Samsung Galaxy S II now shipping for $100 in America… on Alaska’s GCI

Leave it the regional folks to steal the thunder of the Big Four. While we were all led to think that Sprint’s Epic 4G Touch would be the first subsidized Galaxy S II to officially land in the US of A, it looks as if Alaska’s GCI has beat ’em all to the punch — and in more areas than one. A tipster residing in The Last Frontier just picked one up today, and best of all, it’s running a solid Benjamin less than it will on those other operators. Oh, and it’s compatible with the company’s “4G” (read: HSPA+) network. Unadulterated wilderness? Yep. Northern Lights? Definitely. Early / cheap access to the year’s hottest Android smartphone? Evidently. So, who’s up for a little northern exposure?

[Thanks, Joshua]

Samsung Galaxy S II now shipping for $100 in America… on Alaska’s GCI originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Sep 2011 13:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Vigor hits the FCC with a dose of Verizon LTE

Verizon’s LTE lineup just keeps looking better and better all the time. The oft-rumored HTC Vigor is the latest device to pass through the halls of the FCC whilst sporting Big Red’s 4G frequencies, along with a handy dose of CDMA / EVDO. HTC’s still keeping an uber-tight lid on all of the details of this phone, however, mandating that all of the juicy secrets remain confidential for now. The Vigor’s rumored to have a 1.5GHz dual-core CPU, 1GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage, but we’re still in the dark despite the phone’s fancy new badge of approval. We’re just another baby step closer, folks, so feel free to peruse the numbers and graphs in the source link.

HTC Vigor hits the FCC with a dose of Verizon LTE originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Sep 2011 11:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Auckland amps up free WiFi for Rugby World Cup

Just in time for play-by-play tweets about the Rugby World Cup in New Zealand, Auckand has instituted a fully-integrated WiFi network across its Link public transit system. According to officials, buses and some trains will get the free internet treatment, giving passengers up to three 30 minute sessions a day between September 1 and October 31st. Powered by Tomizone and sponsored by Localist, the network promises 2 – 6Mbps downloads and is based on point-to-point links around town using fiber assets for backhaul. If that wasn’t enough connectivity, CallPlus and Slingshot are dishing out some gratis WiFi of their own with an additional thousand hotspots sprinkled throughout the city. Hopefully, the added infrastructure will mean WiFi access par excellence year round for maximum non-Rugby related tweetage. Check out the full PR after the break.

[Thanks, Scott]

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Auckland amps up free WiFi for Rugby World Cup originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Sep 2011 01:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play 4G hitting AT&T on September 18th for $50 on contract

We knew good and well it was coming, and come it has. Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play has made the natural GSM shift in the States in order to grace Ma Bell’s airwaves, and despite the “4G” naming convention, this fellow will be topping out at HSPA+. In other words, LTE lovers will need to look elsewhere. This marks the first launch of a PlayStation-certified smartphone for AT&T, and given that it’s been around the block a time or two, the carrier is (smartly) pricing it at just $49.99 on a two-year contract — a buck-fifty less than what it launched for on Verizon Wireless. As we’d heard, it’ll ship with Android 2.3.3, a 1GHz CPU, Adreno 205 GPU, a 4-inch display (854 x 480) and will arrive in an exclusive ‘stealth blue’ hue. AT&T customers will also be blessed with a gratis Multimedia Dock (DK300) and MC100 music cable, not to mention seven pre-loaded games at no charge. Full details on that are hosted up after the break, and interested consumers can line up to grab their own on September 18th.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play 4G hitting AT&T on September 18th for $50 on contract

Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play 4G hitting AT&T on September 18th for $50 on contract originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Sep 2011 10:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Droid Bionic finally available on Verizon, angels sing in chorus

Nine months and three days. That’s the length of time between Verizon’s official unveiling of the Motorola Droid Bionic and its actual release. The poor device suffered through countless delays and a complete design overhaul as it watched its LTE brethren get launched in the meantime. But today, September 8th, is the day the chains come off Verizon’s latest 4G wonder, and it’s all yours for three Benjamins. Were you one of the faithful who waited so patiently (or impatiently, even) for the inevitable day of reckoning? Carpe diem, friends, and head to the source link.

