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Awesome Camera, Agonizing Everything Else

Awesome Camera, Agonizing Everything Else



Reviewed by Alexandra Chang

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The Nokia 808 PureView is the most exciting smartphone on the market that you shouldn't buy.


The phone generated a ton of buzz at February's Mobile World Congress, not because it sports a stunning display or has the latest software features - in fact, the 808 PureView runs on Symbian, an outdated operating system Nokia has openly dismissed in favor of Microsoft's Windows Phone OS.


The 808 PureView is captivating because of one feature, and one feature alone: the on-board 41-megapixel camera.


Most highest-end smartphones, including Apple's iPhone 4S, Samsung's Galaxy S III, and HTC's One X, have 8-megapixel cameras. Compared to those cameras, a 41-megapixel camera sensor seems totally over-the-top and unnecessary. But what Nokia has developed with its homegrown PureView imaging technology is, by far, the best camera I've seen on a smartphone.


That doesn't mean it's a good phone. It's actually a pretty terrible phone with an outstanding camera. You should only consider buying the 808 PureView if you really love mobile phone photography. Even then, you're probably better off waiting until Nokia's PureView technology comes paired with a better OS, like Windows Phone (and Nokia confirmed to Neowin Sunday that PureView will arrive in its Windows-powered Lumia phones "very soon"). Also consider that, in the U.S., the phone is currently only available as an unlocked device for AT&T and T-Mobile networks at the high, unsubsidized price of $700.


The 808 PureView is no shining example of industrial design. With its giant camera protruding awkwardly from the back of the shell, it's chunky and top-heavy. It's a full 13.9 millimeters thick. Holding the 5.96-ounce 808 PureView brings back memories of the old Nokia bricks of the early 2000s.


Speaking of ancient history, Nokia has a long record of building truly awesome camera packages into its smartphones - big sensors, Carl Zeiss optics and full-featured imaging software - the most recent examples being last year's N9, and the N8 before that.


The curved edges and matte polycarbonate back make the phone easy to grip, an important quality for a phone dedicated to shooting photos.


As much as I initially balked at the PureView 8082s heft and strangely shaped back, I quickly grew accustomed to holding it. The curved edges and matte polycarbonate back make the phone easy to grip, an important quality for a phone dedicated to shooting photos.

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Along the right side of the phone, there's a volume rocker, a spring-loaded lock/unlock switch, and a dedicated camera button. On the top, you get a headphone jack, a micro USB port, and a micro HDMI port.


The phone's 4-inch display features edge-to-edge Gorilla Glass, with the exception of dedicated buttons for the menu, making a call, and ending a call. It's only a 640×360 pixel screen, so if you're used to an iPhone's Retina display, you'll be sorely disappointed. It's an unfortunate drawback considering the device is centered around digital imaging.


It may not be the best device for viewing photos, but it completely outperforms other smartphones in actual photo-taking.


More megapixels doesn't always mean you're going to have better photos, but in this case, it absolutely does. The 808 PureView combines a high-end Carl Zeiss lens and advanced software to produce images that look significantly better than other smartphone cameras (yes, even the iPhone) and is comparable to point-and-shoots.


One thing to note: You don't actually shoot 41-megapixel photos. In fact, the highest resolution photo you can take is a 38-megapixel photo at 4:3 aspect ratio in full-resolution sensor mode. The way the PureView technology works is that it uses pixel oversampling, essentially packing up to seven pixels worth of data into one pixel area. The results? Sharp, clear images with little to no noise. And the 41-megapixel sensor also makes it possible to zoom into photos 3x without losing any of the clarity.


Most of the time, I was shooting in PureView mode at 8 megapixels and getting just-as-impressive photos as I saw with full resolution. The only advantage to shooting in full resolution mode is that you can zoom in more without losing details in the image. The Camera app, which you use to take all of your photos, is designed specifically for the PureView camera. And it's the best app on the Symbian platform, showing a lot more maturity than apps like Mail and Maps. It's clear that the PureView team spent a lot of time making the camera software user-friendly.


Once you launch the Camera app - by pressing the dedicated camera button or by tapping the app icon - you're taken to a screen with four sections. The majority of the screen is where you'll see what you're shooting. At the middle-top, there's a Setting icon where you can switch between Automatic, Scenes, and Creative mode. A left-hand sidebar shows you the more detailed settings controls, and a right-hand sidebar has a Camera/Video toggle, a soft shutter button, and a thumbnail that takes you to your photo gallery.


