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The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon – a truly great camera

Feb10
by Sindy Cator on February 10, 2014 at 4:24 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Gadgets

n1camera 520x245 The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon   a truly great camera

Mobile World Congress could be quite a show this year. Samsung, Sony, LG and Huawei are all expected to launch new high-end Android smartphones in Barcelona and an announcement from HTC, while unlikely, still hasn’t been ruled out just yet.

For all of the device manufacturers involved, these will be important, influential handsets that they need to sell in large quantities and create substantial revenue from over the next 12 months.

The stakes are high, but it’s an exciting time for consumers and the media as we get to discuss, compare and dissect all-new hardware.

The camera conundrum

This year, I firmly believe that Android smartphone makers can change their fortunes (or just protect their market share, in the case of Samsung) by launching a handset with an unbelievable camera.

Experiencing déjà vu? That’s because all of these firms were in an identical position last year. Google was steadily refining its mobile OS and although the hardware and software experience had improved on many Android smartphones, truly terrific cameras still proved elusive.

179551110 730x491 The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon   a truly great camera
In 2013, many of the top Android OEMs tried to address this problem. We had the HTC One (our review), with its intriguing ‘UltraPixel’ 4-megapixel camera; the Sony Xperia Z1, with a gargantuan 20.7-megapixel sensor; the ‘shake-to-wake’ camera app on the Moto X, and the enormous Oppo N1 (our review) with its unique swivelling camera. A ton of different ideas were tested, but none of them solved the age-old problem that has plagued the Android market for years:

There still isn’t an Android smartphone that, in all lighting conditions, can clearly beat the current iteration of the iPhone.

I can say this with confidence because, even if you ask many of the most experienced photographers or die-hard Android enthusiasts, you’ll never get a definitive answer for this simple question: “Which Android smartphone has the best camera?” Some will slump for the Sony Xperia Z1, the HTC One or the Google Play edition Samsung Galaxy S4, while others will say the shots produced by their Moto X or Nexus 5 (our review) are good enough.

There’s never a clear winner though, which speaks volumes about the problem facing Android OEMs. Apple has built a glowing reputation for the iPhone’s camera and it’s become an important factor when customers weigh up their next handset purchase. The widely held belief – regardless of whether you believe it to be true – is that if you’re passionate about photography, the iPhone still offers the most competent and reliable rear-facing camera.

168787939 730x507 The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon   a truly great camera
There is some truth to this argument. I’ve owned Android smartphones that have incredibly powerful components and a wonderful software experience, besting the iPhone in its ability to keep me productive and connected. But the camera has been so lousy, or so inconsistent, that I’ve also carried the iPhone with me for capturing spur-of-the-moment shots.

When it really matters, I know that the iPhone will always deliver. It’s also the reason why, whenever a new Android smartphone enters the market boasting a new and improved camera, most people ask how it compares to the iPhone.

Android: The next level

There is an opportunity to create an Android smartphone with a camera that can match, or even surpass the reputation of the iPhone. Manufacturers, as always, are looking for ways to differentiate and we’re entering a period where the leaps in sheer power are starting to shrink with each new device.

There are still gains to be made in the overall software experience, but aside from a monumental redesign akin to iOS 7, it’s rarely influential enough to affect the average person’s buying decision. (Having said that, I do know people who avoid Samsung devices because of its TouchWiz Android skin.)

We can expect most of the new devices at Mobile World Congress to have high-resolution displays, a sleek industrial design and an internal battery that is adequate, if not remarkable. All of these factors are hugely important – make no mistake – but they’ll never be what my parents or friends talk about excitedly over a cup of coffee at the weekend. They’re just not game-changers.

New cameras, meanwhile, should be exciting and far easier to market precisely because there is no general consensus to the question posed earlier: “Which Android smartphone has the best camera?” To set themselves apart and attract new customers, these manufacturers need to build a camera that is truly competitive with the iPhone and then market it heavily.

It’s a simple, but potentially powerful narrative: ”Prefer Android to iOS, but care about photography? Don’t worry, the new [insert new device name here] takes better photos than the latest iPhone.”

173318858 730x556 The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon   a truly great camera
Of course, for this strategy to work Android smartphone makers need to actually deliver on that promise. No matter what it takes, they need to build that outstanding camera experience – the hardware, software and how they come together – that gives you beautiful shots 99 percent of the time.

