1 "TAKE NO AS A QUESTION "

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

LG G Watch launch date, pricing revealed


LG G Watch launch date, pricing revealed

LG G Watch launch date, pricing revealed
It looks like LG’s new Android Wear based smartwatch, G Watch, will be available by the end of the second quarter.
NEW DELHI: It looks like LG's new Android Wear based smartwatch, G Watch, will be available by the end of the second quarter.

The South Korean giant has told online publication Pocket-Lint that the G Watch will be available before July and will be priced less than £180 (Rs 18,000 approximately) in the UK. 

The website also got access to a non-functional prototype of the watch and mentioned that the square shaped watch will come with interchangeable straps. It noted that the watch features a solid, seamless build and feels lightweight, yet premium.
LG has been teasing the watch via its social media accounts. The company has not revealed the specifications or features of the watch. It is worth pointing out that Evleaks, a Twitter account run by a former technology blogger, had said that a Google smartwatch made by LG, will be released at the Google I/O event which is scheduled to be held in June. Evleaks had also posted purported specifications of the LG smartwatch that included a 1.65-inch IPS LCD display(280x280p), 512MB RAM, and 4GB internal storage. He tweeted the specs before LG made the G watch public in March.
Another report by Taiwanese publication ePrice informs that LG is working on a second smartwatch which will be released after the launch of the G Watch. LG is also expected to release its Lifeband Touch fitness band in the first half of the year. 
Motorola's Moto 360 and LG's G Watch are the first smartwatches to feature Google's Android Wear software platform made for wearable devices. Motorola has also hinted at a summer release for its round smartwatch.


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Panic on web as Heartbleed bug leaves millions of users vulnerable

Panic on web as Heartbleed bug leaves millions of users vulnerable

Panic on web as Heartbleed bug leaves millions of users vulnerable
The bug, dubbed Heartbleed, “allows anyone on the internet to read the memory of the systems protected by the vulnerable versions of the OpenSSL software”.
NEW DELHI: Web administrators and computer security researchers on Tuesday scrambled to fix a serious vulnerability in OpenSSL encryption used by thousands of web servers, including those run by email and web chat providers. The bug, dubbed Heartbleed, "allows anyone on the internet to read the memory of the systems protected by the vulnerable versions of the OpenSSL software". 

In other words hackers or cyber criminals can use the Heartbleed bug to steal private encryption keys from a server that is using OpenSSL protocols of SSL/TLS encryption and then snoop on the user data, including passwords. There are reports that servers of Yahoo, Imgur and Flickr have been affected. However, this is around two-year-old bug and hence no one knows for sure how many people have exploited it at how many servers have been compromised. 

The bug is so serious and widespread that Tor Project, which manages the anonymous Tor network, has advised web users to go offline for a while. "If you need strong anonymity or privacy on the internet, you might want to stay away from the internet entirely for the next few days while things settle," it said in a blog post. 

OpenSSL Project has created a website called www.heartbleed.com to inform web users and web masters about the bug."The Heartbleed bug allows anyone on the Internet to read the memory of the systems protected by the vulnerable versions of the OpenSSL software. This compromises the secret keys used to identify the service providers and to encrypt the traffic, the names and passwords of the users and the actual content. This allows attackers to eavesdrop on communications, steal data directly from the services and users and to impersonate services and users," explained a note posted on the website. 

In a separate note OpenSSL Project said that the bug was discovered by Neel Mehta, a security researcher working with Google. It also said the "affected users should upgrade to OpenSSL 1.0.1g". The key bit to note here is that by users OpenSSL doesn't mean the web users but web server administrators who use OpenSSL protocols. 
The reason why the Heartbleed bug has caused panic among server administrators and security researchers is because how it affects servers. "This bug has left large amount of private keys and other secrets exposed to the internet. Considering the long exposure, ease of exploitation and attacks leaving no trace this exposure should be taken seriously," explained the Heartbleed website. "Leaked (private) secret keys allow the attacker to decrypt any past and future traffic to the protected services and to impersonate the service at will." 

