180610.011.G965USQU3CSAB. Both include the January 1st, 2019 Android security patch.

Android ...

OxygenOS Open Beta updates for OnePlus 5/5T and 6/6T are pulled after units get bricked

OnePlus has pulled the latest OxygenOS Open Beta updates for the OnePlus 5 and OnePlus 5T after some users reported that the update bricked their phone. According to OnePlus, users of the two models reported that the OTA update failed to install on some units while some really unlucky owners were unable to turn on their device after loading the update. To be on the safe side, the company also pulled the latest Open Beta updates for the OnePlus 6 and OnePlus 6T.

The updates involved include Open Beta 26 for the OnePlus 5, and Open Beta 24 for the OnePlus 5T. The ...

Best Buy brings Moto G6 price down to $100 in killer new deal (with a few requirements)

When it comes to ultra-affordable mid-range phones with respectable specifications and surprisingly premium build quality, you can’t do much better than the Moto X4 and Moto G6.

While the latter, 2018-released model is technically slower than 2017’s X4, its larger, trendier 2:1 screen and generally lower price point might make the Moto G6 the overall superior deal. Especially at $99.99.

If you thought $179 was a small price to pay for an unlocked G6 or that Google Fi’s newest $149 Moto X4 listing with free $50 service credit included would be impossible to beat, Best Buy is ...

As Apple & Samsung declined, Huawei's smartphone shipments exploded in 2018

The Mate 20 Pro – Huawei was the big winner last year

Last year was a pretty tough year in the smartphone world with all but Huawei and Xiaomi experiencing struggles at some point in the year. In fact, according to data from IDC, shipments declined 4.1%, thus marking the worst year ever for smartphones.

Overall, 1.404 billion devices were shipped throughout 2018. Once again, Samsung led the industry with sales of 292.3 million for the entire year and a market share of 20.8%. These figures are certainly impressive but do represent a sharp ...

New iPhone and Android games worth playing in 2019

If you are wondering what new mobile games are worth playing, you might feel a bit lost when you open the app store and get swamped with all the new releases.

That's why we have picked the games that we enjoyed the most and cast out the ones that go overboard with the in-app purchases and other shenanigans.

In this list you'd find different genres of games, all newly released and sorted with one important criteria in mind: how fun they are to play!

So let's take a closer look at the best new games for Android and iPhone in early ...

Meizu's unique "holeless" phone is priced at $1299 on Indiegogo



Remember that port-less, button-less phone that Meizu introduced last week? Even though it was considered a concept device, the Meizu Zero is available on crowdfunding site Indiegogo (via Android Police). Meizu has priced the device at $1,299 with an April delivery expected. The manufacturer has 100 units available, and 9 have been claimed thus far. The manufacturer also sold the one unit it was offering for delivery this month at a price of $2,999.

Overall, Meizu is seeking to raise $100,000, and with 31 days left in the campaign, it has been able to meet 14% of the ...

Mobvoi TicWatch E2 offers a compelling package for being priced at $160 [hands-on]


To some people, it’s outright robbery paying $400 for a smartwatch. Sure, it’s still not close to the cost of some of today’s ultra-premium smartphones that hover around the $1000 range, but $400 is still quite an investment. Then again, there’s Mobvoi’s TicWatch E2, which is a Wear OS running smartwatch that can be picked up on the cheap for a mere $160!

The savings you’d get going with the TicWatch E2 is no doubt something consumers will appreciate, especially those who are on a tight budget to begin with. Being priced that low would generally be suspect ...

Save $300 on Apple's MacBook Pro (15.4", 2018) with Intel Core i7 processor, Touch Bar, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD

Buy Here

Apple's new MacBook Pro laptops are excellent gadgets that are unfortunately accompanied by proportionately steep MSRPs. MacBooks are also generally known for retaining said prices well after release, so seeing a discount on one is a relatively rare sighting. If you have the cash and intention to invest in ...

Potent Apple iPhone hacking tool proves that Karma is a bitch

A tool called Karma allowed former U.S. spies working for the United Arab Emirates to hack into iPhones belonging to certain targets. According to Reuters, Karma was used on the iOS powered handsets belonging to leaders of foreign countries, activists and diplomats. Reuters reviewed documents and spoke with five of the operatives involved in the spying.

The report says that the spying took place starting in 2016 and targets included a human-rights activist in Yemen who had won the Nobel Peace Prize, a senior official in Turkey, and the Emir of Qatar. Overall, there ...

