Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts

Why teens are tiring of Facebook




To understand where teens like to spend their virtual time nowadways, just watch them on their smartphones. Their world revolves around Instagram, the application adults mistook for an elevated photography service, and other apps decidely less old-fashioned than Mark Zuckerberg's main kingdom.

And therein lies one of Facebook's biggest challenges: With more than 1 billion users worldwide and an unstated mission to make more money, Facebook has become a social network that's often too complicated, too risky, and, above all, too overrun by parents to give teens the type of digital freedom or release they crave.

For tweens and teens, Instagram -- and, more recently, SnapChat, an app for sending photos and videos that appear and then disappear -- is the opposite of Facebook: simple, seemingly secret, and fun. Around schools, kids treat these apps like pot, enjoyed in low-lit corners, and all for the undeniable pleasure and temporary fulfillment of feeling cool. Facebook, meanwhile, with its Harvard dormroom roots, now finds itself scrambling to keep up with the tastes of the youngest trendsetters -- even as it has a foothold on millions of them since it now owns Instagram.

Asked about the issue, a Facebook spokesperson would only say, "We are gratified that more than 1 billion people, including many young people, are using Facebook, to connect and share."

The data doesn't exist to slap a value on Facebook's teen problem. But we know -- from observing teens, talking to parents and analysts, and from a few company statements -- that age doesn't become Facebook with this group.

In recent weeks, Facebook has told us twice about its teen-appeal problem. When it filed its annual report, it warned investors for the first time that younger users are turning to other services, particularly Instagram, as a substitute for Facebook.

Then, earlier this week, Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman admitted that Instagram, an application he described as popular among the "younger generation," is a "formidable competitor" to Facebook. Which seems odd until you realize that the profit-hungry Facebook isn't yet making a dime from Instagram.

"What we do know is that Instagram is already a very popular service that continues to grow rapidly, and we believe, based on the information that we have, that it's quite popular among these kinds of users that you're asking about, the younger generation. It is very important for Facebook to build products that are useful to those users, and to build products that they feel comfortable ... they can have a good experience with. Definitely high on the list of priorities for us."

The under-13 tween crowd, including one CNET editor's daughter, technically isn't allowed to use the application, as dictated by the terms of service and a federal restriction (although the law is changing this July in ways that will make it easier for kids to join). Yet kids found Instagram anyway, largely because their parents wouldn't let them join Facebook, argues Altimeter Group principal analyst Brian Solis. Teens 13 and up joined Instagram, he said, because Facebook became "too great" a social network where they're now connected to their grandparents.

Isn't it ironic, as Alanis Morissete would say, that Facebook, the one-time underground drug of choice for college kids is now so readily available and acceptable that we all do it in broad daylight, and worse, at work? Sure, a 12-year-old skateboarder can derive some value from Facebook, but in the whitewashed kind of way that the rest of us use LinkedIn.

"We take pictures of food and landscapes," Solis said, "but teenagers use [Instagram] to share pictures of themselves ... the more you share, the greater the reaction, and the more you push outside comfort zones, the more people react."


A teen's Instagram account.



(Credit:
Screenshot by Michelle Meyers/CNET)

Tweens and teens are addicted to the idea of eliciting more reactions in the form of likes, followers, and comments, he said. They employ like-for-like photo tactics, use a myriad of hashtags to get their pictures in front of more users, and promote their desire for additional followers in their profiles.

Ascertaining the extent of Instagram's popularity with teens is particularly tricky -- until you talk to them. And some data on the phenomena does exist. Nielsen, one of the few companies to measure teens' online behavior, can only track web usage for this youngest demographic. The analytics firm told me that Instagram was the top photography website among U.S. teens ages 12 to 17 with 1.3 million teens visiting the website during December 2012. By the analytics firm's count, roughly one in 10 online teens in the U.S. visited Instagram in their browser during the month.

Anecdotally, the evidence overwhelmingly points to Instagram as the preferred social network of tweens and teens. A personal relationship provided me with a direct lens to view how two teenage boys used the application in their everyday lives. I also chatted with other kids, some the children of friends, and others I found through friends of friends.


Beth Blecherman's 14-year-old son, who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, downloaded Instagram when he was 13 because all of his friends were using it as their social network. Marisa, a 16-year-old girl who attends Cathedral City High School in southern California, has been using Instagram for more than a year. She said that a majority of her high school friends are using the application. And a San Diego friend's 12-year-old son is so hooked on the application that he was in tears when his account was temporarily suspended earlier this year.

"Teens recognized Instagram as a social network before anyone else," Solis said. "Everyone else treated it as a camera app."

At the same time, Instagram could disappear from teen consciousness just as easily at it arrived. Remember: Instagram was only 17 months old when Zuckerberg bought it in the weeks prior to Facebook's IPO last May. Parents are starting to understand that their kids haven't developed a fascination with the application to share artistic photos of landscapes and architecture. All of the teens I spoke to have watchful parents who keep an observant eye on their Instagram accounts.


Teens searching for a cyber hangout to call their own Adam McLane, a former youth pastor who hosts educational social media seminars for parents of teens in San Diego, told me that his sessions are dominated by talk of Instagram, with frenzied parents fearful that their innocent young ones are participating in unsavory activities such as bullying or posting inappropriate photos.


This Snapchat message will self-destruct in seven seconds.



(Credit:
Snapchat)

The parent factor alone could send kids fleeing to other applications such as Snapchat, Pheed, and Tumblr, all of which appear to have strong teen followings. Investors are betting on Snapchat in particular, which sends more than 60 million short-lived messages daily, because they don't want to miss out on the next Facebook.

"Teens are looking for a place they can call their own," Danah Boyd, a senior researcher that studies how young people use social media for Microsoft, told me. "Rather than all flocking en masse to a different site, they're fragmenting across apps and engaging with their friends using a wide array of different tools. ... A new one pops up each week. What's exciting to me is that I'm seeing teenagers experiment."

This experimental nature puts Facebook in the tricky position of reacting to the whims of transitory teens. Take Facebook's impromptu release of Poke, a mobile phone application, modeled after Snapchat, for sending messages that self-destruct moments later. The company's most reactionary move, however, was its surprise purchase of Instagram, an impulse buy that ultimately cost about $715 million.

Now that Instagram has more than 100 million active users, Facebook's impulsive pickup looks like a smart one. But the dangerous reality is that Facebook is bleeding attention to an application with no advertising model, nor does the social network even understand how Instagram ties in with its own applications.

Facebook doesn't know what teens want. Ebersman said as much, albeit in less direct terms:

"Facebook is a very young company in terms of the age of our employees, and I am hopeful that continues to be an asset for us in terms of having our finger on the pulse of what matters to that particular constituency of users and how we can provide products to satisfy them."

Put that way, Facebook's saving grace might be that its employees are also tiring of Facebook.


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U.S. one step closer to Kim Dotcom extradition



The U.S. is one step closer to bringing Kim Dotcom to its shores.


The New Zealand Court of Appeal today ruled that the U.S. government will not be required to turn over all of their evidence against Kim Dotcom in order to obtain his extradition to the States. A summary of its case, the judges ruled, will do just fine.


The Wall Street Journal was first to report on the ruling.



Dotcom had been hoping to force the U.S. government to present all of its evidence against him before it could move forward with hopes to extradite him from New Zealand. For over a year now, the U.S. has been trying to extradite the controversial MegaUpload founder, alleging that he was the brains behind an operation that allows users to store pirated movies, music, and other media illegally.


Dotcom took to his Twitter account today to rail against the court's ruling, saying that "the fight goes on." He added that he will next take his fight to the Supreme Court of New Zealand.


"Am I disappointed about the ruling today?" Dotcom asked. "Yes. Do 'good faith' and 'U.S. government' go together? No. Will I sleek like an innocent baby tonight? Yes."


Today's ruling comes a little over a month after Dotcom announced the launch of Mega, the follow-up to MegaUpload that allows for encrypted cloud storage of files. Like MegaUpload, Mega has caught the ire of copyright owners and the U.S.


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T-Mobile USA adds customers but sheds sales in latest quarter



One of T-Mobile retail stores.

One of T-Mobile retail stores.



(Credit:
T-Mobile USA)


T-Mobile USA managed to grab more customers last quarter, but that achievement didn't translate into higher sales.


For the fourth quarter, the company added 61,000 customers in total, an improvement of 587,000 over the prior year's quarter. The overall news, however, was good and bad.


The number of prepaid customers grew for the sixth quarter in a row, with 166,000 additions last quarter. But the number of contract customers dropped by 515,000, compared with a loss of 492,000 in the fourth quarter of 2011.


Total revenues for the quarter reached $4.9 billion. Though that marked T-Mobile's second sequential quarter of sales growth, the numbers were down 5.2 percent from 2011's fourth quarter. A 14 percent drop in revenues from contract subscribers was responsible for most of that decline. At the same time, earnings plummeted by 25 percent to a little more than $1 billion.


On the plus side, T-Mobile said that its Value plans are doing well. Introduced last year, the Value plan can potentially save subscribers money by allowing them to pay for the phone in monthly installments. The plan also lets users bring their own unlocked devices to T-Mobile rather than having to shell out for a new one.


Over the fourth quarter, 1.3 million subscribers opted for the Value plan, adding up to more than 6 million Value customers. Around 100,000 iPhone owners have been jumping ship to T-Mobile each month due to the bring-your-own-device option. More than 2 million iPhone users are now on the carrier's network.


In December, T-Mobile USA CEO John Legere confirmed that the carrier would start selling the iPhone sometime this year.


On the horizon, T-Mobile to prepping to merge with MetroPCS in the next couple of months. T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom is naturally hoping the deal will pay off in higher revenues and a larger market share.


"We are looking forward to the merger of T-Mobile USA and MetroPCS," Deutsche Telekom CEO Rene Obermann said in a statement. "This combination will substantially benefit the shareholders and customers of both companies by creating the leading wireless value carrier with expanded scale, spectrum and financial resources to compete across the entire U.S. market."


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Build and sell an app with no developer skill with AppMachine



Develop apps to sell on the app stores with zero programming skill from 400 Euros.



(Credit:
Andrew Hoyle/ CNET)


BARCELONA, Spain--Developing good apps for iPhone or Android normally takes a lot of skill and potentially tens of thousands of pounds. With new service AppMachine however, you're able to build good looking apps with zero programming knowledge for only 400 euros that you can then submit to the iOS or
Android app stores.


The app development system is mostly browser based. When you first sign up you'll need to choose a name for your app and choose an appropriate theme for the sort of app you're making. It's very similar to the simplistic style of Tumblr blogs, and takes about as much skill.


Adding different types of content is done by choosing one of 20 building blocks including photos, Facebook interaction, maps and contact pages. You can upload locally stored content to the app but the best way to use it is with RSS feeds that can constantly pull in content from your blog, Facebook page, Flickr accounts or various other sources.



If you want to really customise your app, you'll want to opt for the designer option for 699 Euros.



(Credit:
Andrew Hoyle/ CNET)


Once your content is in place, you have various customisation tools at your disposal. You're able to change the overall theme if your original choice doesn't suit, change colour schemes and image layout options. It's free to build your app up until the point of publishing, so if you're not happy with the look, you haven't wasted a penny.


If you want more control, a designer option is available. It lets you customise buttons, and have a greater variety of options for tweaking the layout. The designer option costs 699 euros, but you are able to get a much more personalised app out of it.


When your app is all finished, AppMachine will then take you through the process of submitting your finished product to the app stores. The price doesn't include the 99 Euros you'll need to pay for an iOS developer license, but even with that added cost, the total app price is still a lot cheaper than having apps built by a professional developer.


It's still probably not something the average
iPad user among you will want to shell out for, but it could be an affordable option for small business owners, store owners or professional photographers who want to showcase their wares in app form without shelling out thousands for the privilege. It's opening up to the public in the next few weeks.


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Tablet Tuesday: Get a 10-inch Acer Iconia for $199.99 shipped




At just $199.99, the Acer Iconia Tab A210 offers considerable bang for the buck.

At just $199.99, the Acer Iconia Tab A210 offers considerable bang for the buck.



(Credit:
Acer)


Looking for a big tablet? The iPad famously (or infamously) starts at $499. The
Google Nexus 10: $399. Even the comparatively affordable Kindle Fire 8.9 will set you back $299.


For a limited time, and while supplies last, Acer (via Ebay) is selling the refurbished Iconia Tab A210 10.1-inch Android tablet for $199.99 shipped. Deal? More like steal.


The Iconia A210 features a 1.2GHz Tegra 3 processor, 16GB of storage (expandable via microSD cards), the aforementioned 10.1-inch screen (running at a competitive, if not spectacular, 1,280 x 800), and
Android 4.0. Acer will push out an Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) update in the (presumably) not-too-distant future.


The
tablet weighs 1.5 pounds, so it's a bit on the heavy side, and it has only a front-facing camera. It also lacks an HDMI output, an issue only if you like to wire your tablet to a TV.


CNET hasn't reviewed this model, but over at Amazon (where it sells for $349.99), two dozen buyers collectively rated it 4.5 stars out of 5. Most of the reviews are positively gushing.


Because it's a refurb, you get only a 90-day warranty. If you can live with that, you stand to save a full $150 on this big beauty. Who's in?


While you're mulling that over, take my new poll: How do you use your tablet?


Bonus deal: Game time! Newegg has a BioShock/Elder Scrolls: Oblivion (PC) bundle for free after a $10 mail-in rebate (PDF). Also available: Star Wars: The Force Unleashed 2 (PC) for free after rebate (PDF).