In an answer to a question — Am I affected by the bug? — the OpenSSL website notes, "you are likely to be affected either directly or indirectly". 

"OpenSSL is the most popular open source cryptographic library and TLS implementation used to encrypt traffic on the Internet. Your popular social site, your company's site, commerce site, hobby site, site you install software from or even sites run by your government might be using vulnerable OpenSSL. Many of online services use TLS to both to identify themselves to you and to protect your privacy and transactions. You might have networked appliances with logins secured by this buggy implementation of the TLS," noted the website.



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Samsung, Apple's big smartphone dilemma


Samsung, Apple's big smartphone dilemma

Samsung, Apple's big smartphone dilemma
As the smartphone action shifts to the mass market, leaders Samsung and Apple are under pressure to make their high-end phones more affordable to revive sales

SEOUL: As the smartphone action shifts to the mass market, leaders Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Apple Inc are under pressure to make their high-end phones more affordable to revive sales. And that may spell trouble for already-softening margins.

Samsung, which said on Tuesday it would likely post a second straight quarterly profit decline, has knocked around a tenth off the price of its Galaxy S5 in South Korea, in the first such move for a marquee smartphone launch — the S5 rolls out globally on Friday. And it's throwing in a free gift pack of media subscriptions and web apps worth 600,000 won ($570).

The mass market — where a smartphone can be had for as little as $25 — is the new mobile device battleground, as high-end growth eases off with sales slowing in mature markets. Japan, for example, may see smartphone shipments shrink this year, according to researcher IDC.

Samsung's flagship S5 price cut suggests the South Korean firm wants to encourage users to trade up to a fancier phone — at a potential cost to its margins. Samsung's mobile business operating margin dipped to 16% in October-December from 18% over the whole of 2013.

"It reflects how much Samsung is agonizing to secure margins. They're now offering premium models at lower prices as the demand outlook for high-end phones remains uncertain," said Lee Seung-woo, an analyst at IBK Securities.

Premium smartphones tend to be priced at above $300 and pack in more features, such as more powerful processing power, high-resolution display, better cameras and fingerprint reading. With the S5, which has few hardware improvements from its S4 predecessor, industry watchers reckon Samsung is aiming more at a broad mass market than tech savvy users.

To be sure, Samsung has a far broader product line-up than rival Apple, and it has some leeway to trim prices given that manufacturing costs have fallen. Lee Min-hee, an analyst at IM Investment, reckons the total cost of production materials for the S5 — from the battery and screen to the processor and sensors —will be 10-15% lower than for the S4.

While this allows vendors to make quality phones for less, it makes it tougher for them to maintain a premium brand image.

"Samsung needs to be very clear about the market segment it's pursuing," said Clement Teo, analyst at Forrester Research in Singapore. "Take Apple — it didn't drop prices on its iPhones, even with the new models. This helps it maintain a margin premium and attracts a certain loyal user base."

But Cupertino, California-based Apple is also taking note of the growing potential of the mass market. Internal documents revealed during an ongoing US patent trial against Samsung indicates some at Apple felt the company priced itself too high.

Less pricing change at Apple
According to an April 2013 presentation filed to a US court, executives had debated plans for Apple's 2014 fiscal year and concluded that consumers wanted what it wasn't offering: cheaper phones — for less than $300 — and bigger screens.

It's unclear how representative that presentation is of Apple's mindset. Nor are there signs that Apple, which thrives on its premium positioning and plays down suggestions that it go mass-market, intends to deviate from its path.

Apple did not respond to requests for comment.

An 'economy' model may wedge Apple more firmly in emerging markets — a segment still seeing strong growth. Apple now relies on discounted older generation phones to reach cost-conscious buyers, but buyers in markets like Brazil and China increasingly want the latest gadget.

IPhone shipments grew just 8% in Apple's 2013 fiscal third quarter, a far cry from five years ago when shipments more than doubled.

"They are foregoing incremental revenue opportunities by not having a product that addresses that market," said BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk, adding that the main hope of investors now is that Apple produce a new product — a wearable device, say — to galvanize revenue growth.