Deal: Get a new 65-inch Hisense 4K Smart TV for $498 at Walmart, save big!


Buy Here

A 65-inch Hisense 4K LED Smart TV is available at a very alluring price. This model comes with Roku TV and can be found discounted to $640 at places like Best Buy, but right now you can get it for just $498 at Walmart. That's a discount of $142 or around 22%.

The panel on this TV boasts a 4K resolution of 3840p x 2160p. The refresh rate is 120Hz, ...

Android Q dark mode: how much battery power would it save?

An integrated, system-wide dark mode – this is one of the biggest new features expected to come with Android Q later this year. Excited? You should be! While an all-black interface doesn't look particularly cheerful, it has a number of benefits we can all appreciate: reduced eye strain, for instance. In this article, however, we'll explore a different benefit of a dark theme – its potential to improve a phone's battery life.

This power-saving ability applies to devices with OLED screens in particular: where each pixel is lit individually and the darker it is, the less power it consumes. ...

iPhone XI rumor review: what are the 2019 iPhones going to be all about?

Well, folks, 2019 is here and although we’ve got months of waiting before the next generation of iPhones hits us — there are already rumors about them floating about the Web. Never too early for those if your device is hot enough, we guess.

As every year, we expect the iPhone XI (or however Apple decides to call it this time around) to be announced all the way in September. But, already, we have some juicy tidbits of information about them. Let’s gather it all up!

Three models
In 2017, Apple launched the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus with a design very, very similar to what we have ...

Do we really need compact phones?

Over the past few years, smartphones have been growing and growing, presumably driven by customer demand for bigger and bigger screens. When the first Galaxy Note launched, it was mocked for having a “needlessly big”, 5.3-inch screen. But it happened to spark a revolution and start a trend of bigger and bigger smartphones. Here we are, in 2019, and a 5.5-inch screen is just your regular, run-of-the-mill phone.

However, as they grew in size, we still had a compact phone offering here and there. Sony always had a Compact series of its main flagship line, offering a smaller phone with the same ...

Samsung trademarks 'Celeb Alarm,' so that Galaxy S10 can blare The Rock to wake us

Make of it what you will but Samsung has been granted a trademark approval by the European patent office that goes like this: "Celeb Alarm." We can only imagine one scenario for waking us up with this option, and one phone where the feature could make a cameo - the Galaxy S10.

Whether you will feel personally taken out of REM sleep by the blaring sound of Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson battle cries (hey, he is the 10th most popular person for 2018!), the mumbling of Kanye, or the lusciously spoiled voice of his equal half, Samsung could be preparing us for a treat. 
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Samsung posts fourth-quarter profit drop, warns of weak demand until the second half of 2019

Samsung Electronics reported its largest quarterly profit decline in two years during its earnings report today. As the Galaxy maker warned in its earnings guidance earlier this month, its results were hurt by slower-than-expected demand for semiconductors, which had bolstered its earnings in previous quarters even when smartphone sales were slow.

Samsung’s forecast was also dour, at least for the first half of the year. It said annual earnings will decline thanks to continuing weak demand for chips, but expects demand for memory products and OLED panels to improve during the second half.

The company’s fourth-quarter operating profit was 10.8 trillion won (about $9.7 billion), a 28.7 percent decrease from the 15.15 trillion won it recorded in the same period one year ago. Revenue was 59.27 trillion won, a 10.2 percent drop year over year.

Broken out by business, Samsung’s semiconductor unit recorded quarterly operating profit of 7.8 trillion won, down from 10.8 trillion won a year ago. Its mobile unit’s operating profit was 1.5 trillion won, compared to 2.4 trillion won a year ago.

Smartphone makers, including Samsung rival Apple, have been hit hard by slowing smartphone sales around the world, especially in China. Upgrade cycles are also becoming longer as customers wait to buy newer models.

This hurt both Samsung’s smartphone and chip sales, as “overall market demand for NAND and DRAM drop[ped] due to macroeconomic uncertainties and adjustments in inventory levels by customers including datacenter companies and smartphone makers,” said the company’s earnings report.

Samsung expects chip sales to be sluggish during the first quarter because of weak seasonality and inventory adjustments by its biggest customers. The company was optimistic about the last two quarters of 2019, when it expects demand for chips and OLED panels to pick up thanks seasonal demand and customers finishing their inventory adjustments.



