Unlocked iPhone 4S Goes on Sale Across The World

The iPhone 4S begins its second international wave today, going on sale in much of Europe. and unlike the stateside iPhone 4S, this one can be had unlocked.

Customers in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland can now head to their favorite carrier and sign their lives away for the next year or two.

Here in Spain, the carrier deals aren’t bad (from around €35 per month with 1GB data that you can also share with an iPad using a free extra SIM), but the interesting part is the price of an unlocked iPhone, which starts at €600.

€600 is $850, and that’s for the 16GB model. it goes up in €100 step to top out at €800, or $1,133 for the 64GB model. For comparison, those are the exact same prices as the 3G iPad lineup, which will give you a rough guide to what the U.S prices will be when the unlocked phone goes on sale there, probably some time in November. up in Canada, the unlocked prices run at $650/$50/$850 (thanks, Jon!), which should also let you see where things are headed.

I have a feeling that there may be another press release from Apple on Monday, announcing another few million units sold. if this damn rain will stop, I might just head over to the Apple store to check things out.

See Also:

  • Critics Be Damned! iPhone 4S Pre-Order Success Validates Apple …
  • How the iPhone 4S Stacks up with the Best of the Rest
  • iPhone 4S Supports Russian GLONASS Satnav

Price Check by Amazon App Expands to Android Platform

SEATTLE–(BUSINESS WIRE)–(NASDAQ:AMZN) – Amazon.com, inc. today announced that the Price Check by Amazon app, originally released for the iPhone, is now available for Android mobile phones. Price Check by Amazon is a price comparison app that provides shoppers the easiest way yet to compare in-store prices with the low prices on Amazon.com and its more than two million online merchants, across all categories of products – from toys to consumer electronics. Shoppers can use the app to scan a barcode, snap a picture, or say or type a product name to see prices from Amazon.com and its other online merchants and read product reviews. Shoppers can then purchase the item with 1-Click and have it delivered directly to their doorstep.

“Consumers want a fast and convenient way to determine the best possible price available for a product”

“Consumers want a fast and convenient way to determine the best possible price available for a product,” said Sam Hall, director of Amazon Mobile. “Since Amazon is widely known for its vast selection and low prices, Price Check for iPhone quickly became one of our most popular apps following its release last November, which is why we’re excited to expand the app to the growing number of Amazon customers using Android phones.”

With Price Check by Amazon for Android, shoppers can price check four ways:

  • Scan a barcode: Amazon’s barcode scanner will match an item and provide pricing from Amazon.com and its other online merchants in seconds. one exclusive feature to the Android app is the ability to scan in either portrait or landscape mode, making it faster and easier to find products.
  • Snap a picture: Snap a photo and instantly match the picture to books, DVDs, CDs, video games and more.
  • say the product name: Speak the name of a product to return accurate product matches and pricing from Amazon.com and its other online merchants.
  • Type your search: Type the product name to instantly find products and prices.

“So far this year we’ve seen shoppers with iPhones choose Price Check’s barcode scanner to check prices more than any other search method available with the Price Check app and use Price Check millions of times, most frequently on weekends,” Hall said. “We’re thrilled to now offer Android users the same instant access to Amazon’s prices wherever they shop.”

using Price Check by Amazon is fast and simple. For example, a customer may be shopping for a blender in a home store and decide to compare the in-store price of the item to Amazon.com and across more than two million online merchants on Amazon. With Price Check, the customer scans the barcode on the blender, and immediately the app displays prices sorted from lowest to highest. when available, the results show the Amazon.com price – with eligibility for FREE Super Saver Shipping or FREE Two-Day Shipping with Amazon Prime. The customer can then decide whether to make an in-store purchase or make a purchase directly through the app using Amazon.com’s secure checkout.

Price Check by Amazon includes prices on millions of products – from books to HDTVs to baby strollers – from Amazon.com and its other online merchants. The app also includes access to Amazon’s popular shopping features, such as product details; customer reviews and ratings; adding to Wishlist; sharing via Twitter, Facebook, text message or e-mail link; and immediate purchasing using 1-Click ordering and Amazon Prime.

Price Check is available for free on the Amazon Appstore for Android at amazon.com/appstore or from the Android Market. For more information, please visit amazon.com/pricecheck_android.

Amazon’s mobile shopping applications include Amazon Deals for iPhone, Price Check by Amazon for iPhone and Android, Amazon Student for iPhone, Amazon Windowshop for iPad and the Amazon Mobile App for iPhone, iPad, BlackBerry, Windows Phone 7 and Android-based devices. Customers can learn more by visiting amazon.com/amazonmobile.

About Amazon.com

Amazon.com, inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), a Fortune 500 company based in Seattle, opened on the World Wide Web in July 1995 and today offers Earth’s Biggest Selection. Amazon.com, inc. seeks to be Earth’s most customer-centric company, where customers can find and discover anything they might want to buy online, and endeavors to offer its customers the lowest possible prices. Amazon.com and other sellers offer millions of unique new, refurbished and used items in categories such as Books; Movies, Music & Games; Digital Downloads; Electronics & Computers; Home & Garden; Toys, Kids & Baby; Grocery; Apparel, Shoes & Jewelry; Health & Beauty; Sports & Outdoors; and Tools, Auto & Industrial. Amazon Web Services provides Amazon’s developer customers with access to in-the-cloud infrastructure services based on Amazon’s own back-end technology platform, which developers can use to enable virtually any type of business. The new latest generation Kindle is the lightest, most compact Kindle ever and features the same 6-inch, most advanced electronic ink display that reads like real paper even in bright sunlight. Kindle Touch is a new addition to the Kindle family with an easy-to-use touch screen that makes it easier than ever to turn pages, search, shop, and take notes – still with all the benefits of the most advanced electronic ink display. Kindle Touch 3G is the top of the line e-reader and offers the same new design and features of Kindle Touch, with the unparalleled added convenience of free 3G. Kindle Fire is the Kindle for movies, TV shows, music, books, magazines, apps, games and web browsing with all the content, free storage in the Amazon Cloud, Whispersync, Amazon Silk (Amazon’s new revolutionary cloud-accelerated web browser), vibrant color touch screen, and powerful dual-core processor.