The iPhone 5C, a colorful plastic model priced just $100 cheaper than its premium cousin, was aimed at emerging markets and marked a departure from Apple's focus on premium phones last year. But it's not been a spectacular success. Some analysts theorize that an unwillingness to sacrifice profitability meant the device wasn't priced cheaply enough.

A thinner slice
Apple's iPhone margins have crept south as the company packs more features into its gadgets, trying to stand out in an increasingly crowded field. As its market share dwindles, the company enjoys less leverage to squeeze suppliers. And margins may fall further if Apple introduces bigger screens as expected.

Bernstein Research analyst Toni Sacconaghi estimates that making the screen just 30% larger could wipe 4-5 percentage points off gross margins. IPhone margins are now in the mid-40% range, down from 50-60% a few years ago, analysts estimate.

"With the iPhone 6, Apple is likely to stick to premium pricing as it's widely expected to come with a bigger screen and some innovative design tweaks," said Doh Hyun-woo, an analyst at Mirae Asset Securities. "They are unlikely to make as much change in pricing policy as Samsung does."

The average selling price of a smartphone globally is seen dropping by more than a fifth by 2018, to $260, according to IDC, as more buyers, especially in emerging markets, opt for price over brand, and as manufacturing costs continue to drop.

The iPhone remains the most expensive smartphone, with an estimated average selling price this year of $649, more than double the average price of $247 for Android phones, Samsung's mainstay products, according to IDC. Average selling prices of iPhones will drop only 6 percent to $610 by 2018, while Android prices will decline 18 percent to $202, according to those IDC forecasts.

"Apple has a clear strategy - to be the best in the market segment it competes in, and it has performed well," said Forrester's Teo. "Regardless of 5C sales, the bigger picture is that Apple is relevant to users in their moment of need - through an iPhone, iPad, iPod or its App store."

China chips away
All the while, competition from cheaper smartphone brands is getting fiercer. The share of smartphone shipments by vendors outside the top five — Samsung, Apple, Huawei, LG Electronics Inc and Lenovo Group — rose to 39.3% last year from 27.4% in 2011.

From Nokia to BlackBerry Ltd and a host of Chinese vendors, manufacturers are bringing out cheaper, stripped-down smartphones aimed at hundreds of millions of potential users in emerging markets such as China, India and Indonesia.

Chinese manufacturers — from global names such as Huawei and Lenovo to the less well known Gionee, Oppo and CorePad — are picking up market share as they acquire technical and design expertise to add to their low production costs.

"The winners in the current market conditions will be those who show the best cost-efficiency, and in that sense Chinese players will be in a better position," said IBK's Lee.

($1 = 1055.4000 Korean Won
)


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Yuvraj did not deserve this unwarranted criticism: Pietersen


Yuvraj did not deserve this unwarranted criticism: Pietersen

Yuvraj did not deserve this unwarranted criticism: Pietersen
Pietersen loves to be a "realist" and that's the reason he is not feeling stressed ahead of IPL. (TOI Photo)

NEW DELHI: Once labelled a 'pie-chucker' by Kevin Pietersen, beleaguered Yuvraj Singh has found support from the maverick batsman, who says the India left-hander is at the receiving end of "unwarranted criticism" following his scratchy knock in the World T20 final.

Yuvraj's 21-ball 11 sucked the momentum out of India's innings on Sunday and some unruly fans pelted stones at the all-rounder's residence in Chandigarh. India lost the title clash to Sri Lanka by six wickets.

Standing behind Yuvraj, who is now a friend, Pietersen said: "I haven't read the newspapers here but what I have seen on twitter is that he has got a bit of stick. I think that it was unwarranted and he did not deserve this."

Former India players such as Kris Srikkanth and Ravi Shastri had critical of Yuvraj's batting, prompting Pietersen to say that it's "very easy to say things" when one is not an active international cricketer.

"You can't always be good. It's very easy to say things when you stop playing. I see a lot of players talking who don't even play international cricket and wished they were playing, have a lot of things to say. Because criticising is the easiest thing to do," he said.

