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Monday 31 October 2011

Holographium review


We review Holographium, an iPhone app that paints real-life light graffiti on your digital photos

Light painting is a fascinating concept, and a great many clever photographers have performed some outstanding works of art using light as a real-world paint brush.

You may even have experienced it yourself by accident, when taking a photo at night. A torch trail snakes its way around the picture, while you and the background are clearly stationary.

This is achieved by leaving the camera’s shutter open for an extended period of time - around 10 seconds minimum according to the Holographium iPhone app.

Taking light painting digital, the idea behind this app is that you can display a hovering, real-world 3D banner anywhere you like, complete with all the reflections and shadows such a banner would leave on surrounding objects.

The Holographium process begins by entering the text you want to display in your light graffiti. You can then choose a colour from a basic palette, and determine the pseudo-depth you’d like to give to your floating letters.

At this point you’re required to set up your digital camera. The images aren’t taken using the iPhone’s camera, but a digital camera equipped with a variable shutter speed.

A tripod is pretty much a necessity, with the camera ready and waiting with the required image in its viewfinder.

The shutter speed of the camera is entered into Holographium, so it knows how long to leave images on the iPhone’s screen. Once all this is done, you press the shutter button on the camera, and hold the iPhone in mid-air wherever you want the light painting to appear in the photo.

Moving the iPhone from left to right, in time with the shutter speed (for example, taking 12 seconds to move from one end of the banner to the other), the text will be processed by the app to appear as floating 3D words on the exposed photograph.

This sounds quite complex and difficult to perform when reading the description, and it is. Getting the timing right, putting the camera in position, ensuring the ambient light is right, and getting clear of the viewfinder before the shutter closes is no small task.

The results are as promised, however. The strange shapes you see on the iPhone’s screen during the calculated animation miraculously turn into 3D light, hovering in mid air.

Be prepared for a lot of attempts to get it right, with a lot of photos coming out with squashed or blurred text, unreadable angles and an intrusive haziness from the iPhone operator, but with persistence Holographium can create some very cool images that even photoshop would be hard pressed to recreate.

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OPlayer review


We review OPlayer, an iPhone app that plays all your digital videos without the need to convert them into MP4s, or to load them through iTunes

It doesn’t seem that long ago since Apple backpedalled on its decision not to allow third-party web browser apps on the iPhone, since it already had Safari built in.

But the public wanted those apps, and eventually they were allowed through the net. Now we’re suddenly starting to see video player applications, suggesting a similar thing has happened with multimedia playback.

OPlayer is the latest addition to this new trend, and provides superb playback quality of all your digital video files in a quick, easy and attractive package.

Natively the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad only accepts MP4 videos, and even then they must meet a very particular specification. If the audio sampling rate is even slightly different to what Apple insisted upon, the video wouldn’t work.

So being able to drag and drop most any computer-format video file into the iPhone, and immediately watch it, feels like a kingly gift after several years of tedious format conversions and battles with iTunes.

OPlayer accepts a host of well-used video file types, such as AVI, WMV, Xvid, Divx, MP4, MPG, MKV and more, and is just as happy to play your audio files in the MP3, WMA, RM or AAC formats. None of these files need any kind of conversion to play on the iPhone, and all are handled quickly and smoothly.

The app can comfortably overlay subtitles on the video playback, which can be part of a container file (such as MKV), included automatically by giving the subs file the same name as the video file, or loaded in manually from an external SUB or SRT file.

Playback of files is immensely convenient, resembling the native YouTube application in many respects, while adding in a few important features to help you keep your files organised. Primarily this includes the methods used to move videos to and from the app, which can be done through iTunes’ file sharing function using a simple, and fast, drag and drop.

Streaming is supported over HTTP, while FTP and SAMBA sharing is also included should you want to drag files off a suitably equipped server or a computer. And should you wish to move files over to the device wirelessly, a web client is included allowing you to send video over Wi-Fi in either direction.

A playlist function is available for both video and audio, and you can create custom lists of websites, servers or other sources you’re likely to call upon regularly for bringing in the content.

All this might sound a bit complex in description, but that’s not something OPlayer is easily accused of. Ignoring any of the transfer protocols that many people won’t use anyway, this is a very simple and impressively efficient app to use.

The features are all there if you really need them, but for quickly filling up your device with videos to watch when and where you want, OPlayer delivers everything you need within a few button presses.

Apple should have included an app like this in the iPhone’s firmware, but OPlayer more than earns its £1.79 by cutting out the tedious MP4 file conversions alone. Bundle all its other great features in, and you’ve got a first class app that’d be a bargain at twice the price.

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Sunday 30 October 2011

Self Destructing Message review


We review Self Destructing Message, an iPhone app that adds Mission: Impossible-level security to your text communications.

As amusing as it is to think about sending a message that will self destruct after a few seconds, and as difficult as it is to stop “dum, dum, da-dum DUM dum, dum, da-dum dum” going through your mind as you do it, that’s exactly what this app does.

But it’s not a novelty app that aims to parody that particular aspect of Mission: Impossible just for shits and giggles.

There’s a real and – potentially – useable communications tool included here, that works in a slick and interesting fashion, and delivers on its promises.

Self Destructing Message first needs you to set up an account, though if you’ve already signed up on a different app from the same developer, your credentials are already there for you to sign in.

The app can be set to remember your login details, or you can add a gateway to the messaging system by entering your login each time it loads. Once the app can identify you, you can set up an address book. Of sorts.

Given the clandestine nature of the app, it seems ill-advised to openly list the name and number of the people you’re sending a self destructing message to.

When entering a contact into the “Black Book” you can give your recipients – and those likely to send a return message – an alias that only you can identify.

The Black Book is mutually exclusive, and any recipients are identified by the username they registered when installing the app.

This is the only time you’ll see their real username, as you enter the alias by which they’ll then be listed in the book.

A message is typed out like any other instant messenger, but before it’s sent, a self-destruct timer is added. This can be anywhere between five seconds and one minute, at varying increments.

The message is then sent to the recipient’s inbox, where it waits to be opened before the timer is primed.

The recipient (or you, if you’ve just received a message) then has that limited amount of time to read and digest your message before it’s gone forever.

The developer even promises that its message servers are purged every 24-hours, so there’s not even any hope of reclaiming it through very elaborate means.

Photos, audio and video can be sent in exactly the same manner, and are taken to pieces just the same after they’ve been used.

Obviously the circumstances for requiring this app are rather extreme and a little hard to imagine, but there’s still a good chance that people will want to share the occasional secret without concern of it then sitting forgotten and discoverable at the other end, where you’ve no control over its removal.

So in its own, very unique way, Self Destructing Message is a complete success, and is ideal for serving a very select clientele of secret social networkers.

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iBrewMaster review


We review iBrewMaster, a homebrew iPhone app in the old sense of the word, which keeps an eye on your ale so you don’t have to

When we talk about homebrew these days, we’re generally referring to community-made software. But before the days of small, internet-distributed computer utilities, homebrew was about a garage full of exploding beer-like concoctions that caused temporary blindness and false pregnancies. At least, that’s the way our dad made it.

This iPhone app brings the two homebrew meanings together in feature-packed unison, to provide the perfect companion for the tech-savvy CAMRA member. Combining recipes for beer with a critically timed brewing schedule and a useful social networking element, iBrewMaster is the packet of peanuts to the iPhone’s bottle of Newcastle Brown.

Although homebrewed beer isn’t something we proclaim to know anything about, even a cursory glance through iBrewMaster’s features demonstrates that this app should be the first port of call for novices and head brewers alike.

Primarily, the app offers a clear, well-categorised schedule for your current batches of homebrew. Keeping strict records and keen timing is (evidently) essential to the perfect brew, and iBrewMaster keeps track of everything including primary fermentation to its bottling stage. You can then keep a close eye on when it’s time to take the next step in each batch’s brewing process, and keep a record if you decide to change up the recipe.

Which brings us to the next impressive feature of iBrewMaster. Recipes are a major part of the app’s appeal, and something of a social drinking network is included allowing brewers to download and share their beer recipes. A huge number of recipes are available online, and each one has a whopping amount of easily-accessible detail. The type and weight of hops, the expected gravity, how much yeast to include, the full brewing schedule, the colour of the finished booze, and even user ratings to help you decide.

Recipe packs are available as in-app purchases at 59p each, and there’s an equally huge selection to choose from there, too. And should you be on the lookout for local suppliers, there’s a section where homebrew companies can advertise and you can search for ingredients.

All of this is further refined by a massive amount of customisation. Now, given our novice brewer status (half of Tom Caxton’s, anyone?), it’s hard to know exactly how we’d go about changing this level of intricate detail, but suffice to say there’s enough customisation to run the Tetley Brewery.

It might not be the cheapest app, but now that VAT is through the roof, it’s only really the price of a decent pint, and considering iBrewMaster will help you make a barrel-full of cheap and hearty booze, it hardly seems like an outrageous price. Perhaps it’s angled more toward the expert, too, but following the community’s recipes is undoubtedly a great way to get into the fine art of homebrewing.

Cheers.

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Speed Tracker review


We review Speed Tracker, an iPhone app that shares your speed for real life races with lead-footed friends

It’s hard to decide whether Speed Tracker is a game or an app. It’s filed under the App Store’s navigation category, so presumably Apple, at least, considers this to be more of an application than a game. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t still a lot of fun to be had with it’s rather unusual feature set.

Given that iPhones all have GPS built-in, and most come with a hefty data package alongside their contracts, sharing bits of personal information with friends has become a normal part of leaving the house for many of us. But most of us are still a tad cautious of sharing our location, not just for privacy’s sake, but because we might be avoiding people, or not where we should be.

Location sharing is a big part of Speed Tracker’s social service, though, from a rather different perspective than normal. What it actually shares is the speed you’re currently travelling at, comparing it with a Game Center-connected friend in something of a remote, real-world race.

Both your positions are overlaid onto Google Maps, with the current speed showing as you move around the maps. Statistics are also kept automatically by Speed Tracker as you move about the place, with top speed, average speed, location, distance and time all recorded and available to upload to Facebook later on.

A voice chat feature is built into the app, allowing you to converse with whoever you’re currently connected to through Game Center. As great as this feature sounds, it should be noted that it only actually works when both iPhones are connected to a Wi-Fi signal, which seems unlikely if you’re travelling around at 50 MPH or more.

As a single user, Speed Tracker finds itself much more on the application side of the fence, as it doubles up as a speedometer. Perhaps not massively useful in a car (though checking the accuracy of the car’s speedo is no bad thing), but quite an interesting feature if you’re on a train, boat, bicycle, skateboard or even on foot.

Certainly Speed Tracker is more of an entertainment product than a functional one, but that’s no criticism. It’s surprising how often you choose to test your current speed once the option is available, and for just 59p, it undeniably feels like value for money. Especially when the Cannonball Run-style motorway races begin…

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Future Guns review


We review Future Guns, an iPhone app that offers a cross breed of shooter gaming and a gun simulation

Here we have another of those awesome apps that refuses to fit into the game or application pigeonholes. Future Guns marks a wide territory for itself, dipping toes in the reference, entertainment, gaming and simulation ponds all at once, all while managing to avoid wearing schizophrenia on its sleeve.

It does have a serious and disturbing gun fetish, worthy of a redneck trailer park, but that’s an entirely different neurosis altogether.

So what is Future Guns? Well, that’s actually a bit difficult to describe, but there’s one thing that’s very easy to say about this app. If you’re really into guns – if you’re the kind of person that reads magazines on the subject, has models and replicas, and can name all those moving parts – you’ll really enjoy Future Guns. Just buy it. It was made for your brand of obsessive compulsive disorder.

That’s not to say it isn’t also fascinating to the hobbyist shooter, or even the trigger-happy novice. An armoury of existing, new and future guns (not just a clever name) is available for you to choose from, and then take out onto four difference types of shooting range to test them out.

The third-person range is perhaps the most fascinating, which gives you a side-on view of the firearm you’ve selected. But this isn’t just a high-res picture, or an automatic animation. The guns feature moving, operational parts that can be operated as you inspect the machine. You can pull the trigger, with full muzzle climb and recoil as the gun fires; you can reload the ammo; pull back the slider; eject the bullets; switch between firing modes and basically fiddle with the mechanism as much as you desire.

The three other ranges land more in the gaming realm, rather than the simulation seen in the third-person range. Now the gun is in your hand and aiming forward, with accelerometer-controlled crosshairs and a point-scoring objective. The ranges get more and more difficult as you progress, and the game ends when you run out of ammo.

Then the app returns to the reference / simulation realm, with detailed information and statistics on the available weaponry, which should provide invigorating reading for the well-armed anorak.

It’s probably a stretch to recommend buying Future Guns based on its gaming parts, but we have to admit that gaming is a little less than half of the app’s real intention. If you’ve any kind of gun fascination – whether it’s shooting them, the engineering behind them, or the skills involved in using them -- Future Guns delivers where other shooters never bother to go.

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Little World Gifts review


We review Little World Gifts, an iPhone app that makes sure it’s never too late to send a gift – even if it’s a virtual one

Only a year or two ago a virtual gift wouldn’t have been considered a gift at all. But now everyone is so enamoured – and practically dependent – on online communities like Facebook, and excited by digital commodities in games like Farmville, a cyber-gift can be received just as well as a real one.

Little World Gifts is aiming to bridge the gap between physical pressies and virtual ones, by giving you access to a digital gift shop with a host of 3D objects that can be bought and sent direct from the iPhone.

Online gift vouchers have been around for quite a while, and have proven very popular, so you might question whether you want to send a 3D rendered model of a Picasso painting to someone, or just give them a token to spend at Amazon. But Little World Gifts isn’t really aiming at the voucher market, offering instead a collection of interesting trinkets that – hopefully – the receiver will come to cherish.

The app is presented as shelves in a shop, with the many gifts and ornaments arranged for you to browse through. There are free gifts as well as paid ones, ranging from lucky Chinese cats, to shoes, chilli peppers and Elvis figurines. Little World Gifts requires you to sign in through Facebook Connect, which is a little unusual (given that it’s the only way to create an account) but proves quite practical since your virtual gifts can be delivered through the social network, as well as directly to someone’s iPhone.

The paid gifts require an in-app purchase (of varying values, depending on the gift) and tend to be a bit fancier, bigger, or more exclusive. And it’s not just an image that’s being bought. These are beautifully rendered 3D models, which the recipient can rotate, zoom into, and phone-fondle to their heart’s desire. Some can be animated, while others contain sound effects and secrets unlocked by fiddling with the object.

Push notifications are employed to let you or your recipient know they’ve received something from Little World Gifts. They can then be put on display, mirroring the virtual gift shop shelf with a virtual display cabinet, mantle piece or sideboard where your cyber-ornaments can be seen by the world.

It’s an idea that’s as unique as the trinkets you can buy through the app, and although it might take a while before the world is ready to receive virtual gifts as willingly as real ones, Little World Gifts is definitely a step in the right direction. Considering how many e-cards have been sent this Christmas, and were well-received, it suggests that Little World Gifts and its shoppers might well be blazing the gift-giving trail.

Let’s see if it catches on.

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Bike Repair review


We review Bike Repair, an iPhone app that keeps your cycle in full working order and teaches you a thing or two about mechanical tinkering

Even if you don’t particularly buy into the whole New Year resolution thing, it’s hard to deny that January feels like a good time to make a few changes. December is a month where we break from our normal routines, which makes the New Year feel like it’s ready for a shake up, and after the overindulgence of Christmas, that shake up generally includes some form of diet and exercise.

And let’s be honest: We all have a bike in the garage that’s not been used for 18 months, despite us regularly promising ourselves that we’re “going to get out on it more”. Well, there’s no better time to make good on that promise, and the iPhone’s Bike Repair app is here to make it possible.

As its name suggests, this is a maintenance and inspection guide to getting yourself back in the saddle. The app contains an impressive 38 step-by-step guides, which break the bicycle down into essential aspects and explains how they work and how to keep them working.

For example, the Wheels section explains how to change an inner tube (might sound obvious, but that’s not the case if you’ve never done it before), and how to change the rim tape. Breaks rubbing on the wheel? There’s a guide that explains not only how to fix it, but what’s causing the problem, which helps immensely in building you investigative knowledge of bike maintenance.

