LG Optimus F5 mid-range LTE smartphone hits France April 29, global dispersion to follow

LG Optimus F5 midrange LTE smartphone hits France April 29, global dispersion to follow

LG’s F-series handsets may not be in the same class an HTC One or GS4, but we can’t help but appreciate the solid specs and LTE-goodness baked into these mid-range devices. Following a debut alongside its F7 sibling at MWC, the F5 will begin trickling out to French retailers on April 29th. While there’s no mention of US availability — despite a recent leak pegging it for Verizon — we do know LG will soon be pushing it out to parts of Asia and Central / South America. Aimed at markets new to LTE, the smartphone packs a beefy 2,150mAh battery, 5-megapixel camera, 1.2GHz dual-core processor and a 4.3-inch screen for showing off LG’s skinned version of Android 4.1.2. If you’re curious to give LTE a go and this looks like a winner, you’ll find the full press release after the break.

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With Smartphones, Consumers Think Brand And Price First, Carriers Second, Finds Compete/Google Research

Old Cash Register

The growth in smartphone usage — supported by ever-faster mobile network speeds — is also giving rise to a much more competitive landscape among carriers, handset makers and other phone retailers targeting consumers on the hunt for new devices. Google today is releasing a report it compiled in partnership with Compete to show how that is playing out in one market in particular, the U.S. It shows that while carriers may still hold the key to making a call or getting online with a smartphone, when it comes to buying one, carriers are taking a backseat as users seek out brands and best prices first, with carriers as the follow-up to that.

Here is the graphic from Google’s report that spells out how the retail landscape is changing:

Google notes that while we are still seeing some competition among handsets, it’s on the decline. Some 66% of users surveyed in March 2013 noted that they considered 2 or more handsets when buying their last device in the past year. That number, however, is down by 9% over 2011.

This speaks to the continuing consolidation we’re seeing in overall smartphone rankings, where brands like Samsung and Apple increasingly dominate in sales, to the detriment of companies like Nokia, HTC, RIM and others. (These figures out earlier this month from Kantar Worldpanel put iOS and Android sales at nearly 93% of all smartphone sales in the U.S. in the last three months, with Samsung very much the biggest of the Android OEMs.)

But look over to the next graphic and you can see quite the opposite trend. When it comes to considering carriers, some 47% of users are these days considering more than one, with that number up by 134%: in other words, carriers are gradually losing their brand grip. And I’d hazard to guess that carriers come into the equation with a heavy price rider: with those offering the best deals getting more attention if a user isn’t locked into a plan elsewhere. That’s further demonstrated by the fact that these days, 30% of consumers switch carriers when they’re upgrading, a rise of 39%.

Although a lot of people made a big deal about users switching to Verizon when it finally started to carry the iPhone in 2011, after years of exclusivity on AT&T’s (less good quality, they argued) network, the Google/Compete numbers seem to tell a slightly different story: It found that one-third of buyers select phones first, and carriers second, with 25% of those purchasing devices in the last year doing so because they wanted the “latest and greatest.” So much for network quality. Meanwhile, upgrade eligibility, which ties users in to signing with the same carrier, only motivated 9% of purchases.

Indeed, there are other signs that many of the stronger controls by carriers are on the wane. T-Mobile’s big marketing push in the U.S. as the “Un-carrier” plays testament to that, as do services like Three in the UK, which lets users sign up to smartphone tariffs on rolling, monthly contracts. (Yes, you can argue as Darrell has that these are more marketing tactics, with the user getting billed one way or the other; but all the same tariffs that further decouple phone services from contracts are on the rise.)

Among its other findings — unsurprisingly highlighted by a company that makes the bulk of its revenues from digital advertising — Google said it found that 80% of all mobile phone shoppers research for their handsets online, although the majority (61%) of sales are still completed in physical stores, with another 4% on the phone. It also found that the trend for multi-screen content consumption is also being echoed in mobile device shopping habits: the number of those using mobile handsets and tablets to look up info about mobile phones has tripled; with one-third taking that browsing into stores themselves. That’s also seen a rise in video usage too, with those browsing for phones online including 30 minutes or more of video-watching as part of their research.

As with other kinds of technology, younger demographics are proving to be the least price sensitive: 62% of 18-34 year-olds spent over $100 on phone purchases last year, Google notes.

Read the full report here.

Retail Version Of Minecraft For Xbox 360 Delayed Until June 4

Retail Version Of Minecraft For Xbox 360 Delayed Until June 4

We think it’s safe to say Minecraft has been a complete success on the Xbox 360 as the last time we heard of its sales, it reached 5 million copies sold. Hearing a retail version of the game was being planned was no complete surprise to us considering how well the game has done in its digital format. The retail version of Minecraft is still coming, just not at the end of April as it was originally announced.

The retail version of Minecraft for the Xbox 360 has been hit with a delay in the U.S. and is expected to be released on June 4. The news comes directly from Microsoft’s Larry Hyrb, who is better known as Major Nelson, in a recently published tweet saying the reason for the delay is “in order to include the very latest content.” (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Power Glove Oven Mitt Keeps You Cooking ‘So Bad’, Skyrim Will Not Receive Additional DLC As Team Will Be ‘Moving On’,

    

Two new Microsoft Stores opening today, three more this month

Microsoft is continuing its efforts to roll out more of its Microsoft Stores across the US and Canada. The company announced that they’re opening two new specialty stores today, with three more specialty stores opening within this very month, which means the month of April will see the opening of five Microsoft Stores.