Set to lead Delhi Daredevils in the upcoming seventh edition of Indian Premier league, Pietersen is happy that he will have to face a selection dilemma when it comes to having his pick between 'Million Dollar Man' Dinesh Karthik and the new South African sensation Quinton de Kock when they kickstart their campaign.

While De Kock has made grand entry into international cricket, Karthik's Rs 12.5 crore bidding makes him slightly favourite to get the nod.

"Of course, it is good to have selection dilemmas as it is quite a good thing to have. I kind of enjoy having selection dilemmas. You have got to hate the fact that you can only choose from only 11 players.

"You should be wanting that your squad of 16 is ready to have a go. Yes, it will be a difficult pick for the first match but we would certainly settle down with time," he said.

Life without international cricket is not something that Pietersen would have ideally imagined but then he has been a non-conformist in many ways.

Pietersen loves to be a "realist" and that's the reason he is not feeling stressed ahead of IPL.

"I don't see any pressure. In fact, I enjoy pressure. As an individual, all you can do is to give your best. In the next six weeks, I will give my everything to Delhi Daredevils. I am a firm believer in 'what will be will be'. So people can't demand things. People can be happy if things happen and be disappointed when things don't happen. I am a realist in every sense," Pietersen said matter-of-factly.

The batsman is upbeat about his team's chances as he believed that the team has got good depth.

"We do have a lot of expectations as we have picked up a player that can do real good things. The strength is good as we have quality Indian players and experienced overseas players. In Gary Kirsten, we have a great coach. I think we have the ability to go all the way. Having said that, I can tell you that there are no guarantees as such," he said.

Talking about DD coach Gary Kirsten, K P said that both are on the same page regarding team's common goal.

"I think my interactions with Gary has been very, very good. We kind of sing from similar hymn sheet. Gary is a very relaxed man and a great man manager. I just can't wait to start working with him."

When Pietersen speaks, the reassuring tone makes even worrying factors look like non issues.

Delhi's spin bowling is an issue but Pietersen brushed it aside.

"We have leg-spinner Rahul Sharma apart from Shahbaz Nadeem. He's played for India and he will be good.'' He also feels that there is no big deal about adaptability as some of the younger Indian players will be playing in UAE for the first time.

"If you talk about me, I have done that for 10 years of international cricket playing in different countries in different conditions. As far as the younger players are concerned, it will be a good experience for them.
"


