Samsung’s Next Galaxy Phone Set for August U.S. Release

Samsung's Galaxy S2 will make its U.S. debut soon. (Photo courtesy Samsung)

Samsung plans a U.S. release for the sequel to its most successful Android smartphone by the end of the summer, according to a senior executive of the company.

“We expect to release the Galaxy S2 in the U.S. market sometime in August,” said Shin Jong-kyun, Samsung president of mobile business and digital imaging, in a briefing with reporters in South Korea on Wednesday. The story was first reported by Yonhap News.

The phone was initially released in South Korea — Samsung’s global headquarters — in April, subsequently rolling out to Europe and southern Asian countries in the months that followed.

The release of the Galaxy S2 comes at a particularly contentious time for Samsung, one of the largest manufacturers of Android-powered smartphones. The company is embroiled in a bitter patent dispute with Apple, the latter claiming Samsung’s Galaxy Tab and Galaxy S products were utter rip-offs of Apple’s iPad and iPhone devices.

“We love competition, but we want people to invent their own stuff, and we are going to make sure we defend our intellectual property,” Apple COO Tim Cook said on the company’s earnings report conference call on Tuesday.

Samsung’s first Galaxy smartphone model — which admittedly looks a lot like the first iPhone — was hugely successful for the company. In its first six months after release, Samsung sold 10 million Galaxy S smartphones worldwide. Total sales of the Galaxy S2 from the countries it has already been released in amount to approximately 3 million devices thus far.

Considering the patent dispute with Apple, Samsung’s sales figures beg for comparison to the iPhone’s success. Apple reported record sales of its iPhone devices in its earnings report on Tuesday, with 20 million iPhones sold in a period of only three months.

But Shin has the company’s sights set high. Samsung is heavily promoting its latest tablet offering, the Galaxy Tab 10.1. And Shin expects the company to sell over 60 million smartphones by the end of this year.

Whether that number is realistic or not remains to be seen. If customers love the phone as much as our sister site Wired.co.uk does, Shin’s expectations may not be far off base.


iTunes and iWork updated for Lion, add full-screen support, and resume

What good is an OS update without some software that can take full advantage of all its fancy new features? Naturally, Apple’s got your back, and today you’ll be getting some spiffy new versions of iTunes and iWork to compliment that fearsome Lion upgrade. iTunes 10.4 finally ushers the music management app into the 64-bit era, and adds support for OS X 10.7’s full-screen windows. The iWork Update 6 also brings along the distraction-free functionality, as well as resume, auto-save, and versioning for all your important docs. Not everyone is seeing the updates just yet, so be patient, it shouldn’t be much longer before you’re interrupted by that slightly annoying, but oh so satisfying, Software Update window.

iTunes and iWork updated for Lion, add full-screen support, and resume originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 13:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Can the MacBook Air replace the White MacBook? Maybe it’s not trying to.

The White MacBook is dead, leaving the MacBook Air as the cheapest Apple laptop around. That is, unless you consider the iPad a viable alternative.

The 404 864: Where there’s Lion pie in my eye (podcast)


Apple's latest hardware refresh introduces the long-awaited Big Mac Pro

(Credit:
Reddit)

Wilson’s especially giddy today because Apple just released two new MacBook Airs and a pair of new Mac Minis that all feature a data port for high-speed Thunderbolt peripherals. On today’s episode, we’re also talking about Rupert Murdoch’s pie in the face, a social network for Anonymous hackers called AnonPlus, and the proper way to teach your parents how to use modern technology.

The 404 Digest for Episode 864



Episode 864

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Originally posted at The 404 Podcast

Deals to be had on 2010 MacBook Air

They might have old processors, but a refurb 2010 MacBook Air can be had for as low as $749.

Rsizr – Online Image Scaling Done Right!

This article was written on October 01, 2007 by CyberNet.

Rsizr Image Scaling

A few weeks ago I wrote about a free application called Liquid Resize that implemented the much acclaimed seam carving (also known as content aware image resizing). It is pumped with features, and it has already had a couple of more updates from time I wrote the article.

