Archive for category Apple

Study Shows That iPhone Apps Are Cheaper Than Android Apps

Posted by PhoneFreak on Wednesday, 29 February, 2012

It sometimes seems as though Apple and Android have been competing with each other since the dawn of time. The two compete for users and for sales. They fight over intellectual property and rush to come up with superior products. They mock the opposing platform in print and television ads. And, of course, both smartphone platforms steadfastly believe that their app store is the superior one.

Proponents of iPhone apps argue that these apps are far more secure, trustworthy, and comprehensive than their Android counterparts. Android users, on the other hand, will point out that their apps are less restrictive, more numerous, and displaying faster rates of investment and growth. Both arguments certainly carry a good deal of validity.

But now a new measure of assessing apps has emerged: price. While it may seem obvious to include price comparisons from the onset, the relative inexpensiveness of smartphone applications coupled with a belief that there were no large-scale differences kept researchers from conducting such a study. The research firm Canalys, finally decided to examine whether that second assumption is true. The result? It’s not – in fact, there is a striking price difference between iPhone and Android apps. That difference falls in Apple’s favor.

The study excluded free apps – which comprise a substantial percentage of the application market – and decided to focus instead on the most-downloaded paid apps in each store. The exclusion of rarely-downloaded paid apps was designed to keep expensive outliers out of the study. The results showed that popular paid apps were far cheaper on the iPhone than on Android phones. For example, the top 100 paid Android apps would together cost $374 – far higher than the $147 it would take to buy the most popular 100 apps from the Apple store. This discrepancy persists also on an individual level, where games such as Monopoly cost far more for Android users ($4.99) than for iPhone owners ($0.99).

How can this strong price difference be explained? Analysts agree generally that Apple follows an aggressive price-reduction strategy that helps the company sell many of its paid apps for only $0.99, but beyond that the explanations vary. Some see it as a sign that Android – which has the larger and faster-growing app store – has greater demand and can afford to charge more. Others, however, including the writers of the Canalys report, believe that Android needs to charge high prices because it has the numbers but not consistency of demand, especially on a per-app basis.

So we have yet another way to differentiate between Apple and Android. And, not surprisingly, nobody is able to reach a clear consensus.

 

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The Most Delicious Parts of Android Ice Cream Sandwich

Posted by PhoneFreak on Tuesday, 10 January, 2012

While Ice Cream Sandwich is in many ways already “so last year,” chances are that most users of the brand new Android operating system will be introduced to it this year. With that said, many Android users familiar with older generations of the OS are still unsure as to what is distinctly different about Ice Cream Sandwich over Honeycomb and Gingerbread. Let this article help you sort it all out. The following are the most important new features of Android you ought to know about:

Revamped User Interface

The latest Android interface is much more elegant and user friendly than previous incarnations. As far as customization is concerned, homepage button and widget sizes are entirely up to you. All the while the bold vibrant colors of the latest OS contrast beautifully with the default glossy black shading and background.

Beaming Between Android Devices

Beam is a new technology for Android that essentially enables users to share content such as map directions, photos, and music files with each other without plugging anything in. It’s especially useful for those with multiple Android devices as it allows for instant transfer of data between the two.

Enhanced Control Over Network Usage Monitoring

One notorious problem of many smartphone owners is keeping track of network usage and avoiding the penalties accrued from going over data limits. The latest version of Android gives users a much more detailed and nicely designed breakdown of network usage.

Evolved Gaming Possibilities

While most people will prefer their PS3 or Android tablet over a smartphone to play video games, trends are making it apparent that consumers are spending more money on downloadable games on their phones instead of traditional platform titles. Those with Ice Cream Sandwich will be able to plug a controller into their phone, among many other gaming-focused additions.

Improved Voice Recognition Technology

With competition coming in the form of the iPhone’s Siri app, the Android team understood that the clumsy voice recognition tool featured on former versions needed to improve. While far from a personal assistant app, the new voice recognition technology for Android is a much needed improvement, featuring more controls during recording and better editing features.