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Monday, 7 April 2014

HTC One (M8) review: A worthy upgrade

HTC One (M8) review: A worthy upgradehtc_one_m8_reuters.jpg

The HTC One might be the best smartphone you never heard of.
The phone won critical acclaim last year, yet it barely made a dent in the marketplace. It's overshadowed by Apple's iPhones and Samsung's Galaxy line of smartphones.
Good thing HTC Corp. doesn't understand defeat.
An updated One expands on some of the features that made it notable. The new One has a metal design like last year's model, but it feels smoother and more comfortable in my hands. The back edges are more curved and remind me of the sleek finish in Apple's latest iPads. HTC also turns its hub for personalized content, the BlinkFeed, into a companion rather than an unwelcomed guest.
HTC is making the Android phone available through all major carriers simultaneously this time, starting Tuesday online and by April 10 in retail stores. Verizon customers don't have to wait months, as they had last year. In an apparent concession, Verizon is the first to get them in stores - on Tuesday.
The new phone, known officially as HTC One (M8) (Pictures), will cost about $200 to $250 with a two-year service contract, or about $650 without a contract. Customers can choose gray, gold or silver.
The One still has some flaws - namely, its 4 megapixel rear camera. By comparison, Samsung's Galaxy S5 phone, which comes out April 11, will have 16 megapixels. Sony and Nokia already have phones that exceed 20 megapixels. Apple's iPhones are at 8 megapixels, twice what the HTC One offers. More megapixels typically translate to sharper images and more options for printing and cropping.
HTC is correct in saying the megapixel count is just one factor in what makes a good camera. It prefers making the size of individual pixel sensors larger to absorb more light for night and indoor shots. That's laudable, but Apple's iPhone 5s (Pictures) and Nokia's Lumia Icon are both able to offer decent low-light shots while providing more megapixels than the One.
Compared with last year's model, though, the One's camera is much better, even at 4 megapixels. Colors look washed out in day shots I took with last year's camera. The new model seems to have fixed that. The new version also has a 5 megapixel front camera for selfies, far better than what rivals offer.
HTC also has improved its camera software
Thanks to a second lens on the rear, the phone now captures depth information. That lets you decide later through built-in software whether to focus on the foreground or the background while blurring everything else. Other phones also offer this capability, but the One does this automatically. You don't have to switch to a special mode ahead of time.
htc_one_m8_camera_usage_ap.jpg
The One offers plenty of manual settings, as other phones are starting to offer. The One goes further in letting you save frequently used combinations of settings. If you take a lot of action shots indoors, for instance, you can save a combo that uses a fast shutter speed to reduce blurring from motion, while adjusting the white balance to filter out the hint of color from the ceiling lights.
You can pause video recordings. Most phones only let you stop recording, so you have to stitch together several files with software to get the same effect. The Vine and Instagram apps also let you pause video recording, but those clips have length limits. With the One, you're limited only by the phone's storage.
As for watching video, sound quality is wonderful, thanks to the phone's two front-facing speakers. If I hold the phone close enough to my eyes and slide the volume to maximum, I can pretend I'm watching in a movie theater. Phones with rear speakers sound boxy by comparison.
The One also has some useful shortcuts when the screen is off. Swipe from the left to get the BlinkFeed content hub, and swipe from the right to get your regular home screen. Press the volume button to get the camera and press it again to take the shot. Double tap to get the lock screen.
With an optional $50 Dot View case, you can see the time and the weather through the small holes, or dots, on the case's front, flip cover. You can answer and reject incoming call by swiping on the case, without needing to flip over the cover.
As for BlinkFeed, the One now offers more ways to customize it and increases the number of social media services it works with. Through a partnership with Foursquare, BlinkFeed also suggests restaurants based on the time and location. Monday's lunch recommendation was dubious, though: It was suggesting frozen yogurt at Pinkberry as outdoor temperatures in New York hovered at water's freezing point.
I do like that you can get BlinkFeed by swiping from the left. Otherwise, it stays out of the way. To get back to the home screen, just tap the home button once or twice. I hated BlinkFeed in last year's model because there was no easy way to restore the home screen without knowing the proper swipes.
The HTC One is a work in progress, though. There's supposed to be a power-saving mode offering 15 hours of battery life when you're down to a 5 percent charge, for instance. That and other promised features weren't done in time for the U.S. release. But if you buy the phone now, you'll get them through upcoming software updates.
U.S. customers are also eligible for a one-time screen replacement if it cracks in the first six months.
The One doesn't have a fingerprint sensor to bypass the security code on the lock screen. The iPhone 5s has it, as will the Galaxy S5. It's also in the HTC One Max (Review I Pictures), a larger version of last year's model. But HTC's version didn't work well, and the company is wise to leave it out in the One.
There's a lot to like in the new phone. This phone likely won't be as popular as the iPhone or the S5, but the One is one worth considering if you're looking for something that feels right and works nicely.

The HTC One (M8) in pictures

Display

5.00-inch

Processor

2.3GHz

Front Camera

5-megapixel

Resolution

1080x1920 pixels

RAM

2GB

OS

Android 4.4.2

Storage

16GB

Rear Camera

4-Ultrapixel

Battery capacity

2600mAh



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Samsung Galaxy Note Pro review