Motorola Droid Bionic finally available on Verizon, angels sing in chorus originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Sep 2011 01:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T introduces Huawei Impulse 4G, available September 18th for $30

If the Impulse name sounds familiar but you just can’t put your finger on it, allow us to break out the iron and get the confusion straightened out. Two weeks ago we reported that a rumored device called the Samsung Impulse 4G might be on its way to guide AT&T into its new era as a LTE powerhouse. Turns out it was partially true: this morning, the carrier announced the Huawei Impulse 4G, which in reality is a rebranded Ideos X5 that will act as an affordable ($30 on two-year contract) HSPA+ device cooking up faux-G speeds at a max of 14.4Mbps. Unfortunately, that’s not exactly the LTE radio we were pining for. The Impulse also has a 3.8-inch WVGA display, an 800MHz Qualcomm MSM7230 CPU, Android 2.2 and 5 megapixel image-snapper with 720p video capture. It’ll be hitting stores on September 18, and we’d say the specs line up with what we’d expect from a $30 Android phone. Follow below for the full press release.

Continue reading AT&T introduces Huawei Impulse 4G, available September 18th for $30

AT&T introduces Huawei Impulse 4G, available September 18th for $30 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Sep 2011 10:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On With the Droid Bionic, Verizon’s 4G Screamer

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The Droid Bionic is here, and to some, it couldn’t have come soon enough. It’s rare to see such a feverish level of anticipation for a non-Apple smartphone, but everyone’s been buzzing about Motorola’s latest 4G LTE handset — so far the only dual-core phone available for Verizon’s 4G network.

The Droid Bionic will go on sale Thursday morning at Verizon stores and through Verizon’s website for $300 with a 2-year contract, $590 without a contract. We received a phone two days early, and these are our initial impressions after spending only a few hours with it. A full review will follow next week.

First, this is not the same Droid Bionic we saw at CES way back in January when the phone was announced. Most of the specs are the same, but the physical case has been redesigned. Most notably, the phone is slimmer, the corners are slightly sharper and the chin is not as prominent — all pluses in my book. It does retain the same slightly rubberized back of the CES version to give it more grippiness. It has a bit of a hump on the back, on the top half where the camera is.

The guts are entirely the same: a 1-GHz dual-core processor, 1 GB of RAM, 16 GB of internal storage plus a microSD card slot that ships with a standard 16-GB card (you can swap in cards as big as 32 GB). There’s an 8-megapixel camera on the back, a VGA camera on the front,

The touchscreen measures 4.3 inches, and houses a qHD (960 × 540) display panel under a layer of Gorilla Glass. Unlike the recent Droid 3, there’s no physical keyboard.

For connectivity, you get HDMI and USB. The headphone jack is at the top, as is the power/wake button — I’ve seen some grumbling on the blogs about the placement of the power/wake button, but I quite like it where it is. There’s also a volume rocker. The phone does not have a dedicated camera-shutter button.

I’d expect nothing less than awesome performance, as we’re currently closing the book on phones with less than a dual-core chip and a gig of RAM, but the Bionic really stunned me with how snappy it is.

It’s running Android 2.3.4 with the recently redesigned MotoBlur on top — Motorola’s skin for Android that aggregates your favorite contacts and social networking feeds across a few home-screen widgets.

But who cares about widgets — how fast is it?

I can tell you, it is very fast. The user interface is extremely smooth and responsive. I’d expect nothing less than awesome performance, as we’re currently closing the book on phones with less than a dual-core chip and a gig of RAM, but the Bionic really stunned me with how snappy it is.

And the 4G speeds here in San Francisco only heighten the experience. YouTube videos load in just a few seconds, even for HD clips. Websites load extremely fast — even Wired.com! — and the JavaScript-heavy pages I tried, like mobile Gmail and Facebook’s mobile site, were as smooth and responsive as native apps.

The screen is bright, and it has an antiglare coating that makes it pop outdoors. But I’m a little disappointed the screen is not sharper. It’s tough to see any rough edges when watching videos or when sweeping through the main UI, but when reading web pages or looking at photos with subtle gradients, the lack of precision is a drag. I held it up against the iPhone 4’s display and saw a noticeable difference.

The camera is fast, which is a nice change from the terribly sluggish camera on the iPhone and even on other current dual-core Android phones. Also, the video camera can capture 1080p HD movies, and the front-facing camera can be used to video-chat over Google Talk with any other capable phone, tablet or laptop.

The Droid Bionic can be used as a 4G hot spot, serving up to five other devices, but we didn’t test that yet. Something else we haven’t been able to test yet is battery life — Motorola claims 650 minutes of talk time and more than 200 hours of standby from the 1735-mAh battery, but we’ll see what a few days of heavy use does to it.