Futuristic Facial Recognition Security Feature

While you may think this is an instance of saving the best for last, the truth is that while this new feature is certainly the coolest of all Android updates, it’s far from optimum. Good for a demonstration, in practice this “security” feature can be cracked with a photograph, or unusable in low light. Regardless, it’s a first generation technology that’s sure to improve with time.

Ice Cream Sandwich isn’t going to be making history. But those who designed it certainly made some improvements over former versions of the Android operating system. While many factors go into deciding whether or not to buy a new phone, rest assured that for the most part the new additions to Ice Cream Sandwich make it a certain selling feature for the phones that carry the OS.

 

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Facebook App Indicators Show Growing Android Strength, Even Despite Success of iPhone 4S

Posted by PhoneFreak on Wednesday, 21 December, 2011

When comparing the relative strengths of smartphone models, there are plenty of data points and indicators that can be used to support any particular company or platform. You can use market share, sales data, revenue figures, and more temporal numbers, such as quarterly shipments and retail sales. When comparing Apple and Android, the two major players in the mobile world today, these indicators, taken together, paint a blurry picture of relative strengths. Yes, Android has a larger market share, and yes, Apple still enjoys greater revenues. Yes, all signs indicate that Android continues to grow, but the iPhone 4S was a big success, next year’s iPhone 5 stands to be even more sought-after, and few would argue that Apple remains the industry’s standard-bearer.

Amidst all this fog of war, industry experts and analysts have begun looking to application information to determine relative strengths in the marketplace. The number of apps sold, created, and regularly used can be a potent indicator for current success and future growth, according to past studies. This metric has been applied to the Windows Phone, which currently stands at a distant third in the market. Data showing a rapid increase in app creation and sales spurred analysts to predict continued growth and vitality for the Windows Phone in the coming year.

But for Apple and Android, the app comparison is wrought with complications. In other words, app data for the two is hard to compare, since Apple tightly regulates its applications while Android does not. This has led to frustrations with Android, since the platform’s apps are an easy target for malware. But it has also caused some developers to grow tired of Apple, who resent that the company imposes deadlines for submitting apps before the Christmas holiday. A delay in gaining approval or a glitch found post-submission could translate into thousands of dollars of lost sales on Christmas Day, when apps are downloaded at a far higher rate than normal. At the end of the day, all these benefits and detriments aside, the Android and Apple app platforms function so differently as to make comparisons difficult.

But this difficulty does not extend to specific apps that can be seen as indicative of the market – and, consequently, of the Android-Apple battle – as a whole. These are apps that most users have on their phones and access regularly, the foremost among them being Facebook’s app for smartphones. Facebook makes an application for both Apple and for Android, and the company has historically favored those it made for the former. Facebook launched its app for Apple a year before it launched to Android – 2008 vs 2009 – and, since then, the iPhone app would regularly be the first to get an update. This trend, however, has suddenly shifted in recent weeks. Just after news came out that Android’s Facebook app had surpassed Apple’s in users and in activity, the social media giant released its Timeline update for Android almost a week before it did the same for Apple.

This is a small indicator, to be sure, but it remains a notable one nonetheless. If Facebook continues to favor Android, there is a good chance that this reflects the preferences of developers and of users, at least in the short-term, as the industry looks towards next year. Either way, it should make for an interesting 2012.

 

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Samsung Wins The Year’s Battle Against Apple

Posted by PhoneFreak on Thursday, 15 December, 2011

Samsung is the latest competitor to step up, sword in hand, to try and slay the mighty Apple. The battlefield is mobile phones and the division lines are as fierce as ever, with the two companies known to be bitter rivals. According to the recent reports of most analysts, Samsung has won the latest battle. In 2011, Samsung shipped over 300 million mobile phones, which is more than Apple in overall sales, though the iPhone still continues to sell more than any individual Samsung device. In overall revenue, Samsung has surpassed Apple, a development that has stunned many in the electronics sector.