If the cameras on any of this year’s flagship smartphones aren’t substantially better than their closest rivals, it simply won’t be enough to make people switch. These firms need to earn that same widely held belief and word of mouth recommendations that Apple has enjoyed for so many years. If any of them can build a smartphone with a camera that is substantially better than its competitors, people will recommend it to their friends and family, or remember it when they next upgrade their handset.

One last shot

A decent camera, on its own, won’t be enough to make any flagship Android smartphone successful this year. As always, a compelling device needs good hardware, industrial design and software in equal measure. Even so, cameras are an area which Android smartphone makers have struggled with for years, and it’s high time that someone got it right.

Whoever cracks it first will have a huge advantage over its competitors and a better chance of making its devices commercially successful – provided it can communicate that prowess properly and match the marketing spend of tech juggernauts such as Samsung and Apple.

152344816 730x454 The 2014 Android smartphone war can be won with one weapon   a truly great camera
In 2014, I want to see a wave of new Android smartphones with truly great cameras. The last 12 months were ultimately disappointing – despite manufacturers’ best efforts – and I pray we’re not in the same position next year, banging the same drum and hoping for change. Android users deserve better.

Image Credit: Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images (2)/ Sean Gallup/Getty Images / ODD ANDERSEN/AFP/GettyImages

└ Tags: syndicated
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Apple TV gets a new channel dedicated to The Beatles

Feb10
by Sindy Cator on February 10, 2014 at 4:11 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Product Updates

Apple TV owners can today access even more content from The Beatles in celebration of the rock band’s 50th anniversary of breaking into the lucrative US market.

The new Beatles channel will highlight some of the band’s appearances on TV, like the 1964 appearance on ‘The Ed Sullivan Show’,  as well as providing links to US-specific audio recordings being sold via iTunes for the first time from today.

The new channel is unsurprising given the ongoing popularity of the Liverpudlian band. The Beatles songs were not available to buy via iTunes until towards the end of 2010. As soon as they were put on sale via the platform, they started flying off the virtual shelves, selling 450,000 tracks in the first seven days alone.

➤ Via 9to5Mac

Featured Image Credit – Justin Sullivan/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: apple, news, syndicated
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Facebook wants to challenge Twitter as the go-to place for discussing TV shows in real-time

Feb10
by Sindy Cator on February 10, 2014 at 4:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web

144248231 520x245 Facebook wants to challenge Twitter as the go to place for discussing TV shows in real time

A Facebook study has revealed that Twitter might have a battle on its hands as the social network of choice for real-time engagement while people are watching films or TV.

The research is the result of a partnership between Facebook and UK analytics firm SecondSync, and looked at social TV data from the US, Australia and the UK.

As you might expect, a majority of TV-related interactions (80 percent) on Facebook were made via a mobile device – the classic ‘second screen’ scenario – but perhaps more surprisingly, 60 percent of interactions happened while the show was still airing.

This finding sits contrary to the notion that Twitter is the go-to social network to discuss a show while it is airing, while Facebook is the place to discuss it in more detail, usually once it has finished.

While the study looked at many facets of interaction, it also focused on how users were engaging while watching TV. For example, it found that Posts were most closely aligned with real-time  TV consumption and that the bulk of conversations took place in the Comments sections.

However, Shares were the least used of all interaction types, with Likes being the most used and the biggest generator of longer-tail interactions once a show had finished. 

None of this should come as much of a surprise really: essentially, viewers use Posts to start a conversation in real-time (rather than sharing a link or page) and receive responses that continue for long after the show has finished in the Comments section. It also follows that these posts would get a large number of Likes, which then spurs the conversation on.

Content matters

Thanks to the partnership, the study also unearthed which type of shows generated the most engagement. So, films tended to drive some of the biggest numbers, with dramatic moments causing peaks. Sporting events are also huge drivers of social engagement, the report noted.

Conversely, it seems that dramas generated activity at the beginning and end of the shows, but much less so in the middle. And, perhaps predictably, social activity related to competitions (like ‘Dancing With The Stars’) directly correlates with the act on stage.

