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Monthly Archives: November 2012

What a nice round figure for Samsung, 5 million units of the mega “phablet”, the Galaxy Note II, sold worldwide since its release in September. That’s three months sooner than its precursor, the Note, hit that mark! Not too bad considering most people thought Sammy was plumb nuts releasing a hybrid phone\tablet.

Other good news for the Korean manufacturer shows they may well sell a grand total of 61.5 million Galaxy devices before drunk revelers kiss the wrong person at midnight on New Year’s Eve. 2 million of that is expected to be more Galaxy Note II sales. So far the new Galaxy S III has sold a crushing 30 million devices, 20 million of that within its first 100 days. Thanks to the huge sales push, the GS III became the most popular smartphone in the world, even beating out perennial favorite, the iPhone. Samsung has a lot to be happy about but how long can their tide last?

Nowadays the most trending keywords is being search in Google is ‘Obama Gay marriage‘ , ‘Obama same sex Marriage‘ and ‘Obama Supports gay marriage‘. The word ‘Obama + Gay Marriage‘ found with 459% spike till Wednesday evening just after the president’s announcement about his changed position. Peoples are going with Obama’s statement and personal opinion about Gay marriage , he said that states reserve the right to set their own course on gay marriage. Regarding to his personal opinion, these 3 keywords were top queries on web searches about Obama on Wednesday.

Obama Same sex Marriage

Obama Gay Marriage

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courtesy by : Google Search

Source : Mashable.com

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With all the hyped hullabaloo around just how mobile-icious we are this holiday season — yes, it’s up, but it is also a retailer-cooked trend that reporters grab onto amid the news drought of the Thanksgiving weekend — one of the many statistics spewed out by a variety of sources was rather interesting.

According to IBM, in a report titled “The iPad Factor”:

“The [Apple] iPad generated more traffic than any other tablet or smartphone, reaching nearly 10 percent of online shopping. This was followed by iPhone at 8.7 percent and [Google] Android 5.5 percent. The iPad dominated tablet traffic at 88.3 percent followed by the Barnes & Noble Nook at 3.1 percent, Amazon Kindle at 2.4 percent and the Samsung Galaxy at 1.8 percent.”

And, over at eBay and its PayPal unit — which spewed out all kinds of data on mobile transactions that showed volume was between two and three times greater, mostly on Apple devices — the company noted that one of its bestselling items on Black Friday was the iPad 2, selling 250 per hour from 12 am to 8 am PT.

That tracks on an earlier survey by Nielsen with 48 percent of U.S. children 6 to 12 years old asking for the iPad, followed by iPod touch (36 percent), iPad mini (36 percent) and iPhone (33 percent).

Presumably, which will be used to order more.

Here’s a lovely IBM chart explaining it all:

IBM Holiday Benchmark Infographic BF2012

While Japan’s ailing consumer-electronics sector struggles to regain momentum, it turns out that Sony Corp. actually climbed to the No. 3 position in the global smartphone market in the third quarter. Sony, which was the No. 6 player in the same quarter a year earlier, came only behind Samsung Electronics Co. and Apple Inc., according to the latest data from research firm IDC.

Does this signal a comeback for Sony, the brand once synonymous with the coolest gadgets?

Probably not.

Read the rest of this post on the original site

South Carolina senator tells This Week he will break Grover Norquist’s pledge in order ‘to avoid becoming Greece’

Senator Lindsey Graham has become the second senior Republican in days to publicly disavow a pledge that handcuffs the party to a policy of no tax rises, raising hopes of a deal over the fiscal cliff.

Speaking on ABC’s This Week, the South Carolina politician said that the only pledge members of either party should make would be one to make sure the country did not go the same way, economically, as Greece. Regarding a pledge against tax hikes that has been signed by most Republicans in Congress – having been promulgated by the conservative lobbyist Grover Norquist – Graham said: “I will violate this pledge, long story short, for the good of the country.”

In the aftermath of the GOP’s defeat in the presidential election of 6 November, Norquist is increasingly seeing his influence on the party decline. On Thursday, senator Saxby Chambliss said he would break the Taxpayer Protection Pledge in an attempt to help avert the automatic triggering of $600bn of spending cuts and tax increases, the so-called “fiscal cliff”.