Samsung Galaxy Note Pro review

Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_front_ndtv.jpg
Is 12 inches too big for a tablet screen? We're about to find out. Samsung has decided that the world needs bigger tablets, and so we have not one but two 12.2-inch models from the Korean giant. As if their lineup wasn't expansive enough, these new models are the largest of a range of new Android tablets.
Samsung's lineup of tablets now extends from 7 inches to 12.2 inches. Factoring in the Galaxy Megaand Galaxy Note phones which have screens of up to 6.3 inches, Samsung really does seem to be trying every possible size.
The two biggest models, the Galaxy Tab Pro and Galaxy Note Pro, look identical and have nearly identical features, so it's easy to mix them up. The chief difference is the S-Pen, which has led to this confusing naming scheme. The S-Pen has been reserved for the Galaxy Note series of smartphones, so it probably seemed appropriate to name this tablet Note Pro.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_angle_ndtv.jpg
Look and feel
There's no doubt about it; this thing is huge! It's also rather heavy and unwieldy. At 753g, it is lighter than an 11-inch MacBook Air, but you will definitely notice its weight in a shoulder bag. If you're carrying a laptop anyway, you definitely don't want to deal with this much extra weight. The Note Pro thus only makes sense if it can replace your laptop, which is a tall order. Otherwise, it's destined to stay put in an office or home; capable of being carried around from room to room, but not really used as anyone's primary computing device.
The Galaxy Note Pro largely sticks to Samsung's current design formula: the front is sunken white plastic, the edges are chrome, and the rear is textured faux-leather plastic with stitching. We still aren't fans of this aesthetic, but we've resigned ourselves to it. Also true to form, there's a single chrome-ringed physical button for Home, flanked by capacitive Back and Recents buttons.
The Recents button replaces the Menu button, which is no longer necessary in Android 4.4. This means there's a slight difference to how functions are called up, as compared to previous Samsung devices. It only takes a quick tap on the Recents button to switch between apps, and long-pressing it does nothing. A long-press on the Home button now launches Google Now. A long-press on the Back button still pulls up the Multi Window tray, which lets you run more than one app at a time on certain Samsung Android devices.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_buttons_ndtv.jpg
Above the screen, you'll see a Samsung logo along with the 2-meagpixel front camera and ambient light sensor. On the top edge right above these, you'll see the Infrared emitter, with a power/standby button and volume rocker off to one side. Most of the ports and slots are located on the right edge: from top to bottom you'll see the S-Pen in its silo, a speaker grille, a Micro-USB 3.0 socket for charging and data syncing, a covered microSD slot and a covered SIM card slot. There's nothing on the right edge apart from a 3.5mm headset jack and a matching speaker. The bottom is completely blank.
The S-Pen is a decent size but is a bit too thin to offer a good enough grip, thanks to the shape of the Galaxy Note's body. It comes with replaceable tips and a little tweezer tool to help pull them out.
Largely due to its size and weight, we found ourselves using the Note Pro flat on a table. Even when reading books, it wasn't comfortable to hold in our hands or rest in our laps. With this in mind, we would have loved to have had a kickstand or some other means of propping it up a bit.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_frontcam_ndtv.jpg
Features and specifications
The main attraction of the Galaxy Note Pro is obviously its 2560x1600-pixel 12.2-inch screen. Just for perspective, this is the kind of resolution we used to see on 24-inch and larger desktop monitors. With most PCs and laptops (no matter how large their screens) still inexplicably stuck at 1366x768, it's no wonder that mobile devices are displacing them so rapidly.
Android scales to the high resolution very nicely, and text is readable throughout. Even the stock Web browser uses all available space rather than displaying content 1:1 and crunching it all in the centre. However, Samsung hasn't really taken advantage of this in its UI design. Icons and widgets are almost comically oversized, especially in the notification shade. We often found ourselves leaning in towards it and then jerking backwards, which took away from the usability experience.
Amazingly, despite its high resolution, the screen is quite grainy. This might be due to the digitizer required for the S-Pen, or the fact that Samsung has used a PenTile panel. It's not always a problem, but it becomes especially distracting when reading text. It feels like the enormous potential of a huge screen has been compromised.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_rear_ndtv.jpg
