Samsung Godiva Spotted Again

godiva blur Samsung Godiva Spotted AgainA couple of days ago, we brought you word that Verizon Wireless would be the carrier of choice for an upcoming Samsung smartphone that is simply known as Godiva, and this time around, we have some blurry images of the Samsung Godiva captured by an anonymous person who has duly sent it to the folks over at Engadget. So far, what we have managed to garner concerning the Godiva in terms of specifications would include a 720p display, Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean as the operating system of choice, and NFC capability within the back cover, but for folks who have been hankering after a physical keyboard, we are sorry that you are all out of luck with the Samsung Godiva. Hopefully Verizon will step forward and do the right thing by sharing with the rest of the world the official name, and chances are we need not wait that long any more. Would you be one who will be placing an order for the Samsung Godiva when it finally arrives?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: T-Mobile Supports HSPA+ Nexus 7, Expands Nexus 4 Availability To Retail Stores, Facebook Rolls Out VoIP Calling To U.S. iPhone Messenger Users,

Developer fired for outsourcing job to China

It might seem like a crazy stunt that you would never think anyone would pull off, but it officially happened. A developer at an undisclosed “critical infrastructure company” was caught outsourcing his job to China for less than one-fifth of his six-figure salary. From there, the developer could sit back and relax.

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A 2012 case study from Verizon brought forth the story of the sneaky developer. Only known as “Bob”, he worked at the unnamed company for a quite a long time, and was earning “several hundred thousand dollars a year.” Plus, he received excellent performance reviews along the way, noting that he was one of the best devs at the company, and that his code was very well-written.

However, Bob’s code wasn’t actually his code, but rather the job of Chinese workers whom Bob paid around $50,000 a year (which says that Bob was being paid around $250,000 a year). Instead, Bob surfed Reddit, watched cat videos, browsed eBay, Facebook, and LinkedIn, and then sent an email to management at the end of the day summarizing that day’s work (of the Chinese workers, that is).

Here’s where Verizon comes into play. The anonymous company asked Verizon for help in understanding some abnormal activity that the company discovered in its VPN logs, most notably a near-constant connection from Shenyang, China that used Bob’s login information. After taking a look inside Bob’s computer, Verizon found hundreds of invoices from a Chinese consulting firm in Shenyang that Bob used to get his work done for him. Needless to say, Bob is now unemployed.

Image via Flickr


Developer fired for outsourcing job to China is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Samsung’s ‘Godiva’ phone appears on blurrycam with Verizon branding, no physical keyboard

Samsung's 'Godiva' phone appears on blurrycam with Verizon branding, no keyboard

After riding into town on Snapdragon S4 benchmarks, we’ve now got some pictures of Samsung’s incoming smartphone, one that’s bound for Verizon. If you liked the curves and capacitive button quartet of the Stratosphere II, you’ll probably be happy with what’s on offer here too. Specifications have been cranked up to a 720p display, Android 4.1.2 (confirmed on-screen after the break) and NFC support within the back cover, although the physical keyboard hasn’t made it into this model — another death knell for the slider. We’re still waiting on an official name from Verizon, likely something to do with clouds or the sky, but suspect the official word shouldn’t be far off.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

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Developer Sacked for Outsourcing His Entire Job to China

The truly lazy are often the most creative. Like this developer, who was caught outsourcing his entire job to China so that he could spend his time at work… not working. More »

Samsung SCH-i425 Godiva outed in benchmark tests, headed for Verizon

DNP Samsung SCHi425 Godiva outed in benchmark testing, likely headed for Verizon

Like Lady Godiva herself, a phone dubbed the Samsung Godiva has been seen naked — at least as far as benchmarks are concerned. The site GLBenchmark has revealed it has a 1.4GHz MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 SoC on board, along with Adreno 305 graphics, a 720p screen, Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean and support for Verizon’s LTE network. Its SCH-i425 model number points to the possibility that it might be the successor to the Stratosphere II (which was known as the SCH-i415) and could therefore sport a sliding keyboard, but that remains firmly speculative at the moment. Yet, seeing as how Samsung’s mobile offerings at CES 2013 were practically non-existent, we’re betting the Godiva — unlike the Lady of Coventry’s ride in the nude — is more fact than fiction.