Washington has until the end of a year to negotiate a deal to avoid such a situation. Economists have suggested that a package of swingeing spending cuts and tax hikes could be catastrophic for the US economic revival, plunging the country back into recession.

“I care more about this country than I do about a 20-year-old pledge,” Chambliss said in an interview, earning a rebuke from Norquist.

A vast majority of Republicans in the House and the Senate have signed the Taxpayer Protection Pledge, which was created in 1986 and which commits them to voting against any increase in revenue taken from personal income. Until recently it had been seen as a litmus test for the conservative credentials of party representatives, but the incoming House of Representatives will have 16 Republicans who have not signed up – an increase from six. One new Republican senator, Arizona’s Jeff Flake, has avoided putting his signature to the demand.

On Sunday, Graham – who had already spoken of his misgivings about the pledge – added his name to those who have gone on record about their intention to break with the policy.

“I think Grover is wrong,” he said. “When you are $16tn in debt the only pledge we should be making to each other is to avoid becoming Greece. I will violate this pledge, long story short, for the greater good of the country, only if Democrats do entitlement reform.”

Speaking on the same show, the Democrat senator Dick Durbin also indicated a willingness for negotiation. After saluting Graham, Durbin said: “What he just said about revenue and taxes needs to be said on his side of the aisle. We need to be honest on our side of the aisle.”

Durbin, a Democratic Party whip, noted that Congress was due to begin its new session on Monday.

“We can solve this problem,” he said. “Tomorrow, there’s no excuse: we’re back in town.”

Protests and divisions in small, peaceful oil-rich country include calls to boycott ballot which may have repercussions in region

November evenings are balmy on Kuwait City’s waterfront, and there is a festive atmosphere in Irada Square as crowds gather for another protest rally. Women swathed in black mix with others in jeans while men in dishdashas and red-checked ghutra headdresses sip tea on Persian rugs spread on the spiky grass.

Speakers are hammering home the call to boycott this Saturday’s elections because the emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al Sabah, has decreed a change to voting rules that will weaken the opposition. Stewards display spent teargas canisters that were fired to break up an unlicensed protest last month.

Unlike elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa , Kuwaitis are not seeking to overthrow their regime. Irada (the Arabic name means “will”) is tamer than Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Violence is very rare.

Yet there is no mistaking the depth of divisions in this small but fabulously wealthy country – and the anxiety about how they will play out. Its ultraconservative Saudi and Emirati neighbours are watching nervously.

“The emir’s decree was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” said Sultan al-Majrubi, a young activist who was injured when special forces broke up October’s big demonstration. “The Sabah family need to change from the inside. They are not thinking about the future and their credit with the people is running out.”

Kuwait is still the most democratic state in the Gulf. Its “springtime” dates back to 2006, long before the overthrow of the autocrats who ruled Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

Last November the prime minister, the emir’s nephew, was forced to quit in the face of allegations that MPs had been bribed to support the government. Protests then were the largest ever seen in the region. Parliament was dissolved in June.

The opposition is a coalition of youth groups, disgruntled tribes and Islamists. Many sport orange ribbons – a nod to the revolution in distant Ukraine. Social media play a vital role. The Twitter hashtag #KarametWatan (“dignity of the nation”) has been used with stunning effect to organise protests and outwit the government.

“If you look at the slogans, the empowerment of the grassroots and the emergence of civil society activism then yes, we are part of the Arab spring,” argues political scientist Shafeeq Ghabra. “People want dignity and political participation and equality before the law. But it’s not a revolution here

Kuwaitis suffer neither hunger nor poverty. The country’s oil riches have funded for a lavish welfare system since independence in 1960. Its 1.2 million citizens pay no tax but the system is rife with paternalism and wasta (connections or nepotism). Last year the emir gave every citizen 1,000 dinars ( 2,210) in grants and free food coupons. “Kuwait is a wealthy society so people have a lot to lose,” smiles Jaafar Behbehani, a businessman. “That’s why many support the status quo.”

In the capital’s diwaniyas – informal all-male gatherings held in private homes – the election boycott is being hotly debated. Ostensibly, the emir is modernising the system by reducing the number of votes from four to one.