Facebook shares shoot up after strong Q4 earnings despite data breach

Facebook managed to beat Wall Street’s estimates in its Q4 earnings amidst a constant beat down in the press. Facebook hit 2.32 billion monthly users, up 2.2 perecent from 2.27 billion last quarter, speeding up its growth rate. Facebook climbed to 1.52 billion daily active users from 1.49 billion last quarter for a 2 percent growth rate that dwarfed last quarter’s 1.36 percent.

Facebook earned $16.91 billion off all those users with a $2.38 GAAP earnings per share. Those numbers handily beat Wall Street’s expectations of $16.39 billion in revenue and $2.18 GAAP earnings per share, plus 2.32 billion monthly and 1.51 billion daily active users. Facebook’s daily to monthly user ratio, or stickiness, held firm at 66 percent where it’s stayed for years, showing those still on Facebook aren’t using it much less.

Facebook shares had closed today at $150.42 but shot up over 11 percent following the record revenue and profit announcements to hover around $167. A big 30 percent year-over-year boost in average revenue per user in North America fueled those gains. Yet that’s still down from $186 where it was a year ago and a peak of $217 in July.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg went beyond his usual intro to the earnings report where he assures investors things are going well and highlights new opportunities. This quarter he noted “We’ve fundamentally changed how we run our company to focus on the biggest social issues, and we’re investing more to build new and inspiring ways for people to connect.”

Squeezing Money From The Olds

Facebook managed to grow its DAU in both the critical US & Canada and Europe markets where it earns the most money after stagnation or shrinkage in previous quarters. The fact that Facebook is no longer dwindling it its most lucrative markets is surely contributing to its share price climb. Facebook’s monthly active user plateaued in North America but roared up in Europe. That was shored up by a reversal of last quarter’s decline in Rest Of World average revenue per user, which fell 4.7% in Q3 but bounced back with 16.5 percent growth in Q4.

 

Facebook raked in $6.8 billion in profit this quarter as it slowed down hiring and only grew headcount 5 percent from 33,606 to 35,587. It seems Facebook has gotten to a comfortable place with its security staff-up in the wake of election interference, fake news, and content moderation troubles. Its revenue is up 30 percent year-over-year while profits grew 61 percent, which is pretty remarkable for a 15-year old technology company.

Earnings Call

Facebook’s plan to concentrate on product innovation in 2019 after focusing on security in 2018 was the core of today’s earnings call. Zuckerberg laid out a product roadmap for more ephemerality and encryption, how unifying the infrastructure of Facebook’s messaging apps will better connect Marketplace to WhatsApp, Groups will become an organizing function for more of the Facebook experience, and shopping features will crop up across the family of apps. You can read Zuckerberg’s full opening statement here.

New stats included 500 million daily Instagram Stories users and 2 million advertisers on Stories. Zuckerberg said he was pleasantly surprised by Facebook Portal sales but didn’t give specifics. He revealed 2.7 billion people now use Facebook’s family of apps each month. However, CFO David Wehner warned the company would eventually stop sharing Facebook-only stats, presumably to mask the shift of younger users to its other apps. He also cautioned that due to the shift of users from feeds to Stories that Facebook has less experience monetizing, and targeting headwinds due to increased privacy scrutiny, Facebook predicts mid-single digit revenue growth rate reductions each quarter this year.

We just released our community update and quarterly results.We've fundamentally changed how we run our company to…

Posted by Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday, January 30, 2019

While the quarter went well, morale isn’t quite as rosy. It’s been a brutal quarter for Facebook At least its swifter user growth rates show Facebook survived its biggest ever data breach without scaring off too many people. Meanwhile it’s continuously struggled with scandals like hiring opposition research firm Definers, and it saw its new teen app Lasso largely flop. Facebook will have to convince investors it knows how to win back the next generation, or at least keep squeezong a lot more money out of the last one like it did in Q4.



Senator Warner calls on Zuckerberg to support market research consent rules

In response to TechCrunch’s investigation of Facebook paying teens and adults to install a VPN that lets it analyze all their phone’s traffic, Senator Mark Warner (D-VA) has sent a letter to Mark Zuckerberg. It admonishes Facebook for not spelling out exactly which data the Facebook Research app was collecting or giving users adequate information necessary to determine if they should accept payment in exchange for selling their privacy. Following our report, Apple banned Facebook’s Research app from iOS and shut down its internal employee-only workplace apps too as punishment, causing mayhem in Facebook’s office.