The Processor is an Exynos 5420; one of Samsung's own designs. It consists of four ARM Coretex A15 cores running at 1.9GHz and four Cortex A7 cores running at 1.3GHz. In previous implementations, this sort of arrangement meant that only one quad-core cluster could be active at any time, in order to deliver performance or battery longevity when needed. The new Exynos 5420 uses a more advanced model (known as Heterogeneous Multiprocessing, or HMP) which can schedule tasks to any of the eight cores in any combination. Tasks can migrate from higher to lower power cores and vice versa, making for a far more powerful and flexible system.
The rest of the Note Pro's specifications also live up to that high standard. There's 3GB of RAM, 32GB of internal storage, GPS with GLONASS, Wi-Fi b/g/n/ac, 3G data, an enormous 9,500mAh battery, and Android 4.4.2. The rear camera takes 8-megapixel stills, but anyone who would up a 12-inch tablet to take photos shouldn't expect great quality.
The exact model available in India is the SM-P901. Other variants, the P900 and P905, offer 4G LTE and Wi-Fi only connectivity in other regions.
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Software
Samsung's moves to downplay Android have been well documented, and the Note Pro's software is evidence of that too. Taking full advantage of the opportunity to tweak the OS for such a large screen, Samsung has made its Magazine UX a bit more prominent, and the Android app launcher a bit less important.
On first boot, you'll see a home screen with two large widget panels and a row of app icons beneath it. Google's search bar is tucked away rather inconspicuously in the lower left corner, and a grid icon in the lower right corner will take you to the usual app launcher icon grid. If you swipe to the right there's another home screen (and you can of course add more), but when you swipe to the left, you're taken into the Magazine UX.
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This consists of large square panels, somewhat similar to the Windows 8 Modern UI, but occupying the entire screen. You also see that you can now swipe between multiple Magazine screens, not just one, and the traditional Android UI is reduced to a single dot on the scroll bar, no matter how many screens you have.
Samsung has also done a neat job with its keyboard. The keys all have an old-style 3D look, and you have a full layout including Tab, Shift, Caps Lock, Delete, and arrow keys, along with a number row with alternate symbol characters on each key. You can even use shortcuts such as Ctrl+A to select all text, and Ctrl+ X, C and V to cut, copy and paste. There's a second Shift button as well, but it's beyond the arrow keys. Like most soft keyboards, it takes up half the screen. At least with a 16:10 aspect ratio, there's more screen space to work with.
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You can have up to six panels on each Magazine screen, which can be news feeds, social feeds, or apps. It looks and behaves a lot like Flipboard, and indeed, most of the news feeds are Flipboard's own. The app panels are basically Samsung's own built-in apps: Email, Gallery, Hancom Office, Messages, Music, S Planner, NYTimes, Samsung's App Store, and Video.
The S-Pen works much as it does on the smaller Galaxy Note devices. Upon pulling it out of its silo, Samsung's floating Air Command menu appears on screen. You can hover over the screen to make a selection, and tap to "click".
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The five major options are Action Memo, which lets you write out an email address or phone number and have it turned into an actionable command; Scrapbooker, whichlets you draw a selection on screen which will then be captured in its original format; Screen Write, if you want to take a screenshot, annotate it and save or share it; S-Finder, a local and Web search app; and Pen Window, which lets you launch apps in floating windows over any app you might have running, without exiting to the app menu.
The S-Pen is handy, but not indispensable. It all comes down to whether you prefer scribbling. You can write out usernames, but not passwords, and Samsung doesn't automatically turn the keyboard into a handwriting recognition area when it knows the S-Pen is out of its silo.
Samsung has also heavily customised the notification shade and quick settings buttons. The Settings app receives an overhaul with items divided into four categories, as with previous Samsung devices. Multi Window functionality has been expanded to allow four apps to work in tiled windows, but we also managed to open five or more apps in floating windows that overlapped each other. Performance definitely took a hit with so many apps open simultaneously, but it goes to show that there's major potential for big, versatile Android devices in the future. 
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Quite a few apps are preloaded, and the choices seem to lean towards business scenarios, such as Cisco's WebEx, Remote PC, e-Meeting, NYTimes, and Businessweek. Many of these require subscriptions to their vendors' respective services. There's also a version of Autodesk's Sketchbook app, optimised for the S-Pen, which is pretty fun to use, and shows off the Note Pro's pressure sensitive digitiser.
