Iâm not sure about you, but even with the aid of the Apple Store app, Iâve sort of intuitively felt that the Apple Watch just must be huge, and certainly way too huge to put on my wrist.
Well, maybe it is. I wonât know until I go into an Apple Store and actually try one one, which I intend on doing at the first opportunity. But as this image proves, even the biggest Apple Watch is positively tiny compared to the Asus Zenwatch.
Google today announced its new Chromebook Pixel, which is just as pretty as its predecessor, only more powerful and less expensive. Itâs powered by an Intel Core i5 processor and 8GB of RAM, and just like Appleâs new MacBook, it uses do-it-all USB-C connectors.
Samsungâs Super AMOLED displays have long been some of the best you can get on a mobile device, and they only get better with the new Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge. According to the experts at DisplayMate, they are the âbest mobile displays ever tested.â
Samsungâs smartphone sales may have taken a plunge as of late, but its new Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge handsets could turn out to be just the devices the South Korean tech giant needs to rebuild its mobile division.
Following strong advance orders of more than 20 million handsets, Samsung is reportedly expected to ship 46 million S6 units this year â representing an increase of 8 million on the previous 38 million estimate.
Those may not be close to iPhone 6 numbers (which sold 74.5 million devices in the last quarter of 2014 alone), but itâs certainly enough to earn Samsung back some of the respect its lost.
Googleâs gorgeous redesign of the Calendar app has finally made its way to iPhone. The Android version of Google Calendarâs redesign was released last fall, but iPhone users can now get their fingers on the official Google Calendar app too.
Like on the new Android version, you get new features like Events from Gmail, to turn emails into events on your calendar. Assists makes adding events quicker by recommending information to insert, and the new Schedule View makes it easier to scan your calendar and see what events you have coming up.
Shortly before Apple kicked off its Spring Forward event yesterday, Google released its latest Android Wear ad, which showcases the one thing you wonât get with the upcoming Apple Watch: choice.
If thereâs one thing Xiaomi canât be accused of, itâs having a lack of ambition.
Not content with having come out of nowhere to become the worldâs third-biggest smartphone maker, the CEO of the Chinese tech company, Lei Jun, has announced that he next plans for his company to become the number one smartphone vendor globally within the next 10 years.
Now that we know more about the long-awaited Apple Watch, itâs time to find out how it stacks up against Googleâs Android Wear platform and the growing number of wearables that support it.
There are lots of similarities between the two, but there also some big differences in software, hardware, and price that will likely help you decide which one is right for you.
Samsungâs smartphone sales may have dipped in recent months, but its new Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge are already off to an excellent start. Since their unveiling at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona earlier this month, more than 20 million handsets have been pre-ordered.
Samsung is rightfully envious of Appleâs mobile payment service Apple Pay, which has swept the mobile payments world since being introduced at the end of 2014. With that in mind, itâs introduced its own âSamsung Payâ rival service, which it hopes will sway customers back in the South Korea tech giantâs direction.
But with Apple having both a lead-time advantage and the âhalo effectâ of a beloved brand behind it, Samsungâs trying to appeal to something a bit more base when it comes to swaying people in favor of its mobile payment service: cold, hard cash.
According to new reports coming out of Korea, the company has decided not to collect fees on Samsung Pay, rather than the 0.0015 percent demanded by other mobile payment services. Samsung allegedly wonât charge partnered credit card companies either, or from service providers for online payments.
Google has already confirmed plans to experiment with its own wireless services to âshow whatâs possible,â and we know itâs going to be limited in its reach. So limited, in fact, that you might need Googleâs own Nexus 6 smartphone to connect to it.
According to new reports coming out of Asia, the newly-unveiled Samsung Galaxy S6 and SGS6 edge handsets both suffer from a pretty grievous fault â in the form of a display error that stops them properly reading touch inputs around the bezel.
Android-powered games consoles are almost always a big disappointment, but gaming giant NVIDIA is confident it can change that with the Shield console, a $199 set-top box thatâs determined to bring you better games.