But his aim seems clear. “They are crafting a new parliament by having it customised for their own needs,” complains a twentysomething consultant handing out boycott badges under the palm trees in Irada Square.

Kuwait’s hybrid political system, enshrined in its constitution, is famously dysfunctional. Near permanent deadlock between MPs and the emir has stymied development. The capital’s iconic water towers dominate the waterfront but no new hospitals have been built for decades and the international airport is a 1960s relic compared with its gleaming counterparts further down the Gulf.

Oil still accounts for 90% of state revenues, and little progress has been made in diversifying the economy, promoting the private sector and reducing state subsidies. Inward investment is sluggish. Underlying this malaise is a lack of trust in the system and resentment at corruption and a lack of accountability from ministers and officials.

Protesters warn that fiddling with the electoral system will not help if root causes are not addressed. “The government blames the national assembly for being an obstacle to development,” says engineer Ghazi al-Shammar. “But the problem really is that they want to make it into a one-man show.”

For Ghabra the conclusion is clear: “By not listening to the people the government is creating a bigger problem.”

Profound social changes lie behind the unrest. Tribes that came from Saudi Arabia in the 1970s have multiplied and tensions grown between them and Kuwait’s urban community, descendants of the pearl merchants and traders of old. “We are against corrupt institutions run by some of the sheikhs and businessmen in their own interests,” says Mohammed Ruwayhil of the opposition people’s bloc. And like elsewhere in the region, over half of the population are under 25, many educated abroad at government expense.

Deference has faded. “We were always told by our fathers that at a diwaniya there was a strict seating pattern,” reflects a thoughtful Sabah minister. “The further you were away from the centre the less you were expected to speak. But with Twitter and WhatsApp and all the social media everyone can speak their mind.”

Repression is mild by regional standards. State security agents hanging around Irada Square are easily spotted. “People do get slapped around and sometimes put into solitary confinement but there is no torture,” says one activist.

Still, official patience is wearing thin. Arrests for the Kuwaiti equivalent of lese-majesty have increased. Musallam al-Barrak, the firebrand opposition leader, was imprisoned for 10 days after issuing an unprecedented public warning to the emir over his election decree – and (falsely) accusing Jordan’s King Abdullah, (who is also struggling with demands for political change), of sending in mercenaries to crush protests.

This month there was a reminder of happier times with a dazzling firework extravaganza commemorating 50 years of the Kuwaiti constitution – winning an immediate place in the Guinness Book of Records as the most expensive pyrotechnic display ever mounted. But the mood is turning ugly.

The opposition is “obsolete,” and their protests vulgar complains Safaa al-Hashim, a candidate in the third electoral district. In the media, charges of treachery are flying over the boycott and there is a whiff of sectarianism in the air as Shias are accused of standing with the government and the tribes of being backward.

“My views have shifted from left to right,” admits a woman business executive. “I am against the way the opposition is behaving. I understand why they are against the one-man-one vote but this country is still being run by a tribal mentality. The law is only enforced selectively.”

Liberals and nationalists are quick to lambast the Muslim Brotherhood – known in Kuwait as the Islamic Constitutional Movement – and accuse it of conspiring to create a new caliphate under the orders of the new Egyptian government. But the claims seem wildly exaggerated and western diplomats privately dismiss them. “There is an Islamist presence, but they are very pragmatic,” is the assessment of Ghanima al-Oteibi, a secular student leader. “The Kuwaiti government is attacking the Ikhwan (Brotherhood) because they need Gulf support,” suggests Saad al-Ajmi, a former minister.

Turnout in Saturday’s election will be crucial in determining whether the new parliament enjoys sufficient legitimacy, or whether, in the words of one sceptic, it is just a “Mickey Mouse assembly”. Whatever the outcome it is hard to see how the country’s underlying tensions can be resolved any time soon. “Kuwait is different but we are not isolated from what is happening around us elsewhere in the Arab world,” sighs the businesswoman.

“The Sabah have always ruled by consensus, but now it is breaking down.”

Sheikh to visit Britain

Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al Sabah will get a brief respite from troubles at home when he pays a state visit to Britain this week. The 83-year-old emir is being hosted by the Queen at Windsor Castle and will be her guest at a royal banquet, visit the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst and meet David Cameron and business leaders who are keen to pursue opportunities in the lucrative Kuwaiti market.