Getting to your problem is handled well within the app, through something of an elimination and selection exercise that ultimately hones in on the issue. You begin by selecting the general area of the problem, such as the chain or handlebars, and then selecting the kind of operation required. This could be replacing the chain, inspecting it, or cleaning it.

The guides take the form of great quality photos of the parts in question, clearly labelled with the required procedure. Essential parts are labelled with arrows, and good advice is thrown in wherever possible and pertinent. The image-heavy nature of the guides makes them very easy to follow, even if you’re not usually technically minded. Indeed, by using photos rather than schematics, Bike Repair offers an experience that’s geared more for the novice than the professional bike repair engineer.

One of the reasons a bike continues to go unused is because it needs servicing, but performing the work yourself not only makes you feel more secure when going out and about - given that you now have a better understanding of how to fix the machine should it break down on you - there’s a distinct satisfaction that comes from getting some grease on your hands.

Feeling more connected to your newly repaired bike is likely to keep you riding it, and alongside a puncture repair kit and a hand pump, Bike Repair is an essential part of your riding gear.

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mBoxMail - Hotmail with Push review


We review mBoxMail, an iPhone app that fetches your Hotmail messages and hand delivers them to your iPhone

Pretty much everyone has a Gmail account these days, and whether it’s a main email or not, it’s simply practical to be signed up with Google able to grab messages through the internet giant’s web gateway. The same used to be true (perhaps to a lesser degree) with Hotmail, being Microsoft’s key to unlocking Live Messenger.

Because of this, a lot of people do still have an active Hotmail account, and this application offers a neat and efficient way of connecting with your webmail while avoiding the advert-heavy website.

Perhaps its most prominent feature isn’t the push email, but its ability to effortlessly handle multiple Hotmail accounts. In a web browser, checking several different Hotmail inboxes is a chore, given that you’ve to sign in and out and in and out. The mBoxMail app allows you to configure as many Hotmail accounts as you like, and jump between them like they’re different folders on the same account.

The push email is still a benefit, of course, and as long as you’re on iPhone 3.0 firmware or above, notifications are delivered when new messages come along. It doesn’t seem to be a flawless push system, though much of the difficulties in having mail delivered directly, rather than fetching, is potentially at the Hotmail end of the avenue. The mBoxMail app therefore makes extra provision for failed pushes, but also offering an automatic background fetch every fifteen minutes. Not quite what it says on the tin, but it’s good to see a backup in place when pushing isn’t available.

Your messages are synchronised with the Hotmail folders, so any read, unread, important or other flags are replicated throughout the messaging system, adding something of an IMAP function to the email account. You can also move messages between folders directly from within the app, and even manage the folders within the email account in exactly the same way.

All your Live Messenger contacts are also brought into the mBoxMail application, as are attachments (even large ones), images and anything else accompanying a message. Searching through your folders is also simple and effective, and an embedded web browser makes it easy to follow any links sent to you by email.

The price makes mBoxMail a little prohibitive, but considering all the features included, this is still a great way to access Hotmail through an iPhone. If you’re already signed up and using Hotmail as your main point of email contact, give serious consideration to picking this app up. If Hotmail only gets moderate use, or you’re undecided on whether to choose it as your new webmail, £5.99 might push the whole thing about out of reasonable price range.

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OpenMaps Pro review


We review OpenMaps Pro, a Google Maps alternative for iPhone that adds a social networking element to your GPS activities

It can’t be easy for any navigation apps to gain much of a foothold on the App Store, considering Google Maps is so damn useful and integrated so tightly within the iPhone’s firmware. For most every basic navigational purpose, GMaps is the quickest, simplest and most effective answer.

Now, OpenMaps is probably sick of being known as “the other Google Maps,” but there really is no better description. The OpenMaps Pro application delivers these maps directly to your iPhone screen as a direct contender to Google, but throws a few extra features to justify its price tag. And it undeniably succeeds.

At its core, this is still a vector-based street-level map system, and looks and operates much as you’re used to with the iPhone’s native nav-app. It quickly differentiates itself with one particular option, however, as it’s able to run offline. Naturally this is more important to iPod touch users than iPhoners, but it’s still potentially valuable for any device.

The GPS locator and compass are included to determine which parts, and how you view, the map, and are essential aspects of finding out just where you are in the world and how to get where you’re going. The route planner backs this up, by offering car, cycle or on-foot directions. Additional stopping points or locations can be added to the route, and specific locations can be bookmarked for future use.

OpenMaps Pro also lifts itself out of Google Maps’ shadow by way of a social networking element. The maps can be populated with all kinds of information local to your current position, handing out details on nearby facilities, but also on nearby people.

Twitter is tightly integrated to show off geotagged Tweets, so you can even get a satellite view of conversations going on around you. This is a two-way street, of course, and you can micro-blog about where you are, where you’re going, and what’s happening in your immediate vicinity.

If Google Maps doesn’t quite cut it for you, or you’re interested in sending out digital information about your online and real-world presence, OpenMaps Pro was designed just for you. There’s a free version so you can test it out, but if any of the app’s unique features have caught your eye, it should be an easy decision as whether or not to go pro.

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Mighty Clock review


We review Mighty Clock, an iPhone app that works while you sleep, and wakes you with an abundance of style

Anyone who makes even moderate daily use of their iPhone will know that it barely gets through the day on a full charge. Watch a video or two during the commute, run a few apps and play a couple of hours of games and its battery counter gets low, fast. Launch a navigation-equipped app, and you can be sure it’s going to be a thirsty phone by the time you get home.

So most of us have learned to keep some kind of charger next to our beds, and if you’ve equipped the bedroom with an iPhone cradle, then the Mighty Clock app could be just what you need to get use out of the iPhone even during the night.

This is one of many “alarm clock” applications out there on the App Store, and while there aren’t too many features shoehorned into its repertoire, it does boast an abundance of style and raw functionality.

At its core, this is indeed an alarm clock app. You can override the iPhone’s settings and tell the app to keep the device from going to sleep while it’s on charge, so firing up the app when you go to bed and standing the handset in its cradle gives you a sweet-looking alarm clock throughout the night.

The display is designed to give the classic LCD-style aesthetic, with changeable colours and a soft glow that’s surprisingly appealing for a few numbers and buttons. The display can be switched between night and day modes, maximising visibility without any unwanted glare. Sliding a finger up and down the screen manually adjusts the brightness, so you can get the light level just right without any real fuss.

You can set alarms, and choose whether to use the built-in sounds or play music from your iPod playlists. The built-in sounds all seem to feature some kind of running water noises, like heavy rain or even a dish washer, which might well encourage you out of bed when you wake up in a warm pool. A strange choice of sounds, but undoubtedly effective. Potentially too effective…

A choice of other, more basic sound effects are also included if you’re after something a bit more traditional to wake you up, such as a xylophone, harp or digital watch.

Mighty Clock can also pull in data from the weather service, to give you an idea of the world you’re stepping out of bed into, although it does come with a warning that this feature leaves the GPS running and doesn’t do your battery any favours. Assuming you’re on charge anyway this probably doesn’t matter, so long as you remember to shut the app down once you get up.

A particularly nice feature of Mighty Clock is the torch function. Should you get up in the middle of the night, you can grab the iPhone off its cradle and launch the torch feature with a single button press. This lights the full screen in white, providing a decent light to find your way around the upstairs without tripping over the cat.

A very useful app for those equipped with a cradle.

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GPS Kit review


We review GPS Kit, an iPhone navigation app that covers your entire life, as well as the world you live in

GPS always seemed like such a serious matter, focusing on precision and data and statistics. Possibly because it originated with the military, but few software developers have ever had much fun with it. Admittedly, there are plenty of games now that make use of location services, and social networking has made decent, frivolous use of GPS info.

But GPS Kit manages to do both. It’s not a game – not by a long shot – but neither does it take the matter of global positioning with deathly seriousness. It provides, quite frankly, an epic magnitude of locational information, but it also acknowledges that you’re receiving that data through an iPhone, and makes sure you can enjoy yourself as well as find your way around.