Warner wrote to Zuckerberg, “In both the case of Onavo and the Facebook Research project, I have concerns that users were not appropriately informed about the extent of Facebook’s data-gathering and the commercial purposes of this data collection. Facebook’s apparent lack of full transparency with users – particularly in the context of ‘research’ efforts – has been a source of frustration for me.”

Warner is working on writing new laws to govern data collection initiatives like Facebook Research. He asks Zuckerberg, “Will you commit to supporting legislation requiring individualized, informed consent in all instances of behavioral and market research conducted by large platforms on users?”

Senator Blumenthal’s fierce statement

Meanwhile, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) provided TechCrunch with a fiery statement regarding our investigation. He calls Facebook anti-competitive, which could fuel calls to regulate or break up Facebook, says the FTC must address the issue and that he’s planning to work with congress to safeguard teens’ privacy:

“Wiretapping teens is not research, and it should never be permissible. This is yet another astonishing example of Facebook’s complete disregard for data privacy and eagerness to engage in anti-competitive behavior. Instead of learning its lesson when it was caught spying on consumers using the supposedly ‘private’ Onavo VPN app, Facebook rebranded the intrusive app and circumvented Apple’s attempts to protect iPhone users. Facebook continues to demonstrate its eagerness to look over everyone’s shoulder and watch everything they do in order to make money. 

Mark Zuckerberg’s empty promises are not enough. The FTC needs to step up to the plate, and the Onavo app should be part of its investigation. I will also be writing to Apple and Google on Facebook’s egregious behavior, and working in Congress to make sure that teens are protected from Big Tech’s privacy intrusions.”

Senator Markey says stop surveiling teens

And finally, Senator Edward J. Markey (D-MA) requests that Facebook stop recruiting teens for its Research program, and notes he’ll push his “Do Not Track Kids” act in Congress:

“It is inherently manipulative to offer teens money in exchange for their personal information when younger users don’t have a clear understanding how much data they’re handing over and how sensitive it is. I strongly urge Facebook to immediately cease its recruitment of teens for its Research Program and explicitly prohibit minors from participating. Congress also needs to pass legislation that updates children’s online privacy rules for the 21st century. I will be reintroducing my ‘Do Not Track Kids Act’ to update the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act by instituting key privacy safeguards for teens. 

But my concerns also extend to adult users. I am alarmed by reports that Facebook is not providing participants with complete information about the extent of the information that the company can access through this program. Consumers deserve simple and clear explanations of what data is being collected and how it being used.”

The senators’ statements do go a bit overboard. Though Facebook Research was aggressively competitive and potentially misleading, Blumenthal calling it “anti-competitive” is a stretch. And Warner’s questioning on whether “any user reasonably understood that they were giving Facebook root device access through the enterprise certificate” or that it uses the data to track competitors oversteps the bounds. Surely some savvy technologists did, but the question is whether all the teens and everyone else understood.

Facebook isn’t the only one paying users to analyze all their phone data. TechCrunch found that Google had a similar program called Screenwise Meter. Though it was more upfront about it, Google also appears to have violated Apple’s employee-only Enterprise Certificate rules. We may be seeing the start to an industry-wide crack down on market research surveillance apps that dangle gift cards in front of users to get them to give up a massive amount of privacy.

Warner’s full letter to Zuckerberg can be found below:

Dear Mr. Zuckerberg: 

I write to express concerns about allegations of Facebook’s latest efforts to monitor user activity. On January 29th, TechCrunch revealed that under the auspices of partnerships with beta testing firms, Facebook had begun paying users aged 13 to 35 to install an enterprise certificate, allowing Facebook to intercept all internet traffic to and from user devices. According to subsequent reporting by TechCrunch, Facebook relied on intermediaries that often “did not disclose Facebook’s involvement until users had begun the signup process.” Moreover, the advertisements used to recruit participants and the “Project Disclosure” make no mention of Facebook or the commercial purposes to which this data was allegedly put.

This arrangement comes in the wake of revelations that Facebook had previously engaged in similar efforts through a virtual private network (VPN) app, Onavo, that it owned and operated. According to a series of articles by the Wall Street Journal, Facebook used Onavo to scout emerging competitors by monitoring user activity – acquiring competitors in order to neutralize them as competitive threats, and in cases when that did not work, monitor usage patterns to inform Facebook’s own efforts to copy the features and innovations driving adoption of competitors’ apps. In 2017, my staff contacted Facebook with questions about how Facebook was promoting Onavo through its Facebook app – in particular, framing the app as a VPN that would “protect” users while omitting any reference to the main purpose of the app: allowing Facebook to gather market data on competitors.