Kuwait is the UK’s fourth-largest trading partner in the Gulf, with exports worth 1.1bn to the emirate in 2009. Britain is also Kuwait’s the emirate’s “partner of choice” for delivering much of its 70bn development plan, comprising 1,000 infrastructure projects including a 4.6bn metro system and a new Kuwait International airport terminal designed by Lord Foster. But implementation of the plan is being held up because of the ongoing political crisis.

Britain is popular for the role it played in helping liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation in 1991. Its embassy is the oldest continuously-occupied building in the capital and a relic of the days when British “political agents” ruled the Gulf coast all the way to Aden. Two years ago Tony Blair produced a report – Kuwait Vision 2030 – in which he concluded that the country needed to change if it was to fulfil its potential and avoid an “uncertain future”. Kuwait was the first client of Tony Blair Associates, set up by the former prime minister to advise on “political and economic trends and governmental reform”.

2012 11 24 14h15 47 520x245 How to summon Windows 8s secret Start Menu of sorts

Happy Saturday Super Troopers, it’s good that you are still with us. For the more than 1% of the world computing community, and I suspect a far larger chunk of you lot, Windows 8 is the operating system du jour.

That in mind, I’ll bet you miss your Start Menu. It was familiar, comfortable, ever-changing and yet ever-present, and now oh-so-gone. TNW is here to help.

Grab your Surface, Windows 8 tablet, laptop, or other machine, and put your cursor in the lower left corner of the screen. Right click. If you did it properly, you should have something like this:

Capture How to summon Windows 8s secret Start Menu of sorts

In Windows 7, such an action leads to only the following:

2012 11 24 14h11 54 How to summon Windows 8s secret Start Menu of sorts

There, you now have a poor man’s Start Menu in Windows 8. Naturally, 99% of all consumers will never find the damn thing, and will thus have to rely only on the new Start Screen in all its Metro glory.

You, however, know better. Now head outside and go for a run. Via Microsoft-News. Top Image Credit: Dell Inc.

pirate flag 520x245 Researchers find Megaupload shutdown hurt box office revenues, despite gains for blockbusters

We’ve heard this one before, over and over again: pirates are the biggest spenders. It therefore shouldn’t surprise too many people to learn that shutting down Megaupload earlier this year had a negative effect on box office revenues.

The latest finding comes from a paper titled “Piracy and Movie Revenues: Evidence from Megaupload” (via TorrentFreak) from last month, conducted by from Munich School of Management (LMU) and the Copenhagen Business School (CBS). Here’s the abstract:

In this paper we make use of a quasi-experiment in the market for illegal downloading to study movie box office revenues. Exogenous variation comes from the unexpected shutdown of the popular file hosting platform Megaupload.com on January 19, 2012. The estimation strategy is based on a quasi difference-in-differences approach. We compare box office revenues before and after the shutdown to a matched control group of movies unaffected by the shutdown.

The study analyzed weekly data from 1,344 movies in 49 countries over a five-year period. Here’s the crux of the results: “In all specifications we find that the shutdown had a negative, yet in some cases insignificant effect on box office revenues.” Not all movies were negatively affected: “For blockbusters (shown on more than 500 screens) the sign is positive (and significant, depending on the specification).”

The researchers try to explain how big blockbusters gained but overall revenues dropped:

Our counterintuitive finding may suggest support for the theoretical perspective of (social) network effects where file-sharing acts as a mechanism to spread information about a good from consumers with zero or low willingness to pay to users with high willingness to pay. The information-spreading effect of illegal downloads seems to be especially important for movies with smaller audiences. ‘Traditional’ theories that predict substitution may be more applicable to blockbusters

Unsurprisingly, the dip in revenues was most visible for average size and smaller films, as people are most likely to see big blockbusters with their friends regardless of what happens on the Internet. Those flicks are less likely to require word-of-mouth promotion by people who used Megaupload to share movies.

Of course this is just one paper, and I’m sure more studies will be done that will dive deeper into the data. By then though, Megaupload’s successor, Mega, will have launched.