Naturally, sporting events provide quite the social draw too, with headline events like the Super Bowl generating 185 million Facebook interactions from 50 million unique users. However, it’s not just the big ticket events that drive social, according to report:

It’s not just marquee finales like this that are able to generate significant volumes of engagement… patterns of engagement map directly to events on the field with the biggest volumes of interaction seen after big plays, controversial officiating decisions and directly after the end of games.

The report also looked at demographics of people engaging on Facebook with TV content and found that the people most likely to engage in this way with TV content were between 18-24 (30 percent) and 25-34 (30 percent) with the remainder made up by decreasing figures approaching the least active and oldest (65+) segment.

The report will be an important tool for Facebook and will go some way to silencing critics that view the social network as a destination for post-event/airing analysis and feedback rather than real-time engagement.

It’ll also help Facebook demonstrate that people are actively using the platform to engage with television and other content, as well as providing even more data to be pored over, analyzed and potentially used for profit. Ultimately, that’s the the aim of all of this – to drive higher revenues.

Featured Image Credit – RAUL ARBOLEDA/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: facebook, media, news, syndicated
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Messaging service Imo becomes an early adopter of WebRTC as it adds plugin-free video calls

Feb10
by Sindy Cator on February 10, 2014 at 4:00 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider

webcam 520x245 Messaging service Imo becomes an early adopter of WebRTC as it adds plugin free video calls

Imo has become the first consumer messaging service to implement the WebRTC standard for its cross-platform video calls.

WebRTC has reached a relatively stable state in Chrome, Firefox and Opera, but it has yet to see widespread adoption. The project is designed to add advanced real-time communication capabilities, and even file sharing, to browsers without the need of plugins.

Imo’s WebRTC integration allows Web-based users of the product to easily initiate and receive video calls from friends, regardless of what platform they’re on. A test call I tried on the service came through seamlessly and looked great from within my Chrome tab.

Here’s a screenshot of some good-looking people using Imo for a WebRTC video call:

imo 730x456 Messaging service Imo becomes an early adopter of WebRTC as it adds plugin free video calls

According to Imo engineer Patrick Horn, 90 percent of the messaging service’s users have compatibility with WebRTC. He also noted that Imo has the flexibility to try out new technologies because it’s a smaller company.

Imo’s deepened investment in video calling comes as existing players have left an opening in the market. Since going over to Microsoft, the quality of Skype’s service seems to have declined. Meanwhile, Apple hasn’t done much to push its FaceTime standard as of late.

Where younger startups have pursued mobile-only messaging strategies, Imo has stuck to a cords-platform model. The company also avoids the silos often found in mobile apps by allowing you to message across other services like Google Hangouts and Facebook.

➤ Imo Messenger

└ Tags: syndicated
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Justin.tv, owner of video game streaming service Twitch, changes its name to Twitch Interactive

Feb10
by Sindy Cator on February 10, 2014 at 2:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

93042570 520x245 Justin.tv, owner of video game streaming service Twitch, changes its name to Twitch Interactive

The company that owns Twitch, Justin.tv, is changing its name today to better reflect the hugely popular game streaming service that it’s now known for. From now on, the corporate entity that owns both Twitch and the website Justin.tv will be called Twitch Interactive, Inc.

The move isn’t particularly surprising, given the tremendous growth of Twitch and game streaming generally over the last couple of years. Twitch Interactive launched the service as a separate brand in June 2011, after it began broadcasting eSports tournaments on Justin.tv. The site now attracts 1 million unique active broadcasters, 6 million streams and 45 million unique viewers every month, watching 13 billion minutes of gameplay that go far beyond the competitive, professional world of eSports.

As the barriers for video game streaming continue to fall – the PlayStation 4 supports Twitch streaming and the Xbox One will follow early this year – the interest in broadcasting and watching this content is likely to increase further.

Twitch Interactive emphasized that Justin.tv won’t be closed, although today’s name change is a clear indication of where its focus now lies. “As Twitch has continued to grow as the leader of the video game streaming space, it has eclipsed our previous initiatives,” Twitch CEO and founder Emmet Shear said. “Given our total focus on serving the gaming community it makes sense to reposition it as our primary brand.”

Read Next: Lionsgate is sponsoring a Starcraft II tournament on Twitch and MLG to promote Ender’s Game / Competitive gaming is coming of age as the eSports scene takes off

Image Credit: Miguel Villagran/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
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