BlackBerry’s Last Gasp: The Weird, Wonderful Passport

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BlackBerry Blend
The touchscreen smartphone has become one of the most successful product categories of all time. But its popularity has blasted holes in a lot of other industries. So many other product categories are sinking or sunk: pocket cameras, GPS units, music players, voice recorders, radios.
And, oh yeah — the BlackBerry.
Poor, poor BlackBerry. At its peak, about 60 million people a year bought BlackBerry devices (or had them bought for them).
But when the iPhone came out, BlackBerry’s leaders didn’t just miss the boat. They were at the completely wrong port. They were late to add a camera, late to create an app store. Quality slipped. Marketing was nonexistent. The stock tanked (from $150 to about $10 a share). Market share tanked (from 20 percent to under 1 percent). And with the phones sinking, the BlackBerry tablet capsized, too.
Thousands were laid off. The CEO was replaced. The replacement CEO was replaced.
Today, BlackBerry says that it has stabilized, smaller but wiser. It’s going to focus on business customers, exploiting BlackBerry’s famed efficiency and security. As proof, today it offers the first new BlackBerry phone since the new CEO took the helm: the BlackBerry Passport. (It’s $600 without a contract or $250 with a two-year AT&T contract.)
This is one weird-looking phone.
It is, in fact, the size of a U.S. passport. I mean, plenty of people will suppress giggles when they first see it — or fail to suppress them.
BlackBerry’s Last Gasp: The Weird, Wonderful Passport
The Passport is big and thick and heavy, with a square screen.
BlackBerry Passport
Once you get over the awkward size and shape and heft, you start to learn about this thing’s virtues, though, and you feel a little guilty for laughing.
First, there’s the classic, beloved, fantastic BlackBerry thumb keyboard. Real keys that actually move. Bigger and more spaced out than on the much narrower BlackBerry phones of old. It’s wonderful.
BlackBerry Passport keyboard
Second, what makes this phone thick is the battery. It occurred to somebody over at BlackBerry that what people don’t like about current smartphones is running out of battery every dang day. So this one goes two, even three days on a charge. That’s fantastic.
Thickness of BlackBerry Passport
Third, the keyboard itself is a trackpad. Nobody’s done that before. In other words, you can drag your finger lightly across the physical keys to make things move on the screen.
For example, it’s how you move the cursor through text — by swiping across the keys.
It’s also how you flick words from the BlackBerry’s word-suggestion feature (recently stolen by Apple’s iOS 8) into the text — by swiping, on the keys, upward beneath the word you want.
Swiping on the BlackBerry Passport keyboard
You can swipe leftward across the keys to delete a word at a time. Or swipe down on the keys to summon the number/punctuation layout.
Finally, you can turn the whole phone 90 degrees (the screen is square, remember?) and use the keys as a very precise scrollbar for webpages.

All of this, plus the big square screen (1440 pixels square), is supposed to address a common quirk of businesspeople: They often wait to do things until they’re back at a computer. A typical phone is just too claustrophobic for anything more than quick replies.
That logic is a little warped, of course, because lots of phones have huge screens these days. The iPhone 6 Plus and Samsung Galaxy S5 are taller, narrower phones, but their screens have the same number of pixels.
Phone comparison: iPhone 5s, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, BlackBerry Passport, Galaxy S5
But BlackBerry maintains that reconfiguring them into a square offers a broader canvas when you’re looking at, for example, calendars, ebooks, and maps.
Calendars on the BlackBerry Passport and iPhone 5s
It’s worth pointing out, though, that the square screen is terrible for watching movies. You’ve got a movie best suited for ants, playing on a huge black empty screen:
Movie on a BlackBerry Passport
Everything else you’d expect is here: front and back cameras, flash, Bluetooth, NFC, removable memory card, quick access to settings, and so on. The sound quality is terrific, both on calls and when playing music or movies. The battery is not removable, however.
There’s an app store — there are two, actually. One contains BlackBerry apps (several thousand), and the other is the Amazon Android app store (200,000 apps). Yes, the BlackBerry OS has a built-in Android emulator that lets you run anything from the Amazon Android app store. (You can even try running any non-Amazon Android app on this thing, but they’re not guaranteed to run smoothly.)
Entering textI’m guessing that diminishing numbers of young phone fans have ever even tried typing on a physical, clicky phone keyboard; it’s just taken for granted that text input means tapping on glass. Well, I’ll tell you: Physical keys are a joy.
The BlackBerry Passport offers a number of text-entry tricks — some old, some new — that make it even better. For example:
• Whenever you’re typing, a fourth row of keys appears on the screen, just above the physical ones. It offers punctuation keys, sometimes number keys — whatever is most useful at the moment. The point is that, on this phone, you never have to switch keyboard layouts just to get a comma or an exclamation point.
• Hold down one of the physical keys an extra half-second to capitalize it — and to open a row of accented variations (like é or î).
• You can dictate text. The recognition is fine, although it’s nowhere near as good as it is in iOS 8. It doesn’t display the words as you speak them, either, as Android and iOS 8 do; instead, you see nothing while you dictate, and then the words appear all at once.
BlackBerry 10.3The Passport is the first phone to come with the new 10.3 version of the BlackBerry software. It offers many large and small enhancements, but the company seems especially proud of BlackBerry Assistant — which everyone else will recognize as “Siri for BlackBerry.”