If you want to pick up the 808 PureView and just start shooting, Nokia's made that easy. The Camera's Automatic mode worked great in well-lit settings and performed decently in low-light situations (you can turn off the automatic xenon flash). But if you want to have more control over your images, the Scenes and Creative modes offer a ton of photo settings.


It does take a bit of time fussing around with the software to get the hang of it, but once you do, it's almost as fun as using a DSLR. For example, in Creative mode, you can adjust the exposure from -4 to +4, set the white balance, choose an ISO, and toggle a neutral density filter.


There are also four focus modes: Infinity, Hyperfocal, Close-up, and Automatic. The Scenes mode is a bit more simple. You choose from a variety of scenes, such as close-up (or macro), portrait, or night, and the app does the work for you. With all of the setting options, it's not hard to figure out ways to make your low-light, action, or macro photos turn out well.


Video performance was great. It captures 1080p video at 30 frames per second. Here's a sample - keep in mind that it's been compressed for viewing on the web.

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In the week that I used the 808 PureView, I would lock the phone while in the Camera app. That way, whenever I wanted to take a photo, I could quickly unlock the screen and just press the camera button. It helped that the shutter was fast and the battery lasted long enough for a full day of shooting.


The only recurring problem I had with the 808 PureView's camera was focusing photos. On many occasions, the camera would not focus where I tapped on the screen. In close-up mode, this was especially problematic. I ended up having to take several photos of the same setting until it focused on the intended spot.


Though the 808 PureView's camera rises above the flock, the rest of the user experience is mired in misery. Symbian, renamed "Nokia Belle" for this particular smartphone, is an outdated, glitchy piece of a software nightmare. The Symbian experience? In one word: Frustrating. In two words: Extremely frustrating.


The web browser fumbles when loading content-rich sites, pinch-to-zoom is a pain, and everything just slow. Setting up my Gmail account was impossible - the phone repeatedly said it could not connect to Gmail, even though all of my information was entered correctly. The Symbian keyboard was hard enough to type my e-mail address on; I couldn't imagine having to compose a lengthy communique with it.


If you are already familiar with Symbian, take great comfort in its many quirks, and don't want to make the switch to a more intuitive, better mobile OS (even Nokia knows Symbian is terribly outdated) then the 808 PureView might be a decent upgrade. And if you're a diehard mobile photography fiend with an extra $700 to spend, and you already own a separate phone you can use as your day-to-day handset, then the 808 PureView could be a fun device to show off to your friends.


So that accounts for, what, 20 people? The rest of us should wait until PureView technology shows up in Windows Phone devices, which should happen in the near future. Then you'll get to use an OS that doesn't make you want to smash your phone - and its awesome camera - against a table.


WIRED The camera produces the best images of any smartphone. Low noise in stills and videos. Multiple setting options allowing you to adjust for different subjects and lighting.


TIRED Still running on Symbian, though it's been re-named "Nokia Belle" here in an attempt to escape the shame associated with the Symbian brand. Body is awkwardly shaped and heavy because of the protruding camera. Will set you back $700 - as much as some Micro Four-Thirds systems.


Apple Concerned About Mobile Payment Security


By Karen Haslam

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Google already offers Google Wallet payments via Android phones and Microsoft is set to launch its own digital-wallet service, but Apple isn't yet willing to enable credit card payments via the iPhone due to concerns about security.


Apple will launch Passbook alongside iOS 6 this autumn, as outlined in our 30 reasons you need iOS 6 feature, the system will provide an integrated iOS solution that holds all of you concert ticket purchases, boarding cards, and so on in one Apple app. These can then be accessed from the Home screen, or inside the app itself. What Passbook lacks is the option to link to credit or debit cards, so consumers can't use it to replace their wallets.


Reports claim that Apple does want to integrate payments, however, the company is holding back, waiting for other mobile manufacturers to test the water.


According to a Wall Street Journal report, Apple's head of iPhone software Scott Forstall is interested in providing the technology for NFC (Near Field Communication) payments via the iPhone. WSJ sources claim Forstall's engineering team has been studying NFC technologies for over-the-air payments and have patented some NFC ideas (a patent, pictured, was awarded in March).


NFC is a short-range high frequency wireless communication technology that enables the exchange of data between devices up to 10cm apart, the set up time is significantly faster than Bluetooth, it doesn't require battery power, and it is considered more secure because of its shorter range.