GPS Kit encompasses everything to do with GPS in a single app. And that’s a lot of satellite transmission to shoehorn into one piece of software, especially when you consider that much of it is already covered by native iPhone apps.

Looking at the maps first, GPS Kit immediately shows how flexible it can be. You can choose from nine different map sources, and a variety of different map types. Cycling and terrain maps, alongside street and satellite, prove this isn’t just a car navigation app – it’s just as useful when going off road. Bolstered by offline maps, it makes the native Google Maps feel very limited indeed.

A host of tools are also included when viewing the maps, such as a simple drag-and-drop measuring device, unlimited pins, a very smooth compass arrow, notes, geo-tagged photos and more. It also shows your exact location by way of standardised co-ordinates, which can be easily switched between the different formats. Any geocachers out there who’ve solved a cache puzzle, only to find their app doesn’t allow them to input a certain type of co-ordinates, will find this small feature to be incredibly valuable.

If it’s statistical information about your location that you’re after, there’s little that GPS Kit doesn’t offer. The current time (taken from the satellite transmission), your current speed, accuracy of the GPS reception, an odometer, compass point direction and more are all neatly and actively presented on the dashboard page.

There’s a lot more data collected, stored and available when it comes to where you’ve been and where you’re going, too, so as much as GPS Kit keeps things accessible and light, it’s still got the muscle to cater for the professional GPS user.

Which brings us to the lighter side of GPS Kit. There’s a significant social networking side to the app, with quick, single button access to Twitter and Facebook should you want to share your current location, geo-tagged photos or any other satellite data about your current situation.

This also gives you access to something of a community overview, with friends and fellow GPS users (and their tagged content) overlaid onto the map. A proximity based chat system is also included, giving you two way texting between nearby GPS Kit users, or you can select a specific channel if you want a private chat with someone specific.

There’s still a lot more that’s gone unsaid about GPS Kit epic amount of functionality, making it quite entertaining just fettling around the app discovering what you can do and learn from the satellites overhead. It’s certainly not the cheapest app, but it undeniably earns its money, and given the level of available customisation, it’ll prove just as valuable to the serious navigator as it does to the location-aware social networker.

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Sign-N-Send review


We review Sign-N-Send, an iPhone app that helps you achieve a paper-free office while still adding that essential signature to your documents

Offices made a special effort to reduce the amount of paper following through their cubicles a few years ago, but going electronic is more of a requirement than a choice these days. The majority of business correspondence is handled via email, instant messaging, online shopping, phone calls and even social networks, so there’s little in the way of a paper trail generated by the modern business.

And as much as everyone relishes the notion of electronic documents, which essentially file themselves, there’s still something of a sticking point when it comes to trading paper for digital docs: the boss’s signature.

Decisions need a name against them, and typing it out still isn’t enough to confirm that the higher-ups have committed themselves to a course of action, or that your customer agrees to the detail of work you’ve supplied them with. Without a bit of scrawl on the bottom, we’re all a bit cautious that a document isn’t official.

Sign-N-Send looks at trying to remedy the situation without bringing printouts or fountain pens into play. The app is accessible from the iPhone’s (or iPad’s or iPod touch’s) email client, and can open PDF or Word documents that are sent as attachments.

Once open, you can look through the doc until you reach any particular signature lines, and then sign on the dotted line using your finger. A variety of different pen nibs are available to give your moniker a bit of flare, and there are multiple undo levels in case you need a bit of practice writing on the touchscreen.

As much as the whole purpose of Sign-N-Send is to add a fluid, digital signature, you can also bring up the keyboard and type it out. Although this defeats the purpose of signing, it can be quite useful for the other authorisation aspects of a document, such as adding the date, or initialling.

Once signed, the document is sent off to a secure server where it’s converted to a PDF that you can return to any other parties, or email to your office. If version 4.2 of the iPhone’s firmware is installed, you can also fire off a print out, though, again that seems a little contrary to its purpose. Nice to know the feature’s there if you need it, of course.

All in all this is a great step toward a genuinely paperless office, and could prove invaluable to any business types who spend a lot of time out and about while a document is sitting on their desk waiting for a signature. With Sign-N-Send, it needn’t wait any longer than it takes to send it to your inbox.

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Thursday 27 October 2011

Hands on: Samsung Epic 4G Touch review

Hands on: Samsung Epic 4G Touch review

How do you make one of the best phones ever released even better? With the US-only Samsung Epic 4G Touch, which was released recently in the US by Sprint, the super-thin (9.59mm) and super-light (128.9 grams) device is remarkably similar to the Samsung Galaxy SII, our Android-leading current 5-star phone.

Even the demigods at Apple might need to worry a little about the Epic 4G Touch. Sure, the iPhone 4S has a bright and crisp screen, with a fast A5 processor.

Yet, the Epic 4G Touch goes a few steps beyond those specs. Outfitted with a 1.2GHz Exynos processor, the Epic is one of the fastest phones we've ever tested. Apps pop up suddenly. Flipping between widgets, there's none of the annoying pause of some earlier Android models. Games like NOVA 2, a sci-fi shooter, pump pixels as smooth as butter on the screen in an almost PC-like fashion.

We're also big fans of the 4.5-inch AMOLED Plus screen technology, which makes the Epic 4G the brightest smartphone screen we've ever seen. The iPhone 4S screen looks slightly dim and washed out in comparison. Movies pop off the screen like you're watching a Samsung HDTV in miniature.

The 800x480 pixel resolution of the screen, at this size, helps makes everything you view look clearer, from Web pages, to games, to photos and movies. The screen is just a wonder to behold.

Hands on: samsung epic 4g touch review

At 129.5mm, the Epic 4G Touch is a bit longer than the SII. It's hard to notice - both phones look about the same - but the extra height means a slightly bigger screen for movies and photos. The Epic has more rounded corners than the SII; also, the power button is a bit closer to the top edge.

The SII and Epic both have a slight raised edge on the bottom back cover. Both phones are light and thin, but the Epic's plastic casing does feel like it could crack easily if you, let's say, roll over it with your bike.

Hands on: samsung epic 4g touch review

This model has two cameras, and both are exceptional. There's a rear-facing 8-megapixel camera that snapped wonderfully clear and colorful photos - so good, we even left a Nikon D7000 at home during a day of testing. Photos of a bright fall day looked rich and fully saturated. The front-facing 2-megapixel camera also worked well for clear and colorful Google Talk video chats.

Sprint improved the hotspot capabilities of this phone, offering up a Wi-Fi signal to anyone around you for up to 8 people, tapping in to the speedy 4G signals (up to about 2.5Mbps in our tests).

The Epic 4G Touch has 16GB of internal memory and 1GB of RAM. Like its SII cousin, the Epic 4G Touch does not have an external SD card slot. You can a card up to 32GB by removing the back cover. As you'd expect, there's Bluetooth 3.0, Wi-Fi (including 802.11N), a gyro, GPS, and a six-axis accelerometer.

Hands on: samsung epic 4g touch review

The Epic 4G Touch runs on Android 2.3.4 and, as such, has only one major drawback: it is standing in the rather tall shadow of Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, which will debut soon in the Samsung Nexus Prime.

That phone promises to include more powerful (and resizable widgets), improved built-in apps, a new UI, full app multitasking, folders for files and apps, and a better phone dialer.

As expected, Samsung included both the Media Hub app (for buying or renting movies and TV shows) and the Social Hub aggregator (for checking social network status). These apps add some extra zing to a phone that is already giving Apple a serious threat, mostly because Samsung has nailed the ecosystem for adding content to apps from the phone (no desktop app required).

The Social Hub app is not nearly as powerful as a true social dashboard like HootSuite or SproutSocial, but it works well enough. The one obvious missing feature is that the Hub does not let you generate any reports on your social success.

Hands on: samsung epic 4g touch review

For this model, Samsung added a few interesting perks. One is that there is now a notification light on the front of the screen near the 3.5mm headphone jack. You'll see a blue light when you get a text or email; the light flashes red when you need to think about re-charging.

The Epic 4G Touch also has a slightly brighter screen than the Samsung Galaxy SII. It's especially noticeable when you play a movie: we tested the movie Fast Five and the outdoor sunny scenes looked especially colorful.

