Transparent mobile phone developed by US company - video

An US technology firm says it has created a transparent mobile phone whose technology rivals that of current smartphones. The device, developed by Polytron Technologies, is made of conductive glass which is
scratch and shatter resistant. No price has yet been announced for the phone, which should go on sale within the year

 


Credit: guardian.co.uk

Samsung criticised as Android device copy bug is unfixed after eight months

Developers and users complaints began only weeks after introduction of Galaxy S III phone but have gone unacknowledged by smartphone giant

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 21 February 2013 21.32 GMT

Samsung has come under fire from developers and users of its Android smartphones and tablets for failing to fix a longstanding bug that crashes any app if the clipboard has previously been used to copy more than 20 items of data.

The only way users can work around the bug, first spotted in June 2012 - just weeks after the launch of the flagship Galaxy S3 phone - is to carry out a complete "factory reset", wiping apps and other data from the phone.

The company has failed to officially acknowledge the existence of the bug, which has been widely documented by both users and developers.

Both smartphones and tablets are affected by the bug, which seems to lie in the Samsung "TouchWiz" software it runs on top of the Android operating system; it does not occur in Samsung "Nexus" products - which use Google's stock Android software - or in "rooted" Samsung phones where the user has installed their own version of Android.

Samsung shipped a total of 212.4m smartphones in 2012 as the world's largest maker of smartphones, according to research firm IDC. But its use of the TouchWiz software in almost 200m of those means millions of users could be affected by the bug.

Only Samsung can develop a complete fix for the bug, which would require it to send new code to every handset and tablet. But that might be blocked by network operators, who have been slow to approve updates, while Samsung has been more focussed on developing new phones than rolling out new software to older phones.

Samsung did not respond to a request for comment.

Terence Eden, a British developer who raised the problem in the past 24 hours, called the bug "shockingly bad engineering". Writing on his blog, he said it was "Typical Samsung. Sloppy engineering followed by complete indifference towards their customers."

Users began complaining of the bug within a few weeks of the SGS 3, one of 2012's best-selling phones, going on sale in May. On 14 June a user called Nathanp05 wrote on the Android Forums site: "Had the Galaxy S3 for a couple of weeks now and it has been great. One thing, last weekend it started to crash any app when I tried to copy text." The only resort was a factory reset - which wipes any data stored on the phone, including photographs or notes. Anything not downloaded to a computer or uploaded to the cloud would be lost, and the user would have to re-enter details and re-download their apps.

Users also began complaining on Google's Android forums in July. In September, they were advised to call Samsung's US number to complain.

The problem has continued without being fixed. Samsung's official developers were notified on 22 October through the Samsung Developer forums, where it was described as a "fatal clipboard bug" which seems to occur randomly.

The fault was pinpointed to a file directory which does not exist in stock Android: "the fault is clearly with the Samsung software," noted the developer, Veeti Paananen, the author of a clipboard-based app who had noticed the bug surface in reports from users around the same time that the Android Forums post appeared.

Paananen told the Guardian that the problem persists: "Some say that an 4.1.x update has fixed it but others claim that the problem just returns later on. Even if a 4.1 update has fixed the issue, there are a lot of Samsung devices that will not receive an update past Android 4.0."

He added: "Anecdotally, I still receive daily reports about the issue, but Google's tools don't show me any OS version numbers."

Users and developers are still reporting the fault on the Android Forums, Samsung Developers, and Google boards, with the most recent being today and the oldest being just four days old.

The top 6 jailbreak apps for iOS 6

A new iOS, a new jaibreak

So you've gone ahead and jailbroken your iPhone running iOS 6. Now what? Well, aside from doing a victory dance for triumphing over the iPhone's carrier limitations, you could start loading up on jailbreak apps. Try these six on for size.

Action Menu Plus

Action Menu Plus is a super-useful suite that adds all sorts of new actions to your Action Menu and integrates them with every app on your device. It includes such actions as track history, look up (on Google, Wikipedia, Dictionary, and Google Translate), and locate.

App: Action Menu Plus
Author: Ryan Petrich
Price: $2.99

iRealSMS 3.0

The iPhone's built-in Messenger app does fine as a basic text-messaging client, but iRealSMS is a much beefier app that brings email-like functionality to text messaging. Besides giving you Inbox, Outbox, Sent, and Draft folders, this app includes functionality like text-to-voice, quick reply/quick send, character count, forward via mail, and privacy settings.

App: iRealSMS 3.0
Author: SpiritOfLogic
Price:$8.99

Xpandr

Xpandr is your basic shortcut app -- and anything that saves on the amount of typing you have to do on an iPhone is a winner. This app lets you save an unlimited amount of shortcuts and apply them to any app or text field.

App: Xpandr
Author: Nicolas Haunold
Price: $2.99

Mobile Dashboard

Mobile Dashboard takes care of one task, but it's a handy task: It puts dashboard widgets over your home screen for easy access. A Sticky Note widget has already been made, and the forthcoming widget-creation API promises to allow users to whip up their own widgets.

App: Mobile Dashboard
Author: Ryan
Price: $1.49

Infiniboard

The nifty Infiniboard app lets you vertically scroll your home screens so that you can add more apps to them. The screens will scroll like regular pages; if you want to group your apps by the page, you can do so without per-page limitations.