However, according to reports, Apple said to be concerned that squeezing in the required chip and a new antenna may severely impact the iPhone's battery life.


Apple is also concerned about whether NFC technology is secure enough, according to reports. Apple chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer is said to have questioned whether there was newer secure technology that employed the Internet rather than use NFC, according to the WSJ sources.

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Apple head of world-wide marketing Phil Schiller is also said to be worried that if Apple facilitated credit-card payments on the iPhone consumers might blame Apple if they had a bad experience.


Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster believes Apple is biding its time before entering the mobile payment market because they are comfortable letting the other mobile companies make the mistakes first. "They let their competitors do their market research for them," he said.


Munster noted Apple's relatively late entries in the MP3 player, smartphone and tablet markets as proof that: "Apple is always a comfortable number two."


Schiller seems to back up Munster's suggestion, he is reported to have said that digital-wallet mobile-payment services are "all fighting over their piece of the pie, and we aren't doing that."


Yankee Group analyst Nick Holland agrees: "Right now it is just a gold rush." Holland notes that the business models and leaders will be more solid in 18 months the market is nascent enough that Apple can afford to take its time, according to the WSJ report.


There is still speculation that Apple will introduce Near Field Communication with the iPhone 5, which is expected to launch in September or October, however, according to air transport IT and communications specialists SITA, if Apple's new iPhone doesn't have NFC "it's game over".


SITA's Jim Peters believes retailers should prepare for the arrival of NFC: "There is a lot of debate that NFC will never take off because of all the arguments. But you need to get ready, this is coming. This is going to happen. By the end of the year the majority of smartphones that you go and buy will have NFC on them. If in October the next iPhone comes out and it has NFC on it, it's game over."


MasterCard's Ed McLaughlin hinted that Apple was venture down the credit card/payments road. "I don't know of a handset manufacturer that isn't in the process of making sure their stuff is PayPass ready," McLaughlin said.


Start-Up to Revive Nokia Smartphone Software


Finnish start-up Jolla Ltd. is in talks with hardware makers, aiming to release a smartphone that runs on Nokia Corp.'s largely abandoned MeeGo operating system within the next six months.


"We are seriously making a smartphone here," Jolla Chief Executive Jussi Hurmola said. "But we definitely can't do it alone."


Mr. Hurmola, a 12-year Nokia veteran who recently joined other former Nokia employees at Jolla, said the start-up needed to raise about €10 million, or roughly $12 million, from private investors to develop the smartphone. He said Jolla would need to sell 50,000 to 100,000 of the phone to break.

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10.07.2012. u 09:49 • 0 KomentaraPrint#

RIM Customers Working On Contingency Plans

RIM Customers Working On Contingency Plans



By Scott Moritz and Olga Kharif

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Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM) customers from GoDaddy Group Inc. to asset manager Thames River Capital UK Ltd. are preparing for the worst: the loss of the BlackBerry service their employees depend on to communicate.

RIM's stock has slumped more than 70 percent in the past year, and tumbled 19 percent on June 29 after the company posted a quarterly loss and delayed the BlackBerry 10 operating system, increasing the pressure on RIM to find a buyer or sell assets. While RIM has built infrastructure to ensure continued service, some customers are devising backup plans as RIM prepares to face shareholders at its annual meeting tomorrow.


"In the past three months there's been a lot of concern that the BlackBerry platform won't be around in the future," said Maribel Lopez, founder of Lopez Research, a wireless- industry consultant based in San Francisco. "It's not unheard of for a large phone manufacturer to go out of business."


Corporate customers, the backbone of RIM's business, are fortifying contingency plans so they won't be affected by a possible breakup of the BlackBerry-maker or other setbacks. With millions of employees connecting to the office through mobile e- mail, companies have been eager to establish a fallback or replacement plan, said Avi Greengart, a technology research director at Current Analysis.


Thames River Capital supplies about 140 of its 170 employees with smartphones, most of them BlackBerrys, said Robert Cockerill, head of infrastructure at the London-based money manager. With the delay of BlackBerry 10 and a service contract with RIM expiring this year, Cockerill said he expects much of his staff to switch to Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) iPhone or devices based on Google Inc.'s Android platform.


Service Disruption

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Cockerill has brought in MobileIron Inc., a Mountain View, California-based developer of software that helps companies manage and protect data on mobile devices and tablets. MobileIron provides security for Thames River Capital including encryption and password protection for non-BlackBerry devices such as iPads, he said.


