LG VS870 surfaces at the FCC and WPC, may be an Escape for Verizon

LG VS870 surfaces at the FCC and WPC, may be an Escape for Verizon

AT&T brought out the LG Escape late last summer as a low-cost Android option with a better-than-usual battery and solid performance. If recent testing is any indicator, a Verizon edition might be in the cards. An LG VS870 (the Escape is the P870) has appeared at the FCC wielding support for Verizon’s CDMA and LTE networks. Lest we worry that it’s just a simple network switch, there’s clues that Verizon is planning a little more: the same phone has already appeared at the Wireless Power Consortium, hinting at Qi wireless charging. How else it might change from the 4.3-inch Escape, if it’s indeed similar, isn’t visible. There might only be a short wait before we find out, as the roughly equivalent Lucid is long enough in the tooth that a replacement would be very timely.

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Source: FCC, WPC

Crackle streaming video heads to LG, Samsung, and Vizio Smart TVs, Samsung Blu-ray players

Crackle video service heads LG, Samsung, and Vizio Smart TVs, Samsung Bluray players

Free video streaming service Crackle is already available on your smart phone, computer, and game console, but today the company announced its expansion to LG, Samsung, and Vizio Smart TVs. The expansion is twofold for Samsung, which is also adding the ad-supported streaming service to its line of Blu-ray players; Crackle characterizes today’s news as the conclusion of a strategy to bring the streaming service to, “all leading smart TV manufacturers.” Of course, that strategy is only complete in a handful of countries thus far — today’s additions apply to only the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia for LG and Samsung, while Vizio Smart TVs in the US and Canada are the only ones to get Crackle. All new iterations of the Crackle app are available via Samsung, LG, and Vizio’s respective app portals.

Show full PR text

Crackle Starts The New Year On A ‘Smart’ Note With Expansion To Major Smart TVs And Blu-ray Devices
LG, Samsung and VIZIO Devices Now Offering Crackle

CULVER CITY, Calif., Jan. 22, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — Crackle, the multi-platform entertainment network, today announced its application is now available on millions of LG, Samsung and VIZIO Smart TVs, as well as on Samsung Blu-ray players. With an already established and popular presence on Sony Internet TVs and Blu-ray players, Crackle is now available on all leading smart TV manufacturers, bringing on-demand streaming directly to millions of living rooms.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120817/LA59056LOGO)
Crackle hand-picks Hollywood movies, television and original series to the tastes of its digitally connected audience, focusing on genres like action, comedy, crime, horror and sci-fi. The Crackle App and online service is free to download and free to watch, and offers unlimited ad-supported viewing of all content available on Crackle.com, including TV and film hits “Rescue Me,” DISTRICT 9, UNDERWORLD, SNATCH and WALK HARD: THE DEWEY COX STORY.
“The penetration of IP-connected TVs and Blu-ray players in the living room is rapidly growing and these devices are fast becoming the new standard,” said Phil Lynch , Senior Vice President, Digital Networks and Games, Sony Pictures Television. “We are pleased with Crackle’s performance on Sony connected devices to date-as well as viewers’ overwhelmingly positive reception to the service-and are excited to begin 2013 with a major expansion into these other leading brands of connected TVs.”
Providing high-quality video streaming, Crackle is available on LG Smart TVs in the U.S., Canada, U.K. and Australia; Samsung Smart TVs and Blu-ray players in the U.S., Canada, U.K. and Australia; and VIZIO Smart TVs in the U.S. and Canada.
Hundreds of films and full-length television episodes available on Crackle are delivered uncut and unedited – the way they were meant to be viewed. Content is continuously refreshed, with new titles added every month.
A sampling of Crackle’s current content offerings in the U.S. include:
DISTRICT 9
UNDERWORLD
SNATCH
WALK HARD: THE DEWEY COX STORY
HARRY BROWN
JOE DIRT
THE BIG HIT
DRAGON WARS
“Rescue Me”
Thousands of episodes of the world’s most loved Anime series including hit titles such as “Blood+” and “Kurozuka” as well as the Marvel Anime series “Wolverine,” “X-Men” and “Ironman”
Two new original series: “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” starring Jerry Seinfeld and “From the Basement,” a music series from Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich , along with over 40 other originals including: “The Ropes,” “Issues,” “The Bannen Way,” and more.
Along with these Smart TV and Blu-ray devices, Crackle is accessible on an expanding distribution network including the recently launched app for PlayStation; Sony and other manufacturers’ Android phones and tablets; the iPhone, iPad and iPod; Roku players; Xbox LIVE service; and Windows Phones, Barnes & Noble’s NOOK Tablet devices and Amazon’s Kindle Fire, among others. A full list of Crackle’s extended availability can be found on www.crackle.com/outreach/platforms.
On the aforementioned devices, the Crackle App can be accessed in the following ways:
Through Samsung Apps at http://www.samsung.com/us/appstore
As a VIZIO Internet App(R) from the Yahoo! Connected TV store http://www.vizio.com/technology/via
Through LG SmartWorld at http://us.lgappstv.com/appspc/main/main/main.lge
Crackle, Inc.
Crackle, Inc. is a multi-platform next-generation video entertainment network that distributes digital content including original series and full-length traditional programming from Sony Pictures’ vast library of television series and feature films in addition to the libraries of other studios. Crackle is one of the fastest growing entertainment destinations on the Internet, mobile and over-the-top devices, offering audiences high-quality programming in a variety of genres, including comedy, action, sci-fi, horror and music. Crackle reaches an impressive audience through its diverse online and mobile distribution network. Crackle is available in the US, Canada, UK, AU, Latin America and Brazil. Visit Crackle’s site at www.crackle.com or find Crackle on Facebook at www.facebook.com/crackle.
SOURCE Crackle, Inc.