Hands on: samsung epic 4g touch review

This model also has an 1800 mAh battery for another hour or so of battery life, up to about 8 hours in our tests. That's a boost over the Galaxy SII, which has a 1650 mAh battery.

The battery power comes in handy, since this 4G phone from Sprint tends to chew up usage time when you play movies and music, and when you play games that tend to stress the processor, like NOVA 2.

Another major difference between the SII and the Epic 4G Touch: Samsung is taking the "touch" part seriously with this device. Samsung has added four capacitive touch icons below the main screen: menu, home, back and search.

When you press the buttons, there's a slight haptics buzz to let you know you've activated that button. The SII has just one large home button. With the four buttons, not only do you get access to those features through hardware-like buttons, but time-saving access in any app. That said,the new buttons do not match up well with the Galaxy Tab, which does not have the same buttons.

So what's not to like? Well, one potential gripe is the price. This is a top shelf phone with a top shelf entry point: $600 without a contract, or $200 when you sign a two-year deal with Sprint. We say this exceptional phone is worth it, if you can live with the plastic non-rugged case.

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Exclusive: Google: ICS is first step in Android overhaul

Google will use its newest version of Android, dubbed Ice Cream Sandwich or Android 4.0, as the basis for the platform for the next few years.

Hugo Barra, Product Management Director for Android at Google, said during a press briefing that ICS was a huge overhaul of the Android platform, and one that brings new levels of user operability to the OS.

"Even before we finished Honeycomb, which was designed specifically for tablets, we decided to take a step back and find out what users wanted from Android," said Barra.

"We gave both users and non-users a device, asked them what they expected, talked to a number of people around the world - basically finding out what they wanted [in our next OS].

Early steps

"We learned a lot from these interactions and that was the data we used to rethink the face of Android. Ice Cream Sandwich is the first step in rethinking Android for the next two to three years, and it's the biggest release we've done in terms of [new] code."

Ice Cream Sandwich offers a number of new features, including data counters, multi-tasking with an inbuilt task killer and an overhauled contacts system to make it easier to communicate with those around you.

Stay tuned for our in-depth hands on: Ice Cream Sandwich review to see if you should consider upgrading to the new OS in the future.

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Hands on: Ice Cream Sandwich review

Hands on: Ice Cream Sandwich review

Ice Cream Sandwich, or Android 4.0, is the next release from Google to help it keep its position at the sharp end of the smartphone market.

Designed to bring its phone and tablet operating systems together, ICS features a huge amount of new code from Google to create new features, easier methods of use and more.

Let's dive in and see what the software is all about in our hands on: Ice Cream Sandwich Android 4.0 review.

Home screen

Google has done a lot more with the home screen than ever before, offering up more interactive widgets (plus the ability to resize them as well) with over 30 offered up from launch, with a glut more to come.

Google has said that it wants the main theme of ICS to be customisation, allowing users to be as in-depth or minimalist as they like. To that end, the physical buttons are now gone, employing a Honeycomb-like set of soft buttons at the bottom of the screen.

The menu system has also been given an overhaul as well, with tabs now offering access to both apps and widgets, making it easier to add in the latter options without needing to mess about with long pressing on the home screen.

Ice cream sandwich review

Folders are also now even easier to create, be it for games, contacts or apps that contain the letter 'z'. Simple drag an icon on top of another and the folder is simply created, with another tap allowing you to rename it. The first three icons of its contents are displayed as a marker too, making it easier to see what's what.

Ice cream sandwich review

Oh, and you can finally take screenshots too (if you've seen any of our reviews, you'll appreciate how much of a relief this is). Simply hold the down volume key and the power button for a couple of seconds and you'll get a handy animation to let you know what's on screen has been saved to the gallery.

Multi-tasking

Android has always been built on a system of being able to flit from one app to another with ease, and that's now even simpler in Ice Cream Sandwich.

Ice cream sandwich review

There's a new UI that's used throughout the OS, with a list of tiles showing which apps are open and their most recent content to help you recognise what's going on. If you want to 'kill' an app, simply swipe it to the side and it will be terminated.

Ice cream sandwich review

This seems eerily reminiscent of the Cards system employed by the soon-to-be defunct webOS from Palm, so we hope we're not going to see yet another patent war started up by Google.

On the Galaxy Nexus the process was much faster than with the similar UI employed on the Honeycomb OS, with apps opening and shutting at high speed.

Notifications

Notifications have been improved once again by Google, with the addition of the sort of widgets we've only seen on customised UIs now present.

For instance, music can now be controlled from anywhere on the phone with a drag down of the notifications bar, plus contacts will now have their picture added should they send you a text or if you've missed a call from them.

Ice cream sandwich review

Like the multi-tasking UI, you can also flick any notification to the right to easily get rid of it, making it easier to clean up your list of alerts.

Ice cream sandwich review

The bar is also now available from the lock screen as well, should you simply be unable to wait to get into your phone to see who may have texted you or shuffle a track.

People

The contacts app for Ice Cream Sandwich has undergone a big visual change compared to older versions of the OS.

Like before, you can have multiple social networks linked into one person, making it simple to keep up to date with their actions and movements on the go.

Ice cream sandwich review

And now if you swipe left or right to go to the new favourites view, you'll get high-res picture versions of your buddies - and if they're connected into Google+, you'll get even more rich information, like if the phone number changes online, it will sync up with your contacts too.

Ice cream sandwich review

You can also view all their updates in one place, in a standardised version of the likes of TimeScape or FriendStream, making it easier to keep up to date with specific people on the go.

Messaging

Google promised to keep updating the keyboard on its new versions of Android, and once again it's come up with a new version of the software - and it's pretty good.

There's not a whole heap of visual changes, bar the predictive suggestions: these have been dropped to just three per word, making it easier to select the word you're after.

Ice cream sandwich review

Smaller, more subtle vibrations have also been added to each keypress to make it easier to register inputs... we tested this out and it doesn't seem that different to normal haptic feedback, to be honest.

The accuracy is excellent too on the new keyboard, with even fudge-fingered attempts at writing yielding almost perfect accuracy. Speech to text is also enhanced, with real time feedback - no longer do you have to wait until you've finished speaking to see what the phone thinks you said, with the cloud-based prediction delivering results as you speak.

It worked well over Wi-Fi, but we'll be interested to note how well it works when it comes to 3G network speeds, as Google hinted it had integrated this functionality thanks to the proliferation of 4G signal in the US.

Face unlock

This is one of the 'fun' features Google has popped in to the new OS, making it easy to unlock the phone using facial recognition.

Google says it's the fastest way to unlock the screen, and it is pretty nifty, with our demo showing the OS is pretty astute at recognising which face is which without accidentally letting a doppelganger open your phone.

Ice cream sandwich review

Google admits a really large, high res photo of the person could feasibly unlock your phone, but it says it has put huge amounts of time into making sure this is really difficult to achieve.

In fairness, it's meant to be a fun feature - if you're that bothered about safety, put a PIN lock on and leave it at that, as we like this idea a lot.

Browser

Google has overhauled the browser again with Ice Cream Sandwich, bringing with it some nifty new features.

One bugbear we've always had has been erased, with the ability to switch between mobile and desktop versions of sites through an option in the menu, which is handy when you want to watch videos and the like.

Ice cream sandwich review

Chrome will automatically sync bookmarks with the phone as well, if you're logged in on both devices at once, making it easier to take your favourites with you on the go.

And another huge feature we wish more phones would employ: offline reading. Should you want to wander underground but still want to check out the best of the web, an option in the menu will allow you to save articles to read later.

Other features, like the ability to see your top most visited pages being more prevalent, are also included - we're looking forward to giving the browser a full shakedown in our full Ice Cream Sandwich review.

Camera

The camera is arguably the biggest upgrade on Ice Cream Sandwich, coming with a number of features to help the handsets using it take on the might of the iPhone 4S.

Ice cream sandwich review

Although obviously hardware dependent, the promise of super quick snaps seems to be true, with Apple-like speeds of photography possible with the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.

Other boosts include a very fast facial recognition system, making it easy to focus on friends, plus a tap to focus meter meaning you can choose where the phone's sensor should be looking.