See also – Kim Dotcom: New Megaupload will launch January 20 2013, the anniversary of the police raid and With Kim Dotcom’s Me.ga plans scuppered, soon-to-relaunch Mega goes online at Mega.co.nz

Image credit: RAWKU5

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Singer, musician, creative tech genius-and Intel’s Director of Creative Innovation-Will.i.am thinks his soon-to-be launched i.am+ iPhone camera attachment will be what can make your iPhone into a much better camera. And he’s done it all with Apple’s blessing.

Due to be unveiled on November 28th (next Wednesday) in London, this new dock/accessory device will employ its own sensor and flash to push the built-in hardware to 14MP:

The first product from his new consumer electronics and app venture i.am+ is an accessory that clips onto an iPhone and transforms the eight megapixel smartphone camera into a 14 megapixel camera, which it is claimed dramatically enhances the clarity and definition of your photographs. Speaking exclusively to The Daily Telegraph, he says: ‘We have our own sensor and a better flash. You dock you phone into our device and it turns you smartphone into a genius-phone. We take over the camera.’
From: Will.i.am’s iPhone accessories to ‘turn smartphones into genius phones’ – Telegraph

Assumedly since Apple granted Will.i.am a dev license, we’ll see a 30-pin and Lightning version of the device when it launches. While I think the device idea is great, sign me up now, I’m a little hesitant about yet another camera app on my phone. Maybe, though, like the Pogo Connect, others can license an API to tap into so maybe apps like Camera+ or Blux Camera can take advantage of the i.am+ as well. Since this is just the start of Will.i.am’s device line, I wouldn’t be surprised if that doesn’t happen:

Apple has granted i.am+ a development licence to produce and sell the camera accessory and camera app for the iPhone 4 and iPhone 5, but Will.i.am says that a larger range of tech hardware will follow.

With the device let to launch next week and be available to UK shoppers in early December (and hopefully other places soon afterward) we’ll update you on the details.

The debut series of i.am+ camera accessories will be officially launched at a press conference in London on Wednesday 28 November. Selfridges will sell the products exclusively from early December.

Here are my thoughts on some things I’d hope to see in the i.am+:

  • Nice replacement for a case or at least easy on-easy off. I like my Olloclip, but I hate having to pop my phone out if its case to use it.
  • Tripod mount. It’s a little detail that could make a use difference if you want to take advantage of 14MP worth of oomph
  • Flash filters. I have diffusers for my Nikon flash and ofter use a paper napkin or piece of semi-transparent tape to diffuse camera flashes. It would be great if we could do the same on the i.am+
  • Simple, clean, no bling design. The picture above is supposed to be Will.i.am holding a i.am+. I really hope it doesn’t look like that.
  • Around $100. Tech is expensive. Great photography tools are expensive (I had a few lenses worth more than the camera body I was shooting with), but to catch on (like the Olloclip did) you need to make it something that people don’t wonder if they should just buy a decent point-n-shoot instead.

What are your thoughts? And no beaming them in as a hologram!

HT: Slashgear

Photo from Getty Images

iPad battery

According to a news report by Chinese daily China Business News, Apple has switched to two new battery suppliers for the iPad and the MacBook, moving away from Samsung’s battery producing arm, SDI.

The two battery suppliers, both based in China, Amperex Technology Limited and Tianjin Lishen Battery could be the first wave in Apple dropping Samsung for key parts for its devices. Apple’s deteriorating relationship with Samsung have been rumored ever since the legal battles started. There have been various news reports from various Asian media outlets predicting Apple’s switch to alternate suppliers for displays, CPUs and, in this case, batteries. Many of these reports, however, were later debunked, but that hasn’t stopped speculation that changes are afoot.

As much as the media would like to believe that a legal rift between Apple and Samsung would trickle down to their business relationship, it seems that as of now the effect isn’t as pronounced as feared. In fact, Samsung was said to be taking steps to separate its component business from the smartphone business, reducing the impact of any legal fallout on the company’s contracts with Apple.

Samsung is one of the few companies with large enough facilities to cater to the scale Apple operates on, and a signifcant amount of Samsung’s component business revenues come from Apple. As TechCrunch points out, a relationship collapse initiated from either side would ultimately cause significant short term damage to both companies, and it would take a while for them to recover.

Via: BrightWire, TechCrunch

Image Via: iFixit

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