Deals found on The Cheapskate are subject to availability, expiration, and other terms determined by sellers.


Curious about what exactly The Cheapskate does and how it works? Read our FAQ.


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BlackBerry delivers first BB10 handset to India -- at $800



BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins showing off the Z10 (right) and Q10, which is launching in a few months.

BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins showing off the Z10 (right) and Q10, which is launching in a few months.



(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)


India is now the latest country to get BlackBerry's Z10 handset.


The company today announced that it has launched the smartphone in India for 43,490 rupees ($800). The device is already available in the U.K. and Canada.


According to BlackBerry, the handset will be offered in over 2,000 retail locations across 50 cities around India. The handset will support carriers running 3G or HSPA+ networks, and the handsets will fully support global roaming.


BlackBerry is taking its time offering its new line of handsets around the world: The U.S. is expected to get the Z10 towards the middle of next month. However, when it launches in the States, it won't come with the massive unsubsidized price tag that Indian consumers will confront, since carriers here will subsidize the price.


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Mozilla, AT&T show WebRTC phone-Web communications link




BARCELONA, Spain -- Mozilla, Ericsson, and AT&T announced today they're demonstrating technology to place Internet-based voice and video calls that bridge traditional telephone services and the Web.


The demonstration, at Mobile World Congress here, uses the nascent WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communications) standard to set up browser-based communications between different devices.




The "proof of concept" links a Web app with a person's existing phone number and "shows how consumers can easily take and receive video calls from their mobile phones or desktop browser using WebRTC or share their web experiences with friends or family who might be on a desktop PC or mobile phone across the other side of the world," Mozilla said in a blog post. "The demonstration also shows how
Firefox can perform many functions usually confined to a mobile device, such as voice and video calls and SMS/MMS messaging."


The demo uses Ericsson network equipment called the Web Communication Gateway, Ericsson said in its announcement.


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Pentagon grounds entire F-35 Joint Strike Fighter fleet



A crack in an engine blade has suspended airborne testing on the $396 billion Joint Strike Fighter program.



(Credit:
Department of Defense)


The U.S. Department of Defense has suspended airborne testing of its Joint Strike Fighter because of a crack in an engine turbine blade discovered during routine inspection, the Pentagon said this week.

The grounding covers every one of the three versions of the F-35 involved in the $396 billion program -- 51 fighter jets that had hitherto been active for testing and training and have been described by the Pentagon as "the most affordable, lethal, supportable, and survivable aircraft ever to be used."

Just 10 days ago, one of the three versions of the fighter, the F-35B, designed for the Marines, was cleared to resume tests after a monthlong suspension having to do with a fuel line defect.

To understand the specific cause of the current issue -- the cracked turbine blade discovered February 19 -- the engine is being returned to the manufacturer: United Technologies unit Pratt & Whitney. The Pentagon said it hopes to return the fleet to the air as soon as possible.



Eventually, there will be more than 2,400 of the next-generation fighter jets, which will come in three models: the Air Force's agile F-35A, the Marines' VTOL model F-35B, and the Navy's F-35C, which has a larger wing surface and reinforced landing gear to withstand catapult launches and deck landings on an aircraft carrier.

The Pentagon stressed yesterday that the grounding is precautionary and that it's not possible to know the impact of the crack on the low pressure turbine blade until the investigation is complete.

Additional delays aside, the warplane is currently expected to formally take to the skies and be battle-ready in 2018 or 2019.


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Nokia plans smartphone fight at low-end of market -- report



One of Nokia's lower-end devices, the Asha 303.

One of Nokia's lower-end devices, the Asha 303.



(Credit:
Nokia)


Nokia has its sights set on the lower-end of the handset market, according to a new report.


The company next week at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona will unveil cheap basic phones and low-price Lumia smartphone models aimed at budget-conscious shoppers, Reuters is reporting today, citing sources from within Nokia. The Lumia smartphones will run on Windows Phone 8, but it's not clear what software will be on the lower-end, non-Lumia models.


Nokia is certainly no stranger to the lower-end of the mobile phone market. Last January, in fact, the company announced that it sold 1.5 billion Series 40 phones. Those devices are designed for emerging markets where the cost of a typical Lumia handset is simply too high for most customers.


According to Reuters, its sources wouldn't say when the cheaper Nokia devices would launch nor where they would be available. However, the company should deliver all of the details at Mobile World Congress next week. And as always, CNET will be there to cover every last detail.


CNET has contacted Nokia for comment on the Reuters report. We will update this story when we have more information.


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YouTube viewership now incorporated into Billboard charts



Billboard's charts, the gold standard for assessing the most popular music, has added a new metric.


Billboard announced yesterday that YouTube streaming data is now being incorporated into its charts. YouTube viewership will now join digital and physical singles sales, terrestrial radio airplay, and streaming as the metrics that determine Billboard's chart order.


Since there are often times thousands of clips of a single music video, Billboard's YouTube data is limited to "all official videos," Vevo clips, and user-generated videos that are using "authorized audio." In other words, only legitimately used songs can be included in its charts.



It only makes sense that Billboard is incorporating YouTube data in its results. The online video site is increasingly becoming a place where people listen to music, and to not include it would possibly leave an inaccurate picture of current tastes.


Already YouTuibe is having an effect on the Billboard charts. "Harlem Shake" by Baauer, which went viral on YouTube, is debuting at number one on the Billboard Hot 100. YouTube also helped send Rihanna's "Stay" from 57th place last week to third place this time around.


The updated Billboard charts with YouTube included are now on Billboard's Web site.


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Wozniak warns Apple must stay 'cool' -- or else



Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.



(Credit:
James Martin/CNET)


Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has a warning for Tim Cook and his executives: stay cool, or you'll have some trouble.


Speaking to Bloomberg in an interview published today, Wozniak said that while Apple is still "really good at setting a standard with a new device," it's starting to lose its standing as the coolest company in the technology industry.


"We used to have these ads, 'I'm a
Mac and I'm a PC,' and the Mac was always the cool guy," Wozniak told Bloomberg. "And ouch, it's painful, because we kind of are losing that."



According to Bloomberg, Wozniak said that Apple's products are no longer able to easily trump competing devices from Amazon and Google because those companies "all have great ideas." He added that Apple should at least consider opening
iTunes to
Android and Windows Phone users.

Wozniak has been surprisingly outspoken about Apple over the last several months. In October, he called the company "arrogant" and lamented that it believed it was "the only one with the right clue." In November, he said that he was worried that Apple is "just used to cranking out the newest iPhone and falling a little behind." He also took a jab at Steve Jobs, saying that he didn't have "to be as much of a real rugged bastard, put people down, and make them feel demeaned."

Despite the negative talk, Wozniak told Bloomberg that he was hoping Apple would launch the rumored iWatch -- a device, he said, he would definitely buy.

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Apple could unveil iPhone Mini this summer, says analyst



Is an iPhone Mini due out this year?

Is an iPhone Mini due out this year?



(Credit:
CNET)


An iPhone Mini priced at $330 in China would provide a healthy shot in the arm to Apple's Chinese smartphone sales, according to Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty.


A low-priced iPhone would add another 20 percent to the 10 percent Chinese market share currently addressed by the
iPhone 5, the analyst said toda. Smartphone prices are starting to stabilize in China, which will open up the market for such a phone. But a deal with China Mobile is also key.


Apple currently sells the iPhone to Chinese consumers through China Unicom and China Telecom. The company has been trying to cook up a deal with China Mobile, the country's largest carrier, but has run into stumbling blocks.


Still, the analyst sees China Mobile as a major contributor to the growth of the iPhone, citing a few different factors. First, Apple would launch a new Mini model. Second, legislation for TD-LTE licenses and number portability could pass later this year or in 2014. And third, China Mobile would be more open to subsidizing higher-end smartphones on a TD-LTE network.


"We believe Apple could launch iPhone Mini at $330 (about Rmb 2,000), in-line with flagship products in China from Lenovo, Huawei, ZTE, and Coolpad," Huberty said in an investors note out today. "Even in a scenario of low 40 percent gross margin and 1/3 iPhone cannibalization rate (flattening legacy iPhone shipment growth), which we view as conservative, the iPhone Mini adds incremental revenue and gross profit dollars."


The $330 would be the unlocked price for the phone in China. Launching over the summer, the iPhone Mini would target other emerging markets beyond China, according to the investors note.


Rumors of a low-cost iPhone gained traction last month following stories from the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg claiming such a device is on the horizon. Several analysts have also forecast a less-expensive iPhone on the agenda for sometime this year.


Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston also sees an iPhone Mini on Apple'sfuture but doesn't think it will appear until 2014 at the earliest.


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LG's 5.5-inch Optimus G Pro to reach U.S. in Q2




LG Optimus G Pro

LG Optimus G Pro



(Credit:
LG Electronics)



After some earlier teasing, LG Electronics fully detailed its Optimus G Pro Android phone today, a high-end model with 5.5-inch screen, LTE networking, and a quad-core 1.7GHz processor.


