Samsung Galaxy Note II confirmed to reach Verizon stores tomorrow

Samsung Galaxy Note II confirmed to reach Verizon stores tomorrow

Despite the fact that Verizon’s version of the Samsung Galaxy Note II — complete with its ugly logo-laden home button — is already starting to ship out to pre-orderers, the carrier and manufacturer continued to keep quiet about their official launch plans. We’ve finally received word from a Samsung spokesperson that the 5.5-inch smartphone-tablet hybrid is destined to make its way into Big Red stores beginning tomorrow for $300 with a two-year contract. If you’ve been exercising a heap of patience in waiting for this gigantophone, you’d best free up some time on your calendar first thing tomorrow. We have the official statement waiting for you after the break.

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Wahoo Balance Smartphone Scale: Wireless Weigh-Ins to Combat the Holidays

It’s never good when your bathroom scale gives you inconsistent readings. That’s probably one of the reasons why people seem to like these new high-tech scales that can track your weight history via your smartphone. There aren’t too many available on the market yet, so it’s good to see more alternatives popping up like this one from Wahoo Fitness.

wahoo smartphone scale 1

The Wahoo Balance Smartphone Scale is powered by Bluetooth, and it allows you to track your weight and BMI over time. It will send your weigh-ins directly to your iPhone or iPad via a free app. The scale itself can manage up to 16 different users and it can hold up to 130 weight readings. Keep in mind that it only works with the Phone 5, iPhone 4S, iPod Touch (5th generation), iPad (3rd and 4th generations), and iPad Mini – presumably because it’s using Bluetooth 4 tech.

The scale is available for pre-order now for $99(USD). Orders will start shipping in the first week of December, so they could make a nice gift idea – assuming the recipient doesn’t think you’re trying to send them a message about their weight.

[via Ubergizmo]


A Google plan to kill carriers with WiFi is all too believable

Could you live your mobile life on WiFi? Attempts to ween users off of expensive, subsidized smartphone deals have been more successful this year than every before; word earlier today that Google had acquired a WiFi hotspot company – and which later turned out to be false – was believable in part because the search company is a prime candidate for ousting cellular from the mobile equation. The ICOA deal may be fake, but Google‘s appetite to ditch the traditional carriers and strike out more or less alone isn’t new.

The original Nexus One was the company’s first effort at that, an attempt to bypass the commonplace subsidized phone deals with an unlocked handset, and relegate the carriers themselves to “dumb pipe” status. It proved to be an idea ahead of its time; smartphone-naive shoppers blanched at a $529 sticker price in January 2010, and Google had to satisfy itself with carrier distribution just like everybody else.

Though we’re only two years past that point, the reception to the unlocked Nexus 4 has been considerably warmer. The phone’s $299 off-contract price didn’t hurt – the same, it’s worth noting, as some high-profile phones have launched, complete with a subsidy and two-year agreement – on carriers like Verizon and AT&T – and Google’s apparent inability to keep them in stock suggests that demand is strong.

Along the way we’ve seen a growing play for the connectivity market by Google. The company already has an agreement with Boingo, subsidizing or offering free access in locations across the US, and of course has its Google Fiber network beginning in Kansas City. It’s still early days, mind, though there are plenty of other wireless hotspot providers out there, primarily in cities, transit locations, and venues like restaurants.

“When does WiFi become pervasive enough to make users sufficiently confident?”

The question is one of saturation, then, and comfort levels: at what point does WiFi coverage become pervasive enough to make users confident enough to abandon traditional carriers. Would the knowledge that 80-percent of the places you can usually be found had WiFi internet access – such as for messaging, and browsing, and VoIP – put you at ease for not having an active cellphone plan? For some that figure would need to be much higher – 90-, or 95-percent even – whereas others, making fewer calls perhaps, might be willing to go down to 50- or 60-percent coverage in return for cheaper monthly bills. Cellphone coverage isn’t 100-percent, after all.

One reluctance might well be down to hotspot unfamiliarity: just how much of the time could you be using a WiFi connection rather than your carrier’s data pipe? It’s not a metric that the carriers themselves are keen to share – focused, instead, on maximizing 3G/4G revenues – though Google could handle that transition relatively easily. Google Now already tracks your location (it can count your steps each month, like a fancy pedometer, or tell you the timetables for the nearest public transport); it would be a small matter to put together a monthly summary of the amount of time you’d spent within the wireless range of a WiFi hotspot.

Even if that degree of pervasiveness wasn’t quite enough to tick the comfort box, it could be sufficient to at least break down some of the monthly bill. Splitting off data use to a hotspot, and using the carriers merely for traditional voice calls and text messaging, would certainly trim service fees, as well as ensuring that things like emergency calling is still available. There’s also room for more unusual price plans, such as we’ve seen Google and others negotiate for tablets and Chromebooks: would you pay another, say, $80 on top of your off-contract phone for twelve months of minimal calls and messages – just enough to tide you through those times you were out of range of WiFi?

Breaking free of carriers and their demands isn’t the sole reserve of Google – Steve Jobs wanted to do it with WiFi and the first iPhone, and Microsoft has Skype for Windows Phone 8 – but the search giant may well be in the best position to actually deliver it. That might not be with ICOA, but it would be mighty surprising if Google wasn’t looking for a way to further democratize the mobile data pipe in its favor.


A Google plan to kill carriers with WiFi is all too believable is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Mobile Miscellany: week of November 19th, 2012

Mobile Miscellany week of November 19th, 2012

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 past week, we discovered an abundance of special edition smartphones and T-Mobile gave ten new reasons for owners of unlocked iPhones to smile. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of November 19th, 2012.