RELATED LINKS
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LG Optimus G Pro Confirmed For Japan Spring Release

optimus pro g LG Optimus G Pro Confirmed For Japan Spring ReleaseSo the LG Optimus G Pro is really the LG Optimus G Pro, and not the LG Optimus G2 that certain quarters suspect it to be. It is rather interesting to note, then, that the LG Optimus G Pro was leaked in Japan first – for the simple reason that it is the local carrier NTT DoCoMo that will make available the new flagship device from LG in that part of the world this coming spring. We have heard that it will arrive only sometime in April this year, so there are still a couple more months plus or so for you to save up your dough if you want to pick it up when it arrives in the Land of the Rising Sun.

Just what kind of hardware does this bad boy pack? For starters, the LG Optimus G Pro will feature a 5” display that does Full HD resolution just like most of the other flagship devices do, in addition to carrying a faster 1.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro processor, a more weighty 3,000mAh battery that will definitely come in handy, 2GB RAM, a 13-megapixel shooter at the back, 32GB of internal memory, LTE support and a microSDXC memory card slot, all running on Android 4.1 Jelly Bean as the operating system of choice. [Press Release]

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Verizon Activates Over 6 Million iPhones In Q4 2012, AT&T Buys Alltel Wireless For $780m To Acquire 585k Subscribers And More,

LG Optimus G Pro 1.7GHz HD phablet announced in Japan, will hit shelves in April

On Friday, January 18, a leaked image of the LG Optimus G Pro was sent to the folks over at Engadget by an unnamed source. Now, just a few days later, the handset has officially be unveiled in Japan. The announcement comes from NTT DoCoMo, and backs up everything we saw in the leak while tossing some more details into the mix. The handset is slated to hit Japan in April.

1

The upcoming flagship from LG features a 5-inch 1080p IPS display, with the entire handset measuring a svelte 139mm x 70mm x 10mm and weighing only 160 grams. The handset will be available in Platinum White and Indigo Black, and runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. There’s no word on when it will be hitting shelves in other countries.

2

Inside, users will find a blazing 1.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon processor, 2GB of RAM, and 32GB of internal storage space. There’s a microSD slot for further expansion to accompany the ample internal storage. The battery is a high-capacity 3,000mAh, although there’s no information yet on the handset’s standby and talk time ratings.

All the other goodies you’d expect are there, including Bluetooth 4.0, infrared, NFC, and mobile wallet. In addition, it also offers DoCoMo’s Xi LTE, which provides a maximum downlink of over 112Mbps in certain areas, making it the fastest 4G available in Japan. According to the NTT DoCoMo announcement, this is one of 11 smartphones in its 2013 lineup.

[via K-tai Impress]


LG Optimus G Pro 1.7GHz HD phablet announced in Japan, will hit shelves in April is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

LG Optimus G Kicks Off Global Rollout

lg optimus g world LG Optimus G Kicks Off Global Rollout The LG Optimus G is rightfully LG’s most premium and powerful 4G LTE smartphone to date, although we are quite sure that this situation will change sometime down the road, but it is not the time yet. In fact, LG has announced that they will start to roll out the smartphone in more than 50 countries later this month – although folks in North America, Korea and Japan have already managed to get hold of this LTE device, other LTE markets will soon be able to get an idea on what the brou-ha-ha is all about. .