LG often sells its phones first in its home market of South Korea, and it looks like that's the plan for the Optimus G Pro, too. But it'll arrive in other areas, too, including North America and Japan in the second quarter of 2013, LG said in an announcement a week ahead of the Mobile World Congress show. That's where the South Korean company will show off the phone and announced three lower-end L-series Android phones, the Optimus L7 II, L5 II, and L3 II.




The Optimus G Pro is a large-screen model that
Android smartphone makers such as HTC and Samsung have embraced in an effort to differentiate products from the smaller iPhone. The Optimus Pro G has a 5.5-inch, 1920x1080-pixel AMOLED screen with a linear resolution of 400 pixels per inch.


Combined with its relatively large 3,140mAh battery, that means people can watch Full HD video "for hours on end," LG said.


The processor is the quad-core 1.7GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 600, and the phone comes with 2GB of RAM. The phone itself measure 150.2x76.1x9.4mm


The camera has a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera with an LED flash and a 2.1MP front-facing camera. A feature called VR Panorama will construct 360-degree panoramas out of an array of horizontal and vertical views around the person holding the phone.


Both of the phones' cameras can be used in a dual-recording mode that "allows users to capture video with both the front and rear cameras simultaneously for a unique picture-in-picture experience," LG said.


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Russian meteorite: The conspiracy theories



A strange time for a military attack?



(Credit:
CNN; screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET)


A good hearty conspiracy theory can shine a sharp light on two of humanity's most enduring traits.


One, of course, is humanity's boundless imagination. The other is humanity's essential suspicion of humanity.


So while you might be deeply immersed in Bill Nye's explanation of the Russian meteorite, those with darker sensibilities have filled the Web with their fears and hauntings about the phenomenon.


There are few nations with greater awareness of dark sensibilities than Russia. The fact that there seems to be little evidence of meteorite fragments on the ground has encouraged some Russians to offer their own suspicions.




As the Toronto Globe and Mail reports, nationalist leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky hasn't been slow to offer something of a Hot War perspective.

"It's not meteors falling. It's a new weapon being tested by the Americans," he was quoted as saying.


We know from our recent experience of North Korea that weapons testing is an imprecise science.


But if you were an American in the mood to test a weapon, would Chelyabinsk, Russia, be your very first choice of place for the experiment?


Perhaps Tallahassee; Area 51; and Bialystok, Poland, were all unavailable due to prior commitments. Or perhaps it wasn't the Americans, but, say, the North Koreans, who mistook Chelyabinsk for, say, Chelsea.


Zhirinovsky's rather emotionally manipulative offering was countered by Russia's Emergency Ministry, which dedicated itself to an extensive rebuttal of his belief (and that of others) that this was some sort of military thing. The rebuttal? "Rubbish."


But that wasn't going to put off the local media, was it? Not only do they have papers to sell, they also have theories to expound to a troubled nation and world.


So, as The Atlantic reports, the local Znak newspaper accepted that this was a meteorite but insisted the explosion was caused by military defense blowing it up.



More Technically Incorrect



Yes, of course it has a source in the military. You thought it didn't?


Though I've watched a few movies in which exciting things happen, I don't find it easy to imagine that some sort of terrestrially created missile-laden aircraft could really explode a meteorite in such a manner.


It is easier to imagine, though, that politicians like Zhirinovsky might take the opportunity to foment a little rage.


Indeed, Alex Jones' infamously well-guarded Infowars site offered that Zhirinovsky insisted that America -- in the person of Secretary of State John Kerry -- had tried to give Russia advance notice of its "attack."


The Drudge Report led me to a piece at Foreign Policy that explained that Sergey Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, simply hadn't called Kerry back.


Which all suggests that Russia isn't, after all, living in fear of an attack from the U.S. Especially one over Chelyabinsk.


On balance, I prefer to currently believe Nye. He is the science guy, after all. And science guys know scientific events when they see them.


I hope.


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How Apple got serious about style





Humble beginnings -- an early conceptual modular Apple tablet from 1982.



(Credit:
Harmut Esslinger, Frog Design)


When Frog Design founder Hartmut Esslinger met Steve Jobs in 1982, it sparked a chain of events that monumentally changed Apple's design philosophy forever. It wasn't just a change in how future products would look -- Esslinger ushered in a change of mindset and a unified design language across products. Esslinger's new book, "Design Forward: Creative Strategies for Sustainable Change," available today in the U.S., delivers some fascinating insights into those crucial early years at Apple.


The dialect that emerged from that period, known as the Snow White design language, influenced dozens of Apple devices starting with the Apple IIc in 1984 and lasting until the Macintosh IIfx in 1990.


Our gallery below starts off with a range of computers that earned Frog Design a hefty annual contract and a role as a leader in Apple's product design process. The two companies didn't just create computers, however; they went beyond and created a mock
tablet, computer phone, flat-screen devices, and more.



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Xbox 360 again the most popular console among U.S. gamers



Microsoft has extended its streak of console sales leadership into its third year.


Research firm NPD yesterday released its game-market sales for January. Microsoft led U.S. console sales for the 25th-consecutive month, tallying 281,000 units sold. At that sales level, Microsoft was able to grab 44 percent console market share. All told, consumers spent $338 million on
Xbox 360 hardware, software, and accessories during the period.


Despite the Xbox 360's success, overall hardware sales were down 17 percent compared to January 2011, reaching $205 million during the period. Software sales hit $373.1 million, and total industry sales across hardware, software, and accessories, was $834.7 million.



Compared to January 2012, those figures appear to be up year-over-year. However, NPD's data is based on a system that covers 364 of the 365 days in a year. Therefore, every five or six years, the company must add a so-called "Leap Week" to ensure its data is accurate and accounts for all days. This January, NPD used its Leap Week, meaning the period included an extra week compared to January 2012.


It's not clear by how much Microsoft was able to top its competitors in the console market. Both Sony and Nintendo have so far remained tight-lipped on actual unit sales during January, and NPD does not publicly release hardware unit sales.


On the software side, Call of Duty: Black Ops II was once again the leader, followed by Far Cry 3 and Just Dance 4. NBA 2K 13 and Madden NFL 13 rounded out the top five.


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Tesla releases logs on disputed NYT car review



Tesla's Model S.

Tesla's Model S.



(Credit:
Wayne Cunningham/CNET)


Tesla, the electric-car maker, has made good on its promise of releasing logs on the New York Times' review of its Model S. And its founder and CEO Elon Musk has wasted no time trying to discredit that review.


According to Musk, his company faced some issues with a review by television show Top Gear years ago. That experience, in which the show "pretended that our
car ran out of energy and had to be pushed back to the garage," prompted him to closely monitor media reviews.


"While the vast majority of journalists are honest, some believe the facts shouldn't get in the way of a salacious story," Musk wrote in a blog post yesterday, justifying his company's use of monitoring technology in cars tapped for media reviews.


Musk then turned his attention to the review published on Sunday by the Times' John Broder. In that, Broder criticized the Model S for range issues and problems in low-temperature environments. Musk claims, however, that Broder's account of what happens was not factual.


Here's a brief list of issues Musk discovered in the logs:


  • Despite Broder saying that he called a flatbed truck after the Model S battery ran out of energy, the logs show that he didn't, in fact, run out of energy, according to Musk.

  • Musk charged Broder with an "obvious violation of common sense" when he he disconnected the Tesla's charging cable when its range was at 32 miles and his trip back was 61 miles.

  • Musk says that the logs show Broder never set his cruise control to 54 mph to save on energy, as he suggested, and instead was driving at speeds between 65 mph and 81 mph.

  • Because cabin temperature can impact energy usage, Broder said that he reduced it. However, Musk claims that the temperature was turned up from 72 degrees to 74 degrees.

"When the facts didn't suit his opinion, he simply changed the facts," Musk said of Broder. "Our request of The New York Times is simple and fair: please investigate this article and determine the truth."


Broder has yet to respond publicly to Musk's latest charges, but he did share his two cents in a column on Tuesday responding to some of the claims Musk published on Twitter (and are also in the latest blog post). Broder started off his defense in defiance of Musk's assertions: "my account [of the test drive] was not fake."


Broder went on to say that while certain recommendations by Tesla weren't followed, including that he "should have pluggested in the car overnight in Connectict, particularly given the cold temperature," he tried to frame his review around "practicality" and "normal use."


"Now that Tesla is striving to be a mass-market automaker, it cannot realistically expect all 20,000 buyers a year (the Model S sales goal) to be electric-car acolytes who will plug in at every Walmart stop," Broder argued.


Given the back-and-forth that has already occurred around this review, expect for Broder to respond to Musk's claims.


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Get a 320GB portable USB 3.0 hard drive for $39



Let's do some math, shall we?


When it comes to portable storage, you can get a 64GB USB 3.0 flash drive for $39.99 shipped. Or you can take advantage of RedTag's today-only deal: a Western Digital My Passport 320GB USB 3.0 hard drive for $39 (plus $1.95 for shipping).


Price-wise, they're a wash. But the Western Digital drive literally has five times the storage. Sure, it's not keychain-friendly like a flash drive, but at 4.4 x 3.2 x 0.6 inches and 4.8 ounces, it can certainly ride in a pocket.