Analysts have pointed to the Samsung Galaxy S2 as Apple’s major worry. The S and S2 combined sold more than 10 million units this year. Overall the South Korean electronics company sold 27.8 million handheld devices in the third quarter, compared to Apple’s 17.1. Nokia wound up in third place. How has Samsung creeped up on the mobile giant, whose vaunted iOS has captured the imagination and love of the smartphone world for the last many years? Here are the two major reasons why:

1) Samsung offers a price-variety in its lineup of devices, giving it good sales figures across multiple markets. Whereas Apple is pretty much limited to the iPhone 4 and 4S, $100 and $200 respectively, Samsung has carved a respectable name for itself in several price ranges. Not only does it offer the best alternative to the iPhone in the higher-end market, it offers several excellent devices for purchase in the low-end camp. This bodes well during the holiday season and a tough economic stretch in which consumers are looking for deals where they can find them.

2) Apple devotees are waiting until they can switch to the 4S. Many iPhone users will be upgrading eventually but are waiting for a good deal or company discount. This leaves sales slumping, even during the holiday season. Apple also points to security leaks in the release of the 4S as a reason why users have been a bit slower to make upgrades to their handsets.

Samsung’s next release will see the Galaxy Nexus running off the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich operating system. Samsung’s partnership with Google has been a major boon for the company, allowing them to brandish a security lock feature that uses the camera’s facial recognition software to unlock the phone. Analysts also claim Samsung’s success testified to the versatility of the Android operating system.

 

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Phone Wars Heat Up As Holiday Season Approaches

Posted by PhoneFreak on Wednesday, 7 December, 2011

Phone Wars Heat Up As Holiday Season Approaches

For over a year now, Apple has been engaged in an all-out legal war with its Android competitors. According to Apple, most Android phones have taken numerous features stolen from the iPhone, an act that amounts to patent infringement and should be cause for these competitors to have their products banned. The company has filed lawsuits based on these allegations in courts and agencies around the world. It has battled Samsung in European, Asia, and – most recently – American courtrooms, where judged have repeatedly ruled that Samsung’s products were not illegally stolen. They have, however, forced Samsung to change certain features on its phones in order to avoid court injunctions. The most recent chapter in the battle was decided this past week, when a judge in San Francisco refused to block the sale of the Samsung Galaxy II in the United States.

Although Apple has failed thus far to truly harm its competitors through litigation, that may change this week with a ruling expected from the International Trade Commission (ITC) regarding four alleged patent infringements in HTC phones. Taiwan-based HTC is one of the world’s strongest and fastest-growing smartphone manufactures, with $5 billion in sales in the U.S. in the past year. But Apple claims that this success is based largely on stolen ideas. Specifically, the company believes that HTC has infringed on four Apple patents. While the average smartphone uses thousands of patents, Apple’s claims may severely curtail HTC sales if affirmed in a court of law.

The ITC has been reviewing the Apple-HTC case since the spring. Initially, a staff ruling found that Apple’s patents were not violated by HTC. An agency judge then rejected that position, ruling that two of those patents – one for telephone number detection and another for data transmission – had indeed been infringed upon. A commission is expected to announce the ITC’s final verdict this week.

The ITC is charged with both upholding patent laws and protecting the public interest. While the Smoot-Hawley Tariff allows the agency to fully and immediately ban HTC imports – effectively removing millions of phones from the shelf just before the holiday season – it is more likely that such a measure will not be taken, at least as far as HTC’s 4G phones are concerned. HTC comprises over half of the American market for 4G phones, meaning that the public interest would likely be curtailed if half of these devices were no longer available.

Regardless of the verdict, the ruling stands to have a considerable impact on Apple’s and HTC’s holiday season. It is expected to come later this week, and a ban could theoretically be immediately instituted. Stay tuned.