A PR blast from Dr. Jong-seok Park, president and CEO of LG Electronics Mobile Communications Company, “As 4G LTE availability expands on a global scale, we will leverage our strong LTE technology and expertise to offer consumers the best 4G experience through our devices. With the latest Jelly Bean OS and improved software, Optimus G will make a strong case for the title of ultimate premium 4G LTE smartphone.”

Singapore will receive the Optimus G first at the end of this month, followed by other markets worldwide offering 4G LTE service. [Press Release]

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Samsung Roadmap Points To More Android Devices, Samsung Galaxy Note 8 Spotted?,

LG Optimus G Pro official for Japan: 5-inch 1080p LCD, 1.7GHz S4 Pro and Jelly Bean

LG Optimus G Pro official 5inch 1080p LCD, 17GHz Snapdragon S4 Pro and an NTT DoCoMo launch

Remember how the LG Optimus G Pro saw its biggest leak in Japan? We might just know why. Local carrier NTT DoCoMo has confirmed the new flagship’s existence as part of a spring device lineup, and it’s everything that was rumored just days ago. LG is adding to the rapidly burgeoning crowd of 5-inch, 1080p phones while freshening the formula we’d seen in the regular Optimus G: there’s now a quicker, 1.7GHz Snapdragon S4 Pro chip, a heftier 3,000mAh battery and Jelly Bean (albeit Android 4.1, not 4.2) out of the box. Other elements are familiar carryovers, such as the 2GB of RAM, 13-megapixel camera, 32GB of built-in storage, a microSDXC slot and LTE. Japanese buyers will have to wait until early April to pick up an Optimus G Pro for themselves; as LG hasn’t confirmed the phone separately, other countries’ launches are still up in the air.

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Source: NTT DoCoMo (1), (2)

Nexus 4 production to increase as demand remains high

Google‘s issue with Nexus 4 stock has been well documented, and if you’re one of the many who have been waiting to get one, then you know how infuriating these stock shortages can be. There’s a bit of good news on that front coming out of LG today, with the company’s French arm stating that it will begin to ramp up production on the highly sought after device. While you may think that these shortages rest on LG‘s shoulders, that isn’t entirely the case, with LG France director of mobile communications Cathy Robin telling Challenges that Google is partly responsible for the exhausted stock as well.

nexus-4

According to her, LG produced an amount of Nexus 4s that were in line with Google’s projections. Google obviously based these projections on the sales of previous Nexus devices, but there was just one small flaw with that plan: previous Nexus devices never managed to hit the level of popularity the Nexus 4 has. So, the end result is that we’re stuck with a constantly sold out handset that neither Google nor LG thought would be such a smashing success.

Hindsight, as they say, is always 20/20, with the Nexus 4′s line up of solid hardware and excellent price tag coming together to form a deal that many Android users are finding difficult to resist. At the moment, both the 8GB and 16GB Nexus 4 variants are entirely sold out on the Google Play Store, and there isn’t any indication of when they’ll become available again. Instead, the listings for both only tell users to “check back soon.”

Hopefully LG can increase demand to the point where the Nexus 4′s stock issues are squashed entirely. Robin said in the interview that if LG were to increase production, it would take about six weeks before the frequency of deliveries is given a boost, so there’s still awhile to wait before these short supply problems are addressed. Stay tuned, because we’ll hopefully have more details for you soon.

[via ZDNet]


Nexus 4 production to increase as demand remains high is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Refresh Roundup: week of January 14th, 2013

Refresh Roundup week of January 14th, 2013

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!

Official Android updates

  • Motorola Photon Q 4G LTE: A minor update is available for Sprint’s QWERTY slider that’s said to improve overall device stability. [Android Police]
  • Samsung Galaxy Rugby Pro: This rugged smartphone for AT&T is now eligible for an upgrade to Android 4.1.1 (Jelly Bean). Users will also find the additions of Swype and Music Hub in this build. [Phandroid]
  • LG Lucid: Verizon has announced an update for this smartphone that brings improved quality of voice calls and installs Flash Player. The newly updated file manager app now brings the ability to manage files in the cloud, and the software also installs Verizon Remote Diagnostics for troubleshooting purposes. [Droid Life]
  • Galaxy Nexus: Google has published the Android 4.2.1 update for the Sprint variant of the Galaxy Nexus to its servers. [Android Police]
  • Samsung Galaxy S III: Owners of unsubsidized Galaxy S III handsets throughout Australia are reporting than an update to Android 4.1.2 — complete with Multi-Window enhancements — is now available for download and installation via Samsung Kies. [Android Central]
  • ASUS Transformer Pad TF700T: An update is now available for the Transformer Pad Infinity that brings greater compatibility with microSD cards and decreases lag when playing music in the background. The software also fixes bugs in the camera and Movie Studio apps. [Android Police]
  • Samsung Galaxy Note II: Verizon has pushed out a fix to this smartphone that’s designed to resolve Exynos security vulnerabilities. [SlashGear]
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7: Verizon has announced an update for this tablet that decreases electrical consumption while charging the device in a “power off” state. [Android Police]
  • Sprint Flash: Sprint has released an update for this ZTE-manufactured smartphone that brings improvements to the camera, adds timing preferences for the LED notification and resolves issues related to Swype. [Android Police]
  • Samsung Epic 4G Touch: An update is now available for Sprint’s version of the Galaxy S II that brings security fixes along with the Sprint Connections Optimizer. [Android Police]
  • Rogers: The Canadian carrier has announced that its Jelly Bean updates for the Galaxy S II LTE, Galaxy Note, RAZR HD and Xperia T have been pushed to February. [MobileSyrup]