There's only one real catch here: it's a manufacturer-recertified drive. When it comes to hard drives, I tend to stay away from refurbs. But this one comes with a six-month warranty from Western Digital, which gives me a little more confidence. And according to the fine print, the drives are "cleaned, quality checked and tested twice."


While you're mulling that over, let's talk specs. The My Passport features USB 3.0 connectivity (backward-compatible with USB 2.0), built-in automated backup software, and optional password protection. I couldn't find any info on the drive's rotational speed.


Over at Amazon, where the drive sells new for $61, some 1,500 buyers (!) rated it 4.4 stars out of 5. Most loved the speed and form factor; an unfortunate few ended up with bum drives -- which, let's face it, happens.


For a mere 40 bucks, I think this speedy drive would be ideal for transporting large files, expanding your available storage, and supplementing your cloud-based data backups. Let's hope it doesn't sell out before you're able to grab one.


Bonus deal: Speaking of backups, Giveaway of the Day has Aiseesoft's iTunes Backup Genius for free. This pro-level recovery tool, normally sells for $99.95 (!), lets you pluck data from
iTunes backup files. Note: Do NOT click the big blue download button on the giveaway page. Instead, scroll down to the link labeled Download Aiseesoft iTunes Backup Genius Now.


Deals found on The Cheapskate are subject to availability, expiration, and other terms determined by sellers.


Curious about what exactly The Cheapskate does and how it works? Read our FAQ.


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Apple's Greenlight suit response to come by tomorrow



Apple will soon respond to the lawsuit filed against it last week by David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital.


According to the Wall Street Journal, Apple plans to file its response to Greenlight by tomorrow. Greenlight will then file its reply on Friday. Both sides would like for the hearing to be held early next week.


The Greenlight hedge fund filed a lawsuit against Apple last week saying that the company should distribute high-yield preferred stock to shareholders, allowing the company to both hold a large amount of its cash, but also give its shareholders more of the value of Apple's cash hoard.



Apple's cash reserves now total more than $137 billion. Apple has so far delivered $10 billion of its planned $45 billion to shareholders.


Apple has been making it clear it wants to handle the Greenlight case as much as possible. Just yesterday, Judge Richard Sullivan of the U.S. Court for the Southern District of New York granted Apple's request to fast-track the lawsuit.


That Apple is pushing ahead with the lawsuit isn't all that surprising. The company plans to hold its shareholders' meeting on February 27, and doesn't want the lawsuit to take center stage. Apple has also made clear that it's willing to work with Greenlight to come to an amicable solution.


"Apple's management team and board of directors have been in active discussions about returning additional cash to shareholders," the company said last week. "As part of our review, we will thoroughly evaluate Greenlight Capital's current proposal to issue some form of preferred stock. We welcome Greenlight's views and the views of all of our shareholders."

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iPhone 5 rated fifth in user satisfaction in new study



The iPhone 5 trailed four Android phones for user satisfaction, according to a new report out today.


Conducted by mobile research firm OnDevice Research, the poll asked 320,000 smartphone and
tablet users in six countries how satisfied they were with their devices. Among the 93,825 people surveyed in the U.S., Motorola's Atrix HD came out on top, followed by Motorola's
Droid Razr M, HTC's Rezound 4G, and Samsung's Galaxy Note 2, leaving the
iPhone 5 in fifth place.

"Although Apple created one of the most revolutionary devices of the past decade, other manufactures have caught up, with some Android powered devices now commanding higher levels of user satisfaction," On Device Research marketing manager Sarah Quinn said in a statement.

Apple did fare better among the 52,140 people polled in the U.K., where it took second place behind HTC's One X. Samsung's Galaxy Note 2 was No. 3 for user satisfaction, followed by its Galaxy S3 Mini and the full-size Galaxy S3.

Among the rankings for overall mobile device satisfaction in the U.S., Apple took the top spot. Google was ranked second, followed by Motorola, HTC, Nokia, and Sony Ericsson. And for some unknown reason, Samsung was ranked at the very bottom.

4G also played a role in user satisfaction. The top five devices in the U.S. all support 4G, and people with a 4G subscription were slightly more satisfied than were those stuck at 3G.

The survey reached mobile users in the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany, Japan, and Indonesia.

Some of the findings seem a bit odd, especially since OnDevice Research didn't reveal all of the devices included in the survey. Google was ranked second in mobile device satisfaction, but Google itself is not an actual device maker. And why Samsung was at the bottom of the satisfaction list is a mystery.

CNET has contacted OnDevice Research for feedback on its survey results and will update the story if we receive any further information.

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