Thames River Capital is preparing for scenarios where BlackBerry service may be shut down, disrupted, or if a competitor such as Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) acquires RIM and converts the operating system to its Exchange e-mail service, he said.


"There is a risk of RIM getting bought," Cockerill said in an interview. "But if you have the right support you can be agnostic and it won't really matter."


MobileIron Chief Executive Officer Bob Tinker said his customer list includes 100 Fortune 500 companies, and about a quarter of those customers are financial services firms.


Embrace Innovation


"Large enterprises don't want to be locked in with a single vendor anymore," Tinker said in an interview. Customers want to embrace all the innovation in mobile and RIM's delay of BlackBerry 10 doesn't help that, he said.


"CIO's are now asking us: 'What do we do if RIM gets acquired or if they restructure,'" said Tinker.


Norton Rose LLP, a law firm with 6,000 BlackBerry-equipped employees, is using MobileIron's software to support iPhones and iPads, which were given to some staff members as secondary devices, said Vlad Botic, group enterprise architect at the London-based firm.


Botic, who said Norton Rose would like to continue using BlackBerrys, began exploring alternatives last year after the three-day BlackBerry outage that caused users around the world to lose data services amid a network failure.


"RIM isn't in a good position right now," Botic said in an interview. "The problem with BlackBerry, which was highlighted when the service went down, was that the only way to solve it is with an entirely new device."


'Significant Outage'

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While the chance of BlackBerry service getting shut down is slim, Botic said he has scheduled a meeting with RIM this week to seek assurances that there won't be a disruption in the event of a takeover.


GoDaddy, an Internet domain-name and hosting company, could switch users to iPhone or Android devices "within hours," said Auguste Goldman, chief infrastructure officer at the Scottsdale, Arizona-based company.


In the event of a "significant outage" for BlackBerry devices, GoDaddy has a plan to migrate users to other platforms, Goldman said in an interview.


"The BlackBerry infrastructure and services are among our most valuable assets," said Nick Manning, a spokesman for Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM. "BlackBerry customers depend on our robust network and they can continue to depend on it going forward."


RIM shares fell 5.3 percent to $7.67 at the close in New York.


iPhone, Android


Six staffers at Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. first began planning for the possibility of a disruption in BlackBerry service last year. To prepare, Nationwide retained Good Technology Inc., whose software for servers and phones can provide secure corporate e-mail and calendar services to iPhones and Android devices.


"You could see that RIM started to decline," Robert Burkhart, director of new technology innovation at Nationwide, said in an interview.


Today, the number of BlackBerrys Nationwide associates use is down to 7,000 from about 8,500 a year ago, while the number of non-BlackBerry devices used has risen from zero to 4,450, Burkhart said.


"We are well on our way to having a dual environment, so if RIM did go out, we'd be okay," Burkhart said. "If people are starting contingency plans now, they are behind the eight ball. They should have been looking at this all along."


Good Technology, which works with 4,000 corporate customers worldwide, including eight of the top 10 financial services companies, has seen an inflow of customers concerned about RIM's prospects and making contingency plans.


Contingency Plans

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"We've had two meetings this month with large financial services firms on this topic," Brian Carr, senior vice president of worldwide sales at Sunnyvale, California-based Good Technology, said in an interview. "In the last year, I talked with half of Fortune 100 companies, and it's a concern for all of them. Every single one of them is looking at contingency plans."


The concerns are prompting many companies to speed up their transition from BlackBerries to other types of mobile devices, Carr said.


RIM has struggled to keep up with Apple's iPhone and devices based on Google's (GOOG) Android platform. Last month, RIM said it would cut 5,000 jobs and posted a quarterly loss that was five times bigger than projected. Sales last quarter plunged 43 percent as RIM's share of the global smartphone industry fell by more than half to 6.4 percent in the first three months of the year, according to research firm IDC.


BlackBerry Migration


"RIM's situation is dire, but even in a worst-case scenario, RIM's servers aren't likely to get turned off anytime soon," said Current Analysis's Greengart. "Still, IT managers are looking more seriously at alternatives to BlackBerry. There's a whole industry ready to provide security and management around Apple and Android," he said.


The migration from BlackBerrys started two years ago for Ken Lawonn, senior vice president of strategy and technology at Alegent Health, an Omaha, Nebraska-based health-care provider.


The shift was prompted by user preferences, rather than concerns about the future of RIM, said Lawonn who uses Good Technology's software. The number of Alegent's 300 smartphone users with BlackBerrys has shrunk to 10 percent from about 50 percent two years ago, he said.