Sharing the photos is easier too, as through the preview pane users can simply tap to share the pic through any relevant app installed on the phone - with an open API for devs to plug into easily, according to Google.

Panorama mode has been widely discussed already, but it's very easy to use - simply enable the option in the settings and swirl the phone around. We've used this on a number of devices before, but with instructions like 'moving too fast' it makes it much easier to capture a wide view.

Ice cream sandwich review

Photo editing is on board too, but we didn't really get a chance to spend a long time with this feature... although the idea of tarting up faces on camera using 'Face Glow' is something we've laughed at before on LG handsets... let's see if Google can do any better.

Oh, and one more fancy feature: when recording video, you can tap on the shot to take a picture in full resolution, which won't make a noise but instantly saves to your gallery. Nifty.

Ice Cream Sandwich: Early verdict

Google's Ice Cream Sandwich is a real step forward for an operating system, both on tablets and phones.

We're really impressed with the way the search giant has thought about making the interaction that much slicker - one of the criticisms of previous iterations of the OS has been the complexity of use, but now more things are where you actually expect them to be.

We're impressed with the boosts to areas like the camera and people tab, things users regularly interact with - although we wonder how many people will actually bother to link up all their friends to get the maximum use from the app.

Other options, like Android Beam (using NFC to share bookmarks or pictures) are a very clever idea, and the multi-tasking options will impress those looking to keep a handle on their data and battery usage.

We'll be bringing your our full Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich review in the near future, so stay tuned to TechRadar for your in-depth look at the latest OS.

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First Nokia Windows Phone devices revealed

The first two Nokia Windows Phone devices will be called the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710 according to leaked marketing materials ahead of Nokia World.

The long-awaited handsets are likely to be unveiled by CEO Stephen Elop at the Nokia World expo in London on Wednesday, and are set to go on sale next month.

The Lumia 800, which has long been spoken of as the Nokia SeaRay, will look similar to the N9 and boast 512MB of memory, weight 142g and by 12mm thick, according to the posters.

The Lumia 710, codenamed Sabre, is set to arrive packing a curved candybar form factor and will have 8GB of internal storage.

A year in the making

Wednesday's reveal will bring to a close a year-long wait for Nokia's Windows Phone offering.

For both the Finnish manufacturer and Microsoft the partnership could not be more important.

Nokia sees Windows Phone as a path back to prominence after sticking with the ill-fated Symbian OS for way too long, while Microsoft reckons Nokia's hardware expertise can held Windows Phone rival iOS and Android.

It's possible that there will be more than these two handsets revealed during tomorrow's keynote. Stay tuned to TechRadar for all of the details as news breaks from Nokia World.

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Nokia Lumia 800 officially announced

UPDATE: Check out our Hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review

The Nokia Lumia 800 has been officially announced by Stephen Elop at Nokia World 2011.

Featuring a near-identical chassis to the Nokia N9, which sees no UK release, the new phone is packing a large ClearBlack 3.7 inch AMOLED display, 512MB of RAM and weighs 142g.

Running Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, this is going to be the flagship phone for Nokia as it transitions from Symbian to Microsoft's new OS.

Processor wise, it's sporting a single-core 1.4GHz processor, and users will be handed 25GB of free SkyDrive storage.

We're seeing Carl Zeiss optics on board, with an optimised flash and an f2.2 aperture for better low light photography.

Easy Rider

Nokia Drive is also on board, which offers free turn by turn navogation with full voice guidance, which also allows you to download install maps before you even set off, should you be worried about data charges.

Also included is Nokia Music, a new service that uses a feature called Mix Radio to offer up mixes the phone thinks you'll like with no login or password needed. In a nod to Spotify, you'll also be able download tracks and listen to them offline too.

Elop cocked a major snook to the likes of Samsung and HTC by dubbing the new Lumia 800 the 'first real Windows Phone, complementing and amplifying the design of Windows Phone."

We've yet to hear anything on the likes of a Nokia Lumia 800 UK release date or UK price, so we'll update as soon as we hear more.

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Microsoft: voice control on Mango is a 'crowd pleaser'

Microsoft is pushing the voice control functionality on its Windows Phone 7 handsets – with Apple's Siri personal assistant still capturing the headlines.

Microsoft has never been backward in pushing its own feature sets in comparison with its rivals, and the Windows Phone blog post by Microsoft's Andy Myers suggests that voice control is a favoured offering.

Of course, the more cynical may suggest that this is an interesting thing to push at a time when Apple's voice control feature on its newly announced iPhone 4S is winning plaudits and coining spoof videos across the media.

Crowd pleaser

"Whenever I get a chance to show off Windows Phone to a friend, I usually start with speech recognition," blogs Myers

"It's always a crowd pleaser, and it's only gotten better in Windows Phone 7.5, which lets you compose, listen to, and send text messages with your voice."

Microsoft has produced a video showing how voice control works in updating your Facebook, which has been posted to YouTube.

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Nokia Lumia 710 launched: budget Windows Phone

The Nokia Lumia 710 has been officially announced at Nokia World 2011 in London.

The new phone features a 3.7-inch ClearBlack display, and a split down the chassis to replace the back of the phone to 'personalise it and make it your own'.

Like its bigger brother, the Nokia Lumia 800, it's running Windows Phone 7.5 to offer a 'new Nokia experience' according to Stephen Elop.

The phone features a single core 1.4GHz processor, plus hardware acceleration and a dedicated graphics processor for improved gaming and internet use.

App attack

It runs the same Nokia Music and Nokia Drive, to offer easier access to music and turn by turn navigation, plus an ESPN application specific to Nokia Windows Phones to make it easier to follow your favourite sports team.

The phone is designed for a lower price point, making it more accessible to a new range of consumers according to Nokia.

We're still waiting to hear more about the Nokia Lumia 710 UK release date or UK price, so stay tuned to find out more from TechRadar.

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Major players to stock Nokia Lumia 800

UPDATE: Check out our Hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review

Major players in the UK phone industry have declared that they will be stocking the Nokia Lumia 800 – the eagerly anticipated handset that sports Windows Phone 7.5.

The smartphone will be available in black on Vodafone from launch, with a cyan version to come 'shortly afterwards'. Three will also 'range' black and Cyan.

The Nokia Lumia 800 UK release date has been set as 16 November, with a UK price without contract at £449.95

Specs

The Nokia Lumia 800 brings a 3.7-inch AMOLED screen, a 1.4 GHz processor and Carl Zeiss optics for the camera.

But it will be the Windows Phone Mango 7.5 integration that marks this out in the Nokia world, with the two companies desperate to see a high-profile partnership bear fruit.

Nokia's decision to go with Windows Phone 7 is hugely significant as the Finnish company has significant good will from a user base that has grown familiar with their handsets in the past.

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Hands on: Nokia Lumia 710 review

Nokia Lumia 710 Hardware

Update: read our Hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review.

The baby of the Nokia Windows Phone range, the Nokia Lumia 710 promises a cheap and cheerful handset with a top end experience.

It's got looks that seem aimed at a younger demographic – so can Nokia tear the teenage masses away from BBM and iPhone lust and over to the Windows Phone way?

The handset certainly doesn't feel bad in the hand – it's made from a smooth plastic which looks good in the white matt finish, although it's also available in a shinier black finish that seemed to attract fingerprints and smears like nobody's business.

It's not overly heavy and although it won't win any accolades for being the slimmest handset on the market, the Nokia Lumia 710 is easily small enough to sit anonymously in a pocket or small bag.

If you spend a lot of time trying out the highest end smartphones, the Nokia 710's screen is going to seem a little pokey. But at 3.7-inches, it's more than adequate for most users and not bad quality, although on occasion images did seem a little jaggedy.

The screen is a ClearBlack display, which means it should be able to handle direct sunlight with no glare and you'll still be able to see what's going on. Sadly, there are no skylights in Nokia World so we can't vouch for that just yet.

We're not massive fans of the physical buttons under the touchscreen; they poke out and feel a little uncomfortable under the finger, and the long slim almost business-like buttons don't really sit brilliantly with the less formal design of the handset overall.

Nokia lumia 700 review

Also notable on the front of the handset is the proximity sensor, not to be mistaken for a front-mounted camera; none of the Nokia Windows Phones have these at present.