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The new stores that are opening today are located in Tampa, Florida and Elmhurst, New York. The Tampa location is at International Plaza and Bay Street, while the Elmhurst store is located at Queens Center. As for the three stores that are opening up later this month, those will be located in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania; Murray, Utah; and Providence, Rhode Island.

Microsoft specialty stores aren’t necessarily full-size stores, but rather smaller, concentrated stores, located in shopping malls usually. However, they still sell the popular products, like Surface tablets, Windows Phone 8 devices, and Xbox 360 consoles. Roughly around a third of all Microsoft Stores are specialty stores.

Microsoft is expected to open more stores later in the year, including its first set of international stores outside of the US and Canada. Specifically, it’s said that the company wants to open its first international stores in the UK and other parts of Europe. However, the exact timeline on that is not yet known.


Two new Microsoft Stores opening today, three more this month is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Samsung Is Building 1,400 Retail Stores Inside Best Buys

In a bid to compete more directly with Apple, Samsung has announced that in the coming months it will open 1,400 Samsung Experience shops within Best Buy stores around the US. More »

Amazon Is Buying Goodreads (Updated)

Noted online bookstore and retailer Amazon.com is buying the excellent online books-related social network and information portal Goodreads. Well, that’s a deal that makes a lot of sense. More »

Store Owner Wants Five Dollars to Let You Look around in His Store

I completely understand that it’s difficult for small retail store owners out there to make a buck today. After all, we have Walmart offering incredibly low prices that most smaller retailers can’t compete with in the retail market and then you have mega-stores like Amazon dominating when it comes to online shopping. The big problem that many retail stores have is that consumers are increasingly “showrooming” at their stores rather than buying. Showrooming is the phenomenon of shoppers coming into a retail store to see and touch a particular item and then going online or to a Big Box retailer to actually purchase.

look fee

While Big Box retailers such as Target turn lookers into buyers by selling at low margins and high volume, one store owner in Brisbane, Australia is taking completely different tact. The store owner has decided that the answer to showrooming is to charge everyone who steps in the door five dollars to look around. The owner has graciously offered to remove that five dollar fee from the price of any goods purchased.

The image you see above is the sign that the storeowner attached to the window, which claims that the policy is in line with other electronic stores, clothing stores, and other retailers. This is the first I’ve ever heard of such a policy, so I have no idea what he’s talking about.

What this guy fails to realize is that if people come into your store, at least you have the chance to make a sale. If you want to charge me five dollars just walked through the door even if I don’t find anything I like, I simply won’t come to your store.

[via Reddit via Consumerist]

Australian store charges five dollars per person to “just look”

I can understand retail locations trying to come up with anything they can to help fight the increasing showrooming phenomenon. Showrooming is the name given to the act of seeing customers come into a retail store to look at items and then leave to purchase the goods online at a lower price. This problem is common to all retailers including big stores such as Walmart and Target.

justlookingfee

A common practice for consumers today is to go into a retail location where they can pick up an item they’re interested in, play with it, and see what it’s like. These people that often leave and go online to places like Amazon.com and others where they can order an item at a lower price without having to pay sales tax. Many retail stores, such as Target, are working with their suppliers to match online prices in their stores.

However, a brick-and-mortar store in Brisbane, Australia is taking a different tack. The store is reportedly some sort of specialty food store and has posted a sign that it will be charging five dollars per person to come into the store and “just look.” The store does note that the five dollar fee will be deducted when goods are purchased.

This seems like an incredibly ridiculous way to combat showrooming. This will certainly limit the number of consumers who walk into this specialty food store to see what the store offers and if they have anything that may be interested in. Very few people will be willing to pay five dollars to step foot into a store. The image included above is of the actual sign in the store window as it was originally posted on Reddit.

[via Consumerist]


Australian store charges five dollars per person to “just look” is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Blockbuster UK finds a rescuing buyer, keeps staff and stores afloat

Blockbuster UK retail

When Blockbuster’s UK brand entered administration at the start of the year, there were concerns that it would ultimately prove just another casualty of the inexorable move toward online video. Not quite: Gordon Brothers Europe, a private equity firm known for rescuing troubled companies, has bought Blockbuster’s British assets. The acquirer isn’t disclosing the cash involved, but it plans to keep 2,000 workers and 264 stores in full swing while it plots a turnaround. That recovery is only described in vague terms at this stage, however — Gordon Brothers plans to bring “new products” and “new technologies” to the bruised retail chain. While we’re glad to see a one-time cornerstone of video rentals get a second chance, we hope that its bounce-back strategy involves a more futureproof selection than aisles full of plastic discs.

[Thanks, Steven]

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Via: Sky News

Source: Gordon Brothers Europe

Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition gets a disc-based version, hits retail April 30th

Minecraft Xbox 360 Edition gets a discbased version, hits retail stores April 30th

Minecraft has already been plenty successful on the Xbox 360 as a downloadable game (and on other platforms, of course), but there will soon be another way for players to find their way into the world-building environment. Microsoft announced today that Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition will be available as a disc-based game at all the usual US retail outlets on April 30th, where it’ll set you back $19.99. The game will be otherwise identical to the downloadable version, and come complete with all the features and content that will be included in the forthcoming ninth update to the game. Gamers in Australia, Hong Kong, India, New Zealand, Singapore and Taiwan will have to wait a bit longer to get it, though, with release dates in those countries set for early June (other countries haven’t been specified).

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Source: PlayXBLA