App: Infiniboard
Author: chpwn
Price: $0.99

 

 

It seems like the iPhone should just let you select any song on the device to act as a ringtone, but for whatever reason, it doesn't. Enter AnyRing, which lets you do just that or even record your own voice as a ringtone. You can select the start and stop time of the song to be assigned as the ringtone, as well as create a custom SMS alert tone.

App: AnyRing
Author: AnyRing
Price: $3.99

 

How to improve your chances of recovering a lost Android phone

By adding some contact info to the lock screen, you might just help an Honest Joe return your lost precious.

By Rick Broida, PC World |  Mobile & Wireless, Android, smartphones

Password-protecting your smartphone makes sense, as it prevents unauthorized users from accessing your data.

But it can also work against you. Suppose, for example, your phone gets lost. If a Good Samaritan finds it and wants to return it, he or she won't be able to do the necessary detective work. (And it's not like you'd want them poking around your data anyway.)

Fortunately, Android 4.0 offers a solution in the form of lock-screen contact information, which will display the message of your choosing even on a passcode-protected device. Here's how to set this up:

1. On your Android phone, head to Settings, then look for an entry called Lock Screen. (I found this under the Personal section on my Samsung Galaxy S3; on your phone it might be under Security or somewhere similar.)

2. Tap Lock Screen, Owner Information.

3. In the field provided, enter whatever message you think might help someone return the phone to you--your e-mail address or office phone number, for example. You could even set up a Google Voice number solely as an "emergency recovery" number, just in case you don't want your personal number readily visible on your lock screen.

4. Make sure Show owner info on lock screen is checked, then tap OK.

And that's all there is to it. Now, if someone finds your phone, they still won't be able to bypass your security, but they will have the info they need to get in touch with you.

Now there's just the simple matter of what kind of reward befits the return of a lost phone. My feeling: $20. Your thoughts?

While you're mulling that over, be sure to outfit your phone with some kind of tracking app so you're not relying solely on the kindness of strangers. You can't go wrong with Where's My Droid, but it's just one option of many.

IBM makes big mobile push with ThinkMobile

IBM is making a renewed push into the burgeoning market for all things mobile, saying it can help its corporate customers grow revenue and become more competitive through mobile app development.

The effort pulls together a raft of IBM products and services, some recently acquired, under a new umbrella brand: ThinkMobile. It's aimed at a market that many view as ripe for expansion -- helping business turn the proliferation of smartphones and tablets from a management headache into an advantage.

"We're on the cusp of a massive acceleration here," said Jerry Cuomo, CTO for IBM's WebSphere products, in an interview.

Through ThinkMobile, IBM says it will help companies design and build customer-facing apps that reduce operational costs or help grow their business, much as airlines are doing with electronic boarding passes, or as Uber has done with its taxi ordering service.

IBM says it also has the tools for building internal apps for sales staff and other workers, and for managing the influx of employee devices. Making better use of mobile can lead to better ways of doing business, not just improving how existing business is done, according to Cuomo. "It's not just about the app, it's about how that app drives process innovation," he said.

IBM will be competing with other major vendors such as SAP, which also is making a big mobile push, and with a plethora of smaller vendors such as Appcelerator, which makes an app development platform. It will also compete with services firms such as Accenture and Cognizant.

IBM says it has an advantage because it has all the pieces under one roof.

Last year was the year that big businesses developed a mobile strategy and piloted apps, and 2013 will be the year for implementation, said Kevin Benedict, head analyst for social, mobile, analytics and cloud at Cognizant Technology Services.

"The market for enterprise mobility is absolutely huge, and it's never going away," he said. That could be an advantage for big players such as IBM, because companies want to invest in platforms they know will be around for many years to come.

IBM clearly sees this as a massive opportunity. Its press materials referred to Thursday's ThinkMobile announcement as its "most significant mobile strategy move since the introduction of the ThinkPad." The company said it would double its investment in mobile this year, though it didn't provide a dollar amount.

The offerings announced Thursday include the ThinkMobile Platform for apps development and deployment. That includes its Worklight deployment software, which is getting new single-sign-on capabilities, and a new beta of Rational Test Workbench, which is software for performance testing and other functions.

It also has MobileFirst software for device management, including updates to EndPoint Manager, and for analytics, through its acquisition of Tealeaf, which made tools for monitoring customer behavior. IBM Global Services is also in on the act, with strategy and deployment services.

The company will support app development and device management for all the major smartphone platforms, it said, including iOS, Android, Windows Phone 8 and BlackBerry. For example, a new version of AppScan will expand its vulnerability testing to include iOS apps.

"We're not in the device business, but we do have an opinion on how companies should develop mobile apps," Cuomo said. For example, IBM advises customers to build Javascript apps that can run across multiple platforms, he said, instead of building native apps for each OS.

As far as IBM is concerned, customers who aren't thinking about mobile are leaving money on the table.

"We believe that without mobile being first on their minds, in terms of how they develop and how they approach their business processes, they can't be as successful as they could be," said Arthur Chiang, vice president for mobility services with IBM Global Technology Services.

"In terms of the revenue opportunities and the cost-saving opportunities, it represents billions of dollars if you properly enable mobile," he said.

IBM will hold a webcast from the Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona next week to discuss its mobile plans. People can register for the event here.