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: GLBenchmark

Samsung Godiva (SCH-i425) Headed For Verizon

verizonwirelesslogo Samsung Godiva (SCH i425) Headed For VerizonThe dust might have settled after the action that happened over at CES last week, but this does not mean that we are done for the year. No sir, the show must go on for the rest of the world, and here we are with another leak of an upcoming device known as the Samsung Godiva, or if you prefer to go by its model number, then the Samsung SCH-i425 would suffice. This particular handset is said to be on its way to Verizon as the carrier of choice, where it seems to reside in the upper mid-range tier.

Initial readings of several leaked benchmark results points to some information concerning its specifications – including a 1280×720 HD touchscreen display, a dual-core 1.4GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor, 4G LTE support, and Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean in tow. There does not seem to be any software rendered on-screen Android navigation buttons, so you will find standard issue hardware buttons located under the display instead. Are you looking forward to the Samsung Godiva?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Hack Converts LG Optimus G’s Software Into A Nexus 4, Sony Xperia Z Camera Sample Images Revealed,

CES 2013: Interview roundup

CES 2013 Interview roundup

Our CES plates were jam-packed full of eye-opening conversations this year. We had the chance to speak to top tech luminaries, entrepreneurs, celebrities and fellow journalists. Much of that opportunity arose from the return of our stage, parked right in the middle of the Las Vegas Convention Center’s Grand Lobby. We blew things out this year, packing the schedule from the show’s opening on Tuesday morning to its close on Friday night.

Below we have a list of the interviews we did at this year’s show, both on-stage and off, so you can relive the thoughts, theories and comments that defined this year’s Consumer Electronics Show.

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Samsung SCH-I425 shows up in benchmarks, could be Stratosphere III

It seems that every other day a mysterious Samsung device passes through GLBenchmark, and today is no different. Today a listing for the Samsung SCH-I425 popped up in GLBenchmark’s database, leaving many to speculate what this new handset is. While there isn’t too much the benchmark results tell us, there is a little bit of information we can take away from them.

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Here’s what we can glean from the listing: this handset has been codenamed “Godiva,” will be running Android 4.1.2, and is destined for Verizon. It’ll have a screen displaying at 1280×720, but we don’t know how big the screen will actually be. There’ll be a Qualcomm MSM8960 clocked at 1.4GHz under the hood, and that will be working alongside an Adreno 305 GPU. As far as specs go, that’s all we know, so a fair amount of this handset is still a mystery.

However, we might know what product line this device belongs to thanks to its model number. The original Stratosphere had a model number of SCH-I405 while the Stratosphere II was designated the SCH-I415, so it stands to reason that the I425 could be the Stratosphere III. If it is, then it seems that the latest in the Stratosphere line is headed to Verizon, and it may not be very long before it arrives given the fact that Smasung is testing things out in GLBenchmark.

Of course, we won’t know for sure until Samsung makes an official announcement. That could come at any time, but don’t expect a lot of fanfare for the SCH-I425, since it seems to be a mid-range phone. Still, we’ll update you if we hear anything new, so keep it tuned here to SlashGear for more.

[via Android Community]


Samsung SCH-I425 shows up in benchmarks, could be Stratosphere III is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Samsung’s Galaxy Camera: Our Secret Star of CES

CES isn’t short of product launches, and if you want to keep up you need the right tools. For 2013, the SlashGear team tried out a new workflow: carrying Samsung’s Galaxy Camera and doing as much of our uploading of photos and video wirelessly. We’d already been impressed by the Galaxy Camera in our review, but taking the Android-powered point-and-shoot out into the field for what’s arguably the toughest assignment on a tech-head’s calendar really put it through its paces. Read on for our full report.