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Buffalo out a new IEEE802.11ac Wireless router with the WZR-D1100H/U

If speed is the only thing that matter to you behold the WZR-D1100H/U a new IEEE802.11ac wireless router that will hit store shelves in Japan at the end of this month at around 25,450 Yen.
Offering a maximum speed of 600Mbps on its 5GHz bandwidth (theoretical) between compatible devices, the WZR-D1100H/U also comes with the of good old IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n at 300Mbps Maximum.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 with LTE now available at Verizon, $500 sans contract

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 101 with LTE no available at Verizon, yours for $500

Been clamoring for a Samsung Galaxy 2 10.1 with LTE? While you may have known about Sprint’s variant which launched 10 days ago, Verizon is now laying claim to the tablet as well. Big Red’s model will cost you a cool $500 ($150 than its 7-inch sibling) with “month-to-month service” that’ll run you between $30 for 4GB of data to $60 for 10GB. Details on the slate’s internals are light, but you can expect it to be loaded with Android 4.0 and 8GB of flash storage (expandable to 64GB via microSD) — whether this one has the beefed-up 1.5GHz dual-core CPU like Sprint’s remains to be seen, but it is 50 dollars less. Verizon’s listing the 10-incher as being ready to ship by the 26th, so hit up the source links below if it’s up your alley.

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Source: Verizon (1), (2)

NTT cuts fiber internet prices in Japan, may be reacting to an LTE generation

Samsung Galaxy S III at NTT DoCoMo

As manic as LTE adoption has been in the US, it could be triggering a full-fledged generational rift in Japan. NTT is cutting prices for fiber-to-the-home internet access by as much as 34 percent in the midst of falling landline subscriptions, and Australia’s Delimiter hears from unofficial sources at the provider that the cuts may be in response to youth being enamored with 4G on their phones. The tipsters believe that many of the younger set are picking one expensive LTE plan, even with data caps, instead of paying for two services; a price drop would be an attempt to keep at least a few of these wireless rebels onboard. Take the assertions with a grain of salt when there’s no official statements to match, but there’s no doubt that 4G demand is booming when NTT’s own DoCoMo just landed its 7 millionth Xi contract. We only wish American wired and wireless carriers would be so accommodating of our temptation to cut the cord.

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Via: GigaOM

Source: NTT West (translated), Delimiter

EE strikes deal with Virgin Media to give its customers free tube WiFi in 2013 (update: Vodafone, too)

EE strikes deal with Virgin Media to give its customers free tube WiFi in 2013 (update: Vodafone too)

Londoners enjoyed not only “the greatest show on earth” this summer, but also free tube WiFi courtesy of Virgin Media. It’s due to remain complimentary for what’s left of the year, but if you’re with EE, you’ll be able to continue updating your status from subterranean platforms in 2013. The UK‘s first 4G provider has struck a deal to hook its customers up to Virgin’s underground WiFi infrastructure, although the announcement seems to have gone out a little earlier than planned. EE tweeted the news then swiftly retracted it, but has since replied to Mr. Miles at Pocket-lint confirming the partnership, at least for however long that message stays… yep, it’s gone. If you’re not on EE, don’t get your sad face on just yet, as there are rumors circulating that other carriers will be piggybacking on Virgin’s hotspots, too — they just haven’t accidentally announced it yet.

Update: It’s now officially official, and Vodafone’s on board as well. Next year, tube WiFi will stay free for those signed with either EE or Voda, and Virgin will be offering pay-as-you-go options for those that aren’t: daily, weekly or monthly access from £2 per day (roughly $3.20). Virgin is also hooking up another 48 stations, with 20 due to be switched on this December and 28 in early 2013. If you’re wondering whether your local station is one of the score being hooked up this month, they’re all listed in the PR below.

Continue reading EE strikes deal with Virgin Media to give its customers free tube WiFi in 2013 (update: Vodafone, too)

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Via: Pocket-lint

Source: EE (Twitter), Stuart Miles (Twitter)

I-O Data announces Nubes a new Wireless Memory Card Reader for iOS

Today I-O Data outs in Japan a new iOS only device that will “extend” your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch possibilities by access to any files (compatible with an iOS App) stored on a memory card without the need of a PC.
Nubes, the name of this new tool is a simple SD, SDHC and SDXC Card reader with an integrated Wireless AP and internal battery that will let you iOS thingy access to any files stored in it. Nubes is only compatible with devices running iOS 4.3.3 or later comes with a 1350mAh …

Vodafone and Visa announce mobile payments app for Android-toting Aussies

Vodafone and Visa announce mobile payments app for Androidtoting Aussies, Windows Phone on deck

Sometime next year, Vodafone subscribers in Australia can expect to taste the sweet fruit of mobile payments, which comes thanks to the carrier’s partnership with Visa. Computerworld Australia reports that Vodafone SmartPass is currently being tested on Android phones in the land down under, which relies on an NFC-enabled SIM card. It’s also said that the carrier plans to introduce a Windows Phone app, although it has no intention of developing a solution for iOS, which is due to the iPhone’s lack of NFC. While mobile payments still remains a mere pipe dream for many, it’s said that Vodafone will eventually bundle the SmartPass app on all smartphones that support NFC. Unfortunately, the technology may remain cumbersome, as it’ll require users to load currency into a prepaid account for use — something Google has already kicked to the curb. If you’ll recall, Vodafone first announced its initiative with Visa in February of this year, although at the time, it was said that only a few European counties would make the initial cut. To learn more about what Vodafone has in store for its Aussie constituency, feel free to hit up the source link.

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Via: WMPoweruser

Source: Computerworld Australia