"Should something occur, we believe that's going to be a fairly easy transition," Lawonn said. "If my BlackBerry broke down, I'd look at the options, and if a BlackBerry wasn't available, I'd pick up an iPhone and be on my way."


Yahoo Defends Android App, Botnet Questions Remain

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Security firm traces torrent of spam to Yahoo's failure to activate HTTPS by default in its Android app.


By Mathew J. Schwartz


Is a big, bad Android botnet sending mountains of spam to unsuspecting email users?


That was the warning issued by Microsoft researcher Terry Zink last week, who said that spam traps had been capturing inordinate amounts of bogus email that had been sent using Yahoo IP addresses associated with the search giant's Android app. As security experts questioned what exactly might be happening, a Google spokesman cautioned that the available evidence didn't add up to a botnet, but rather "that spammers are using infected computers and a fake mobile signature to try to bypass anti-spam mechanisms in the email platform they're using."


Facing criticism for suggesting that there was a new Android botnet sending spam, Zink fired back, saying that whether or not the email signatures are faked, something's been sending spam via Yahoo's Android channels. "The reason these messages appear to come from Android devices is because they did come from Android devices," he said in a blog post.


Other information security researchers backed up that finding. "Many, including Google, have suggested the messages are forged. We see no evidence of this. The messages are delivered to our spam traps from genuine Yahoo! servers with valid DKIM [DomainKeys identified mail] signatures," said Chester Wisniewski, a senior security advisor at Sophos Canada, in a blog post.


Yahoo, meanwhile, defended its Android app. "While our investigation into claims of a potential malware compromise operating as a botnet is ongoing, we can confirm that there is not a problem with our official Yahoo! Mail app for Android and there is no reason for users to uninstall the app," said a Yahoo spokeswoman Friday via email.


What's going on? "One of two things is happening here," said Wisniewski at Sophos. "We either have a new PC botnet that is exploiting Yahoo!'s Android APIs or we have mobile phones with some sort of malware that uses the Yahoo! APIs for sending spam messages."

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But in fact, the culprit may not be malware-infected PCs, botnets, or some never-before-seen type of Android malware. According to mobile security firm Lookout Security, in fact, the problem is rather the Yahoo mail Android app's default use of HTTP. "Yahoo! Mail for Android does not encrypt its communications by default--it performs all its functions over HTTP, not HTTPS," according to a blog post from Lookout. "This means that any traffic that is sent by the Yahoo! Mail Android app can easily be intercepted over an open network connection such as a public Wi-Fi network. This exposes Yahoo! Mail for Android to session hijacking, a form of attack that gained mainstream attention with Firesheep."


Introduced in 2010, Firesheep is a Firefox plug-in that can be used on any unsecured Wi-Fi connection to hijack the session cookies of anyone sharing the same connection who logs onto a website that uses HTTP, but not HTTPS. Created by Eric Butler, the plug-in was designed to illustrate how--in his words--"on an open wireless network, cookies are basically shouted through the air, making these attacks extremely easy." Attackers had long been able to execute credential-hijacking attacks using free, open source tools. But in the wake of Butler's plug-in release, numerous online service providers, including Facebook, added HTTPS as an option--if not always a default.


A Yahoo spokeswoman didn't immediately respond to an emailed request for comment on Lookout's theory. But according to Lookout, Yahoo's failure to use HTTPS by default means that an attacker could easily create an open Wi-Fi network, then wait for people using the Yahoo Mail app on Android to join the network, and check their email. "The attacker intercepts a particular cookie and can use it to impersonate that user, over whatever networks are available to them, including by tethering to a mobile network," said Lookout. "This allows the attacker to send spam emails that appear 100% legitimate."


Given that revelation, all Android users who employ the official Yahoo Mail app on their smartphone or tablet should immediately set the app to only check for email using HTTPS, as opposed to the default HTTP setting. According to Lookout, "from within Yahoo! Mail, simply open Options > General Settings and select 'Enable SSL.'"


Furthermore, while this latest attack targets only users of the Android Yahoo Mail app, it reinforces the need to use HTTPS whenever possible. "All mobile users should exercise caution when connecting to open Wi-Fi networks from a laptop or mobile device. We recommend that desktop users of Firefox or Chrome install the plug-in HTTPS Everywhere to ensure that their traffic to popular sites is properly secured," according to Lookout.

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10.07.2012. u 09:46 • 0 KomentaraPrint#

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