Dropbox Android preview shows off video thumbnails and Nexus 7 UI, yearns for your approval

Dropbox Android preview shows off video thumbnails and Nexus 7 UI, yearns for your approval

It appears that Dropbox is also tweaking its Android app to better suit the Nexus 7 and Jelly Bean. The cloud storage outfit made a recent build (2.1.8.6 to be exact) of its mobile software available for download as a sneak preview of sorts. A few fortunate subscribers got first dibs, but you can grab a look for yourself at the improvements. The tweaks include video thumbnails, improved video playback on both ICS and Jelly Bean, a Nexus 7-friendly UI and the ability to open Dropbox files directly from other applications. If you’re jonesin’ for a look, visit the source link below to do just that.

Filed under: ,

Dropbox Android preview shows off video thumbnails and Nexus 7 UI, yearns for your approval originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Aug 2012 10:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Phandroid  |  sourceDropbox Forums  | Email this | Comments

An Openly Biased Review of Android Jelly Bean by an iPhone Lover [Video]

I’ve never liked Android. It’s an opinion born out of ignorance and bias: The iPhone is the only smartphone I’ve ever owned. I love it, and I think Android is generally an inferior mess. I’m OK with that. But wow, Jelly Bean: the greatest version of Android ever, cold-blooded Apple-killa. Thousands upon thousands of man-hours from one of the largest collections of smart people on the planet, explicitly devoted to winning over jerks like me. Shouldn’t that be enough? I gave Jelly Bean an open channel into my heart, using it as my only phone for nearly a month. How’d it do? More »

Samsung Galaxy S III Jelly Bean update tipped for August 29th

Information emerged a few weeks ago about Samsung’s Jelly Bean update plans for its current range of smartphones, indicating that the Galaxy S III was undergoing testing and that an update would be released early in the third quarter. Now an anonymous source speaking to GSMArena suggests that the Jelly Bean update is ready to go, and will be released on August 29th alongside the announcement of the Galaxy Note II.

It’s not clear if all models of the phone will receive the update or if will initially be for the international version, but if the information is correct, then Galaxy S III owners will be getting a nice little treat in a few short weeks. Previous information indicates that the Galaxy S II and Galaxy Note are also on track for an update to Jelly Bean, although both devices are still being tested internally at Samsung.

The tests for the Galaxy S II are apparently “looking fine”, but Samsung hasn’t made the final decision as to whether or not the handset will definitely receive the update. Strong international sales for the handset suggest that Samsung will follow through, but if it doesn’t then the company intends to release a “Value Pack” for the phone, similar to the what happend with the original Galaxy S and Ice Cream Sandwich.

Samsung is facing a similar situation with the Galaxy Note. The phones are still pretty powerful by today’s standards, and they’ve gained impressive sales figures across the globe, so we can’t imagine that Samsung will leave the two models out in the cold. Even if they don’t receive updates, then enterprising developers and hackers on xda-developers will get to work and no doubt provide stable builds of the latest version of Android. Ideally, though, Samsung will provide official builds for the best results.

[via TechnoBuffalo]


Samsung Galaxy S III Jelly Bean update tipped for August 29th is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Acer Iconia Tab A110 allegedly caught brandishing Jelly Bean in press shots

Acer Iconia Tab A110 allegedly caught brandishing Jelly Bean in press shots

When we last left Acer’s Iconia Tab A110, it was going to be yet another 7-inch Android 4.0 tablet. No big deal. The proposition just became a little more intriguing now that online shop Ebuyer has posted what might be formal press shots of the A110 sporting a fresh coat of Jelly Bean, making it one of the first third-party Android 4.1 tablets that we’ve seen. Assuming the gallery isn’t just a clever attempt to whip customers into a frenzy, the posting suggests Acer’s design will follow the Nexus 7 formula all the way through to the stock interface. About the only differences are that empty home screen and incredibly generic wallpaper. Where it goes awry is the timing: without any hint of a release date, we don’t know if a Jelly Bean update would push the A110 beyond its original summer launch target. Any truth to the story, however, can only mean good things for the tablet’s larger A210 sibling.

Filed under:

Acer Iconia Tab A110 allegedly caught brandishing Jelly Bean in press shots originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Aug 2012 01:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Netbooknews, Tabletblog.de  |  sourceEbuyer  | Email this | Comments

Engadget Giveaway: win one of four Nexus 7 tablets, courtesy of NVIDIA!

Engadget Giveaway win one of four Nexus 7 tablets, courtesy of NVIDIA!

We declared Google’s new flagship tablet, the ASUS-made Nexus 7, to be the best slate that $200 can buy — as well as one of our top choices for students — and while it’s hard to beat the price, we’re going to give four of them away regardless! This week’s contest is all thanks to NVIDIA, the folks behind the quad-core Tegra 3 that powers the Jelly Bean tablet and turns gaming into a smooth and pleasant experience. These little guys are definitely worth a grab, so add a comment to enter!

Continue reading Engadget Giveaway: win one of four Nexus 7 tablets, courtesy of NVIDIA!