Amazon and its affiliates operate websites, including amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.de, amazon.co.jp, amazon.fr, amazon.ca, amazon.cn, amazon.it, and amazon.es. As used herein, “Amazon.com,” “we,” “our” and similar terms include Amazon.com, inc., and its subsidiaries, unless the context indicates otherwise.

Forward-Looking Statements

this announcement contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Actual results may differ significantly from management’s expectations. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that include, among others, risks related to competition, management of growth, new products, services and technologies, potential fluctuations in operating results, international expansion, outcomes of legal proceedings and claims, fulfillment center optimization, seasonality, commercial agreements, acquisitions and strategic transactions, foreign exchange rates, system interruption, inventory, government regulation and taxation, payments and fraud. More information about factors that potentially could affect Amazon.com’s financial results is included in Amazon.com’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent filings.

Qualcomm now shipping 4G LTE Gobi 4000 platform; may power 4G iPad and iPhone

Qualcomm announced Wednesday that it is now shipping its 4G LTE Gobi 4000 platform to OEMs. the platform combines its 3G/4G wireless modems, the MDM9600 and the MDM9200, and the Gobi API that will allow manufacturers to create devices with support for LTE/HSPA+ and LTE/EV-DO networks. “to make Gobi 4000 available to as many consumers as possible, Qualcomm has worked hard to ensure that OEMs can use the platform on many commonly used personal computing, tablet and e-reader operating systems, including Windows and Android, and hardware architectures, such as our powerful Snapdragon dual-core and quad-core processors,” Qualcomm CDMA Technologies senior vice president of product management Cristiano Amon said. Many manufacturers use Qualcomm’s Gobi technology, including Dell, Apple, Lenovo, Novatel and Sierra Wireless. Apple uses older Gobi technology in its CDMA iPad 2 and iPhone 4, which means it’s very possible that we’ll see Qualcomm’s Gobi 4000 platform used in a 4G iPhone and iPad. in addition to the Gobi 4000 announcement, Qualcomm announced 8 new S4 processors (the MSM8660A, MSM9260A, MSM8630, MSM8230, MSM8627, MSM8227, APQ8060A, and the APQ8030) that use the company’s Krait CPU. the chips were designed for next-generation smartphones and tablets and are expected to hit the market early next year. Read on for Qualcomm’s full Gobi 4000 press release.

Qualcomm Announces Commercial Availability of Gobi 4000 Platform for 4G LTE Connectivity

Fourth Generation Gobi Platform Provides High-speed 4G LTE Connectivity with backward Compatibility to EV-DO and HSPA+ Networks

SAN DIEGO – November 15, 2011 – Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) today announced availability of Gobi™ 4000, its latest addition to the Gobi family of embedded data connectivity platforms. Based on Qualcomm’s leading multimode 3G/4G wireless modems, the MDM9600™ and MDM9200™, and a common software interface (Gobi API) for connection management development, the Gobi 4000 platform allows customers to offer both LTE/HSPA+ and LTE/EV-DO designs to meet the growing demand for embedded 3G/4G connectivity in mobile devices worldwide. Gobi 4000-based modules are now available from Novatel Wireless and Sierra Wireless.

“Embedded modules based on our new Gobi 4000 technology are designed to give consumers an uncompromised mobile connectivity experience, both in terms of download speeds and flexibility,” said Cristiano Amon, senior vice president of product management for Qualcomm CDMA Technologies. “To make Gobi 4000 available to as many consumers as possible, Qualcomm has worked hard to ensure that OEMs can use the platform on many commonly used personal computing, tablet and e-reader operating systems, including Windows® and Android, and hardware architectures, such as our powerful Snapdragon™ dual-core and quad-core processors.”

Qualcomm’s latest Gobi-enabled 4G platform features the Gobi Application Programming Interface (API) with LTE extensions and is compatible with leading connectivity standards, including CDMA2000® 1xEV-DO Rev. a and B, HSPA+, dual-carrier HSPA+, and LTE with integrated backwards compatibility to HSPA and EV-DO. the Gobi 4000 platform also includes software enhancements for select MDM™ chipsets that enable a common software interface to help connect, locate and manage 3G/4G devices regardless of wireless interface and operating system. this interface will help streamline product development efforts, spur application development among third-party software developers, and deliver greater flexibility to device manufacturers.

As one of the largest providers of wireless chipset and software technology in the industry, Qualcomm has a diverse chipset and software product portfolio spanning multiple device classes. System designers now have the flexibility to choose an embedded Gobi 4000 platform for high-speed 4G LTE support, or an embedded Gobi 3000 platform for worldwide 3G connectivity. Qualcomm also offers its family of Snapdragon all-in-one processors with the option for integrated multimode 3G/4G, dual-band Wi-Fi®, Bluetooth, FM radio connectivity and differing numbers of CPU cores for the most power-efficient designs.

“Qualcomm’s Gobi 4000 platform provides the 4G LTE support our customers demand for mobility in Dell’s Latitude E6420 laptops,” said Kirk Schell, executive director and general manager of Dell’s Business Client Product Group. “We look forward to giving our customers fast 4G network connections and increased productivity with the addition of the Gobi 4000 modules to our mobile broadband technology offerings.”

“Combining the performance, security and reliability of our ThinkPad laptops with Qualcomm’s Gobi platform has proven to be a compelling solution for our customers,” said Dilip Bhatia, vice president, ThinkPad Marketing, Lenovo. “We look forward to continuing this tradition of delivering quality broadband mobile computing solutions with the addition of Qualcomm’s Gobi 4000 technology to our ThinkPad laptops’ connectivity options.”

“We are offering multiple 4G LTE platforms incorporating Qualcomm’s Gobi 4000 technology within our Expedite® Module portfolio,” said Rob Hadley, CMO, Novatel Wireless. “With our long-standing tier-one carrier and OEM relationships and our leading design, integration and certification expertise, we are excited to help our customers bring commercial 4G LTE-capable laptops, tablets and the rapidly growing number of other devices requiring 4G connectivity to market.”

“Sierra Wireless has been using Qualcomm’s Gobi technology in our embedded wireless modules for quite some time, including in our AirPrime™ MC7700, MC7710 and MC7750 modules for LTE networks, which we introduced late last year,” said Dan Schieler, senior vice president and general manager, Mobile Computing for Sierra Wireless. “Our customers value the performance and flexibility that Gobi technology offers, and we are pleased to continue our collaboration with Qualcomm to provide the new Gobi 4000 technology in our product line.”

Tags: APQ8030, APQ8060A, Gobi 4000, MSM8227, MSM8230, MSM8627, MSM8630, MSM8660A, MSM9260A, qualcomm

Macworld Feature: 26 reasons to upgrade to the iPhone 4S today – Macworld UK

Apple surprised many when it introduced its new iPhone 4S. Not because people weren’t expecting a phone. they were just expecting a different one.

Rumours surrounding the iPhone event had suggested that Apple would jump straight to the iPhone 5 (or maybe even release two phones at once). as it turned out, the company followed the same course it took in 2009 when the iPhone 3G gave way to the iPhone 3GS.

That means there’s still an iPhone 5 out there, being prepped for a future release – most likely next year, if Apple sticks to schedule. so if you’re in need of a new iPhone, should you hold out for a (still-hypothetical) iPhone 5?

The iPhone 4S’s new features range from impressive to jaw-dropping.

The biggest stir has been caused by Siri, the voice-powered assistant built into the iPhone 4S. There’s no doubt Siri is a window into the future. Siri’s ability to understand natural language, and to remain contextually aware of the current conversation, is remarkable. Here’s a transcript from Apple’s Siri video:

Woman: Is it going to be chilly in San Francisco this weekend?

Siri: Not too cold. Maybe down to 61 degrees in San Francisco.

Woman: What about Napa Valley?

Siri: Doesn’t seem like it. it won’t get below 68 degrees.

Though Apple barely glossed over it, the iPhone 4S also supports dictation anywhere the virtual keyboard appears. That’s a feature Android phones have offered for some time, and its appearance in iOS is a welcome one. Composing small snippets of text (for emails, tweets, and messages in the iMessage feature of the iOS 5 update) could get much easier.

Almost as exciting as Siri – and potentially offering a larger practical benefit in real-world situations – is the iPhone 4S’s heavily enhanced camera.

It offers eight megapixels, coupled with the phone’s ability to take in more light than the iPhone 4’s camera could – and those two improvements alone would be plenty. But Apple says the iPhone 4S’s A5 chip offers an image signal processor that rivals those in modern DSLRs, vastly improving colours and white balance. and the camera can now snap its first picture in barely more than a second.

The 4S shoots video at 1080p, compared with the iPhone 4’s 720p. and the power of the A5 processor enables Apple to offer image stabilisation of video as you shoot it.

Thanks to the A5 chip that powers the iPhone 4S, the smartphone is comparable in speed to the iPad 2. This is the most powerful iPhone Apple has produced. Turn to our review on page 46 for more detailed speed testing.

And the chances are we’ve not seen the best of the A5 processor. Give it a few months and apps will be consistently written to take advantage of the dual-core hardware.

Improvements to the HSDPA chipset allow faster throughput on 3G data down/uploads. which, combined with the greater processing power in the 4S’s innards, should transform your browsing experience. Once again, we’ve got figures for these improvements in our review.

Thanks to that A5 processor, the 4S offers graphics that are seven times quicker than the iPhone 4, which opens up a world of console-standard games. One of the highlights of the 4S keynote was the demo of Infinity Blade 2, a forthcoming title that takes iOS gaming even further beyond the ‘casual mobile gaming’ stereotype than its predecessor. This is a device with the power to handle grown-up gaming.

And that’s not all. The wireless AirPlay facility lets you stream 720p video from an app to a TV without having to mess around with cables. The video mirroring feature in the 4S has obvious and valuable applications for businesspeople doing presentations, for teachers, and for many others – and gamers are licking their lips too.

The ‘death grip’ issue with the iPhone 4 wasn’t as big a deal as some of the haters made out, but the improved antennae on the 4S mean it’s been sorted out completely. The only way to mess up the antennae is to cover the edge of the entire iPhone with your hands.

Bluetooth 4 offers the same speed as earlier Bluetooth standards, but with a markedly better battery life. which could come in handy if you buy compatible peripherals.

iOS 5 is the biggest upgrade to Apple’s mobile operating system in years, bringing more than 200 essential features to the table, from iMessage and Newsstand to Reminders and Notification Centre. But as many of us discovered in the days following the roll-out, upgrading from iOS 4.x to iOS 5 can be a painful experience. Grab an iPhone 4S and iOS 5 is on there already, ready for you to discover its many treasures.

The improved power-efficiency of the A5 chip means that, in theory, you should expect around an hour extra 3G battery life from the 4S, as compared with the iPhone 4.

If you own an iPhone 4 today, it’s still an amazing device; the iPhone 4S hasn’t changed that. it looks good, sports the Retina display, takes nice pictures, and works well. and let’s not forget that many people still rock the iPhone 3GS – another perfectly fine phone.

Well, by the same token, if you’re eager for a new iPhone now and buy the iPhone 4S, you won’t regret your decision if Apple releases an iPhone 5 time next year.

The iPhone 5 will probably get a new look, and maybe it’ll be another smidgen faster or sport a slightly fancier display. Make no mistake: you’ll want it. if you’re an early adopter, you’ll drool over Apple’s next iPhone no matter what. But if you’re drooling over the iPhone 4S already, don’t feel obligated to wait. The iPhone 4 remained Apple’s top iPhone for 16 months – the longest such iPhone tenure to date. Perhaps the iPhone 4S will hold that top spot for 20 months now. Apple’s not saying.

You can feel confident that Apple’s not going to pull a fast one and release an iPhone 5 three months from now, right after you buy the iPhone 4S. that kind of iPhone switcheroo would alienate every iPhone 4S customer, and you can be certain that Apple’s learned a lesson about taking care of early adopters.

If you want to buy the 4S outright and sell your iPhone 4 on eBay, you’ll find that iPhone 4s are currently selling for a good price; at press time there were several on ebay.co.uk going for well over £300. Upgrade now and you can sell your old phone for a small fortune. Wait around and the price of your iPhone 4 will fall.

Whether you’re passing on your old  smartphone to a relative in need, or conscientiously donating to a charitable or eco-friendly recycling scheme, upgrading your smartphone can present you with the opportunity to do a nice thing. and hey, spending money is good for the economy.

This one shouldn’t really be an issue, but let’s face it, having the latest phone is cool. and who wants to be left out when everyone else is comparing notes on Siri?

When Apple produces an iPhone with an entirely new body shape, accessory makers rub their hands with glee, knowing that millions of smartphone owners will shortly be looking for cases and sleeves to fit their new phones. But the iPhone 4S has almost the same chassis as the 4 – except for slight variation in the positioning of the volume and mute buttons, so beware if your case has openings for these that are particularly tight – so iPhone 4 owners may well be able to keep their accessories.

Hey, that could be a tenner you’re saving.

Apple called the 4S the 4S because it looks nearly identical to the iPhone 4, and because it’s an internals-only makeover. The rumour mill wrongly predicted that Tim Cook and company would unveil a device called the iPhone 5, but it’s not Apple’s job to correct such rumours or set exact expectations in advance. so even if we thought we’d meet a new phone called the iPhone 5 packed with new features, we needn’t be let down by the introduction of the iPhone 4S instead. we were mostly right: there’s an impressive new iPhone on the market. It’s just that its name isn’t precisely what we expected.

In this feature we’ve focused on owners and prospective owners of the iPhone 4, and explained why they should turn instead to the iPhone 4S. But we’re dimly aware that for one reason or other, some of you haven’t bought an iPhone in a while. and some of you have even been known to purchase smartphones by rival companies. if that describes you, then you really, really need to get an iPhone 4S. and here’s why.

The 3GS has continued to be a going concern during the iPhone 4’s run at the top of the range, just as the iPhone 4 will keep selling units into 2012. But 3GS owners are now two generations out of date – not to mention likely to be coming to the end of the two-year contracts that dissuaded them from upgrading last time round.

Compared to the 3GS, the 4S can add the Retina screen to the list of hero features listed above. Retina was a serious step forward in screen clarity. Apple claimed at the time that it offered as much detail as the human eye was able to perceive; regardless of whether you buy that, the difference between the 3GS’s 480×320 display and the 960×640-pixel screen on the 4 and 4S is impossible to miss.

And when it comes to the camera, the 8-megapixel model on the 4S makes the 3GS’s 3-megapixel camera look positively prehistoric. well, maybe not prehistoric, but at least Elizabethan.

If you’re still using an iPhone 3G, you’ve got all the reasons to upgrade listed above, plus one more that’s an absolute killer: you don’t get to use iOS 5. and we can’t praise that operating system highly enough. no iMessage; no Newsstand; no wireless syncing and PC-free setup; no Twitter integration. none of the many small enhancements that make things easier for those who’ve upgraded.

With iOS 5’s iMessage app, Apple has produced a classic riposte to the BlackBerry Messenger service so beloved of younger smartphone users. The move turned out to be presciently well-timed, in fact, arriving as it did in the midst of a large-scale, three-day outage that brought down BBM across the globe.

Apple fans had problems of their own, of course, with widespread iOS 5 installation issues reported by angry iPhone owners; and a service blip realistically won’t push too many BlackBerry users across the fence. But looking to the long term, Apple is now encroaching on one of the areas where RIM held a trump card. and Apple’s own strong suits – the largest app library on the planet, for instance, and superior touchscreen displays – still look ominously dominant.

Die-hard Android users are unlikely to be swayed by the iPhone 4S, given that they’ve ignored the reasons to switch presented by previous iPhones: rigorously coherent hardware and software design, an arguably stronger user interface, an approval process that weeds out the malicious apps that plague Android, and so on.

But having spent many a frustrating hour battling with Android’s speech recognition function, we can add Siri to the list. it has deeper integration throughout the OS and, while not infallible when coping with broad British accents, seems markedly better at deciphering our island tongue.

Seriously? Ok. Small (if growing) app library; a user experience that can’t compete with iOS; still comparatively low user uptake, meaning less incentive for developers; people will stop laughing at you if you buy an iPhone.

Obviously, your next step is a personal decision. so in all seriousness, if you still use an iPhone 3GS and it makes you happy, we’d say stick with it. if you use an iPhone 4 and don’t feel motivated to buy the iPhone 4S whether because of upgrade costs or its features don’t entice you, more power to you.

But if, on the other hand, you’re fired up about the iPhone 4S, we don’t think you should force yourself to wait for the iPhone 5. The next-generation iPhone is here today; the next next generation is a giant unknown.

HTC Rezound (Verizon Wireless)

The high-definition smartphone era is upon us. the HTC Rezound ($299.99) is the first cell phone to hit the U.S. market with a true 720p screen. It’s also the first phone with Beats Audio, which promises enhanced sound quality via both software and a matched set of headphones. the Rezound has a few flaws, and it’s pricey, but it’s a powerhouse smartphone nonetheless.

Design, Connectivity, and call QualityThe Rezound measures 5.1 by 2.6 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs a hefty 6.0 ounces. It’s not thin or light like the Motorola Droid RAZR ($199.99, 4.5 stars), but it’s at least a little slimmer than the HTC Thunderbolt ($149.99, 4 stars). the Rezound is mostly black, with a rubberized back panel, and sharp-looking red accents on the earpiece speaker, camera lens, capacitive touch buttons, and Beats logo. HTC arranged the packaging to showcase the included Beats earbuds (more on those later); you also get a little carrying pouch for the earbuds in the box, plus multiple sets of eartips in various sizes.

The 4.3-inch, 1280-by-720-pixel Super LCD display is pretty amazing. at 341 ppi, it’s now the densest phone screen available, outpacing the Apple iPhone 4S ($199, 4.5 stars) with its 326-ppi Retina display. It’s also higher resolution than many 7-inch tablets, which are generally 1024-by-600. You’ll notice the pixel density in the Web browser and while watching video, but it doesn’t jump out at you in other contexts.

While the colors aren’t as vivid as what you’ll see on Samsung’s Super AMOLED plus displays, it’s still plenty bright and colorful. Typing on the screen using HTC’s stock keyboard is easy in both portrait and landscape modes.

The Rezound is a dual-band EV-DO Rev. A (850/1900 MHz) and single-band LTE (700MHz) device with 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi. It’s not a world phone, as there’s no GSM radio. Verizon’s fast 4G LTE network, which is now available in 160 cities across the U.S., delivers an average of around 9.5Mbps down according to our 21-city nationwide tests. the Rezound also works as a mobile hotspot for up to 10 Wi-Fi-enabled devices with the appropriate plan. the Rezound connected to my WPA2-encrypted Wi-Fi network without trouble.

Voice quality was okay overall, with a bright, somewhat midrangey tone in the earpiece. I heard a little static around some syllables, but it wasn’t bad. there was a ton of gain available; watch the volume control, or you could put your hearing at risk. Transmissions through the mic sounded fine, and reception was good. Calls sounded clear through an Aliph Jawbone Era Bluetooth headset ($129, 4 stars). the voice dialing failed to recognize my commands most of the time, but at least you can trigger it over Bluetooth. the speakerphone was weak, with a thin tone and not nearly enough volume for use outside. the 1620mAh battery ran for an excellent 8 hours and 37 minutes of talk time.

Hardware, Apps, and AudioThe 1.5GHz Qualcomm MSM8660, S3 dual-core processor and 1GB RAM are top-notch hardware. You get Android 2.3.4 (Gingerbread) with the latest version of HTC Sense. You can configure the lock screen to show additional information, and there’s a new group messaging feature that works across multiple platforms, but the Rezound still hesitates on occasion as you navigate around the UI. HTC is promising an upgrade to Ice Cream Sandwich for “early 2012,” which is further away than I’d like, but at least the prospect is there. the Rezound benchmarked well, but not great; the Droid RAZR and the Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket ($249, 4.5 stars) (over on AT&T) both performed as good or better on our various benchmark tests.

That said, browsing the Web on a 720p phone is what you’d expect: awesome. You can fit desktop pages comfortably enough, at least in landscape mode, to view them at full width and still manage to read the text. HTC’s own apps are fun to use and integrate social networks well, and Android Market contains over a quarter-million third-party apps. It’s possible you’ll run into some compatibility issues with apps that can’t handle the high-res screen, although I didn’t stumble on any during the review period.

For multimedia, there’s 12.68GB of free internal storage; HTC also throws in a 16GB SanDisk microSD card, and my 32GB card worked fine. the slot is behind the battery, though; swapping cards requires a reboot.

The Beats Audio headphones—this phone’s other star distinction, after the 720p display—look sharp, with their red wires and finely-crafted earbuds. the wires include a little remote control with a mic that answers calls and controls the music player app. You want bass? You get bass, including some serious low-end extension with the Beats Audio software enhancer enabled. I’d call the resulting sound “hi-fi” more than audiophile, because both frequency extremes sound overly boosted—though sometimes that can be a good thing with rock and hip-hop tracks. Without Beats Audio enabled, the headphones by themselves sound more muffled than what you’ll hear on a good Shure or Etymotic set. Suffice to say it’s an acquired taste.

Music tracks also sounded fine through Samsung Modus HM6450 Bluetooth headphones ($99, 4 stars), for what it’s worth, though the Beats Audio enhancer only works with wired earbuds.

Video, Camera, and ConclusionsStandalone videos looked fantastic, especially 720p and 1080p videos, the latter of which the handset transcodes on the fly. It’s a treat to watch a 720p video natively on a cell phone. but the video player crashed once during the review, and there’s no kickstand, either. HTC’s Watch service offers premium movies and TV show rentals using cached streaming, so you can begin watching while the rest of the file downloads in the background. You can also output video through an MHL adapter (not included) to an HDTV, complete with 5.1 surround sound.

The camera and camcorder didn’t hold up very well in testing. the 8-megapixel, auto-focus, f/2.2 camera includes a dual-LED flash and a 28mm wide-angle lens with a panoramic mode. Test photos looked good with plenty of light, both indoors and out, but began to fall apart as the sky darkened. some dusk shots looked blurry and lacked detail, and indoor photos in medium light were pixelated and had a yellowish cast. Recorded 720p and 1080p videos were just okay, with blurred details, some dark areas, and a not-quite-smooth 23 frames per second frame rate average for both resolutions. There’s also a 2-megapixel front-facing camera for video chats.

The Rezound supplants the HTC Thunderbolt, as the Rezound has a sharper display, weighs less, features the latest version of HTC Sense, and comes with better headphones, although the Thunderbolt is still a nice smartphone if you want to save $150. the Droid RAZR keeps its Editors’ choice crown, thanks to its slimmer and lighter design, equally brilliant (if lower resolution) display, lower price, and Motorola’s comprehensive Webtop ecosystem of accessories, although the Rezound comes with the Beats Audio earbuds and that amazing 720p screen.

We haven’t tested the Verizon Wireless version of the Apple iPhone 4S, but if it’s like the Sprint version, it offers a superior camera and 1080p camcorder (complete with image stabilization), not to mention the best app store on the planet. but it has a smaller screen and much slower 3G data speeds. And how about the Samsung Galaxy Nexus? That one is just around the corner, with Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and a true 720p display as well; hang on tight for our upcoming review. if you want high-definition video and great quality audio today, the Rezound is a solid choice—just give it another week to see how the Galaxy Nexus turns out.

BenchmarksContinuous talk time: 8 hours 37 minutes

More Cell Phone Reviews:•   HTC Rezound (Verizon Wireless)•   HTC EVO Design 4G (Sprint)•   HTC Rhyme (Verizon Wireless)•   HTC Vivid (AT&T)•   Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket SGH-I727 (AT&T)•  more

TAKEOVER CONTENT HERE

Building a tablet in today’s climate is hard. You’ll either be called out for being a copycat by consumers or officially called out by Apple — the leading tablet maker — for blatantly ripping off its vague design patents.

Since Apple set the precedent for what a modern tablet (not one of those bulky tablet PCs that Bill Gates dreamed up a decade ago), there’s an expectation that a finger-friendly touchscreen tablet should be thin, light and start at $500 (or less if you’re not an iPad).

And even though Samsung is still knee-deep in some lawsuits that span courtrooms around the globe with its larger Galaxy Tab 10.1, it still fired up the factories to pump out the smaller Galaxy Tab 8.9 to sell in the U.S.

To rival the iPad 2 is a tough task. Motorola’s Xoom tried. RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook tried. a sea of cheap Android tablets tried. the only one who seems prepared to bring the entire ecosystem of content and hardware is Amazon and its Kindle Fire next month.

Is the Galaxy 8.9 the tablet that finally gives the iPad 2 a run for its money? Maybe, maybe not.

Imitation, Flattery?

To the unsavvy buyer, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 looks virtually identical to the iPad 2 and can easily be mistaken for one. Heck, even Samsung’s lawyers were unable to tell the difference between a Galaxy Tab 10.1 and an iPad in court from a 10-foot distance.

Step a little closer and similarities fade, ever so slightly. the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is really just a smaller version of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 with some slightly downgraded specs. the tablet has a 16:9 aspect ratio screen with a 1280×800 resolution. it weighs 0.99-pounds and is slim at 0.33-inches. Compared to the iPad 2’s 1.33-pound weight and 0.34-inch thickness and it’s obvious which tablet is going to feel more comfortable in one hand.

Skinning Android 3.0 Honeycomb with TouchWiz UX

Anybody who’s spent even the littlest time with a Honeycomb tablet like the Xoom will know it’s very limited. as in, there aren’t many tablet-optimized apps limited. the UI is a mixed bag limited. Software buttons instead of physical ones limited. You get the picture. despite that, Samsung continues to make great strides in masking Android’s inconsistencies/fragmentation with its TouchWiz UX skin, similar to how HTC did the same with its Sense UI.

For all the vertical-integration between software and hardware that Apple champions with its hardware — be it Mac, iPhone or iPad — Samsung’s TouchWiz UX has tried to emulate the same feel on Android. if you own or use any Samsung Galaxy device or almost any recent touchscreen-based gadget by the Korean giant, you’ll feel right at home with the Galaxy Tab 8.9.

Being an Android-powered tablet, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is highly customizable. there are tons of widgets to poke around with and Samsung’s “Media” and “Social” hubs — your categorized portals to your content — are pretty neat. the Media hub gives you instant access to rented and downloaded TV episodes, movies, music and e-books — all conveniently accessible. Meanwhile, the Social hub is like a master aggregator — it sucks up all your emails, instant messages (from Facebook, AIM, Yahoo!, Google), Tweets, comments, etc. and displays it all in one place.

Going back to the iPad’s one app management for all my emails, IMs and Tweets really stinks after getting spoiled by a centralized hub.

Responsive Enough For Most People

When Hewlett-Packard gave up on its TouchPad and famously dropped it down to $99 in a fire-sale, everybody rushed its corpse like brain-hungry zombies, even knowing that it would get very little or no love via future software updates. the TouchPad wasn’t terrible by any means — it was, let’s say, “just good enough.” just good enough for tweeting on commercial breaks. Good enough for browsing everybody’s favorite tech blog DVICE (wink wink). Good enough for watching Mad Men while on the toilet. it was good enough, especially at $99, it was a steal. Its niggles and wiggles in performance were forgivable.

The same applies for the Galaxy Tab 8.9. Its software and hardware are polished enough that most users won’t even notice or gripe about it. I can go on and on about the little glitches that I noticed while browsing my thousands of RSS feeds or while loading media-heavy pages such as CultureJapan, but every single time, I simply let my annoyances slide.

Why? because there is no perfect tablet. the same applies to Apple’s iPad 2. the iPad 2 might be the tablet everybody wants — that not everybody can afford — but it has its own faults (limited RAM, a crappy VGA front cam and back camera, lack of quick setting toggles, etc.).

We can dig up all the specs we want, whether it’s the Galaxy Tab 8.9’s dual-core 1GHz processor, Tegra 2 GPU or 1GB RAM, but none of that stuff will make or break this tablet. what matters is does the Galaxy Tab 8.9 get the job done for Web browsing, playing movies, music, flinging Angry Birds and running Flash without making you want to hurl it against the wall.

Really Crappy Cameras

As DVICE’s resident camera nut, I love cameras. Big ones, small ones, untraditional ones — I love them all. I’m not new to using tablets to take pictures or record HD video. My reasoning is this: if you’re going to include a pair of cameras on the front and back of a tablet, at least make them good enough, otherwise, just don’t include them at all, as it is with the Kindle Fire. by good enough, I mean ones that don’t produce pictures and videos that are grainy and gross to look at.

The Galaxy Tab 8.9 has a 2-megapixel front and 3.2-megapixel rear camera with LED flash. the latter is capable of 720p HD video recording. Bluntly put: both are terrible. We tried taking photos indoors, outdoors, low light, lots of light, and made a few international Skype calls, but we were never impressed. Easily, an iPhone 4 and even an older iPhone 3GS can outshoot the Galaxy Tab 8.9.

Don’t even bother with the cams here, unless you want your photos to look like they were taken with crappy cellphone cameras, because that’s what you’ll get.

Winner or Loser?

From a usability standpoint, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is the smoothest and tightest Android tablet we’ve ever tested. there are plenty of negatives here: it isn’t made from any “premium” materials like aluminum (it’s back is plastic, made to look like brushed metal), and it could have used a mini HDMI port (not everybody has a connected TV that supports wireless DLNA streaming), and its cameras could be less dog doo, but the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is a winner. there are also some high points: the speakers are loud enough for close-range blasting, the sharp screen is great for watching movies and looking at photos and browsing the Web works without many hiccups (gasp — even Adobe Flash!). Battery is also solid: we easily got over four days of extensive use out of it before needing a charge.

It definitely feels like the perfect size and weight for using it in one hand — even more so than the smaller PlayBook. with a screen of 8.9-inches, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is larger than the 7-inch PlayBook, but smaller than the iPad’s 9.7-inch screen. It’s a middleman device that is discrete in public, which is great, because I’m not looking to stop every 10 minutes while using it in a park, on the subway or bus, just to be asked, what the device is.

If only it wasn’t so damn expensive for a smaller-screen tablet. the Galaxy Tab 8.9 comes in Wi-Fi-only models at $470 for 16GB and $570 for 32GB models. No expandable memory card slots, either. if the Galaxy Tab 8.9 was $350-400, it wouldn’t be at Kindle Fire impulse buy levels, but it’d feel like less of a hard option against the iPad. if you can spare the cash, it’s still an excellent tablet, though — probably the best alternative to the iPad 2.

Oh, and one more thing. the Galaxy Tab 8.9 uses its own proprietary 30-pin wannabe charging and syncing cable à la Apple (though not compatible with Apple products), so if you like keeping your cables in check with only a micro or mini USB, you’re SOL.

All photos for DVICE by Raymond Wong

Watch a 12-Year-Old Put Your Startup To Shame

This 12-year-old iPhone developer has a couple of all-too-rare things going for him: A solid product idea, and a strong ability to communicate with the public. the rest of the tech world should watch his TED talk—yes, his TED talk; what, haven’t you done one?—and learn.

The kid, Thomas Suarez, launched two iPhone apps, an Earth-shaped fortune teller, and his big hit, Bustin Jieber, a whack-a-mole Justin Bieber game. he also created a company, CarrotCorp (“Uploading pictures will never be the same”), and an App Club at his Los Angeles-area school, where he teaches other kids to make iPhone apps. he recently spoke at a Technology Entertainment and Design conference in Manhattan Beach, California. not only does he have a confident and charming tone—”He speaks like [Apple bigwig] Scott Forstall,” wrote one commenter at TheNextWeb—but he makes a solid product that actually enriches the lives of ordinary people. Sure, Bustin Jieber appeals mainly to tweens, but it doesn’t try and raid your Facebook account, spam your Twitter, or sell your location. It’s also never going to need to “pivot” and become something entirely different.

Suarez is not just a smart 12 year-old, he’s an antidote to the sort of overcomplicated overreaching that’s become so common in the tech bubble. he is, at least, until gets $10 million in venture backing from Sequoia Capital or whatever.

Apple: Baird Sees Q4 iPhone, iPad Units Solid

By Tiernan Ray

RW Baird’s William Power today reiterates an Outperform rating on shares of Apple (AAPL), writing that his visits to retail stores “suggest strong demand” for the company’s iPhone 4S, and that it’s “too early to call” on shipments of Apple’s iPad.

Power reiterates a forecast for 27.2 million iPhone units this quarter and 15 million iPad units.

Baird is no doubt responding to the multiple rumors circulating yesterday and today about Apple cutting production of either or both devices for one reason or another.

Baird doesn’t directly address those rumors, but alludes to them, writing “given the importance of the holiday selling season, we believe FQ1 iPad shipments are too early to call, though our checks suggest solid overall demand. we do expect the [Amazon.com (AMZN) Kindle, Nook and others to take some share, but continue to forecast strong iPad growth overall.”

Apple shares are down $10.82, or 2.7%, at $384.46.

iOS 5 Untethered Jailbreak FastRa1n v5.0 is Out; Top 5 Jailbreak Tweaks From Cydia

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Within days from Redsn0w launch, the untethered jailbreak came in the market with the name FastRa1n v5.0.

Now as you can jailbreak your iDevice both the ways, here are five jailbreak tweaks that can change your experience with your iDevice.

BatteryCenter: The jailbreak tweak adds your phone's battery status to your notification center. It shows the percentage of the battery remaining with the current status of power supply (charging).

SBMusic: SBMusic is designed for iPads and allows you to create bookmarks to your playlists. After installing SBMusic you don't have to search for your favorite playlists deep in your music player. with SBMusic, you just tap on the bookmark created for the playlist and you are done.

NoNewsIsGoodNews: This jailbreak tweak saves your time and saves your iPhone and iPad from crashing because of the Newsstand. NoNewsIsGoodNews, once it is installed, removes the Newsstand icon from your SpringBoard and brings out the options located into the Newsstand to the SpringBoard.

PowerCenter: This power-related tweak allows you to quickly and easily respring, reboot, or power off your iPhone with a simple finger slide.

DisplayOut: This tweak is only for jailbroken iPads. As there is no SpringBoard icon, this just shows up in the Settings app. you can adjust your output resolution, orientation, refresh rate, and the scale.

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After a quarter century, American Girl dolls are still wildly popular

This article first appeared in the Sunday Wisconsin StateJournal.

In 1986, three dolls — Kirsten, Samantha and Molly — took theirfirst bows.

They were bigger than most dolls, at 18 inches, had bodies thatlooked more like real girls than the curvaceous Barbie, and theywere dressed to reflect different periods in American history.

They came with books that spun stories of the spirit andpluckiness of girls from those eras.

That was the start of Pleasant co., a catalog business named forfounder and former teacher Pleasant Rowland with a double meaningthat spoke to what the dolls could offer to girls ages 7-12, aspleasant company to them.

Today, 25 years later, American Girl — the name officiallychanged in 2004 — is a small empire, with a wide assortment ofdolls, books, clothing and accessories, as well as movies, storesand online play, generating nearly $500 million a year revenue.

“It was always based in great experiences for girls. in theearly days, we were in print format only … and now, we are a verylarge, multi-channel marketer with print, online, retail andmagazine channels of distribution,” said chief executive officerEllen Brothers.

American Girl has lines of historic, contemporary and babydolls; books set in the past and in the present, as well as booksabout health, feelings and friendship. the company recentlyannounced plans for its 12th American Girl store, featuring abistro, doll hair salon and special activities.

American Girl is also one of the area’s top 20 employers. Of thecompany’s 2,000 employees, 600 work at its Middleton headquartersand call center or at the DeForest distribution center.

The dolls are made in China, as are most of the clothing itemsand accessories. And even though they are priced significantlyhigher than most dolls and toys, American Girl generates littlecontroversy. rather, the company draws widespread raves for itspositive messages to girls as well as upbeat projections for itsfinances.

“American Girl is viewed as a great success story in theindustry. A wholesome, high-quality brand that stands for learning,good values and cherished friendships,” toy industry analyst SeanMcGowan, of Needham & co., in new York, said in an emailinterview.

“American culture is better off for Pleasant Rowland and thecreation of American Girl,” said Deborah Mitchell, UW-MadisonSchool of Business senior lecturer in marketing. “There’s neverbeen a time in our history when there’s been a greater need forgirls to have an expanded view of who they are, where they’ve beenand what they could be.”

Bought by Mattel in 1998 for $700 million, American Girl hasremained relatively autonomous. “What we’ve gained is economy ofscale of the world’s largest toy company,” Brothers said.

Each has benefited from the other, she said. “For years now, weprint the Fisher-Price catalog, mail it for them, and take orderson the web for the Barbie collector business and one of the HotWheels lines.”

American Girl, in turn, has accessed Mattel’s expertise inresearch and entertainment while still controlling the “look andfeel” of the company, the layout of stores and the catalog content.“There are a lot of differences (between the businesses) andthey’ve been very, very respectful of that,” Brothers said.

The toy giant earns props for keeping hands off. “The smartestthing Mattel did was leave the company in Wisconsin and not move itto L.A.,” analyst McGowan said.

Some consumers may consider the $100 price tag for a doll and abook too expensive but American Girl makes no excuses.

“We’ve never shied away from that price point. it is quality, isage-appropriate and historically accurate,” Brothers said. she seesAmerican Girl’s competition as electronics such as cellphones oriPods; not other toys.

“It’s so much more than a toy. It’s emotional engagement; it’s afriend; it’s a history lesson; it’s a keepsake,” Brothers said.

That was the experience of at least two Madison teenagers.

Ruth Percival was 8 years old when she got the first Girl of theYear doll, Lindsey, and the book telling her story. “I did feellike I could relate to Lindsey because she was Jewish,” saidPercival, now 16.

Bethany Wolkoff, 16, won a My American Girl in a school rafflewhen she was in third grade. “I wanted to take my doll everywherewith me,” she said. it wasn’t dressed in the skimpy outfits foundon dolls like Barbie. “I didn’t dress in short skirts much. Maybethat’s part of the reason I liked American Girls more,” Wolkoffsaid.

But is the market still there, as the nation’s economy continuesto struggle?

“These dolls do have high collectible value and I agree thesepurchases are about in line with the costs of electronic toys. Evenin this economy, the iPhone/iPad doesn’t seem to be hurt at all,”said Edward Woo, research analyst with Wedbush Securities, in LosAngeles.

“The brand is more expensive but it’s also a very unique productand as we’ve seen with other ‘luxury’ brands, the more affluentconsumer is willing to spend more than last year,” new York analystMcGowan said.

American Girl dolls also seem to be holding their own againstcompetitors. during the holiday season last year, Toys ‘R’ Usintroduced its 18-inch Journey Girls for $29.99. Disney had itsPrincess & Me doll for $49.99 and MGA’s Best Friends Club dollssold for $32.99.

Woo said while it is hard to track their results, American Girlstill performed well with sales rising 5 percent in 2010 over theprevious year.

McGowan is forecasting $515 million in revenue this year, upfrom $487 million in 2010. he said he thinks American Girl couldspur more sales by expanding its reach.

“I think the biggest opportunity is to capitalize on risingwealth in the middle class in countries like China, Brazil, Indiaand Russia. These markets were not big enough in the past tosupport the brand (localized, of course) but in the coming years, Ithink they will be. American Girl should, in my view, launch localversions in the larger markets,” McGowan said.

“Exploring opportunities beyond the United States is definitelysomething we’ve been considering for a while,” American Girlspokeswoman Julie Parks said, in response.

In her interview earlier, Brothers said stores outside the U.S.were possible, but gave no details.

The UW’s Mitchell said American Girl represents a lot more thana financial engine. “I see not just a business success, but I see atransformative aspect of culture for women and girls in thiscountry,” she said. “It is very much about empowering girls andyoung women.

“When a poll of little girls shows Kim Kardashian is one of thetop role models, that’s just so troubling. think how much worse itwould be without American Girl,” Mitchell said.