There are three microphones on board for noise cancellation, but the call quality isn’t totally fantastic. I could hear the other party loud and clear, but the people I called said they heard a lot of hissing in the background. But hey, at least the calls went through immediately and didn’t drop.

There are a few apps preloaded, but not many. You get ZumoCast (the “access your PC or Mac desktop from anywhere” app we also saw preloaded on the Droid 3), and Netflix is only a download away.

There’s also the Motorola “webtop” experience — a sort of dumbed-down desktop that we first saw on the Motorola Atrix earlier this year. You can hook up your phone to a big screen and use a keyboard and mouse to access mobile apps and a real-ish version of Firefox.

Just like on the Atrix, the “superphone” webtop mode is accessed through various accessories. And in the accessories department, the Droid Bionic rolls with an entourage deeper than Diddy’s:

  • A $300 “lapdock,” a laptop dock just like the one for the Atrix, though the two are not interchangeable.
  • A $100 charging dock with USB and HDMI ports for connecting a display and input devices.
  • A $30 adapter for connecting the phone to an HMDI display to get to the webtop mode.
  • A $50 battery-charger dock that can charge your battery outside the phone.
  • A $40 car nav dock that mounts on your dashboard switches the Droid into a minimalist “auto mode,” bringing maps, music and Bluetooth menus to the fore.

That’s enough plastic to fill Haleakala. The company gave us all of the accessories, so we can tell you whether or not any of them (and webtop) are worth the extra cash once we test all of them. It wasn’t the case with the Atrix.

Look for a full review next week.

Photos by Jim Merithew/Wired


Motorola Droid Bionic Hands On: The Good, the Bad, and the Grainy

Remember when you first heard about the Droid Bionic? You had no gray hair and Jimmy Carter was still in the White House. Well, eight months after CES, here it is—potentially the new king of Android pile on Verizon, at least this month. More »

Samsung Stratosphere makes its obligatory FCC visit, confirms membership in Verizon’s LTE club

We know, the image above is hardly as detailed as the ones we glanced at this morning, but it has its measure of significance nonetheless. It’s a rough diagram of the Samsung SCH-i405 — a phone known to us as the Stratosphere — as it appears in FCC filings approved today. The documents’ mention of LTE band 13 (as well as CDMA / EVDO) seems to confirm rumors that suggest the aforementioned device will be coming to Verizon’s 4G network, likely sooner rather than later. If you’ve been eager to see an Epic 4G-esque QWERTY slider on the largest carrier in the US, this will be your golden opportunity. Of course, this may prove to be a drop in the bucket when compared to an impending flood of even more tempting handsets.

Samsung Stratosphere makes its obligatory FCC visit, confirms membership in Verizon’s LTE club originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Sep 2011 23:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone 4 Still Tops the Smartphone Sales Charts

The iPhone 4 was the top selling smartphone on both Verizon and AT&T this summer. Image: Cannacord

With all the rumor and mayhem around the upcoming iPhone 5, we almost forgot that the iPhone 4 is still on the market, and doing great.

T. Michael Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, found the iPhone 4 leading the pack in smartphone sales despite being more than a year old and about to be eclipsed by a new model within months. It was the leading smartphone seller in June, July and August on AT&T and Verizon. On AT&T, the iPhone 3GS also performed exceedingly well, as the number two seller those months.

The iPhone 4 debuted on AT&T last summer, and on Verizon in Feburary, where it broke sales records in the first two hours.

But all the hype in recent months has surrounded the upcoming iPhone 5. Apple’s newest handset, a prototype of which appears to have gone missing from a San Francisco tequila bar, is rumored to sport a larger display, possibly with curved glass, and a metal back. An 8-megapixel camera upgrade is expected, as is an A5 processor like that of the iPad 2. It’s also likely that the next generation iPhone will be available on Sprint and possibly T-Mobile.

Outside the Apple arena, 4G phones dominated the sales figures.

On Sprint, the HTC EVO 3-D 4G dominated in sales, while on T-Mobile, the HTC Sensation was the best seller. On Verizon, the Samsung Charge 4G took second place and the HTC Thunderbolt 4G snagged third.

Walkley also found the iPad 2 (unsurprisingly) was the top-selling tablet on Verizon and AT&T. The first generation iPad also continues to sell well, beating out many newer Android tablets that are available.

via AppleInsider