Filed under:

Engadget Giveaway: win one of four Nexus 7 tablets, courtesy of NVIDIA! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Aug 2012 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Refresh Roundup: week of August 6th, 2012

Refresh Roundup week of August 6th, 2012

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it’s easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don’t escape without notice, we’ve gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!

Continue reading Refresh Roundup: week of August 6th, 2012

Filed under: , ,

Refresh Roundup: week of August 6th, 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Aug 2012 21:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Samsung is moments away from a true iPad alternative

The next game-changer in tablets could come from Samsung, not Apple, as a perfect storm of processor, screen and platform coalesces to make the Korean firm an innovator not a copycat. Samsung has already demonstrated its abilities in processors – even Apple would have to agree with that, having co-developed the A4 chipset powering the original iPad with its Korean rival – but the new Exynos 5 Dual raises the bar significantly; according to the rumors, meanwhile, that will find its way into the Samsung “P10″, a new uber-tablet packing a display that squarely challenges Apple’s Retina tech.

The P10, it’s believed, will arrive sometime in 2012, with an 11.8-inch WQXGA screen. If you’ve not been keeping up to speed with your acronyms, that means 2560 x 1600 resolution for a pixel density of 256ppi; in contrast, Apple’s new iPad has a 9.7-inch screen with a 264ppi pixel density. At those sort of levels, a handful of pixels either way probably isn’t going to swing it, meaning both tablets will likely be as easy on the eye when it comes to graphics.

The 2560 x 1600 number is interesting, because it’s the figure Samsung has been shouting about with relation to the Exynos 5 Dual, the latest SoC (system-on-chip) off the Korean firm’s semiconductor lines. Although only a dualcore, rather than the quadcores we’ve seen from NVIDIA and others, Samsung steps up to an altogether more advanced type of processor, the Cortex-A15, which means that – on paper at least – the Exynos 5 Dual will be more potent than any of the chipsets currently on the market. In fact, Samsung says one A15 core is between 1.5x and 2x faster than the A9 NVIDIA is currently using.

So, Samsung has a pixel-dense display – one we have high hopes for, too, given the company’s track record in panel technology – and the processor to drive it, but that’s not the extent of the new Exynos’ abilities. In fact, running such a screen is really just the baseline. The Exynos 5 Dual is able to overlay a live UI onto a 1080p HD video, while simultaneously processing a live camera preview feed, encoding video in the background, and driving a separate display via HDMI output. Most users will never require that exact mixture of tasks, but it does suggest that the new Exynos will be smooth as melted butter in everyday use.

Samsung has been taking a pasting in the courtrooms of late, Apple turning the company’s own design research against it as it sets up a case of design theft. Performance in the marketplace is also questionable, with Samsung’s healthy shipment figures potentially masking altogether more pedestrian sales of devices like its Galaxy tablets.

Yet it’s not all bad news: the new Galaxy Note 10.1 looks set to build on the perhaps surprising degree of interest around the original Galaxy Note, and Samsung’s promotional campaign for the pen-enabled tablet suggests that the company might finally have got the message that functionality in context is just as important, if not more so, than how well-packed your spec-sheet is.

Samsung’s big challenge, then, is not to get sidetracked by the pure specifications of its new slate behemoth. The company needs to tell us why we need tech that previously it might simply have hoped to hypnotize us with.

Much of that will depend on the platform the tablet runs. So far, the rumors haven’t pinned down OS, though there are two key possibilities: Windows 8 (or, more accurately, the ARM-specific breed, Windows RT) or Android. With Jelly Bean, building on the solid groundwork of Ice Cream Sandwich, Google’s platform is finally feeling up to speed for tablets; our experience with the Nexus 7, which runs Android 4.1, suggests that Android has – after the abortive mess of Honeycomb – eventually come of age on larger displays.

Samsung has woken up to context. It is either realizing or being forced to comprehend that delivering products that look like they’ve been borrowed from Apple’s alternate-ideas pile isn’t good for business: customers don’t want copycats, and if they want something that looks like an iPad (either in hardware or software, or both) then they’ll probably just buy an iPad. Yet the tablet market is still relatively immature and, like Microsoft’s emphasis on content creation with Surface, there’s more than one way to skin the proverbial cat.

With Jelly Bean, Android finally feels as smooth in operation as it needs to be. With the Exynos 5 Dual, Samsung has a chipset that can translate that smoothness to a tablet. With a 2560 x 1600 display, it can compete on shelf-appeal, rather than being the pixelated also-ran behind the new iPad. As long as it tells us why we really need it, Samsung could have the next big tablet hit on its hands.


Samsung is moments away from a true iPad alternative is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google’s official Nexus 7 case hits homes and hands-on

This week we’re taking a peek at the official Google Play sold Nexus 7 case for the rather popular 7-inch tablet. This case snaps around the tablet and flops down unto the tablet for a full all-around protection situation. While there is a magnetic sensor in the tablet, this standard case does not make use of it, just working as a much more basic bash-protectant instead.

The case itself will cost you $19.99 when you pick it up from Google and is made entirely of TPU. There’s no silicone here, which we’re thankful for as that stuff often picks up dust and hair galore, and the whole unit is high quality as we would expect from the makers of the tablet. ASUS is involved in the creation of this case as well as they are in making the tablet itself.