Unofficial Android updates, custom ROMs and misc. hackery

  • Motorola Droid RAZR / RAZR Maxx: A root exploit has been published for the official Jelly Bean OTA software build, meant for these two non-HD smartphones for Verizon. [Talk Android]
  • Motorola Atrix 4G: Motorola is requesting soak test participants for a pending update to this AT&T smartphone. [Android Central]
  • Sony Xperia Z: Sony has announced that it’ll release an Android 4.2 update to the Xperia Z shortly after the smartphone’s arrival. [Android Central]
  • Motorola Atrix 2: A pre-release Jelly Bean update has worked its way into the wild for this smartphone on AT&T. Curiously, Motorola has previously stated that the Atrix 2 would never see an update past Ice Cream Sandwich. [Android Community]

Other platforms

  • HTC 8X: AT&T has released its first update for this Windows Phone handset. Known informally as the Portico release, it features an option to keep WiFi connections alive and allows users to reject phone calls while responding with a text message. [WinSource]
  • Nokia Lumia 810: An OTA update is now available for this Windows Phone on T-Mobile that brings fixes to Bluetooth functionality and is said to improve overall device stability. [T-Mobile]

Refreshes we covered this week

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IRL: Securifi Almond, Samsung Galaxy Note II and the LG Optimus G

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we’re using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

This is the one place where it’s okay for us Engadget editors to be slightly behind the times. Back at CES a couple weeks ago, for instance, we got hands-on with the Securifi Almond+, a touchscreen router with a fancy all-white design and even fancier support for Zigbee / W-Wave home automation. Here in “IRL,” though, we’re just fine to talk about the OG Almond, which doesn’t offer quite so many add-ons. Rounding things out, we’ve also got some anecdotes about the Galaxy Note II and Optimus G, neither of which need an introduction at this point.

Securifi Almond

IRL Securifi Almond, Samsung Galaxy Note II and the LG Optimus GLook, I moonlight as the IT guy at the White House, okay? Now that we’re having such an honest conversation, I will say that I’ve been on the hunt for an ideal WiFi range extender for some time now. Western Digital’s My Net Wi-Fi Range Extender does a fine job, but a) it’s pretty large and b) it lacks bells and whistles. If you’re looking for an alternative that addresses both of those issues, let me introduce you to the other product I’d trust to stretch WiFi waves from the Situation Room to the Rose Garden: the Securifi Almond.

While this is a bona fide WLAN access point / router at heart, I was focused primarily on testing its range extension abilities. I plugged the unit in some 90 feet away from a Netgear N900, watched the colorful touchscreen dance to life, and then tapped on a few screens in the Wizard Guide to set it all up. We’ve all heard it before — “easy to set up!” — but this one’s truly capable of doing as advertised. Within four minutes, the unit had found my local 2.4GHz network, accepted my password and created a new network using that same password for areas that were previously out of reach.

In practice, it adds another 150-odd feet of range to my N900, and I saw no degradation in performance while streaming video. The touchscreen also continues to be useful after you’ve pecked in your information. You can have it display the local weather or the time, making it a pretty awesome glanceable piece of technology while it’s broadcasting in the background. Two quirks, though: one, the weather forecast (apparently) doesn’t update on its own, and two, the clock reversed AM and PM in my testing. Granted, both of these are in “Beta,” and I’m hoping the company adds even more functionality through OTA software updates — which the unit is fully capable of receiving.

The other bits you should know about: it won’t rebroadcast 5GHz signals (boo!), and it actually creates a new SSID (network name) instead of just amplifying your existing one. This means that once you walk out of range of your existing router, you need to disconnect and reconnect to a new network name, which is a slight hassle. Those things aside, it’s a solid performer at $80, and hopefully it’ll get even better once the updates begin to roll in.