Revelations in 2017 and 2018 prompted Apple to remove Onavo from its App Store in 2018 after concluding that the app violated its terms of service prohibitions on monitoring activity of other apps on a user’s device, as well as a requirement to make clear what user data will be collected and how it will be used. In both the case of Onavo and the Facebook Research project, I have concerns that users were not appropriately informed about the extent of Facebook’s data-gathering and the commercial purposes of this data collection.

Facebook’s apparent lack of full transparency with users – particularly in the context of ‘research’ efforts – has been a source of frustration for me. As you recall, I wrote the Federal Trade Commission in 2014 in the wake of revelations that Facebook had undertaken a behavioral experiment on hundreds of thousands of users, without obtaining their informed consent. In submitted questions to your Chief Operating Officer, Sheryl Sandberg, I once again raised these concerns, asking if Facebook provided for “individualized, informed consent” in all research projects with human subjects – and whether users had the ability to opt out of such research. In response, we learned that Facebook does not rely on individualized, informed consent (noting that users consent under the terms of the general Data Policy) and that users have no opportunity to opt out of being enrolled in research studies of their activity. In large part for this reason, I am working on legislation to require individualized, informed consent in all instances of behavioral and market research conducted by large platforms on users. 

Fair, robust competition serves as an impetus for innovation, product differentiation, and wider consumer choice. For these reasons, I request that you respond to the following questions: 

1. Do you think any user reasonably understood that they were giving Facebook root device access through the enterprise certificate? What specific steps did you take to ensure that users were properly informed of this access? 

2. Do you think any user reasonably understood that Facebook was using this data for commercial purposes, including to track competitors?

3. Will you release all participants from the confidentiality agreements Facebook made them sign?

4. As you know, I have begun working on legislation that would require large platforms such as Facebook to provide users, on a continual basis, with an estimate of the overall value of their data to the service provider. In this instance, Facebook seems to have developed valuations for at least some uses of the data that was collected (such as market research). This further emphasizes the need for users to understand fully what data is collected by Facebook, the full range of ways in which it is used, and how much it is worth to the company. Will you commit to supporting this legislation and exploring methods for valuing user data holistically?

5. Will you commit to supporting legislation requiring individualized, informed consent in all instances of behavioral and market research conducted by large platforms on users?

I look forward to receiving your responses within the next two weeks. If you should have any questions or concerns, please contact my office at 202-224-2023.



Apple bans Facebook’s Research app that paid users for data

In the wake of TechCrunch’s investigation yesterday, Apple blocked Facebook’s Research VPN app before the social network could voluntarily shut it down. The Research app asked users for root network access to all data passing through their phone in exchange for $20 per month. Apple tells TechCrunch that yesterday evening it revoked the Enterprise Certificate that allows Facebook to distribute the Research app without going through the App Store.

TechCrunch had reported that Facebook was breaking Apple’s policy that the Enterprise system is only for distributing internal corporate apps to employees, not paid external testers. That was actually before Facebook released a statement last night saying that it had shut down the iOS version of the Research program without mentioning that it was forced by Apple to do so.

TechCrunch’s investigation discovered that Facebook has been quietly operated the Research program on iOS and Android since 2016, recently under the name Project Atlas. It recruited 13 to 35 year olds, 5 percent of which were teenagers, with ads on Instagram and Snapchat and paid them a monthly fee plus referral bonuses to install Facebook’s Research app, the included VPN app that routes traffic to Facebook, and to ‘Trust’ the company with root network access to their phone. That lets Facebook pull in a user’s web browsing activity, what apps are on their phone and how they use them, and even decrypt their encrypted traffic. Facebook went so far as to ask users to screenshot and submit their Amazon order history. Facebook uses all this data to track competitors, assess trends, and plan its product roadmap.

Facebook was forced to remove its similar Onavo Protect app in August last year after Apple changed its policies to prohibit the VPN app’s data collection practices. But Facebook never shut down the Research app with the same functionality it was running in parallel. In fact, TechCrunch commissioned security expert Will Strafach to dig into the Facebook Research app, and we found that it featured tons of similar code and references to Onavo Protect. That means Facebook was purposefully disobeying the spirit of Apple’s 2018 privacy policy change while also abusing the Enterprise Certificate program.