However, there is a new seam carving app in town, and I have a feeling that it will conquer all the others. Give a warm welcome for Rsizr, which a free and completely web-based solution to seam carving. To get started all you have to do is select an image from your computer, and then drag the two sliders over a bit to start the processing (I outlined them in the screenshot above). Then the necessary “handles” will get placed on the corners of the photo for resizing it.

Here’s why I think Rsizr is so great:

  • The image processing is done prior to scaling the image (by using the sliders). This is especially useful when working with large images where the processing can take a long time. With this you can just drag both the horizontal and vertical sliders all the way over, and then walk away until it’s done. When you come back the image will be ready for its instantaneous resizing!
  • You can scale the image without using seam carving, revert back to the original, or crop it in a few clicks.
  • There are tools available to mark areas on the photo which you want to preserve or remove first. A good demonstration of how that would be useful is when trying to remove someone from a photo:
    Rsizr Remove Person 

I suggest that you check Rsizr out and see how well it performs for you! If you decide to upload your results to a photo sharing site make sure you drop a link in the comments so that we can see, too. ;)

Rsizr Image Scaling (works with JPG, PNG, and GIF images)
Sources: Go2Web2 & Download Squad

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Cakes of nanotubes may measure terahertz laser power, not years wasted

VANTATerahertz lasers sure are awesome but, there’s one big problem, we have no reliable way of measuring their power — a pretty important piece of data to have before you start bombarding people with their flesh penetrating rays. A new coating for laser calibration tools called VANTA seems like a viable candidate for sucking up those longer than visible wavelengths. Constructed of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes, up to 1.5mm in length, cakes of VANTA are not only more absorbent than other materials used for measuring a laser’s power (which makes it more accurate and faster), it’s also quite easy to handle. Chunks of the stuff can be sliced off with a razor and shuttled to the detector on the blade’s side. We give it a week before someone cuts a piece with one of those new MacBook Airs.

Cakes of nanotubes may measure terahertz laser power, not years wasted originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 12:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pee whiz! Pollee, a urinal just for the ladies

Urinals aren’t just for men anymore. The Pollee urinal for women is designed to cut down on slow-moving bathroom lines at large public events.

Amazon Prime Instant Video is adding CBS TV shows, including all of Star Trek

Looking for a Netflix alternative once the price for streaming and discs combined jumps in September? Amazon Prime Instant Video is becoming an increasingly appealing option, especially now that it announced TV shows from CBS are coming to the all-you-can-eat video streaming service this summer. The deal appears to be similar to one CBS reached with Netflix earlier this year, also including the complete Star Trek series among 18 “popular TV shows” with complete seasons available. Including the new selections from CBS Prime Instant Video is claiming over 6,000 movies and TV shows available, a number which is still dwarfed by Netflix’s Watch Instantly library but does include those shipping benefits on purchases. Since we love free shipping and Frasier, it’s a win / win for us.

Continue reading Amazon Prime Instant Video is adding CBS TV shows, including all of Star Trek

Amazon Prime Instant Video is adding CBS TV shows, including all of Star Trek originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 12:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OLPC XO-3 cases may sport solar panels, satellite internet, grant three wishes

OLPC XO-3

We’ll give Nicholas Negroponte one thing, he’s nothing if not ambitious. The OLPC founder always has some pie-in-the-sky vision for the XO line of child-centric computers, including dual-screens and hand-cranks. Now that we’ve skipped right past the XO-2 for the ARM-powered, and still MIA, XO-3 it’s time for a whole new round of concepts. The latest is a series of accessory cases for the potentially Android-sporting tablets that boast satellite internet capabilities or solar panels for charging its battery. The former MIT Media Lab head has even suggested that a more mundane cover with a keyboard could be on tap. Of course, it would probably help if the foundation could get the machines out the door first. We haven’t heard much about the XO-3 since the last round of delays pushed its release back to February… of 2011. But you know what they say, better late, and all that jazz.

OLPC XO-3 cases may sport solar panels, satellite internet, grant three wishes originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 12:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePC World  | Email this | Comments