Darren Murph

Samsung Galaxy Note II

IRL Securifi Almond, Samsung Galaxy Note II and the LG Optimus GI was among the naysayers when Samsung released the Galaxy Note. Maybe it was my memories of the Streak 5 or perhaps it was just dread at the idea of carrying around a gargantuan handset. The Note’s massive success did little to change my perception, but it did make me look at its successor with respect. Spec bump aside, the Galaxy Note II is certainly a more mature product compared to the OG Note, what with its bag of software tricks and that improved S Pen. I can see the S Pen‘s usefulness for not only the creative types, but also obsessive note takers and for general tomfoolery. Add smooth performance and impressive battery life, and it makes the Note II quite a compelling proposition indeed.

Attempting to occupy that middle ground between smartphone and tablet, the Note II’s size is its chief strength as well as its weakness, depending on how you look at it. Despite the new one-handed mode that shrinks the keyboard and dialing pad and docks them to the side, I still think the large size is tough to handle with a single hand. Heck, even using the lockscreen slider to accept or reject calls might be an issue if you try doing it one-handed, making the pebble-smooth handset prone to slipping. Ditto when you stretch your thumb across the glass to pull down the notification bar or to reach any app controls placed on the top.

On the flip side, watching movies is lots of fun thanks to that big display, as is playing games. Apps like Flipboard also shine with some extra screen real estate. Features such as multi-window and pop-up video make great use of the extra screen real estate and add to the device’s pull factor, much more than having the same functionality on its smaller sibling, the Galaxy S III.

Basically, when it comes to smartphones, size does matter. It’s really up to you what you prefer — a large slab that can possibly help avoid the hassle of lugging both a phone and a tablet, or a conventional-sized blower that’s more pocket-friendly but leaves something to be desired when it comes to the media and app experience. Personally, I think of these high-end phablets as SUVs of the smartphone world — hardly easy to parallel park or squeeze into tight spaces — but big, powerful and spacious. Love ’em or leave ’em, they’re here to stay.

Deepak Dhingra

LG Optimus G on Rogers

IRL Securifi Almond, Samsung Galaxy Note II and the LG Optimus GThe Optimus G feels like the Nexus 4’s neglected cousin. Both LG phones are capable, but the Nexus 4’s status as the official Google phone — and the accompanying $350 unlocked price — tend to overshadow the Optimus G’s more traditional approach. I felt compelled to try the Optimus G on Rogers for a few weeks for just that reason. Is it worth it to give up stock Android and pay more, all so that you can score a few hardware advantages?

The Cliff’s Notes answer: yes. In some cases, anyway. The battery life could certainly clinch a few sales. Where the Nexus 4’s runtime is fairly average, the Optimus G has no problem lasting through a photo- and Twitter-heavy day. The 32GB of storage space is naturally useful for a hefty music collection like mine, too. LTE is indeed appreciated versus the Nexus 4’s dual-carrier HSPA+ 3G, although I’ll readily acknowledge that the 3G in my area is often fast enough. I’m even sanguine about the interface, despite my preference for pure Android. LG’s custom interface feels relatively unintrusive and light, at least next to Samsung’s TouchWiz. It mostly stays out of the way, and it doesn’t lean on gestures that might only be useful once in a blue moon (see: Samsung’s tilt-to-zoom).

If an unfettered Google experience isn’t a factor, about the only potential dealbreaker is that oh-so-frustrating camera focus system. The Optimus G’s camera (eight megapixels on the Rogers model) is fine in much of the time, but it’s tough to compose some macro or close-up portrait shots when the continuous autofocusing offers just a split second of sharpness before it readjusts; I’ve taken a few photos that looked fine in the preview but were blurred by the time I hit the capture button. If LG ever embraces traditional autofocus for the Optimus G’s camera, though, it’ll be easier to recommend it, regardless of whether the Nexus 4 is on the shopping list.

— Jon Fingas

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LG Optimus G sales hit 1 million worldwide

LG Optimus G sales hit 1 million worldwide

LG proved with the Optimus G that it can produce a smartphone that stacks up with the best of ’em, and according to the company’s newly released sales figures, consumers are starting to take notice. As it stands, more than 1 million Optimus G’s have been sold since the handset’s September debut. While the figure pales in comparison to heavyweights like the Galaxy S III and iPhone 5, that’s not too shabby for a phone that’s only been available in North America since November. Given the similarities between the Optimus G and the Nexus 4, we’re quite curious to know how sales of the two smartphones compare, but Google’s currently keeping those numbers close to its chest. That said, there’s little doubt that LG currently has its hands full at the production line.

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Via: GSM Arena

Source: Yonhap News