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A quick recap, if you’ve not been keeping up. Revealed at IFA 2012 last September, the Galaxy Camera blends a 16-megapixel camera with a 21x optical zoom together with Android as per the Galaxy S III smartphone. We had a mixture of AT&T and the recently-released Verizon versions of the Galaxy Camera, each using 4G LTE networks (there’s WiFi b/g/n, but we rarely took the time to hunt down local wireless networks). Just about all of the regular Android apps run on the camera, including Instagram, but we stuck with Samsung’s default app, that can also record Full HD 1080p video.

Our thinking was that, rather than shooting in our normal style – swapping out memory cards and offloading media to a laptop whenever convenient – we would use the Galaxy Camera’s wireless connectivity to upload photos and videos directly to the cloud. By using Smugmug, which has a dedicated app for Android, we could automatically watermark each shot and keep all of the media together in a place where the whole team (whether physically present at CES or otherwise) could access it.

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In practice, that turned out to be largely the way the team worked, at least in more time-critical situations. Tag-teaming on press conference coverage, one person could shoot content and pick the best of the images to upload, all wirelessly, while the other person could pull their preferred images from the Smugmug gallery. With product hands-on, there was no “which memory card were those photos on?” confusion, since the images had already been uploaded.

Functionality is useless if the quality is lacking, though happily that wasn’t our experience with the Galaxy Camera. For best results you’ll usually get the most ideal images from a DSLR, unsurprisingly, but heavy, bulky cameras aren’t especially suited to the booth-hopping of a show like CES. In fact, we were able to coax some decent results from the Samsung – our Pebble smartwatch hands-on photos were all taken with the Galaxy Camera, for instance – while the 21x optical zoom proved invaluable for getting closer to items on-stage during press conferences.

Pebble smartwatch photo samples:

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The Galaxy Camera isn’t perfect, mind. We experienced the odd focusing issue, where the Samsung would be reluctant to lock onto close-up subjects. That could usually be addressed by repositioning the frame and trying again – or backing off a little altogether – but it was frustrating when it happened, and interrupted our workflow. The uploading process could also be fiddly; we were using the Smugmug app, through which we could choosing individual photos and videos to be uploaded to a gallery in the cloud, but each required separate selections.

It’s also not ideal to be jumping in and out of the camera app, picking content to be uploaded. Some sort of briefly-shown “Upload This” button shown displayed with the preview frame after each shot is taken would be great, as would easy onboard watermarking. A double-save – one lower-res copy for uploading more quickly, and a higher-res original kept on the memory card for later – would also be useful. It’s worth noting that most of our complaints could be addressed by apps, which the Galaxy Camera’s Android OS would make easy to install – not something you could say about most point-and-shoots.

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So what have we learned? Our experiment to integrate the Galaxy Camera into our workflow isn’t over, with a trial-by-fire at CES highlighting some of the Samsung snapper’s shortcomings. We returned to an old-fashioned whip-out-the-memory-card style workflow at a couple of points, for instance, usually when there was a particularly urgent image we specifically needed. It proved difficult to edit the upload priority of content in the task list, forcing us to go manual with our offloads. Samsung’s onboard video editing app proved fiddly to use on the go, and we quickly reverted to more traditional editing once the footage was on our computer.

For its balance of convenience and performance, though, the Galaxy Camera has impressed us again. When time is of the essence – and when we’re incredibly excited to bring you the latest news, as soon as possible – the effectiveness of an online camera is demonstrable. We’ll be tweaking with alternative apps and maybe even cooking up some custom software of our own, just so that we can better embed the Samsung into the SlashGear system, so expect to see more photos and video shot on the Galaxy Camera through 2013!

Thanks to Samsung who loaned us a number of Galaxy Cameras, with no expectations as to whether/how we might use them at CES, or indeed subsequently report on them.


Samsung’s Galaxy Camera: Our Secret Star of CES is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Mobile Miscellany: week of January 7th, 2013

Mobile Miscellany week of January 7th, 2013

If you didn’t get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we’ve opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This week, both Nokia and Microsoft discussed strategy for the coming year and Verizon’s CEO shared his thoughts on the end of subsidies. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of January 7th, 2013.

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