Aug
13
2012
0

Cardiio for the iPhone uses the front-facing cam to measure your heart rate

Based on MIT technology for measuring the light reflectance off your face, Cardiio for the iPhone is capable of measuring your heart rate as if with a standalone pulse meter within +/- 3 beats per minute margin of error…

Written by admin in: android review |
Aug
11
2012
0

Android Central international round-up - August 11, 2012

Android Central

In international Android news, it's been a solid week of update news and IFA leaks. Sony confirmed its release plans for ICS on the Xperia P, as did Motorola with the GSM RAZR and RAZR MAXX. And HTC followed suit with its announcement that ICS would arrive before the end of August on all devices for which the update has been announced (good news Desire S and Thunderbolt owners!) The international HTC One X also got its update to Android 4.0.4, and with it some new menu key options and improved Beats Audio and browser capabilities. Vodafone Australia's Nexus S got Jelly Bean. And spare a thought for Motorola Xoom 3G owners in the UK, who are just now getting their Honeycomb-to-ICS update.

On the IFA front, we saw yet more leaked pictures of Sony's line-up of late 2012 Android products. Press renders of the Xperia Tablet leaked, and we saw even more blurry-cam photos of the LT30p (aka Xperia T). Elsewhere, the Xperia GX and SX went on sale in Japan, leaving international Sony fans wondering about a possible international launch for the GX in Berlin later this month.

And some interesting morsels of Galaxy Note 2 news dropped this week, too, with suggestions from the Korea IT Times that the upcoming 5.5-incher will feature a flexible SuperAMOLED display — a smartphone first for the Korean manufacturer.

Check the links below for some of the main international Android stories of the past week. If you've got international news, you can tip us at the usual address.

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Written by admin in: android review |
Aug
08
2012
0

India and BlackBerry close to solution on country’s desire to eavesdrop on coded messages

For a few years, the Indian government had sought encrypton codes from RIM so that it could monitor encrypted messages from BES; the government is worried that its enemies could be sending coded messages that are for a planned uprising…

Written by admin in: android review |

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