Windows Phone Gaining in Apps, Legitimacy

Posted by PhoneFreak on Thursday, 24 November, 2011

In the smartphone world there are a myriad number of indicators that tell us which mobile provider or manufacturer is superior. We can look at the data for phones shipped, devices sold, market share, earnings, and profits. We can compare size, revenues, and cultural power in our bid to find the most successful company in the industry.

Recently, a new indicator of success has emerged: applications. All smartphone, regardless of the manufacturer and operating system, come with access to a unique library of apps. These apps can not only demonstrate the strength of a product, but they can also forecast future changes and growth by telling us where the money is being sent. If large companies are having apps developed more for one operating system over another, or if most enterprising software engineers are focusing their efforts likewise, then this says some about relative product strengths.

Recently, the app battle has been playing out between the two dominant players in the market: Google’s Android and Apple’s iPhone. The numbers suggest that, even though the Android has surpassed the iPhone when it comes to market share, Apple’s product still reigns supreme, at least as far as the app indicator goes. Since the launch of Apple’s App store, the iPhone has had app sales and download numbers that far surpass Android. Even though Apple is more discerning when accepting apps to its store, it wins by tremendous margins in every key category – average price, total number of apps downloaded, and total revenue from apps sold.

Coming in at third in the application battle is the Windows Phone, which has seen its sale, creation, and downloads of apps skyrocket in recent months. Microsoft estimates that the Windows Phone Marketplace will surpass 50,000 apps by January after hitting 40,000 only this month.

The growth stands as a testament to the current successes – and future potential – of the Windows Phone operating system. It has surpassed RIM’s BlackBerry OS, it has entered into a partnership with Nokia after the latter abandoned its Symbian operating system, and it recently unveiled the “Mango” update that has been well-received by critics.

But, despite all these successes, the growth in its app marketplace truly reflects the Windows Phone’s arrival as a major and lasting player in the industry. The growing number of apps means, after all, that developers are increasingly being drawn to the system – and that they believe it has a long term future. Furthermore, of course, the marketplace wouldn’t be gaining apps this quickly if the device wasn’t enjoying strong sales.

Evaluating mobile companies based on the number of apps they offer can surely overlook many other important indicators. Regardless, when it comes to the Windows Phone, it’s hard to interpret the growth in apps as anything besides a positive and noteworthy trend.


Samsung Passes Apple as Top Smartphone Seller

Posted by PhoneFreak on Tuesday, 1 November, 2011

Samsung Passes Apple as Top Smartphone Seller

Quarterly figures released this week have revealed some interesting – although not altogether surprising – news: according to Samsung and to market analysts, the phone company shipped more smartphones than Apple this past quarter. Samsung shipped 27.8 million smartphones during this time, which equates with 23.8 percent of the market, compared to Apple’s 17.1 million shipments for 14.6 percent of the market.

There are several factors that can explain Samsung’s tremendous current success. First of all, the company has been noted for its quality by consumers and technology experts. With sleek, appealing designs, the most advanced Android features, and a line of brands that appeal to all demographics – whether wealthy, low budget, high tech, or utilitarian – Samsung’s wide appeal and consequent success directly relates back to the quality of its phones.

But Apple’s phones are of no less quality, which brings us to the most probable cause for Samsung’s recent rise: its global penetration. The global smartphone market has grown 44 percent in just one year, meaning that there are 117 units in use worldwide. The biggest growth occurred in regions where Apple’s omnipotence is less guaranteed and in demographics that can’t necessarily afford the most expensive phones on the market. By appealing to these areas and these people, Samsung has positioned itself to take advantage of the current smartphone boom.

The battle between Samsung and Apple for shipment figures is fitting, considering that the two companies have already spent most of the year fighting in court. Most recently, Apple filed a lawsuit claiming that Samsung copied the iPhone and iPad in developing its Galaxy device. Samsung, in turn, has filed counter-lawsuits against Apple, and this legal feud appears to have no end in sight.