Becoming the most funded Kickstarter in history is certainly enough to boost confidence â and if youâre Pebble CEO Eric Migicovsky itâs enough to get you to take some potshots at giant-sized rival, Apple.
With Cupertinoâs March 9 Apple Watch event just one week away, Migicovsky has thrown out a few barbed comments about Appleâs eagerly-anticipated debut wearable. Describing the device as âdefinitely lacking,â Pebbleâs founder noted how heâs just not that into smartwatches that are ârelegated to being an accessory to your mobile phones.â
If you need a smartphone camera that can capture a steady image even when youâre not, youâll want to choose Samsungâs new Galaxy S6 over the iPhone 6. At least, thatâs what the South Korean company hopes to prove with the strange, shaking display table it brought to MWC.
Pebble gave its latest smartwatch project an extra bump this morning with the new Pebble Time Steel model, which pushed the project over the mark to become the most-funded Kickstarter project ever.
Pebble Time has raked in $13,617,054 so far, pushing it past the Coolest Cooler for the top spot. Pebble also has the third-most-successful Kickstarter project with its original Pebble Watch in 2012. The Pebble Time project still has 24 days left, so it will likely push far past the $15 million mark.
Here are the top 10 most-funded Kickstarters of all time:
Googleâs efforts to counter the threat of the Apple Watch will begin with bringing Android Wear support to iPhone. Sources claim the search giant is now âpreparingâ an Android Wear app for iOS, and it could be announced at Google I/O in May.
Fancy pizza but canât be bothered to find your phone? Weâve all been there, and itâs not a pretty place. But now you donât have to fall asleep hungry wondering what youâre doing with your life, because Dominoâs finally lets you order and track a pizza from your smartwatch.
This time last week, Pebble announced Pebble Time, its brand new smartwatch for 2015. And if youâve already backed that thinking it would keep you going until a more extravagant successor to the Pebble Steel came along, youâre going to be pretty disappointed with todayâs Pebble news.
Just one week after the company announced Pebble Time and raked in more than $12 million (and counting) in funding, it today revealed Pebble Time Steel, a high-end version of the device thatâs made of metal, and boasts better battery life.
Of the smartphone stories which played out in 2014, two of the biggest were the triumph of Appleâs iPhone 6, which sold a massive 10 million+ units in its opening weekend alone, and the faltering of Samsung, which fell from the dominant position it had enjoyed since 2011.
Today, a new report from Gartner (paywall) breaks down both the 1.2 billion smartphone sales that took place worldwide last year, and also the sales from Q4 2014 â revealing how Apple leaped ahead in the smartphone category, while the South Korean tech giant Samsung started to lose its footing.
Make no mistake about it: this was the year everything changed.
After finally lifting the lid on its new Apple Pay competitor this morning, Google confirmed plans to take on carriers as well. The search giant will launch its own wireless service within the coming months, but it will serve only as a proof of concept to âshow whatâs possible.â
Googleâs ready to take on Apple Pay with a new mobile payments platform called Android Pay. It will work over NFC, and it will come with an API that will allow third-party developers to integrate the service into their own Android apps.
Appleâs Touch ID sensor has been the best and most reliable fingerprint scanner since it made its debut in the iPhone 5s, but competing products announced at Mobile World Congress this week could give the Cupertino company some concern.
Not only has Samsung made huge improvements to its own fingerprint sensor for the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, but Qualcomm has delivered an even more impressive alternative called Sense ID that works through aluminum, stainless steel, and more.
Samsungâs love affair with cheap, tacky plastic is on hold for its stunning new Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge.
Unveiled today at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the new handsets pull out all the stops in an effort to reverse Samsungâs declining smartphone sales and mount a new challenge against Appleâs most popular iPhones to date.
They sport all-new designs made out of premium materials, and vastly improved software that promises a better user experience. But they arenât without their own compromises.