Other buttons to play with are the volume slider on the side of the handset, just along from the camera shutter button.

Nokia lumia 700 review

And on top, there's the standby button next to a 3.5mm headphone jack.

Nokia lumia 700 review

The back plays host to the Nokia 710's 5MP camera with single LED flash, as well as a speaker grille.

Nokia lumia 700 review

Playing to Nokia's long tradition of interchangeable phone fascias, the Nokia Lumia 710 offers five interchangeable multi-coloured back panels; we like the turquoisey blue with the white body but hey, you can make your own design decisions here.

Nokia lumia 700 review

Hands on Nokia Lumia 710 review: interface

The Nokia Lumia 710 runs Windows Phone 7.5 – no surprise there – so you can look forward to that tiled home page, the extensive people hub and threaded messaging, among other Microsoft-made delights. You might want to check out our Windows Phone 7.5 Mango review for our full thoughts on the software.

The handset, although erring on the mid-range side of things, handled the software nicely; swiping between screens and running multiple apps didn't seem to give the handset any trouble – no doubt thanks to the lovely 1.4GHz single-core Qualcomm processor keeping things ticking along nicely.

Nokia lumia 700 review

It's no surprise, given the relatively low price point, but still a shame that the Nokia 710 only comes with 8GB of storage – space that will be quickly taken up with bits and pieces, unless you make full use of the streamed content available.

Things like photos can be uploaded to Facebook and other social networks at the click of a menu-based option, so there's no need necessarily to store them on your handset, and you can make use of Nokia Music to save room on songs – more on that below.

As premium partner, Nokia has made a couple of sneaky additions to the Windows Phone 7.5 apps, however. As well as the now-standard line up, you'll get Nokia Drive and Nokia Music on the Finnish Windows Phones.

Nokia lumia 700 review

Nokia Drive is a fully featured sat nav featuring turn-by-turn navigation, as Nokia reps were very keen to point out. Even in the depths of the Nokia World convention centre, it picked up our location pretty quickly and the 3D maps loaded in an adequately short time.

It's not exactly a beautiful interface, unfortunately; a lot of greys and formal Nokia-style text in play here, but it's functional and quick which, when you're lost in the vales of East London, is what counts.

Nokia Music, meanwhile, offers a little more than Microsoft's Zune Player. You can stream music on the handset via a radio mix or built playlists. You can also create offline playlists for when you're flying or going underground and signal will be limited.

Nokia lumia 700 review

It looks the part, taking its design cues from Microsoft's own apps; unfortunately with limited hands on time in a noisy trade show, we weren't able to test out the quality of the service. More on that in our full Nokia Lumia 710 review, so stay tuned.

Nokia lumia 700 review

The camera is one of the few major differences between the Nokia Lumia 710 and its better specced sibling, the Nokia Lumia 800. With a 5MP sensor and a lesser flash, it's not going to win Nokia any awards, but we found it quick and simple to use, with the touch-to-focus function working well and the physical shutter button a welcome addition.

Nokia lumia 700 review

The resulting pictures were fairly bright even without the flash, and our brief video recording session didn't give us anything to complain about. Nokia's spec sheet claims 720p HD video – we're sure it's not lying.

As for internet, over a Wi-Fi network with very heavy traffic, it still managed to load TechRadar in an acceptable time; we may have been tutting after a three or four second delay, but we can't tell how much the connection is to blame for that.

Nokia lumia 700 review

You can't really read much on with the website in full-screen mode, but pinch to zoom rendered quickly and smoothly, so that's no great shakes.

Nokia lumia 700 review

Early verdict

It's always hard to form an opinion on Windows Phone hardware, because Microsoft's specifications mean they're all incredibly similar.

But this isn't a bad mid-range attempt from Nokia, the company has clearly called on its strengths in that arena and come out with a handset we wouldn't be ashamed to call our own.

But whether it can handle more intense multi-tasking and if the battery life and connections can live up to the hefty streaming Nokia seems to be pushing its users towards, we don't know.

We'll be putting the Nokia Lumia 710 through its paces in our full review soon, but until then you can colour us cautiously optimistic.

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In Pictures: Nokia Lumia 800

UPDATE: Check out our Hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review

We've gone hands on with the Nokia Lumia 800, and here's our quick take on the handset ahead of our in-depth hands on review.

The phone borrows most of its design language from the Nokia N9, which was never launched on our shores, but also brings the likes of Nokia Music and Nokia Drive, to offer up services not available on other Windows Phone handsets.

Check out our Nokia Lumia 800 pictures, and stay tuned for our in-depth hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review.

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Hands on: Nokia Lumia 800 review

Hands on: Nokia Lumia 700 review - hardware

Nokia has unveiled its badly-kept secret at Nokia World 2011, with the Lumia 800 finally getting an official outing.

We were big fans of the Nokia N9 when it was shown off a few months ago, but after it was sadly canned for UK shores we thought we'd never see the design again.

But it turns out the N9 was shunted to make way for the Lumia 800, which is basically the same handset, but rebooted to run Windows Phone 7.5.

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First impressions of the phone are mixed. If you're used to handling the current crop of super slim handsets doing the rounds in today's phone shops, you can't help but feel the Lumia 800 is a little on the chunky side.

Nokia lumia 800 review

However, that's not to say it isn't an attractive device, with its large 3.7-inch OLED screen pushed to the sides of the chassis, and a cool curved polycarbonate shell gives the phone a very premium feel indeed.

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Apple wins slide to unlock patent

Apple has been awarded a patent covering the slide-to-unlock functionality on the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.

The familiar touchscreen mechanism was subject to a trademark application back in 2009 and Apple has finally been given the all clear to add this to its ever-growing army of patents.

The patent filing states: "A device with a touch-sensitive display may be unlocked via gestures performed on the touch-sensitive display.

"The device is unlocked if contact with the display corresponds to a predefined gesture for unlocking the device."

Cue the lawsuits

Slide to unlock is also a popular feature on Android and Windows Phone handsets and the next logical step will surely be in the courtrooms as Apple looks to lock-down its intellectual property.

Tellingly, the patent application also has covered all "predefined gestures" like the custom pattern input widely used on Android handsets.

It also begs the question, if software developers are unable to use slide to unlock or pattern input, then how else are we going to lock and unlock our phones? A counter action claim is likely.

The successful patent application follows this week's revelations of late Apple CEO Steve Jobs' determination to "destroy Android".

Jobs told biographer Walker Isaacson: "I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong.

"I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this."

Via: BBC

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Monday 24 October 2011

In Depth: Upgrading to a Wireless N router: what to look for

Wireless routers are everywhere these days. Sign up with most ISPs and they'll even give you one for free – why would you need anything more? Well, let's see.

We'll randomly pick one of the UK's biggest ISPs: Be. It provides an excellent service, but the free router is very basic. It's an 802.11g model, with no support for the newly ratified N standard, so performance will be hobbled. Anything with an 802.11n adaptor could be running at less than half its possible speed, and you'll probably have worse range, too.

We're not having a dig at Be, though – this is more or less the standard across all the free routers out there. ISP-provided models often do things like not allowing you access to important settings, or using a 10/100Mbps Ethernet port even if your computer is using a Gigabit Ethernet adaptor.

Performance is only part of the problem, though. Another is that the routers are using old technology, a particular issue when it comes to security. You should be encrypting your transmissions using the latest WPA2 standard, for instance, but even though it's been around for five years, most free routers support only the easily cracked WEP and outdated WPA standards.

Firewalls, intrusion detection and other security features are likely to be similarly outdated, and sticking with a freebie router means you'll probably miss out on a whole range of possible benefits, including web traffic prioritising, printer sharing, network storage, VPN support and port forwarding.

Choose to upgrade

Relying on free hardware carries a real cost, then, and if you'd like to have a faster, more secure and better-managed network, you'll almost certainly be better off with an upgrade. But be careful – there are plenty of issues to consider first.

Router manufacturers have been working hard to improve the range of their products in recent years, and if you have a large house or like to browse the web in the garden, this sounds like a good move. But there's a downside. If you live in an urban environment, many of your neighbours will also have wireless networks – and the greater their range, the more likely they are to cause interference, slowing you down.