That legal feud may be the more substantial one in the first place. After all, alongside the news of Samsung’s quarterly supremacy are warnings from many commentators that this development should be taken with a grain of salt. The most recent quarter did not include Apple’s release of the iPhone 4S, meaning that shipments dropped off because many consumers were waiting for its arrival and that sales should easily pick up in Apple’s next quarterly report. Furthermore, even though Samsung ships more phones, Apple enjoys better margins and better profits.

Ultimately, it appears as though the jury is still out – in both the court and the marketplace. At this point, all we know with certainty is that the competition between Apple and Samsung will likely benefit consumers with some excellent new smartphone options in the year to come.


Latest Smartphone Capabilities Are Shockingly Space Age

Posted by PhoneFreak on Saturday, 15 October, 2011

(credit: torugatoru)

With the introduction of the Siri iPhone app earlier this month, smartphone technology took a seemingly small step that will be remembered as a giant leap for humankind. For the first time ever, at least practically, consumers have access to speech-recognizing personal assistant software that can process a seemingly endless series of commands, questions, and even sly pop culture references. We can safely say we’ve arrived into the age of artificial intelligence – at least the most basic form of consumer use for it. But as far as smartphone technology goes – and that technology’s potential – Siri is only the beginning in a list of capabilities that seem straight out of science fiction.

 

For instance, Swiss researchers have recently found a way to monitor the heart through the smartphone. By connecting four non-invasive electrode sensors attached to the body into the headphone jack, smartphones can monitor heart activity and provide an individual with real-time health data. This data can in-turn be sent to the appropriate medical professional if necessary. It’s an astounding piece of technology that only signals the start of what is certain to become a way for virtually anyone to someday have their entire biometrics constantly monitored through a communications device which can alert emergency personnel in the event of injury or illness. Trekkies out there will recognize this as a key component of the uniforms worn by the members of the Starship Enterprise.

On the slightly spookier side of things, a research team at Georgia Tech recently found a way to deduce what someone is typing through the iPhone 4 accelerometer, which measures vibrations in the air and is a component of every smartphone on the market. The remarkable formula they found is 80% accurate, and uses a system of processing two keystrokes at a time to hone in on the particular vibrations given off by certain chains of keys pressed. They say it’s a bit too complex for your average identity thief, but a clever hacker could easily use this system to break into the phone of an employee of a major corporation and record keystrokes, waiting for passwords and other information to be uncovered.

Smartphones are turning more and more into pocket-sized computers. But more than that, they’re encapsulating technological trends that are occurring as we speak. While the first several generations of smartphones were indeed and are indeed mostly inspired by the hardware and software of most personal computers, it’s the mobile devices themselves that are the first in line to receive the latest in technological breakthroughs. But with that role in innovation comes a risk of manipulation, as malicious-minded people will always be eager to take advantage of the latest technology. Even if you aren’t using Siri, always remember to ask the right questions when operating the latest in personal technology.


The Lost iPhone 5 Fiasco and Apple’s Response Shows Steve’s Authority Remains in Spirit

Posted by PhoneFreak on Wednesday, 7 September, 2011

(credit: Incase)

1984 was the year Apple released the Macintosh and changed personal computing forever. They capitalized on the device’s inaugural year by creating a Hollywood-grade television advertisement inspired by George Orwell’s masterpiece “1984”, in which a woman wearing an Apple logo being chased by the novel’s Thought Police hurls an Olympian hammer into the projection of the propaganda-spouting Big Brother. The commercial’s message was obvious: the personal computer experience was no longer going to be based on the priorities of bottom line-minded manufacturer moguls. Apple was going to offer the public a computer designed to their wants and needs.

 

Apple Computer has come quite a long way since 1984. Steve Jobs launched it, was fired from it, returned to it, and most recently left again for good. During that time he led the efforts to create such revolutionary products as the iMac G3, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. The company as a collective is responsible for where personal computing technology is today, and nothing reflects that more than the fact that it’s the second most valued company in the world.