This phone has no Home button. To get back to your Home screens, you swipe the current app up off the screen. So to tell “Siri” to start listening, you hold down the Play/Pause button on the right side of the phone.
It’s an impressive facsimile. You can say, “Make an appointment for lunch, tomorrow at 1 p.m.,” “Email Cheryl,” “Set my alarm for 7:30 a.m.,” “Play some Billy Joel,” “Text Chris,” “Give me directions to the Empire State Building,” “When is the next Cleveland Cavaliers game?” “Turn off Bluetooth,” and so on. Each time, BlackBerry Siri does exactly what you’d expect.
Her voice is less natural than Siri’s. And she takes a long time to process things you say. Even so, the lesson of Siri is now the lesson of BlackBerry: It’s almost always faster to open an app, set an alarm, place a call, or start an email by voice — rather than tapping around for the app you need.
ShortcutsYou can type BlackBerry Assistant commands, too, which is great whenever it might be awkward to speak commands aloud (library, church, surgery).
That’s only one example of the kinds of efficient shortcuts that the BlackBerry has always been so good at. Me, I love these things. For example, when you’re looking at any kind of list (like your inbox), you can press the T or B keys to jump to the top or bottom of the list. N or P moves you to the next or previous section of something. In email, press C to compose, R to reply, F to forward, and so on.
There are 200 of these shortcuts in BlackBerry 10.3. You’re not expected to learn them all, but over time, you become truly amazed at how thoughtfully they’ve been designed.
BYOD“BYOD” means “Bring your own device,” and it’s a thorn in BlackBerry’s side. It refers to employees bringing their own personal phones (usually iPhones and Android phones) in to work.
Corporate network geeks are a paranoid bunch. As you know if you’ve ever worked for a big company, they hate people mixing personal stuff with company stuff; in fact, they often don’t allow it. They insist on your using a separate phone and laptop for work purposes.
BlackBerry has, for a couple of years, offered a clever “sandboxing” solution called BlackBerry Balance. In effect, it creates two worlds on the same phone, called Work and Personal. Your work calendar, contacts, and apps are kept separate from your personal ones.
To switch modes, you swipe down from the top of the screen and tap either Personal or Work. (In Work mode, your bosses can install their own wallpaper, provide their own apps, and even disable your camera.)
Screens showing personal and corporate sides of a BlackBerry Passport
Without your work password, you can’t see any of your company material. Your calendar shows appointment blocks but doesn’t identify them.
And if you leave the company, your bosses can delete the whole Work world or Personal world in one swift click.
With the BlackBerry Passport, however, there’s another development: something called BlackBerry Blend. It lets you connect your phone to any computer or tablet — your own personal laptop, for example, or an Android tablet or iPad — by WiFi or a USB cable.
At that point, using the Blend app on your computer or tablet, you can work with everything on your BlackBerry: email, text messages, BBM (BlackBerry’s popular private messaging system), calendar, files. It’s a live, encrypted link.
BlackBerry Blend
You can use your full-size keyboard and trackpad to work with all the company stuff that’s on your phone. And you can access your company’s email and networks without having to fuss with a VPN (virtual private networking) setup.
The best part is that nothing ever actually moves to your laptop. Your phone stays corporate-secure, and your overlords are satisfied. When you disconnect, no trace of your phone’s contents remain on the computer or tablet.
Unfortunately, BlackBerry Blend wasn’t ready in time for me to test. I saw a demo but couldn’t try it myself. If it works, it sounds very cool.
Passport to anywhere?The BlackBerry Passport is unusual, innovative, and weird. It has pros and cons that don’t line up with any other phone. It feels a little slow sometimes, and of course it’s like typing on a Pop-Tart; this is not a one-handable phone.
If BlackBerry can get its act together and finish assembling all the pieces … if it can get corporate worker bees to try it … if it can somehow get onlookers not to point and laugh … then the Passport might have a future, although a limited one with a select audience.
But public opinion is a big battleship to turn around. And unfortunately for BlackBerry, the tide is against it.
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Apple Releases iOS 8 ‘Fix,’ but Users Report Major Problems with Update

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Apple Releases iOS 8 ‘Fix,’ but Users Report Major Problems with Update
**
One week after the launch of iOS 8, Apple has already released its first update for the new OS in iOS 8.0.1, which contains a slew of bug fixes.
But you shouldn’t hit the Install button yet. Soon after the update hit, an abnormally high number of users immediately started reporting that the iOS 8.0.1 update is breaking cellular reception and other features like TouchID. For those affected, “No service” is displayed after the update has been installed, and toggling Airplane Mode or powering the phone off and on again doesn’t seem to be fixing it. We’ve reached out to Apple for comment on the situation.
image
According to the company’s release notes, iOS 8.0.1 was intended to fix numerous problems, including an issue that held back HealthKit apps last week. iOS 8.0.1 also patches up issues with third-party keyboards, a bug that prevented some apps from getting at the photo library, reliability around Apple’s Reachability feature, and more. The full changelog follows below. To install the update on your iPhone or iPad, just head into settings. This one shouldn’t require as much space as the original iOS 8 release.
• Fixes a bug so HealthKit apps can now be made available on the App Store
• Addresses an issue where third-party keyboards could become deselected when a user enters their passcode
• Fixes an issue that prevented some apps from accessing photos from the Photo Library
• Improves the reliability of the Reachability feature on iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus
• Fixes an issue that could cause unexpected cellular data usage when receiving SMS/MMS messages
• Better support of Ask To Buy for Family Sharing for In-App Purchases
• Fixes an issue where ringtones were sometimes not restored from iCloud backups
• Fixes a bug that prevented uploading photos and videos from Safari
أكمل القراءة Résuméabuiyad

10 Awesome iPhone 6 and 6 Plus Cases

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10 Awesome iPhone 6 and 6 Plus Cases
Smartphone cases have gone from a necessary evil that protect your phone from the inevitable bumps and bruises of everyday life to sophisticated fashion statements.
And the newest crop of cases and bumpers for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus are no different. We’re talking about cases that range from beefy pieces of rubbery plastic to shells made of all-natural wood and leather, and everything in between.
In other words, if you’re looking for some new cases for your iPhone 6 or 6 Plus, you might want to start with these.
iPhone 6 with Apple's leather case
Apple’s own leather cases for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus are as simple as cases get. Priced at $45 and $49 for the 6 and 6 Plus, respectively, Apple promises that these leather cases will protect your phone without adding much bulk. 
Monoprice — Ultra-thin Shatter-proof Case for 4.7-inch iPhone 6
Monoprice’s ultra-thin shatterproof case for the iPhone 6 is available for just $5.60 and will protect your precious smartphone against the nicks and cuts that result from everyday drops. It won’t, however, protect your screen much. So if your iPhone face-plants, its screen is still at risk of shattering. But if you want a case for your phone and don’t want to spend $50, you can’t go wrong with this one.
OtterBox Defender series case for iPhone 6
OtterBox is known for offering super-sturdy smartphone cases, and its Defender Series is the company’s beefiest of all. Priced at $59.90 and $69.60 for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, respectively, the Defender Series packs three layers of protection, a built-in screen protector, and port covers to protect against dust. And for everyone stuck in 2009, the Defender also includes a belt holster that doubles as a kickstand. 
CandyShell Card Case from Speck
Want to protect your iPhone and ditch your wallet? The Speck CandyShell Card Case has you covered. Offering an impact-resistant outer coating and a raised bezel to protect your phone’s display, the Card Case is seriously durable. What’s more, its backside features room for three credit cards and some folded bills. Priced at $39 for the iPhone 6 and $44 for the iPhone 6 Plus, it’s a 2-for-1 special for your smartphone.
Case-Mate's Brilliance Case
If you want to add some extra pizazz to your iPhone 6 or 6 Plus, look no further than Case-Mate’s Brilliance Case. At $80 for both iPhone 6 and 6 Plus models, the Brilliance Case’s back panel is covered in shimmering crystals. The Brilliance isn’t just a pretty face, though. It also offers dual-layer protection, and its bezel extends past the iPhone’s display to keep it from smacking against the floor if you drop it face-down. 
Stowaway [Advance] iPhone case from Incipio
The Incipio Stowaway [Advance] is what happens when you smash a phone case, a wallet, and a kickstand together really hard. Priced at $34.99 for either the iPhone 6 or the 6 Plus version, the Stowaway includes a slot for up to three credit cards, your ID, or cash. A kickstand situated above the credit card slot lets you prop up your phone to watch movies or TV shows. Oh, and it’ll protect your phone, too.
Radius v2 iPhone case from BiteMyApple
The folks at BiteMyApple call this case the bikini of iPhone cases, and for good reason. The Radius v2 uses the bare minimum of material needed to cover and protect your iPhone 6 ($79) or 6 Plus ($89) from drops, bumps, and bruises. Unlike most cases, the Radius v2 doesn’t completely cover up the iPhone 6’s beautiful shell. The trade-off is that it also leaves the phone more exposed, making it susceptible to scratches and nicks. That said, it certainly looks cool.
Griffin Technology's Identity Performance iPhone 6 case
The iPhone 6 and 6 Plus have taken some knocks for being a bit more slippery than their predecessors. Griffin Technology’s Identity Performance case ($40) seeks to solve that problem with a no-skid back panel. And if your phone does slip from your grasp, the Identity Performance’s shell will protect it from drops as high as 4 feet. An included reusable screen protector will also keep your iPhone’s display safe from scratches and nicks.
Grovemade Walnut and Leather iPhone case
Grovemade’s Walnut and Leather iPhone Case lets your iPhone go au naturel without you having to fear that it’ll break if it slips from your hand. That’s because, Grovemade’s cases are made using all-natural walnut wood. Get it, naturel, natural? … Anyway, the Walnut and Leather iPhone Case protects your iPhone from falls while also doubling as a stand thanks to its flexible leather cover. These handcrafted cases cost $129 for the iPhone 6 and $139 for the 6 Plus.
Tech21 Classic Shell case for iPhone
Tech21’s cases use a special D30 material that is both flexible and durable to help absorb impacts from falls. They’ve smashed the stuff with a hammer in demonstrations, and it doesn’t break. Available for $35 for the iPhone 6 and $39 for the 6 Plus, the Classic Shell offers protection for both the front and back of your precious smartphone. But please don’t try the hammer thing.
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Report: Amazon Developing One-Button Ordering Devices for Your Home

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Report: Amazon Developing One-Button Ordering Devices for Your Home
Amazon.com will boost staffing at its secretive Silicon Valley-based hardware unit by at least 27 percent over the next five years as it tests Internet-connected “smart” home gadgets such as a one-button device to order supplies.
The plans, detailed in a little-known government document and by people familiar with the matter, signal Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos’ intentions to double down on the No. 1 U.S. online retailer’s hardware strategy. This is despite the lukewarm reception of Amazon’s new Fire smartphone and some investors’ criticism of its heavy spending on highly experimental projects.
The Lab126 division, which developed Amazon’s Kindle and other consumer electronics devices, plans to boost its full-time payroll to at least 3,757 people by 2019, according to the agreement reached with California in June that would give Amazon $1.2 million in tax breaks.
Amazon will invest $55 million in Lab126’s operations in Sunnyvale and Cupertino, the agreement posted on the California governor’s website shows.
This expansion comes as Lab126 tests connected-home devices that could open up a new front in its war against Google and Apple, two people familiar with Lab126’s activities said recently.
The sources requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the media.
Technology companies see Internet-connected dishwashers, thermostats, and other household devices that can “talk” to one another as ways to fuel demand for products and services. But skeptics say many of these devices cost too much for most consumers and could take years to go mainstream.
Amazon is testing a simple WiFi device that could be placed in the kitchen or a closet, allowing customers to order products like detergent by pressing a button, one of the people said. Lab126 is also interested in wearable devices, the other person said. Both sources stressed that such devices may never come to market.
These details shed rare light on the division at Amazon, which is notoriously tight-lipped about any unit’s operations and staffing.
In a statement, Amazon said Lab126 was moving “incredibly quickly” and cited the company’s 2014 devices, including the Fire phone, Fire set-top box, and several new tablets and e-readers.
“We will continue to invent and create new features, services and products, and to support this innovation. Lab 126 is also growing very quickly,” Amazon spokeswoman Kinley Pearsall said.
Whether or not Amazon ultimately sells connected home and wearable devices, the experiments hint at Bezos’ broader ambitions. Lab126 has become increasingly important to Amazon’s broader aim to use devices to make it indispensable to its more than 240 million active users.
Bezos is deeply involved in developing Lab126’s projects, from the 2007 debut of the first Kindle e-reader to the Fire phone.
The Fire phone, which Lab126 worked on for four years, debuted this summer to lackluster sales and reviews. Earlier this month, Amazon cut the price of its phone to 99 cents with a two-year contract with AT&T.
Amazon shares are down nearly 20 percent this year.
Other tech leaders are also seeking a central place in the home. In January, Google bought Nest Labs, a smart thermostat maker, for $3.2 billion. In June, Apple announced plans for HomeKit, its own framework for connecting household gadgets.
Embedding households with such devices would be much more lucrative than merely selling gadgets like wireless LED light bulbs or WiFi garage-door openers.
With Lab126’s experiments, Amazon envisions homes decked out with Internet-connected sensors that would allow it to tell customers ahead of time when they need to replace air conditioner filters or service their washing machines, one of the sources said.
“If I walk into my laundry room and there’s a big pool of water and the floor needs to be replaced, I’d love to know about it two weeks before it happens,” said Ryo Koyama, CEO of Weaved, a startup working on connected-home technology.
Lab126 had almost 3,000 full-time employees in its 2013 taxable year.
(Reporting by Deepa Seetharaman and Noel Randewich; editing by Richard Chang.)
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Owners Report That the iPhone 6 Plus Is Susceptible to Bending

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Owners Report That the iPhone 6 Plus Is Susceptible to Bending(DevinPitcher/MacRumors)
This story has been updated.
Apple’s iPhone 6 Plus appears to have a hidden feature, though it’s one you might not want to test out. According to a report by MacRumors, Apple’s latest smartphones are susceptible to bending out of shape if kept in your pocket for too long.
MacRumors’ report is based on posts by two of its forum members. The first forum member, Hanzoh, said that he kept his iPhone 6 Plus in his front pants pocket for about 18 hours.
During that time, he said, he drove to a wedding, danced, and sat down for varying periods. Later, when he took his iPhone out of his pocket, he noticed that it had a slight bend at its midsection.
Bent iPhone 6 Plus
(HanzohMacRumors)
A second MacRumors forum member, DevinPitcher, claimed that his friend’s iPhone 6 Plus bent after his friend put it in his pocket and got into his car. Both Hanzoh and DevinPitcher provided photos of their iPhone 6 Pluses to back up their claims.
As MacRumors points out, past forum members have seen similar problems with the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s. Those owners reportedly received replacements for their bent handsets from either Apple or their carriers.
That the iPhone 6 Plus is capable of bending isn’t out of the realm of possibility. The phone is not only Apple’s largest, but it’s also one of its thinnest.
In fact, Lewis Hilsenteger over at Unbox Therapy tried bending his iPhone 6 Plus after reading reports of its flexibility, and managed to put quite the kink in the handset. Though, it took a good amount of force for him to see any results.
Interestingly, Hilsenteger said in his video that he was putting pressure on the center of the iPhone, but it bent closer to the top near its volume keys. That’s also the same area where both of the MacRumors forum members saw their iPhones bend.
All of that is to say, it’s easy to imagine that an iPhone 6 Plus could be bent when an owner bends to sit down with the phone in his pocket.
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Report: Apple Already Preparing to Release iOS 8.0.1 Bug-Fix Update

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Report: Apple Already Preparing to Release iOS 8.0.1 Bug-Fix Update
Apple has already cooked up a fix for certain problems discovered in iOS 8, according to blog site MacRumors.
Citing an anonymous source, MacRumors said Tuesday that an iOS 8.0.1 update addresses several key bugs, including problems with the following:
  • call forwarding and freezing when opening Visual Voicemail
  • keypad not showing up to enter iCloud Keychain verification codes
  • videos sometimes not playing on Safari
  • AirDrop support for Passbook passes
  • installation of VPN profiles
Apple released iOS 8 last Wednesday with several new features and refinements. But it didn’t take long for some iOS users to start reporting problems. Conversations on Apple’s support forums and other online sources have pointed to WiFi connectivity glitches, the usual battery drain issue, and slow performance in Safari, among other problems.
The update will likely patch other bugs beyond those cited above, according to MacRumors. So some of the issues reported on the support forums may be resolved as well.
Apple had apparently been readying iOS 8.0.1 even before it launched iOS 8, as the update has already been sent to mobile carrier partners for testing, MacRumors added. No release date has yet been revealed. But if the update is at the carrier stage, then the actual user rollout shouldn’t take too much longer to kick off.
Last year, Apple rolled out iOS 7.0.1 just a few days after it launched iOS 7 in order to fix a fingerprint glitch with the iPhone 5s. Less than a week after that, iOS 7.0.2 came out to patch a bug with the lock screen.
CNET contacted Apple for comment and will update the story with any further details.
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PlayStation TV Coming to U.S. in October at $99 Price

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PlayStation TV Coming to U.S. in October at $99 Price
Available in Japan since last year, the PlayStation TV will go on sale in the U.S. this Oct. 14 for $99.99, Sony announced. The set-top box is due to launch in Europe one month later with a price tag of €99.99.
When connected to a television, PlayStation TV provides access to a selection of PS Vita, PSP, and PS One games, in addition to allowing users to access saved movies, TV shows, and music like any other set-top box.
The system also allows PlayStation 3 and 4 players to pick up a saved game on a different screen thanks to its Remote Play feature.
Aside from the around 700 games available through the service (including God of War, Tomb Raider, and Tekken), three PS Vita games will be provided for free with purchase (Worms Revolution Extreme, Velocity Ultra and OlliOlli).
PlayStation TV has an internal storage capacity of 1 GB (expandable via memory card) and is compatible with the DualShock 3 and DualShock 4 controllers.
In the US, the device will be available in a bundle including a DualShock 3 controller, an 8 GB memory card and The Lego Movie Videogame for $139.99. No bundled offers have been announced so far for the European market.
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Phablet Reviews Before and After iPhone 6 Plus (Everyone Got It Wrong)

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Bigger is better. No, wait, bigger is worse. Well, which is it?
Apple’s newly supersized 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and the jumbo, 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus are a marked departure for the company, which has clung to the same, small screen size for years. It has gone so far as to publicly deride larger phones from competitors, notably Samsung, even as their sales grew to record highs.
Tech reviewers over the years have tended to side with Apple, in general saddling reviews of the Samsung Galaxy Note – a 5.3-inch device that kicked off the phablet push in 2012 – with asides about how big the darn thing was. To be fair, I’m one of them; I called the 6.3-inch Galaxy Mega “preposterous” last year. I also think the iPhone 6 Plus may be more phone than most people will be comfortable with, although the skyrocketing sales seem to point otherwise.
But does Apple have something special? Can its phones succeed where others have … well, already succeeded? And more importantly, are tech reviewers being fair when they review the iPhone 6 Plus? Here’s what some of them said today, compared with how they reviewed earlier phablets and big phones from the competition.
BGR
Jonathan Geller spun 180 degrees thanks to Apple. But he’s decent enough to admit he was wrong.
2012:  Samsung Galaxy Note
The most useless device I’ve ever seen … This is a phone, after using it for a few hours, that feels like it is too big to be taken seriously. That’s the end of it. I don’t care if you like large screens on mobile devices, I don’t care if you love Android, and I don’t care if you love 4G LTE — this is a device fit for use only by such a small subset of the human population that I can’t fathom how AT&T and Samsung are putting so much marketing resources behind it.
– Jonathan Geller
2014:  Apple iPhone 6 Plus
Now that Apple has finally taken the wraps off the iPhone 6 and the iPhone 6 Plus, and Apple fans are going crazy with anticipation over the largest iPhones ever released, something needs to be said. And that something is, “Thank you, Samsung.” We got it wrong.
– Jonathan Geller
TechCrunchTechCrunch wasn’t sure how it felt about phablets at first. But larger iPhones have clearly convinced them.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Unfortunately, you might look a little crazy with that huge thing up to your face. I found that it was really difficult to get comfortable with the device, never feeling like I had complete control over it as I would with a smaller phone. On the other hand, the mobile video experience offered by the Note can’t really be beat.
– Jordan Crook
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
In terms of carrying and holding the device, the additional size makes for a less ‘perfect’ ergonomic quality, something the iPhone 6 definitely achieves, but there’s still lots to love about the industrial design of the 6 Plus … For most tasks, I find the iPhone 6 Plus to be a two-handed device – but I also find that I’m absolutely fine with that.
– Darrell Etherington
The Wall Street Journal / RecodeLauren Goode is singing a very different song – and is willing to admit it. So too Walt Mossberg, who called the 5.3-inch Note “gargantuan” and the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 as “terrific.”
2012:  Galaxy Note 2 It’s still too big for a smartphone … After testing it over the past week and a half, the awkwardness that came with carrying such a large, “notice me” phone outweighed the benefits of it, for me.
– Lauren Goode
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
Maybe I’m getting old, and my eyes are getting worse. Or maybe I’m stuck in Apple’s reality-distortion field (help). But something strange happened this week. I started to like a phablet.
– Lauren Goode
2014:  Walt Mossberg on Galaxy Note and the iPhone 6
That iPhone, and its four-inch successor, the 5S, proved very popular. At first, larger, wider phones seemed weird (I even compared holding the first Samsung Note to your face to “talking into a piece of toast.”) But for many people, especially in certain countries, the iPhone’s screen began to seem too small, as competing models appeared with bigger and bigger screens. At first, larger, wider phones seemed weird … the iPhone 6’s 4.7-inch screen is a catch-up feature. But it’s very well done.
– Walt Mossberg
The New York Times / YahooFor David Pogue, a 4.8-inch Samsung was great, but so big it needed to be ridiculed. A 5.5-inch iPhone “doesn’t seem bigger than the iPhone 5,” however. He’s clearly adjusted to the scale.
2012:  Galaxy S3
This phone is huge. Its 4.8-inch screen is a broad canvas for photos, movies, maps and Web pages. But you can’t have a big screen without a big body, and this one is more VHS cassette than postage stamp. It’s the old trade-off: A big phone is better when you’re using it, but a small one is better when you’re carrying it.
– David Pogue
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are absolutely terrific phones. They’re fast and powerful and well designed. There’s not a single component that hasn’t been improved. These phones are a delight to behold and to be held.
– David Pogue
The GuardianLooks like The Guardian had a change of heart, err hand? At least they’re not above admitting it.
2013:  Galaxy Note 3 The sheer size of the device basically makes one-handed operation impossible. Samsung’s given the Note 3 an entire settings menu dedicated to trying to make it easier to use one-handed, but even with my adult male-sized hands it’s a struggle to reach even half of the screen without dropping the device.
– Samuel Gibbs
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
Too big. This thing’s too big. Waaay too big. It’s … actually, that screen is pretty nice, isn’t it? Wow, you really can get a lot of content on there, can’t you? Hey, my hand’s getting used to the size. It’s quite comfortable, isn’t it?
– Charles Arthur
USA Today
Ed Baig stuck to his guns: Phablets in general just aren’t going to work for everyone, regardless of who makes them.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Screen size is a balancing act, of course, and some will find the large display ungainly. Holding the phone to your ear might feel a bit dorky. I found it could easily fit in a coat pocket or purse, and surprisingly my front jeans pocket as well. But the size is simply not going to work for everybody.
– Ed Baig
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
I prefer the 6 Plus because I like the biggest of the big screens, and like that I have to squint less often. It felt fine in my jeans pocket, but won’t fit every snug purse or small pair of hands.
– Ed Baig
CNetCNet’s reviewer said the Note was a really, really big phone, but a great one. The iPhone is a great phone but a really, really big one.
2012:  Galaxy Note
There’s no way this baby is slipping into my jeans pockets, but it’s fine for my purse … With its huge screen and throwback stylus, the Samsung Galaxy Note is a polarizing smartphone that winks at tablet territory. Those who like their screens XL will find a top-notch device that lets multimedia shine. The S Pen adds some artistic potential, but for some, the phone will just simply be too big.
– Jessica Dolcourt
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is too big for everyone to love it, but it’s Apple’s best phone this year. If your budget and your pocket can make room for it, give the iPhone 6 Plus serious consideration.
– Tim Stevens
The VergeAt first, The Verge was obsessed with the sheer size of the Note. Today size isn’t the same factor it once was.
2012:  Galaxy Note
Human society has yet to evolve to the point where it can witness a person holding up a massive slate of technology to his ear without attempting to make a bad joke about it … It’s only the one-size-fits-none form factor and some software troubles that hold the Galaxy Note back from being a truly memorable mobile device.
– Vlad Savov
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is a big phone because it has to be; Apple made a big phone in 2014 because consumers have demanded big phones. Samsung’s empire is built on gigantic phones that keep getting bigger … and while Apple initially derided screen size as an unworkable gimmick, it turns out that bigger sells … I’m going to buy an iPhone 6 Plus. I’m taken with it; it feels like an entirely new kind of device for Apple, and it has such a killer camera I can’t say no.
– Nilay Patel
InfoWorldGalen Gruman gets the award for consistency — and bluntest statement about the sheer size of modern phones.
2012:  Galaxy Note
The Galaxy Note’s 5.75-inch height and 3.25-inch width fit in my open palm, but without much leeway. Many women and even men won’t be so lucky. … Even two-handed operation can be problematic. In vertical orientation, thumb-typing is quite comfortable on the larger-than-usual onscreen keyboard. But in horizontal orientation, I strained to reach the innermost keys with my thumbs, despite my large hands.
– Galen Gruman
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 Plus is too big for me.
– Galen Gruman
Digital TrendsWe can’t very well call out other publications without quoting ourselves. Here is what our Mobile Editor Jeffrey Van Camp thought of the Galaxy Note and iPhone 6 Plus.
2012:  Galaxy Note
I can’t imagine how many times a Note will be dropped because someone is trying to use it one handed … If you have big hands or often use your phone with two hands, then the Note may be a good device for you. Aside from its size, most everything else about it is solid … Samsung hasn’t made a huge mistake with the Galaxy Note.
– Jeffrey Van Camp
2014:  iPhone 6 Plus
I’ve never loved phablets. I still don’t … Of Apple’s two new models, we recommend the iPhone 6 over the iPhone 6 Plus, but compared to other (oversized) phablets, this is a fantastic offering … If you like big phones or have avoided previous iPhones because of their diminutive stature, take a fresh look at Apple.
– Jeffrey Van Camp
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Study: iOS 8 Crashes 78% More Than iOS 7

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When we covered 8 big problems with iOS 8earlier this week, there was apparently a huge problem that was omitted from the list: it is still early for iOS 8 right now, of course, but so farApple’s new mobile software is far more prone to crashes than the previous release, iOS 7.1. According to a study from Crittercism, which says it analyzes data from more than 1 billion monthly active mobile users, apps crash 78% more frequently on Apple’s latest and greatest version of iOS 8 than they do on its predecessor.
Study: iOS 8 Crashes 78% More Than iOS 7
In an email to BGR, mobile application performance management experts Crittercism said that the company analyzed data across iOS users between September 17th and September 22nd, and found that app crash rates across all devices running iOS 8 landed at 3.56%.
On the same devices running iOS 7.1, apps only crashed 2% of the time, though that figure is up from 1.6% in March.
Older devices are obviously worse offenders than newer ones. As of September 22nd, apps crashed 3.57% of the time on the iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c and iPhone 4s (of note, Crittercism lumped the iPhone 4 into this group in the supplied data even though it doesn’t run iOS 8). Meanwhile, the company found that as of the same day, iPhone 6 apps crashed 2.63% of the time and iPhone 6 Plus apps crashed 2.11% of the time.
As far as adoption is concerned, Crittercism pegged iOS 8 adoption at 20.06% as of the 22nd, which is probably a bit low considering Apple confirmed a 46% iOS 8 adoption rate as of September 22nd.
More from BGR: 8 big problems with iOS 8
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Report from Maker Faire: You, Too, Can Be a Maker

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Report from Maker Faire: You, Too, Can Be a Maker(Photos by Rob Pegoraro/Yahoo Tech)
Some 85,000 people paid up to $40 a ticket to get their weird on at the World Maker Faire in New York last weekend, and they could not have come away disappointed. These were among the sights at Make magazine’s celebration of do-it-yourself craftiness, computing, and kitsch at the New York Hall of Science in Queens:
• A 17-foot-tall 3D printer from SeeMeCNC named PartDaddy.
• Not-A-Camera, a laser-cut wood illustration of a camera that itself concealed a lens, circuit board, and microSD Card slot.
• The enormous robotic giraffe I last saw lumbering around the South Lawn of the White House.
• 3D-printed prosthetic hands for children developed by the e-NABLE project.
• The Sashimi Tabernacle Choir, an art car encrusted with crustaceans and fish, all of which danced and wriggled in time to such tunes as Handel’s Messiah.
• Popcade, a 50 percent scale arcade game machine that played such classics as Defender and Joust (fortunately, it did not require half-size quarters).
• A swimmable mermaid suit, made to order out of silicone. Creator Pearlie Mae offered this warning about wearing one: “It’s very exfoliating.”
As delightfully strange as all that was, it fit my expectations from visits to earlier, smaller Maker Faires. But there were other parts I didn’t see coming.
Children building circuit boards at Maker Faire
Giant companies like Maker FaireCorporations showed up in force at the World Maker Faire, the fifth in a row here: Disney, Intel, LG, Toyota, Ford, and Pepsi all had major exhibits.
And while the interest of an Intel should be obvious (at CES, it introduced a tiny computing module, Edison, made in part for the tinkering market), firms like Disney and Pepsi don’t exactly stand out as champions of DIY and remix culture.
Maker Faire founder Dale Dougherty acknowledged the potential for awkwardness during a Q&A session with the media on Sunday. “I think they’re here to learn as well,” he said. “You look at the LG booth — it doesn’t look like their CES booth.”
Indeed, the Korean electronics conglomerate had a long line of people waiting to build a tiny circuit board with a soldering iron. And Disney’s tent was mostly occupied by such guest exhibitors as littleBits, which makes tiny electronics kits for kids and other curious types; no space was given over to its movies or TV shows.
“We do our best to help them understand what the maker movement is,” Dougherty said. “Ideally, it’s a remixing of some corporate cultures with the maker movement.”
Not-A-Camera
It’s not just about 3D printing and ArduinoThe earlier, smaller Maker Faires I’d attended leaned heavily on 3D printers, tiny gadgets built around Arduino microcontrollers, interactive LED sculptures, and other projects that involve computer code, circuit boards, or both.
Here, however, I found myself spending a soothing 45 minutes getting an introduction to crocheting in the NeedleArts Zone. The analog side of Maker Faire also emerged at Bash the Trash, a project from Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., that makes musical instruments out of junk. For example, a thick cardboard tube, a Styrofoam box, a scrap piece of wood, some old metal wire, and a turnbuckle had become a violin of sorts.
At Pop-Up Repair, members of this New York group fixed random objects for free. While I watched, one volunteer used a soldering iron to fix a set of earrings; another wielded pliers to twist wire to patch a tear in a belt.
And a tent in a field attracted a crowd for lock-picking tutorials — not to break into other people’s homes, but to learn about how pin-tumbler locks work. As a slide show emphasized, the first rule of lock-picking is “Do not pick someone else’s locks”; the second rule is “Do not pick your locks … if you rely on them.”
At a Maker Faire, you’re more likely to be asked, “What do you make?” than “What do you do?” I was a bit leery of that question, since I don’t code and only picked up a soldering iron for the first time last month. But seeing all this non-electronic handiwork made me rethink things: Well, I do bake bread and (occasionally) brew beer, so maybe I am a maker after all.
Sashimi Tabernacle Choir
The world is going the other wayDuring that media Q&A, Dougherty spoke about the situation Maker Faire was created to work against: “Things arrive as packages; we don’t get to put them together.”
Since the first Maker Faire in 2006, many things have made life easier for the tinkerer. Open-source software, where anybody can inspect and improve a program’s instructions, is no longer a foreign concept; the cost of small-batch manufacturing with 3D printers, laser cutters, and other computerized tools has dropped dramatically; crowd-funding sites have radically opened up financing for hardware hackers.
But the mainstream gadget business keeps making products that are less open to tinkering and repair by their users. The original vision of the Macintosh — an appliance computer in a sealed case — looks more and more like the industry standard.
And I can’t really complain, since I’ve bought into this trend. The phone I used to take notes on all weekend has a battery I can’t replace and storage I can’t expand, and the laptop tucked into my bag doesn’t have a single internal component I can swap out or upgrade.
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Report: Apple Plans to Phase Out Beats Music Brand

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Report: Apple Plans to Phase Out Beats Music Brand
Update, 4:43 p.m.: An Apple spokesman tells Recode that TechCrunch’s report is “not true,” though he won’t elaborate. Recode says Apple plans to continue to offer on-demand streaming but may “modify” the Beats Music brand over time, suggesting it may fold the service into iTunes.
**
Beats Music will eventually disappear as a brand, according to a new report. TechCrunch reports that Apple plans to eliminate the Beats Music streaming service, which it acquired in May, but doesn’t say when. The report is less clear on what Apple plans to do with streaming music. Once source tells TechCrunch that on-demand music could be integrated into iTunes; another source says Apple will make a “significant music announcement” in the first half of 2015.
Engineers from Beats Music have already been transferred to other divisions at Apple, including iTunes, according to the report. As TechCrunch notes, Beats Music CEO Ian Rogers was put in charge of Apple’s ad-supported iTunes Radio product in August and has been splitting his time between the services since then.
When Apple bought the Beats brand for $3 billion, Apple senior vice president Eddy Cue called Beats Music “ the first music subscription service done right .” Though it mostly mimicked existing services from Spotify, Rdio, and others, Beats Music tried to differentiate itself through hand-curated playlists and the involvement of music-industry titans like Dr. Dre and Trent Reznor. But after three months, it had only 250,000 subscribers, compared with  over 10 million  on Spotify. Still, Cue had positioned Beats as a key component of Apple’s music strategy, saying that the company wanted to offer on-demand listening along with ad-supported radio and digital downloads.
All of which suggests that while the Beats Music brand may be going away, on-demand streaming from Apple could easily take another form. If iTunes is remade as a kind of celestial jukebox that combines your MP3s and on-demand streaming into a single place, then the Beats Music brand going away might not be such a bad thing, after all.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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iPhone Drop Test Carnage: All Models Shatter in Exhaustive Video

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iPhone Drop Test Carnage: All Models Shatter in Exhaustive Video
At some point, you’re going to drop your new iPhone 6 or 6 Plus. And if a YouTube video by gadget tester Taras Maksimuk is any indication, your handset is unlikely to fare well.
In the more-than-12-minute-long video that will make iPhone fans weep, Maksimuk, who goes by the Twitter handle @TechRax, dropped the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, along with every previous version of Apple’s smartphone, onto a concrete surface from a height of 5 feet.
The result: technological carnage. Each iPhone’s screen shattered when dropped on its display. Still, most of the phones withstood being dropped on their edges.
All you Samsung fans giggling at the thought of Apple fanboys seeing their precious smartphones shattered might want to check your schadenfreude. Maksimuk said he saw similar results when he tested Samsung’s Galaxy S5.
Worth the carnageMaksimuk told Yahoo that the test cost him $4,000 in sacrificial iPhones. To recoup that expense, his video will need to generate about 1 million views. The video was posted Sept. 20. As of this writing Sept. 22, about 200,000 people have watched it.
Maksimuk’s results run counter to what iPhone warranty-seller SquareTrade found in its testing. According to the company, the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus are the most durable phones Apple has ever created.
In fact, the iPhone 6 survived being dropped from a height of 4 feet without much issue. The iPhone 6 Plus, though, saw its front and back panels separate on its left side, but its display was left intact.
To reiterate: SquareTrade performed its drop tests from a lower height than Maksimuk’s tests and only let the phones fall on their sides.
Of course, drop tests are an imperfect science. Your phone’s survival depends largely on the height from which you drop it; whether it falls on its edge, back, or display; and what surface you drop it onto. In other words, your results may vary.
If you really want to keep your favorite new gadget safe, your best bet is to pick up a strong case.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to mourn the loss of all those smartphones sacrificed in the name of science and YouTube awesomeness.
Email Daniel at dhowley@yahoo-inc.com; follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley or on Google+ here.
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