The other app of note is Peel Smart Remote, which uses the built in Infrared port to let you control TVs. It works fine with set-top boxes such as the DTH ones prevalent in India, and includes schedules for lots of local channels. The interface is a little unclear though, and it's a bit of a process to just change channels, since the app insists you browse through a list of shows organised into somewhat unintuitive categories.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_top_ndtv.jpgPerformance
Benchmark scores for the Galaxy Note Pro were pretty impressive. SunSpider took only 542.3ms, and Browsermark returned a score of 1913. AnTuTu scored 34,136 points, while Quadrant reached 16,415. Graphics scores appeared poor, but we should remember that the screen resolution is far greater than most other laptops, which means there's a lot more work to be done. When compared to smaller tablets, all graphics benchmark results suffered other than 3DMark's Ice Storm Unlimited runthrough, which renders at a fixed off-screen resolution. When we considered this score, balance was restored.
That still means that gaming won't be much fun on the Note Pro. In any case, it's far too large for mobile games that use tilt controls or virtual thumbsticks.
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Movies look great on the big screen. Once again we were left wishing there was a kickstand, because this thing could work just fine as a TV or even a secondary monitor at close quarters. It choked on our highest quality H.264 video clip, but everything else in common formats played back well. The two stereo speakers are quite loud and you can fill a small room, but the sound is tinny and compressed.
As expected, there was no problem with performance in general usage. The Note Pro is snappy and responsive, although animations tend to feel laggy because they really are amplified on the big screen.
The battery lasted for 10 hours, 9 minutes in our video loop test, which isn't surprising considering the sheer size of the 9,500mAh battery.
Verdict
It's not hard to imagine that Samsung, having heard rumours of Apple introducing a larger sized iPad, decided to beat them to it. That is to say, they didn't have any purpose in mind when developing this product other than to be the first to do it. It seems a bit far-fetched to us that this product was conceived as a business tool or an office productivity machine. It's an indulgence, pure and simple, and that's not the sort of thing you see in work environments.
You just can't hold it in one hand, and so typing or even using the S-Pen requires that you put it down on a table. That's awkward and uncomfortable, and it's just not the kind of thing you can deal with when you're trying to be productive. Once again, we're left wanting for a stand of some kind. In its current form, the Galaxy Note Pro is much better suited to lounging on a couch with, since at least then you can put your knees up and rest it against your thighs.
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There still could be applications for this product though. Education springs to mind; surely there are apps for children that would work wonderfully on a bigger screen, especially in classroom environments with groups of students around one device. Maybe it could be a tool for creative professionals in production environments: music and video editing also seem like prime candidates, along with creative illustration, of course. Beyond that, maybe elderly folk or those with mobility impairments would really appreciate the spacious keyboard and simple interface, as compared to laptops or PCs that are generally difficult to use.
We shouldn't have to struggle so hard to justify owning such a product, and so the whole thing just falls flat for us. Sure, it works well and represents some genuine innovation in the market, but how practical is it, really, for most people? That's not even factoring in the amount of money it costs, which could just as easily be spent on a very capable laptop.
Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_box_ndtv.jpgIn fact some convertible Ultrabooks, which offer a balance of tablet and laptop features, cost even less than the Note Pro, such as Lenovo's Ideapad Yoga 13, which comes with an Intel Core i5 CPU, 4GB of RAM, a 128GB SSD and 13.3-inch 1600x900 screen.

So as much as we want to like the Galaxy Note Pro, we really can't see any reason to be excited by it. Perhaps its near twin, the Galaxy Tab Pro, will offer better value for money, but we can't help but feel that as far as Android tablet sizes go, 12.2 inches is well past the point of diminishing returns.
Price: Rs. 65,575

Pros
  • S-Pen
  • Good battery life
  • Potential for multiple uses
Cons
  • Grainy screen
  • Bulky and heavy
  • Expensive  
Ratings (Out of 5)
  • Design: 4
  • Display: 3.5
  • Camera: 2.5
  • Performance: 3.5
  • Software: 3.5
  • Battery Life: 4
  • Value for Money: 3
  • Overall: 3.5



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