Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4: Plenty to like, but nothing to love


Samsung has high expectations to meet with the Galaxy S4, its latest flagship phone and main competitor for Apple’s iPhone.
In an increasingly crowded smartphone market, Samsung has tried to set its phones apart by adding stronger software features to its already impressive hardware.
With the S4, Samsung has taken that strategy and run with it, by offering a wide variety of new features meant to appeal to tech enthusiasts and novices alike. The result is a solid phone that still lacks a killer feature to propel it to must-have status.
Samsung certainly comes through on the hardware. The most remarkable part of the Samsung Galaxy S4, by far, is its screen. The company has managed to pack in a whopping 5-inch display while actually making the phone a hair smaller than its predecessor, the Galaxy SIII. That, combined with Samsung’s signature screen quality, gives users more real estate to browse or watch video.
The phone is also very smooth and very fast — it moves easily between apps, doesn’t lag while browsing and doesn’t stutter during video playback.
Its 13 MP camera takes stunning photos in normal and low light, and could easily replace a point-and-shoot for casual shutterbugs.
The phone has a plastic body, which has earned it criticism from those who would like to see Samsung offer a more finished, metal smartphone, but the plastic body helps to make the S4 thin and light.
The phone’s screen does eat up a lot of battery, but Samsung has given the S4 a bigger battery to keep users from having to top up in the middle of the day. The company has also opted to give the phone a removable battery, meaning that users can keep a spare around in case they run out of power. The phone will also support a microSD card to expand on the 16 GB or 32 GB models that Samsung is launching in the United States.
Despite those technical strengths, the phone’s software features are more hit and miss. Some features are genuinely useful, such as a photo-editing feature that can remove passersby from snapshots. The phone can also shoot video and photos simultaneously, and users can hook the phone up to a cable box and use it as a television remote.
While these are good features, there are also some downright strange features — such as the face-slimming “Beauty Face” photo filter — that will probably get very little use.
And other promising features, such as an auto-scrolling feature that detects when you’re looking at the phone, don’t work consistently enough to be useful. As Samsung improves its technology, these kinds of features may change how users interact with their phones but currently are more fun to play with than to actually use.
For those who are interested in the Galaxy S4 but may feel intimidated by all of its new features, Samsung has added an easy mode that strips out some of the bells and whistles to leave you with a fast, basic phone. The company said it included the option so the S4 can be a good fit even for those who feel less comfortable with smartphones.
All in all, the Samsung Galaxy S 4 is a great phone and users who pick it up will be happy with its performance — but it still lacks a certain polish that dampens its wow factor (Washington Post) )

Nintendo expects to sell 9 million Wii U consoles in year to March 31


Packages of Nintendo Co's Wii U gaming software are pictured at the company headquarters in Kyoto, western Japan January 7, 2013. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao
(Reuters) - Nintendo Co Ltd said on Wednesday that it expects to sell 9 million of its new Wii U game consoles in the year to next March 31, after a disappointing start since their launch in November.
In the latest business year that ended on March 31, the creator of Super Mario sold 3.45 million of its successor to the hit Wii machine. It initially forecast sales of 5.5 million but later lowered that to 4 million.
Nintendo, which began by making playing cards in the late 19th century, is counting on the Wii U, its first console in 16 years to come with a dedicated Super Mario game title, to revive its fortunes as sales of the six year-old Wii slacken.
The Japanese gaming company forecast sales of its handheld 3DS console to rise nearly 30 percent to 18 million.

Apple to return $100bn to shareholders


Profits decline due to rivalry in smartphone and tablet markets, but company's cash reserves burgeon to nearly $145bn.

California-based Apple faces tougher competition from South Korea's Samsung and others [EPA]
Apple Inc has reported that its quarterly profit dipped for the first time in nearly a decade as it earned less money  in the competitive smartphone and tablet markets.
The maker of iPhones, iPads, iPods, and Macintosh computers quickly stepped in to bolster its stock price by announcing a plan to more than double to $100bn the amount it will spend to buy back its stock and pay out dividends.
Apple raised a coming stock dividend by 15 percent to $3.05 per common share.
While Apple's coffers bulged with $144.7bn, the company said most of that money is offshore and it will be shrewder to borrow cash to implement the stock buy-back plan.
"We will fund the capital return programme from operations and borrowing," said Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's chief financial officer.
Apple shares jumped briefly on the news in after-hours trades but slid back down to $403.95, about two dollars below where it was at the close of the Nasdaq.
Sales decrease
The California-based company posted a profit of $9.5bn on revenue of $43.6bn in the first three months of this year, compared to a profit of $11.6bn on $39.2bn in the same quarter in 2012.
It said its gross margin, or the amount of money it makes in profit from its devices, shrank to 37.5 percent from 47.5 percent.
The number of iPhones sold in the quarter rose to 37.4m from 35.1m during the same quarter last year. The number of iPads sold surged to 19.5m from 11.8m a year earlier.
Meanwhile, sales of iPod MP3 players dropped by more than a million to 5.6m and Macintosh computers sales slipped about two percent to just below four million, according to Oppenheimer.
The company's chief executive Tim Cook said that the decline in Apple stock in recent quarters has been "very frustrating for all of us".
Shares in Apple are well below their 52-week peak above $700 in September as the tech giant faces tougher competition from South Korea's Samsung and others.
'Optimistic about future'
"Although we've achieved incredible results, we acknowledge our growth rate has slowed," Cook said during an earnings call with financial analysts.
"We will continue to focus on the long term and we remain very optimistic about our future."
Cook remained adamant that Apple was well-positioned in the booming smartphone and tablet markets.
"We have a lot more innovations in the works," Cook said, promising "some really great stuff coming in the fall and across all of 2014".
"For the size company it is, Apple is plugging along very nicely," said Forrester analyst Frank Gillett.
"The question we are asking ourselves is whether they can bust out a new category. My hunch is there are a bunch of new things brewing."
Revenue in China was up 11 percent to $8.8bn, with iPad sales more than doubling despite Apple reporting that growth had slowed there.
China served as an example of an Apple strategy to win over smartphone buyers with affordable prices on iPhone and iPad models, letting margins shrink in order to build ranks of loyal customers.
"China has an unusually large number of potential first-time smartphone buyers and that is not lost on us," Cook said.
He cited data showing that Apple ranks impressively when it comes to customer loyalty and the willingness of users of its gadgets to spend money on digital songs, music and apps at the iTunes store.
"We do want to grow faster, but we don't look at it as the only measure of our health," Cook said.
The iTunes shop pulled in more than $4bn in revenue in the first three months of the year, setting a new record, according to Oppenheimer.
Source:
AFP