Above you’ll see Cory Gunther from Android Community applying the case to his own Nexus 7 tablet with white back from Google I/O 2012. As he notes, the case is durable, easy to apply, and certainly does “get the job done” without any frills. Cutouts exist along the back and sides for each of the device’s ports, mic, and speaker as well. The whole case weighs in at a measly 4.7oz and comes in one color: dark grey.

You needn’t worry about which model you’re getting here as both the 8 and 16GB versions of the Nexus 7 fit perfectly well. This case comes in a tiny box surrounded by a massive amount of packaging from Google and you’ll get it in just about as short a time as Google can possibly get it to you because they’re certainly not running short on supplies. The tablets themselves, on the other hand, that’s a different story entirely.

Don’t forget to check out our original in-depth review of the Nexus 7 and stick around for future tablet action with SlashGear as this device continues to take off!

case
P1090925
P1090926
P1090921
P1090923
P1090924
P1090919
P1090920
P1090917
P1090918
P1090916
P1090914


Google’s official Nexus 7 case hits homes and hands-on is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google’s Nexus 7 and the iPad dedication effect

When Apple decided to put a tablet into the market, they made it clear that, at least at first, they’d only have one model – this “hero” strategy is now working for Google’s Nexus 7 tablet as well. With the iPad being the single most popular tablet device in the world – with no contenders to speak of as far as sales go – you’ve got to wonder why no company has stuck to their guns with a single product name (with slight variations in each generation’s upgrade) like Apple has. Google isn’t exactly taking this strategy to heart with the Nexus 7, but the fact that it’s popping up in the news so often with headlines like “sold out” attached to it has got us thinking: has Android finally got a hit?

Have a peek at three stories that have popped up on the Android-focused blog, and our sister-site, Android Community over the past couple of days. Each of these news bits has the Nexus 7 as its focus and shows how powerful the device has become, how well-loved by the hacker and developer community as well. Begin with the Nexus 7 as in-dash accessory as whipped up by a modder hoping to boost the excellence of his Dodge Ram. Check the video out right here:

You don’t do something so dedicated with a piece of hardware unless you’re confident that enough people will be interested and pumped up about you doing it. In this case, you also don’t do something this hardcore unless you believe in the device and the company behind it. With a tablet or smartphone, you also have to trust that the hardware manufacturer and software developers behind the device will remain dedicated to it through the known future – Google has instilled that trust in this modder.

Next you’ll want to see the most recent “Sold Out” post coming from the Nexus 7 as its listed on the Google Play store. While it turned out this time that Google’s system may have simply been rocking the “Coming Soon” sign while it updated its web system, the shipping time has gone from days to weeks to out of stock entirely several times since the tablet first arrived on the market. Google is either terrible about keeping the device in stock, or they’re doing it on purpose to make people feel like if they did get it, they’re lucky! Either way it’s the same result for the end user.

Finally you’ll want to peek at the most recent overclock and benchmark results from the developers taking the time to push this tablet to its limits. What these hardcore users are doing is releasing all limits in the tablet added on the software end – or as many that make sense to release – so that the device can rev its engine to the max. At the moment, this tablet has gone to 1.64 GHz on each of its four CPU cores – that’s high powered, and it’s shown itself to be a massive clobberer of benchmark tests as well.

The dedication we’re seeing here to this one tablet is nearly unprecedented, and we’re sure Google is patting itself on the back for how well the device has done thus far. Now we’ve only to wait for the sales numbers to show how great (or not so great?) the device has actually done on the market. On that note – if you’re waiting for iPad sales numbers, you’ll be waiting for a very, very long time. The only way we can compare these devices and their success in the market is with analysis from 3rd party groups – and I’m sure we’ll see those soon too!

For now though, let us know: do you own a Nexus 7? Do you an iPad? Do you own both?


Google’s Nexus 7 and the iPad dedication effect is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Engadget’s back to school guide 2012: tablets

Welcome to Engadget’s back to school guide! The end of summer vacation isn’t nearly as much fun as the weeks that come before, but a chance to update your tech tools likely helps to ease the pain. Today, we’re leaning back with our tablets — and you can head to the back to school hub to see the rest of the product guides as they’re added throughout the month. Be sure to keep checking back — at the end of August we’ll be giving away a ton of the gear featured in our guides — you can hit up the hub page right here!

DNP Engadget's back to school guide 2012 tablets

Your back may be straining from the textbooks, laptop, gym gear and lunch in that dangling overstuffed messenger, but you’re still gonna want to save room for one more item — a tablet. After all, while you can surf, tweet, play games and watch video from your other devices, there’s nothing like doing it from a simple glass window that sits in the palm of your hand. As the hardware gets more powerful, these devices are rapidly becoming versatile enough to let you justify leaving the laptop at home on less-intensive days, so why not check out our picks of the finest devices you should be using and abusing before, during and after class.

Continue reading Engadget’s back to school guide 2012: tablets

Filed under:

Engadget’s back to school guide 2012: tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Aug 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments