Orca Health Launches ENTDecide App For iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

New app supports AirPlay Mirroring in iOS 5.

Park City, UT (PRWEB) November 16, 2011

Orca Health is proud to announce its latest app for iPad, iPhone and iPod touch, ENTDecide, is now available on the App Store.

The ENTDecide App is divided into three sections: Anatomy, Condition, and Specialist. Using medical images and annotations which are specific to each ear, nose, or throat condition, the app describes each condition, shows what it looks like, discusses symptoms and findings and gives treatment recommendations based on best practices. ENTDecide also provides a directory of specialists based on user’s location.

ENTDecide takes advantage of the new AirPlay Mirroring feature in iOS 5, allowing users to stream the app’s content to a larger screen. This capability will help doctors in consultation with their patients and teachers with their students, delivering a key educational benefit to the app.

“We are excited to launch our tenth app on the App Store, providing doctors and students with even more valuable content,” said Matt Berry, Founder and CEO of Orca Health. “ENTDecide also takes advantage of one of the most innovative features of iOS 5, AirPlay Mirroring, allowing users to stream content to a larger screen for easy viewing.”

As with Orca Health’s other apps, ENTDecide leverages the full technical capability of the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch to deliver beautiful 3D medical imagery, videos, augmented reality and best-practice recommendations, which help doctors and patients arrive at the best, most cost-effective solution to their medical problems. These solutions increase patient satisfaction and reduce costs for patients, doctors, hospitals and insurers.

The ENTDecide App is available for free from the App Store on iPad, iPhone or iPod touch or at itunes.com/appstore/.

Matt BerryOrca Health425-298-7442pr(at)orcahealth(dot)com

For the original version on PRWeb visit: prweb.com/releases/prweb2011/11/prweb8969397.htm

Video: Hitachi Maxell's Wireless iPhone 4 Charger

Not sure what to think of this, but here we go: Hitachi Maxell has developed a wireless charging solution for the iPhone 4 that looks pretty elegant but requires users to place their handset in a special case. That’s the bad news, but the good news is that this case can double as a protective sleeve in everyday use.

All that you need to do is to place the iPhone 4 on the charging pad (any angle is OK) and let it do its magic.

The charger will hit Japan on April 25, but our friends at Diginfonews in Tokyo already caught the device in the wild and shot this video:

The Qi-certified charger will be priced at $60 ($83 for a bigger pad that supports two iPhones simultaneously), plus $36 for the sleeve.

Apple’s Lower Prices Are All Part of the Plan

Something unexpected has happened at Apple, once known as the tech industry’s high-price leader. over the last several years it began beating rivals on price.

People who wanted the latest Apple smartphone, the iPhone 4S, were able to get one the day it went on sale if they were willing to wait in a line, spend at least $199 and commit to a two-year wireless service contract with a carrier.

Or they could have skipped the lines and bought one of the latest iPhone rivals from an Apple competitor, as long as they were willing to dig deeper into their wallets. for $300 and a two-year contract, gadget lovers could have picked up Motorola’s Droid Bionic from Verizon Wireless, or they could bought the $230 Samsung Galaxy SII and $260 HTC Amaze 4G, both from T-Mobile, under the same terms.

Apple’s new pricing strategy is a big change from the 1990s, when consumers regarded Apple as a producer of overpriced tech baubles, unable to compete effectively with its Macintosh family of computers against the far cheaper Windows PCs. but more recently, it began using its growing manufacturing scale and logistics prowess to deliver Apple products at far more aggressive prices, which in turn gave it more power to influence pricing industrywide.

Apple’s innovations — including products like the iPhone, iPad and the ultrathin MacBook Air notebook — are justifiably credited for their role in the company’s resurgence under its chief executive and co-founder, Steven P. Jobs, who died on Oct. 5.

But analysts and industry executives say Apple’s pricing is an overlooked part of its ability to find a large audience for those products beyond hard-core Apple fans. Apple sold more than four million iPhone 4S smartphone over its debut weekend.

People can still easily find less expensive alternatives, with less distinctive and refined designs, to most Apple products. Within the premium product categories where Apple is most at home though, comparable devices often do no better than match or slightly undercut Apple’s prices. “They’re not cheap, but I don’t think they’re viewed as high-priced anymore,” said Stewart Alsop, a longtime venture capitalist in San Francisco.

Apple declined to comment for this article.

Prices in the ultrathin notebook category are an illustration of Apple’s strategy. while there are much cheaper laptops for sale, ranging all the way down to bargain-basement netbooks that cost a few hundred dollars, Apple’s MacBook Air has become a hit among computer users seeking the thinnest and lightest notebooks available. The product starts at $999 for a model with an 11-inch screen.

On Oct. 11, the Taiwanese computer maker Asus introduced its answer to the MacBook Air, a sleek device that uses Windows. but it was unable to undercut Apple; the Asus computer also starts at $999. Samsung’s wafer-thin Series 9 notebook, with comparable features, costs $1,049.

The computer maker Acer, however, began undercutting the cheapest MacBook Air this month with an $899 ultrathin notebook, the Aspire S series, that has a bigger screen.

The original MacBook Air catered to a more rarefied audience when it came out in early 2008, priced at a whopping $1,799 for a model with a 13-inch screen. a year ago Apple revamped the notebook to make it thinner and smaller and reduced its entry-level prices to $999 and $1,299 for models with 11-inch and 13-inch screens. Jean-Louis Gassée, a venture capitalist and former Apple executive, said there was a “collective gasp” at how low Apple priced the new MacBook Air.

The aggressive pricing, analysts say, reflects Apple’s ability to use its growing manufacturing scale to push down costs for the crucial parts that make up its devices. Apple has also shown a willingness to tap into its huge war chest — $82 billion in cash and marketable securities last quarter — to take big gambles by locking up supplies of parts for years, as it did in 2005 when it struck a five-year, $1.25 billion deal with manufacturers to secure flash memory chips for its iPods and other devices.

Mr. Gassée said Apple’s pricing decision on the MacBook Air made it clear that Apple’s management of its supply chain had become a “strategic weapon.”

Another example of that was Apple’s decision to price the entry-level iPad at $499 when it was introduced early last year, hundreds of dollars lower than many analysts expected. “I think everyone was stunned at the cost of the iPad,” said John Gallaugher, an associate professor of information systems at Boston College. “It was a very competitively priced device.”

For a time, Apple’s biggest competitors were unable to go below the iPad’s price with their own tablets. when Motorola Mobility Holding’s Xoom tablet hit the market in February, the cheapest model available without a wireless service contract was $800. Motorola later released an entry-level model with more storage than the least expensive iPad, priced at $599.

After lackluster sales, Apple’s major competitors are now finally undercutting the iPad on price, though it is not clear how sustainable that approach is. Motorola recently announced a plan to offer an entry-level Xoom tablet for $379 at best Buy stores for a limited time. after Hewlett-Packard, having missed sales goals, announced plans to discontinue its TouchPad line of tablets, it dropped the price of its cheapest model to a fire-sale $99.

The most credible challenge to the iPad is likely to come from Amazon’s $199 Kindle fire tablet, which goes on sale in November. while analysts say they believe Amazon will lose money on each device sold, the Internet retailer’s plan is to use the device to encourage purchases of other Amazon products and services, like e-books. Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Company, said the price of the iPad reflected a “mind-set change” at Apple after the introduction of the first iPhone in 2007, which started at $499. That was an eye-popping sum for a phone in markets like the United States, where people had become accustomed to getting lower-price, carrier-subsidized phones in exchange for committing to long wireless contracts.

Only a few months after the product went on sale, Apple cut $200 off the price of the high-end model of the iPhone, to $399. Apple shifted gears again in 2008 with a new model called the iPhone 3G that it priced at $199, after beginning to accept handset subsidies from its carrier partners, something it did not do with its first version of the phone. Carriers pay Apple more for the latest iPhones — around $600 each, analysts estimate — aiming to profit by locking consumers into wireless plans.

Mr. Sacconaghi said Apple’s pricing of the original iPhone and its exclusive distribution deal with AT&T in the United States at the time created an opening for Google and its handset partners to flood the market with phones running its Android operating system.

While Apple’s iPhone business is thriving, Android handsets accounted for 43.4 percent of the worldwide smartphone market in the second quarter, compared with 18.2 percent for Apple, the research firm Gartner estimates.

Many carriers now offer older Android handsets that cost customers nothing if they sign up for two-year contracts. and now even Apple is getting into that act: when it announced its latest iPhone model this month, it said its two-year-old iPhone 3GS would be free with a two-year contract.

First published on October 24, 2011 at 12:00 am

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Agile iPhone Development

At DrewCrawfordApps, we practice an agile development methodology based on multiple small sprints and continuous delivery.  This is because agile methods provide higher productivity, lower costs, result in higher quality software, and happier clients.

According to VersionOne’s 2010 study, 66% of agile practitioners report faster time-to-completion for software projects.  More than half of all respondants report that agile has “Significantly Improved” or “Improved” their ability to respond to change, alignment with business objectives,   team morale, time-to-market, productivity, software quality, risk management, engineering disciple, and software maintainability.

But a significant feature of Agile is that developers are less likely to build software that is no longer needed.  When software development iterations are large or are done in a “big bang” fashion, the long lead times between specification and delivery can mean that the features requested are no longer relevant to users.  Shortening the feedback cycle means that engineering resources are spent on delivering features that are actually useful, instead of out-of-date by the time that they are delivered.

VersionOne found that 74% of those surveyed reported that morale was improved through the introduction of agile processes.  Improvement in developer morale not only means higher-quality productivity as developers are motivated to work harder to ship software, but also that the highly mobile top tier of technical talent can be more easily acquired by the organization.

Rally Software’s in-depth study of agile development showed that Agile practices lead to a 37% faster time-to-market for software projects vs traditional methods.

Salesforce.com reports a +568% increase in features delivered to customers as a direct result of implementing agile methods.

David Rico’s research on Agile development showed that Agile projects have a median quality improvement of 63% over traditional methods and a minimum quality improvement of 10% in the companies he surveyed.  84% of the VersionOne survey respondants felt that Agile methodologies had reduced the number of bugs by 10% or more.

With all of these improvements, it’s no wonder that these practices lead to higher satisfaction among iPhone project clients.  iPhone development is a fast-changing world that moves even more quickly than other types of web, desktop, or systems development.

Many potential clients make the common mistake of adapting a traditional software development process to the mobile development world, without a true understanding of the assumptions and underlying requirements of the development methodology.

The iOS software market is much  more competitive than the traditional software market, because there is only one primary sales channel–the Apple App Store.  As a result, millions of software products compete for the same real estate.  Even in a “niche” vertical, there are often many software vendors competing for customer dollars.  If a competitor is using a lower-cost development methodology, that competitor will be able to consistently deliver a higher-quality experience to its users, putting you out of business.

Even if you have no competitors, Apple itself dictates a rapid pace for the iPhone and iPad application market.  iOS, the iPhone and iPad operating system, is currently on a yearly release cycle.  Because of Apple’s highly secretive product roadmap, it is very difficult to predict the future in this market.  Apple’s rapid improvements to iOS can obsolete dozens of product lines from individual developers overnight.  Sudden announcements can cause an unforseen shift in development, due to added or removed functionality in the underlying operating system or new hardware capabilities.  In this challenging marketplace, it is more important than ever to adopt an agile software development process for your iPhone projects, both to stay current on the latest Apple development practices and to remain competitive in a marketplace of other agressive software developers.

It should come as no surprise that according to a study at Colorado University, an overwhelming 80% of respondents reported an increase in customer satisfaction after introducing Agile methods.  Agile development methodologies are an important ingredient in our overall strategy at DrewCrawfordApps to deliver the highest quality software at the fastest possible speed.  When selecting a development partner for your iPhone project, make sure you are working with a development team with an understanding of the unique challenges of the iOS marketplace and with a development strategy that will lead to success for your iPhone development project.

Tags: agile iphone developer, agile iphone development, iphone app development, iphone app development cost

HTC Raider Review (Video)

HTC Raider Review (Video)

What does it take for a smartphone to stand out these days? Pixels? Check. Dual-core? Double check. Size? Indeed. it seems that the frontier has been paved, and then slaked over ad infinitum, until all hardware appears to perform the same function with a different veneer. It’s a glorious time to be a phone addict, but a frustrating time to be a phone buyer.

HTC wants to cement its place in the market (and they’ve done just that, if money talks) by catering to every possible demographic. The HTC Raider, also known as the “Holiday”, is the company’s first LTE-certified device and is available on both Bell and Rogers’ LTE networks in Canada. with their respective networks slowly rolling out over the next year, only those living in Canada’s biggest cities — and precious few among those — currently have access to LTE speeds.

Besides the pumped-up baseband, the Raider is a natural progression from the HTC Sensation, though it owes more to the EVO 3D in its design lineage. while it reuses the EVO’s APQ8060 processor and 1GB RAM, there is a new f/2.2 8MP camera with dual-LED flash and 1080p video capture,  a 1.3MP front-facing camera, and 16GB internal storage, along with support for Bell’s 42Mbps HSPA+ network, and Rogers’ 21Mbps HSPA+ network and its nascent 75Mbps LTE deployment.

While the Raider is by no means a copycat product — one look at its glossy, angular design will tell you that — is merely adding LTE to a slightly upgrade Sensation or EVO 3D enough to bring users to the fold? Read on for our full review.

Specs:– Android 2.3.4 with HTC Sense 3.0- 4.5 inch 960×540 pixel qHD display- 1.2Ghz APQ8060 Snapdragon processor w/ Adreno 220 GPU- 1GB RAM, 16GB internal eMMC storage- 8MP camera w/dual LED flash, f/2.2 aperture, 28mm lens, 1.3MP front camera- 1080p video capture- Bluetooth 3.0, WiFi b/g/n- MDM9200 baseband supporting LTE (700/1700/2100MHz), HSPA+ (850/1900/2100MHz) and quad-band GSM/EDGE (850/900/1800/1900MHz)- 128 x 67 x 11.2 mm, 177g- 1620mAh battery

The Design Angle

We heard the word “monolithic” thrown around to describe Raider, which is apt when viewed head-on. The device is a no-nonsense slab of glossy, black plastic; the only colour to speak of is a tinge of silver on the backside speaker grill and the words ‘htc’ etched above the LCD and on the battery cover. its screen edge gives way to a diagonal inward slide and a false sense of thinness. at 11.2mm, the Raider is not a thick phone, but HTC has wisely preempted any such claims by angling gently blooming out the back cover to meet the sides. this allows it to lie flat while giving the illusion it is floating.

As mentioned, HTC has gone with a glossy black polycarbonate which, along with the glass covering the LCD, is a fingerprint magnet. Thankfully the screen has very little bezel, edging the sides and the top as far as any device we’ve seen; the four capacitive touch buttons — Home, Menu, back, Search — are nicely spaced below, and are given to accurate presses most of the time.

On the left side is a microUSB port, which doubles as a HDMI out if you use the right converter. The top houses the 3.5mm headphone jack and power button, which, along with the right-side volume rocker add some chrome to the all-black arrangement.

The battery cover is a single piece of sturdy aluminum which slides off with a satisfying motion. underneath reveals a 1620mAh battery, SIM slot and empty microSD slot; the Raider comes with 16GB internal storage. The Raider has a masculine, tapered feel to it, and at 177g it’s hefty without being onerous. while we love the way HTC seems open to experimentation, the Raider may not suit everyone’s taste, and for both Rogers’ and Bell’s first LTE handset its design may be a tough sell.

The Display

To say that the Raider has an improved screen over the Sensation and EVO 3D is putting it mildly. at 4.5″ the pixel density is somewhat lower at 245ppi but text is sharper, viewing angles drastically better and colour saturation fantastic.

While the qHD resolution may be underwhelming to some, we had a great experience using the Raider. from typing on the excellent HTC keyboard to browsing web pages the screen was responsive, auto-brightness did not falter and colours seemed accurate, if a little muted. we compared the display to the HTC Amaze and found it to have better viewing angles and colour accuracy but lower maximum brightness and softer colours overall.

Performance

The HTC Raider is equipped with the same 1.2Ghz APQ8060 Snapdragon processor as the EVO 3D. while it can’t be said the third-generation chipset is slow, it is getting on in months and appearing worse for the wear against newer offerings from Samsung and Texas Instruments. The Adreno 220 GPU inside the SoC is capable of encoding and decoding 1080p video, and it performs decently in 3D games and browsing, but its limitations are becoming clearer as time goes on.

Benchmarking the Raider was a frustrating venture: scores seemed artificially low, as if someone muted one of the cores. The reality is that the APQ8060/MSM8x60 chipset has an asynchronous dual-core SMP micro-architecture, meaning that both cores can be clocked at different speeds and voltages depending on the workload. The problem with some benchmarks is that they don’t explicitly enable the second core, or clock it to the same speed as the main one. we ran the Quadrant benchmark a few times to test this theory, and while it did score above an equivalent 1.2Ghz single-core processor (the HTC Desire HD clocked to 1.2Ghz scores about 1400) with 1850 points, it’s not nearly as high as it should be.

We preferred to perform another range of benchmarks, ones that we know utilize both cores and give us repeatedly consistent results: Vellamo, Smartbench 2011 and CF-Bench.

As you can see, the Raider couldn’t keep up with the latest offerings from Samsung, and it was even bested by the six month-old HTC Sensation. we suspect this is because they have given the Raider’s chipset a more conservative scaling in order to save on battery life. More on that later.

During regular day-to-day tasks — reading emails, browsing the web, Twitter, Facebook, Angry Birds — the Raider is flawless. Indeed, we noticed no perceptible difference between it and the much faster Amaze. When situated in an area with LTE many functions of the phone that require an internet connection, like page rendering and file downloads, are many times faster than their HSPA+ counterparts. this makes the phone appear to be much faster than it is, as most devices these days are bottlenecked by high ping times and low throughput.

All About LTEIs LTE the new status symbol?

More a philosophical argument at the moment than anything else, but can LTE really sell a phone? Sure, it’s fast — really fast — just look at our Speed Test results for proof. but in its infancy, the chips that supply connectivity to the devices, in this case the Qualcomm MDM9600, are power hungry to a fault.

The US Market has been dealing with this issue for months now. since the launch of the HTC Thunderbolt in March, the handset, which uses the same LTE chip, has been plagued with battery issues. Same with the Samsung Droid Charge. since the Raider is one of Canada’s first LTE devices (the other is the Samsung Galaxy S II LTE) and will soon be followed by the LG Optimus LTE, and the Galaxy Nexus, it’s more a warning sign than a heralding of a new era. It’s easy to achieve mind-blowing speeds of 25-30Mbps using the HTC Raider on either Bell or Rogers, but until the technology matures and vendors such as Qualcomm start integrating LTE basebands into their SoCs, battery life will continue to be a problem.

Here in Canada, however, we are lucky. Unlike on Verizon, which falls back to an agonizingly-slow 1x EVDO network outside of LTE coverage areas, both Bell falls back to 42Mbps HSPA+ and Rogers has 21Mbps HSPA+ sites to rely on. as a result, if battery life is getting you down, or you just don’t need the speed, you can easily turn off LTE in the settings.

But how is the speed?

Blazing by our battery concerns, using LTE for the first time on a mobile device is a religious experience. it provokes feelings of joy, alarm and vexation — “Is this really happening?!” — that only expands the more you use it. while we must preface this by saying that once LTE device start proliferating through the big cities — Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, etc. — speeds will slow significantly, but both Bell and Rogers claim that users should expect between 12-25Mbps on a regular basis.

The differences were most obviously apparent when downloading large files. For example, when we first launched the included N.O.V.a. 2 demo we were asked to download 417MB of add-on data. Normally, an HSPA+ device would force us to download over WiFi, but the Raider took care of half a GB of data in less than five minutes. For those who opt to go with a 10GB plan, LTE may be able to replace home broadband for some people. Web pages load instantly, as ping times between the remote server and your phone are cut often in half. we experienced little discernible difference between using LTE and our home WiFi, which is connected to a 50Mbps Rogers cable box.

What about the caveats?

At the moment, Rogers, Bell and upcoming Telus LTE uses the AWS bands, so 1700 and 2100Mhz. these are high frequencies, so the waves are more prone to multipath and distortion. in layman’s terms, signals at high bands don’t travel through objects very well, hence the common complaint from WIND and Mobilicity customers that their devices suffer signal problems inside buildings. Next year, the government of Canada will auction off the highly-coveted 700Mhz spectrum, allowing mobile carriers to use those lower frequencies — the slower but more robust waves — to flesh areas that are less dense and harder for signals to reach.

We found that in certain areas downtown, inside a club for instance, our LTE signal would often drop to one or two bars. while we still achieved unbelievable speeds at those signal levels, and there will always be HSPA+ connectivity to fall back to, the lack of 700Mhz spectrum at this time is a concern. we also don’t know how the auction will play out. WIND and Mobilicity have appealed to the Canadian government for priority access to the valuable spectrum, claiming that allowing the incumbents, with their huge cash reserves, to bid in the auction will lead to “spectrum hoarding”. in 2008, during the last auction, the incumbents purchased enough of the AWS spectrum from Globalive and Dave Wireless (WIND and Mobilicity) that they are now able to use it for their initial LTE rollout.

The other implication of LTE is how quickly Android devices plough through data. 10GB may seem like a lot, but the average user is not going to pay $50 for their data. The more likely situation is that as LTE rolls out to more devices the price per GB will match what is currently offered, so most customers will end up with 500MB to 1GB of data. Considering how easy it is to eat into that allotment, it will be incumbent on users to monitor their bandwidth and not make any drastic changes to their usage.

But we want to know about the battery!

Ok, so the Raider has the same CPU as the EVO 3D, the same GPU as the Sensation and the same LTE baseband as the Thunderbolt. we found the former two to have decent battery life when used moderately — emails, browsing, games, Twitter, Facebook, etc. — but you’re likely not going to get more than a day from a single battery charge. The EVO has a bigger 1730mAh battery than the Raider’s 1620mAh, and we noticed a big drop-off in battery life when using LTE over the course of a day.

As previously mentioned, HTC has made improvements to the power management system inside the CPU cores of the Snapdragon, which is likely why we are benchmarking lower than the Sensation/EVO combo. as a result, LTE doesn’t create the battery black hole as it initially did on the Thunderbolt, which lasted around four hours on a single charge.

We were able to get well over a day of usage out of the Raider when connected to HSPA+, as we don’t get LTE where we live at the moment. Heading downtown for the day, we noticed a drop of 10-12% an hour, with the battery dying after eight hours of consistent usage. Downloading the aforementioned 417MB data bundle depleted 6% in less than five minutes, so it’s clear LTE is the driving force behind battery consumption. since there is a toggle you can always disable it as you see fit, but be aware that you’re buying a very, very fast first-generation device, and with it comes battery concerns.

Cameras

The Raider joins its Amaze cousin and the remaining bevy of new HTC devices with its low-aperture, high-speed f/2.2 camera sensor. while there is no dedicated camera button to speak of, HTC has done a great job simplifying its camera UI, and we had a great experience taking photos with the Raider.

Indoor macro shots came out well, with vivid detail and little software compression. we found the dual-LED flash a little underpowered, unable to light up a calendar from only a couple feet away. Photo fidelity, however, is discernibly improved over the HTC Sensation. The Raider is constantly caching the image it sees through the lens, so there is no delay between pressing the shutter button and taking the shot. on average, due to the constant caching and almost instant auto-focus, we found the Raider takes faster shots than the iPhone 4S. as you can see from the shot below, colours on the Raider seem a bit more saturated and details a bit sharper — too sharp, in fact — but the quality holds up pretty well to the iPhone 4S.

The updated camera UI, which was introduced with the T-Mobile myTouch 4G Slide, incorporates two-touch scene selection: panorama, HDR, burst mode, etc. The options are granular and varied for a phone camera, allowing the specific adjustment of ISO, white balance, exposure, contrast saturation and sharpness. Modes like “Vintange” or “Depth of field” play software tricks on the original image, and fit right in with the popular Instragram or Picplz filter aesthetic, but in our opinion add too much noise to be used for anything but a web clip. Noise is an issue in regular shots, too, especially in low-light areas: clearly the low aperture, while allowing for more light to enter the lens, is not able to overcome the high ISO needed to optimize the detail in the shots. Outdoor photos fare better, and the Raider should be sufficiently capable to replace your point-and-shoot for landscape shots.

The 1.3MP front facing camera is, to be expected, adequate for the occasional vanity photo or Skype call. we are happy to report that the Raider supports video calling over all the major conferencing apps, including Google Talk.

As expected, the Raider also shoots 1080p video at 30fps, like its Amaze cousin and the Sensation before it. HTC has made steady yet subtle improvements not only to the UI since it launched the Sensation, but to the video recording quality. with more light comes a smoother picture and less noise, which is clear when looking at the daytime results from the Raider. Indoor video fares slightly worse, with a lower frame rate and a pronounced fuzziness. few cameras are adept at shooting under poor lighting, and in this situation the Raider does a pretty good job, though we noticed smoother frame rates with the iPhone 4S and Galaxy S II under the same conditions. we ran into problems when adjusting from one lighting source to another — when moving from inside to out- or vice-versa — as the frame rate slowed right down, and the lens lost focus. The Raider has trouble readjusting its focus on the fly, so you’ll occasionally have to touch the screen to manually reassert your depth of field. as you can tell from the sample video, even in stereo the quality of the sound picked up by the microphones is low, though extremely sensitive: the construction noise we heard was not nearly as tinny as it appears on video.

One of the benefits to owning a modern Android smartphone, especially one with LTE connectivity, is its ability to upload directly to YouTube over the air. There is a very simple video trimmer included, and for photos a simple editor allows for cropping, rotation and applying basic effects before sharing.

Sense UI: haven’t I seen this before?

We won’t touch too deeply on the Raider’s software. it runs Android 2.3.4 with Sense UI, like the Sensation and EVO 3D. There have been no additions in functionality to the OS in nearly a year, and for the most part it is a stable, attractive and functional Android skin. some people claim it is getting long in the tooth next to the customizable and lightweight TouchWIZ 4 from Samsung. we still like it better than offerings by Motorola and Sony Ericsson, though admittedly they have improved substantially in the past few month while HTC has stayed rather static.

It’s curious why HTC has not updated their skin to Sense 3.5 which debuted earlier this year with the Rhyme and will be present in the upcoming Rezound. There is a consistency to the UI that we appreciate, especially in first-party apps such as Messages, Email and Watch. but the effect is negated, and largely blown away, when you start adding dozens of third-party apps that are designed in all manner of ugly ways.

Bell has updated the game demos included on the Raider: N.O.V.a has been replaced by its sequel, and so has Let’s Golf. they are still just demos, and cannot be uninstalled but now offer an in-app purchase of $5, or to “rent” the game for $3/month. we realized that in addition to Bell’s PVR, TV & Radio and Tunes & Apps, along with the requisite Polaris Office, there are three GPS Navigation apps on the Raider. Google offers their Navigation add-on to the official Google Maps which is fantastic and provides turn-by-turn directions for free, including traffic alerts, walking and transit directions. Also present is Locations, HTC’s service which, after a 30-day trial allows you to purchase it for $29.98, or $19.98 for one-year unlimited usage. It’s good, with truer 3D landscapes powered by  Route66, but it’s basically the same thing. Then there is Bell’s included TeleNav-powered offering, which like Locations is perfectly capable but superfluous. we think it’s disingenuous for Bell to preload their GPS Navigator, which costs $50, when Google’s Navigation is available at no cost.

There are some decent power-saving options available to the Raider. Power Saver restricts the ability of certain phone features such as background data, Bluetooth and WiFi when battery levels drop below a pre-determined point. Sleep Mode emulates existing third-party solutions such as CyanogenMOD and JuiceDefender by turning off background data between certain hours or only when the screen is turned on.

The four-shortcut Sense UI is still going strong, and really is the fastest way to get into the camera app, or to check an unread email. as usual, HTC includes FM radio and Flashlight apps, and a suite of social media services which are better served by downloading their respective official apps from the Marketplace. HTC excels in making their native apps simple, but aside from occupying the home screen with flashy garish widgets, they don’t serve much purpose anymore. We’d rather the company focus its attention on improving performance and making Sense more lightweight: the 3D animations, transitions and showmanship adds little to the experience and strains the processor and battery.

Upgrade path

At this point, with Android OS 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich looming so close, releasing a phone with Gingerbread is a liability. HTC has confirmed that they are looking into upgrading their 2011 smartphones to ICS, and there is no reason to believe the Raider is not on that list. it is not known how the four capacitive touch buttons at the bottom of existing Android devices will be incorporated into Android 4.0, but there is no doubt the Raider is capable of running it without issue.

As for hacking/modding, the bootloader on the Raider is locked, and we have no idea if or when HTC will allow users to unlock it through their HTCDev portal.

Closing Thoughts

The Raider is likely the first of many LTE offerings by HTC. in this case, it is the first LTE device on the market, and good thing too, since Samsung and LG will be competing very soon.

Besides LTE, the Raider is a capable beast, a monolithic artifact outdated before its time. its tapered design coupled with glossy plastic and aluminum backing harkens back to the Windows Mobile-powered HD2. some users will find it uncomfortable to hold; others too plain; more not different enough to justify an upgrade. The Raider does everything right, and yet we can’t help but yearn for the second-generation LTE devices that will inevtiably arrive in six months, with power-efficient designs and improved battery life. we can’t help but be disappointed that in light of the LG Optimus LTE and Galaxy Nexus the Raider does not have an HD screen.

Its one virtue — and gosh is it ever — is the ability to blow all other smartphones out of the water when it comes to throughput. we like the Raider the way we love comfort food: it’s consistent, stable and comfortable. Fans of HTC on Rogers or Bell should have no problem justifying its purchase. For the rest, wait a few weeks while we sort out which LTE handset is king.

Pros:

–       Streamlined, tapered design is attractive and functional-       LTE speeds are mind-blowing-       Camera takes wonderful shots, instantly-       Decent performance in apps and games-       Sturdy construction-       big, beautiful qHD display-       Good battery life when connected to HSPA+

Cons:

–       Poor battery life when using LTE-       Sense UI badly needs an update-       some issues with connectivity-       Poor indoor video quality/frame rates-       only iterative upgrades from Sensation/EVO 3D besides LTE

  1. LTE-enabled HTC Raider now available at Bell
  2. Bell set to release the HTC Raider 4G LTE
  3. Bell and Rogers officially announce the LTE HTC Raider
  4. Update: Bell official pricing of the upcoming HTC Raider 4G LTE

Discussion 31 comments for “HTC Raider Review (Video)”

Amazon Kindle Fire Might Overtake iPad Sales This Holiday Season

Amazon has just released its Kindle fire tablet to the public through retail establishments and by online order. Amid mixed reviews, Amazon is optimistic that the US$ 199 price tag might hit the sweet spot among consumers and that the Amazon's new 7-inch tablet is poised to overtake Apple's iPad 2 in terms of holiday sales.

Amazon might have a clear winner in its hands, if we consider a poll taken by retail and review site Retrevo. in a survey among 1,000 participants, those who planned to purchase the Amazon Kindle Fire outnumber potential iPad 2 buyers.  12% said they plan to buy a Kindle fire, while 10% said they want an iPad 2. even those who already have tablet computers have shown a preference toward the Amazon Kindle fire, at 27% who want to upgrade to a Kindle fire vs. 20% who will be moving up to an iPad 2.

Meanwhile, respondents specifically asked to choose between the Kindle fire and the iPad 2 likewise leaned toward Amazon's hybrid e-reader and tablet. 44% said they will chose a Kindle fire over the iPad 2. Only 12% said they will choose the iPad 2 over the Kindle fire. still, a good portion — 44% — say they don't know enough about the Kindle fire yet to make a decision, which can change as early consumer reviews come out.

More consumers likely to buy the Kindle fire than iPad 2, according to a Retrevo survey

Retrevo's director of community and content Andrew Eisner says the Kindle fire has a clear advantage when it comes to market buzz, but it has to prove itself a worthy challenger to other established players in the tablet market. but at "a very attractive $199 price point" and a lighter form factor than the iPad 2, the Kindle fire might be the preferred device for those who want a tablet that's light on the pocket and light on the briefcase (or backpack, purse or hand).

Goldman Sachs analysts agree that demand for the iPad might be on the decline. According to bill Shope, the product line might slow down or stall in growth, and Apple might soon be challenged in its dominance in the tablet market.

While improving holiday demand into late November could certainly push the momentum in the other direction, we believe it is prudent to assume the iPad is facing some near-term demand challenges."

Still, Shope is sticking to its current estimate of 13 to 14 million iPad 2 units shipped this Q4 2011. Shope has suggested that Apple might want to look into the possibility of reducing iPad 2 prices to remain competitive, given that the company has undertaken this strategy with its previous-model iPhones. With the launch of the latest iPhone 4S, the iPhone 4 was reduced to $99 with plan and the iPhone 3GS is now free with two-year contract. Both the iPhone 4 and 3GS have been the two top-selling smartphones in 3Q 2011, according to NPD, and are likely to remain in the top spots after the iPhone 4S by yearend, even beating newer and more powerful Android offerings from various brands.

Should Apple worry? With the iPhone and iPad bolstering much of the company's growth and revenue, they should not take the Kindle Fire's challenge lightly. even if the Kindle fire is half as powerful (and beautiful) as the iPad 2, Amazon's secret sauce is in how the Kindle fire serves as a gateway to Amazon's rich resource of content and retail items, including ebooks, videos, magazines, and the like.

   

Ballistic Life Style (LS) Series iPhone 4/4S case review – Appletell

Provides: Scuff and drop protection for iPhone 4/4S Developer: Ballistic Minimum Requirements: iPhone 4/4S Price: $29.99 Availability: Now

The problem with getting superior drop protection for your iPhone 4 or 4S is that you’re often going to end up with a lot of bulk. in addition, the cases are usually hard to get on and off, and port/button access can sometimes be tricky. With their Life Style (LS) Series case, Ballistic has managed to avoid these issues, while also providing a fairly attractive design.

The bulk problem was solved by placing most of the protection where it matters: the corners. the somewhat thin but rigid silicone case is reinforced on all corners by a thicker, removable rubber bumper designed to absorb the shock of impact. It’s removable because if you want even more protection you can insert a bigger rounded bumper. the case comes with five red (rounded) and five black (curved) bumpers, so if you lose one of either color, you’re still covered.

I found the protection of either bumper design to be more than adequate, especially when combined by the nearly full protection of the rest of the case. it covers the back and all edges of your iPhone, with openings only for the dock, speaker/mic, hold switch and headphone port. the power and volume buttons are covered, but marked with embossed buttons for easy access (Verizon owners will need to buy the case designed specifically for their iPhone). the edges that sit around the iPhone screen are raised enough to prevent the screen from contacting services. and although these lips rise outward from the screen, they can interfere when you’re interacting with the far edges of the screen.

But as I was saying, because either the black or red corner bumpers will work just fine, which one you choose will likely be determined by your design preference. I preferred the black bumper with my transparent blue case. the blue looked good sitting on my both my black iPhone 4 and my wife’s white iPhone 4S, taking on a different look with both.

The case is also available in transparent smoke.

Perhaps what’s most surprising about the Life Style (LS) Series is that it’s quite easy to get your iPhone in and out of the case. the rigid design is just flexible enough to pop on and off without fear of damaging the phone, but the fit is very secure when in place. the case also provides a decent grip, with the corner bumpers serving as nice resting spots for my somewhat large hands.

The only major drawback to the Life Style (LS) Series is that it doesn’t come with a screen protector; Ballistic wants you to buy that separately.

But if you’re happy with just the case, the Life Style (LS) Series is easy to recommend at only $30.00. It’s by no means the thinnest option out there, but if you want the piece of mind that only this kind of protection can provide, this is about as low a profile as you’re going to get.

Reviews: Case-Mate Tank for iPhone 4/4S

Tank is a slider-style case and most of the body is hard textured plastic in either black, green, or white. it splits apart where the bottom of the screen meets the bezel. the bottom portion is almost totally lined in thick silicone, while the other half only has the material at the very top. the screen cover is removable, but it’s meant to stay in place. Putting the iPhone into the case isn’t a totally intuitive process, but Case-Mate does have a guide showing the right steps, as well as an instructional video on its website: first, you push the iPhone 4/4S into the case’s bottom, where the silicone tightly holds it in place; then you slide the top down, and push the pieces together. Two tabs on the bottom fit into holes on the top to hold the parts together.

Case-Mate recommends against using a screen protector film with Tank, although we didn’t experience any problems in doing so. when totally assembled, Tank is a bit taller and much wider than a standard iPhone 4 or 4S. one problem with the case is how tightly it fits around the screen. There’s very little clearance on any of the four sides, inhibiting activities such as typing, pulling up Notification Center, and sliding it away. otherwise it feels good in the hand, if not a bit heavy. for those that like to wear their iPhones, a holster clip is included.

Putting aside the screen cover, Tank falls right about in the middle of the pack when comparing protectiveness across similarly-styled cases. We really like that there’s Home Button coverage without reduced sensitivity, and there’s also a flip-out Dock Connector cover, although the microphone and speaker are totally exposed. along the top, silicone permanently covers the volume buttons and Sleep/Wake button, yet they’re still able to be used with distinct clicks. There’s a flip-open cover for the headphone port, and next to it a very, very small half-moon shaped scoop prevents the noise-canceling microphone from being completely blocked. On the back is a combined opening for the rear camera and flash, and another that’s contoured around the light sensor, headset, and camera on the front. the side switch is totally exposed, although very deeply recessed. People with large fingers will find it very difficult to flip back and forth.

The flagship feature of Tank is the polypropylene shade that covers the screen when it’s not in use. as we mentioned, it’s removable but meant to stay in place. rather than using a flat piece of plastic, Case-Mate has segmented and curved it, letting it slide around the iPhone’s edge. a little nub on the right edge of the slider allows you to tug it back and forth, and it moves very smoothly; with a little practice, it’s easy to open or close the cover in one fluid movement. when it’s closed, you can still somewhat make out what’s on the screen but can’t touch through it at all. the seal isn’t waterproof, but it will certainly prevent splashes and scratches when used properly.

While the screen protector is a cool feature, it’s also the sort of thing that makes you question whether it’s actually smart or just a gimmick. after all, there are very comparable cases such as OtterBox’s Defender Series Case and Griffin’s Survivor that both have permanent, touch-through screen protectors. Yes, they’re thinner and simpler, but at the same time, they present one less barrier to accessing your phone.

Defender Series Case and Survivor both earned strong general recommendations when we reviewed them. Compared to Tank, they’re narrower, offer more significant protection overall, have full-time screen protectors, and cost $10 less. We’d trust either of them in protecting the iPhone 4 or 4S as much as we do this one. Although the sliding screen is a cool feature, it ultimately feels more like a hinderance than a help. because of this, Tank is worthy of a B rating; it’s a pretty good case, and if you’re looking for something distinctive and protective, worth considering.

How to Increase the Battery Life of Apple’s iPhone 4S

 

Many those with an iPhone 4S have complaints about the battery life. Apple has acknowledged that there are problems, and is working to fix them with an OS update. in the mean time, users of this new smartphone can make a few changes that will increase their time between charges.

In response to widespread complaints about the battery life of the iPhone 4S, as well as earlier devices that are running the newly-released iOS 5, Apple said: “A small number of customers have reported lower than expected battery life on iOS 5 devices. We have found a few bugs that are affecting battery life and we will release a software update to address those in a few weeks.” this fix will likely come in the form of iOS 5.0.1, a beta of which has already been sent to developers for testing.

Increase Battery Life NowA work-around for one of the bugs that Apple referred is available now, and many users have reported significantly better battery life with their iPhone 4 and 4S. this involves turning off a function that sets the clock based on what the local time zone is — this is apparently checking for the current time zone far, far too often.

To make this change, go to: Settings > Location Services > system Services and turning off ‘Setting Time Zone’. obviously, this will disable the device’s ability to tell which time zone it is in; but users who need this function can temporarily re-enable it when they are traveling.

The other changes aren’t the result of bugs, but are instead, general tips for using less power. for example, Apple suggests that users keep Wi-Fi on all the time as it can increase the accuracy of the GPS. this is true, especially in cities, but it is also a constant drain on the battery. Turning it off when not in use is good a way to save power. The same is true of Bluetooth; turn it off.

The backlight is also a major power drain. Rather than allowing the device to pick its own brightness level, users can turn off Auto-Brightness and manually set it at the lowest level they feel comfortable with — about 30% works for many people.

Push email, in which messages are sent to the smartphone as quickly as possible, is a popular feature but it’s also a significant drain on the battery. Coming up with alternate settings takes careful thought, though, or it can make the problem worse. asking the iPhone to check for messages every 15 minutes would only be a savings for those who regularly get large amounts of email, more than 8 or 10 an hour. Dropping down to every 30 minutes will probably bring a longer battery life for most people, and checking only once an hour will almost certainly result in a noticeable improvement.

Some people believe that Apple’s social-networking system Ping is an unnecessary battery drain. this can be turned off by going to Settings > General > Restrictions > Enabling Restrictions with a password, and then flipping Ping off.

Do you have a suggestion for increasing the battery life of an iPhone? Please, share it with us in the Brighthand forums. 

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