That success, per the Jobs playbook, had been at the cost of individual designer freedom and most important of all, absolute secrecy. Seriously, when it came to the next big steps and the next big decisions, Steve Jobs was adamant about Apple’s motives remaining as unknowable as those of a chess grandmaster. It kept them one step ahead of the enemy in every way imaginable. Jobs, the ruthless genius that he was, always knew how important that secrecy was. At the end of the day, the freedom of expression the Apple experience offered to the public was at the expense of the freedom of expression of Apple employees. Nothing they said or did could ever compromise the secrecy of their projects.

So now there’s this lost iPhone 5 prototype left at a Frisco bar. As you know this same exact event happened last year and is being dealt in a similar way: Apple is the primary investigator of the theft. This was highlighted by the San Francisco Police Department’s admission that they never received a report about an iPhone gone missing at that bad. As it turns out the department’s press team wasn’t alerted that the police were “assisting” Apple with the investigation into who took the iPhone prototype.

So Apple, by-way of police assistance, is currently conducting searches in residences they suspect the iPhone 5 may be being held. The evidence linking these locations was both incriminating and Apple’s to have first before the police: in-phone GPS tracking. The phone was not recovered at the location search, however the inhabitant told investigators he was at the bar the iPhone was last seen the night it went missing.

It’s a testament to how much the Steve Jobs way of doing things remains the core of Apple Computer. Essentially, they aren’t messing around with the confidentiality of the latest iPhone release, which may or may not hit shelves next month. It’s classic Jobs in spirit, as he personally called the possessor of last year’s stolen iPhone 4 prototype asking for it to be brought back to Apple headquarters. In the two weeks since he left his post as CEO, Jobs still holds a presence over the company’s actions even if he isn’t there to execute them himself.

Apple continues to represent personal computing freedom. They accomplish this by preserving secrecy through private police action.

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The iOS5 Release: Apple Might Just Out Do Themselves in October

Posted by PhoneFreak on Saturday, 3 September, 2011

We know that now that we can hardly live without a smartphone and that Apple dominates the market, and while new phones will surely continue to be released,Apple might just surprise people with its October release of its iOS5 programming system. Their iOS5 programming system will feature over 200 new features compatible with all of their iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch products. With Black Friday sales soon to approach the electronic market, people will be waiting in long lines to find the latest Apple gadget to use iOS5 time and again.

Out of the two hundred plus features, some of the most noteworthy features will include the Notification Center, I Message, Newsstand and Safari, Twitter, Game Center, and Safari.

1. Notification Center: Using any Apple gadget, anyone can receive incoming email, texts, and friend requests at any time, when the moment strikes. What’s even sweeter is that we can keep track of emails, texts, and social media notifications all in one spot across multiple Apple gadgets. While enjoying this feature, checking the local weather before you leave the house is located within the Notification feature.

2. I Message: With I Message, it’s real easy to convince family and friends to join the bandwagon of Apple gadget users. Shared Apple gadget users with iOS5 can send one another unlimited text messages via Wi-Fi, for instance, with different devices at any one given time. What’s almost dumbfounding to even the seasoned Apple-user is that a conversation can begin on one device and finished hours later on a different device in a different locale occur ring at a better time.

3. Newsstand and Safari: Within the Newsstand feature, all avid and newcomer Apple-users will be able to receive recently purchased magazine subscriptions daily directly to their custom newsstand folder. Apple-users will literally go their Newsstand folder to retrieve their favorites in the palm of their hand when they choose to display them. Most Newsstand Apple-users are going to love also using Safari, where reading without unnecessary distractions is easier and saving articles for later retrieval across multiple Apple gadgets is possible.

4. Twitter: For the avid Apple-users who have not succumbed to Tweet communication, the Twitter feature makes it easy to Tweet with those using iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch. All it takes is one stop sign-in to Tweet from locations like Safari, Photos, Camera, YouTube, and Maps.

5. Game Center: Apple’s Game Center on iOS5 will include more gaming options, the opportunity to post personal profile pictures, and make friend recommendations for continued gaming. Anyone can size up their own network of opponents and view others statistics and achievement scores before resuming play.