Sources tell us that Apple revoking Facebook’s Enterprise Certificate has broken all of the company’s legitimate employee-only apps. Those include pre-launch internal-testing versions of Facebook and Instagram, as well as the employee apps for coordinating office collaboration, commutes, seeing the day’s lunch schedule, and more. That’s causing mayhem at Facebook, disrupting their daily work flow and ability to do product development. We predicted yesterday that Apple could take this drastic step to punish Facebook much harder than just removing its Research app. The disruption will translate into a huge loss of productivity for Facebook’s 33,000 employees.

[Update: Facebook later confirmed to TechCrunch that its internal apps were broken by Apple’s punishment and that it’s in talks with Apple to try to resolve the issue and get their employee tools running again.]

For reference, Facebook’s main iOS app still functions normally. Also, you can’t get paid for installing Onavo Protect on Android, only for the Facebook Research app. And Facebook isn’t the only one violating Apple’s Enterprise Certificate policy, as TechCrunch discovered Google’s Screenwise Meter surveillance app breaks the rules too.

This morning, Apple informed us it had banned Facebook’s Research app yesterday before the social network seemingly pulled it voluntarily. Apple provided us with this strongly worded statement condemning the social network’s behavior:

“We designed our Enterprise Developer Program solely for the internal distribution of apps within an organization. Facebook has been using their membership to distribute a data-collecting app to consumers, which is a clear breach of their agreement with Apple. Any developer using their enterprise certificates to distribute apps to consumers will have their certificates revoked, which is what we did in this case to protect our users and their data.”

That comes in direct contradiction to Facebook’s initial response to our investigation. Facebook claimed it was in alignment with Apple’s Enterprise Certificate policy and that the program was no different than a focus group.

Seven hours later, a Facebook spokesperson said it was pulling its Research program from iOS without mentioning that Apple forced it to do so, and issued this statement disputing the characterization of our story:

“Key facts about this market research program are being ignored. Despite early reports, there was nothing ‘secret’ about this; it was literally called the Facebook Research App. It wasn’t ‘spying’ as all of the people who signed up to participate went through a clear on-boarding process asking for their permission and were paid to participate. Finally, less than 5 percent of the people who chose to participate in this market research program were teens. All of them with signed parental consent forms.”

We refute those accusations by Facebook. As we wrote yesterday night, Facebook did not publicly promote the Research VPN itself and used intermediaries that often didn’t disclose Facebook’s involvement until users had begun the signup process. While users were given clear instructions and warnings, the program never stresses nor mentions the full extent of the data Facebook can collect through the VPN. A small fraction of the users paid may have been teens, but we stand by the newsworthiness of its choice not to exclude minors from this data collection initiative.

Senator Mark Warner has since called on Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to support legislation requiring individual informed consent for market research initiatives like Facebook Research. Meanwhile, Senator Richard Blumenthal issued a fierce statement that “Wiretapping teens is not research, and it should never be permissible.”

The situation will surely worsen the relationship between Facebook and Apple after years of mounting animosity between the tech giants. Apple’s Tim Cook has repeatedly criticized Facebook’s data collection practices, and Zuckerberg has countered that it offers products for free for everyone rather than making products few can afford like Apple. Flared tensions could see Facebook receive less promotion in the App Store, fewer integrations into iOS, and more jabs from Cook. Meanwhile, the world sees Facebook as having been caught red-handed threatening user privacy and breaking Apple policy.



You can pre-order Meizu’s crazy phone with no port for $1,299

If you’re interested in Meizu’s insane smartphone that doesn’t have any port or button, you can now pre-order it on Indiegogo for $1,299. Supply is limited as the company is only selling 100 units for now.

The Meizu Zero looks like any modern phone at first sight. But if you look beyond the display, you’ll notice that there’s absolutely zero port or button.

The volume button has been replaced with a touch-sensitive surface. The fingerprint sensor is integrated in the display. Wireless charging is the only way to charge the device. And if you’re thinking about putting your SIM card in the phone, there’s no SIM slot either — I hope your carrier supports eSIM cards.

There’s no speaker grille either. Meizu is using the screen as a speaker by sending vibrations through the display. It also works as a microphone, apparently.

It’s unclear if this is just a giant joke or an actual product. But it’s an interesting experiment. For $1,299, you get a phone with a 5.99-inch AMOLED display and a Snapdragon 845 system-on-a-chip. The company expects to ship the device in April 2019.