We carried out a few scans in the suburbs of Leicester and found that most locations had at least 10 Wi-Fi networks within range, while several had 20 or more. The highest we recorded was 33. That much competition for bandwidth will guarantee performance problems.

Inssider

You could use Inssider or a similar free tool to scan your neighbourhood for other networks, and change your network's channel to avoid some of them. But there are only three non-overlapping channels available for 2.4GHz Wi-Fi (1, 6 and 11), so if you have more than four networks within range there may still be clashes.

And that's before you consider interference from other devices that operate at the same frequency: microwave ovens, cordless phones, baby monitors and so on. A better idea may be to abandon the 2.4GHz band altogether and buy a dual-band 802.11n wireless device that operates at 5GHz as well.

Not only does this offer you more bandwidth, with eight non-overlapping channels rather than three, but there's also much less competition for it – so you should see immediate benefits in crowded urban environments.

The downside of the 5GHz band is that its higher frequency doesn't have the same range as 2.4GHz 802.11n devices. It normally has far better coverage than standard 802.11g hardware, though, so if you're moving up from a free 802.11g router then this shouldn't be an issue. And even if it doesn't work out for some reason, then because this is dual-band hardware, you'll be able to switch back to 2.4GHz any time you want.

There's plenty to like about this new technology, but be careful – not every dual-band router is the same. The Linksys WRT320N, for instance, is marketed as dual-band, and it really can work at 2.4GHz or 5GHz. But the important word here is 'or': the router has only one radio that switches from 2.4GHz to 5GHz as required.If you have a mix of technologies – both wireless G and N kit – and they're working simultaneously then this will inevitably slow you down.

A better option is to look for a router that's dual-radio as well as dual-band. The Linksys WRT610N is a perfect example. It includes 2.4GHz and 5GHz radios that can transmit and receive at full speed simultaneously, so there's no time wasted switching bands, and your adaptors always have the router's full attention.

Pick your hardware

The number of radios is one of the most important hardware features of a router, but there are others worth considering. Take a look at the antennas, for instance. If these are inside the case then the router will be a smaller, more compact package.

However, external antennas that use a standard connection (look for a common connector type, such as RP SMA) will be upgradeable, and that could help you squeeze more performance and range out of your setup. Browse a specialist store such as Wi-Fi Antennas to see what's available.

Every router comes with Ethernet ports that you can use to establish a wired connection to your network. In most cases, these are regular 10/100Mbps types, but many routers now include Gigabit Ethernet ports. If your PC supports Gigabit Ethernet then this is a definite plus, especially with high-performance routers (the best 5GHz models can reach over 100Mbps), where a 10/100Mbps connection would quickly become a bottleneck.

Connection to the outside world will be via a conventional phone cable if the router includes a broadband modem. In that case, there's not too much to say: as long as it supports ADSL2+ (all current routers do) then it'll get you online with the minimum of hassle.

If you have an ADSL2+ or cable modem already, though, or maybe want to connect both, then pay attention to extra WAN options. Billion routers are particularly interesting here. The BiPAC 7800N, for instance, features an ADSL2+ port and a separate WAN port to add another cable modem, fibre connection, extra ADSL2+ line or whatever you need.

The new BiPAC 7800GZ comes with a builtin SIM slot: just add the appropriate card and it'll directly support 3G connections too (which is much easier than trying to cope with USB modems and their many compatibility issues).

An increasing number of routers now include USB ports along with the usual LAN and WAN ports. Typically, these will be used as an easy way of adding network storage: plug in a USB drive and it'll be freely available to everyone on the network. Well, sort of.

One complication is how the router presents the drive to the rest of your network. What you ideally want is support for Windows Server Message Block (SMB), which provides a standard way for apps to locate, read and write files to a network resource. As long as this is included then you should be able to browse the network in Explorer, 'see' the router's USB drive, map this to a network drive on your PC and use it as normal.

Some routers offer rather less convenient methods. For example, the Asus RT-N13U forces you to access the drive through a built-in FTP or HTTP server, which probably won't be ideal for most people.

Don't assume that seeing 'FTP' in the spec means this will always be the case, though. The Linksys WRT610N, for instance, supports external hard drives as well as USB keys, and these can be used as FTP servers, media servers, SMB-based external drivers, or all three at the same time. Handy!

Not to be outdone, other manufacturers have added even more USB functionality. Some DrayTek routers, such as the Vigor 2710, provide a USB port that allows printers to be connected and shared across the network.

And D-Link's SharePort technology lets you plug just about any USB device into a router such as the DIR-685, then access it on any PC on your network as though it was connected locally. This requires extra software to be installed on your network PCs, and only one can use the device at a time, but it could still be useful.

Before you opt for a solution such as this, it's worth thinking about how it might affect overall performance. If it's a large network, and the router is already likely to be fully occupied most of the time, then do you really want it handling additional file transfers and print jobs?

USB port

We've also noticed that USB devices connected to a router are noticeably slower than when plugged into a PC – that's no real surprise when you think of all the work the router's processor is doing. So, while USB storage is useful for basic things (as long as you make sure it supports SMB), if you have heavy-duty requirements then a dedicated network storage device will still offer the best speeds.

Once you've decided on the basic hardware you need, it's time to consider the software-based features – and none are as important as security.

So it's fortunate that just about every 802.11n router comes with a good set of security features: firewall, intrusion detection, the latest WPA2 encryption, and WPA and WEP if you need them for older devices. Avoid the latter two if you can: WEP is easily cracked and of no real value, and using WPA may drastically cut performance.

While every router comes with some form of firewall, the implementation varies greatly. Some are very simple, but DrayTek routers in particular are as configurable as their software-based cousins.

The DrayTek Vigor 2910G, for instance, has built-in support for around 30 instant-messaging apps, eight P2P protocols and 16 web-streaming applications.It's easy to add more, and you're able to create custom filter sets to control what traffic is allowed and what will be blocked.

The most interesting security features are often the more unusual extras. One of our favourites is the ability to set up a guest zone (also known as 'guest access'). This allows the router to create a separate wireless network that provides access to your internet connection, but keeps users isolated from more valuable resources, such as your PCs. That's perfect if, say, you don't mind your kids' friends using the network to get their iPods online, but you'd rather they didn't poke around any further.

If you need to connect to the company network from home, Virtual Private Network (VPN) support will probably be useful. At a minimum, your router should offer VPN passthrough for IPSec, PPTP and L2TP: this means it'll recognise VPN traffic and allow it to pass through your firewall and other protective layers.

Some routers only support passthrough for a single session – a hassle if you need more than one connection. Ideally, you'll want support for multiple concurrent sessions, and this doesn't have to be expensive: D-Link's DIR-655, for instance, includes it for around £65.

If that's not sufficient, look for a router with VPN endpoint capability, which means it's able to initiate a VPN connection itself. A few routers, such as the Buffalo Nfiniti Wireless-N, come with a complete integrated VPN server. If the router supports remote access, and that's a feature you'll use, consider how it's protected.

Some D-Link routers now use a CAPTCHA-style 'type the letters you see in the box' graphic, making it much more difficult for hackers to use brute-force attacks on your system. Others may let you limit access to particular IP addresses, or customise the port number used.

A feature to investigate carefully is any talk of 'content filtering' or 'parental controls'. Sometimes these turn out to require a subscription. Occasionally they're competent free packages, such as NetGear's Live Parental Controls, but in many cases, they're near-useless keyword-based efforts where you manually enter a few suspect words and the router blocks any webpage that uses them.

If you need decent parental controls then download the router manual before you buy it, and take the time to find out what's included.

Controlling the priority of certain types of network traffic is an excellent, often overlooked feature of modern routers. You don't want your video stream to have major glitches because someone else in the household is downloading the biggest collection of MP3 files in P2P history, right? Get Quality of Service (QoS) configured correctly and the network may be able to take care of this on its own.

A lot of 802.11-certified equipment comes with some basic QoS functionality in the form of Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM). If your router and network adaptors are WMM-certified, they have the feature turned on and your app supports WMM, you're in business.

The program adds QoS details to its packets that say, 'I'm important, me first', so the router prioritises them ahead of other traffic. There are problems with this scheme, though. Not enough apps support WMM to make it really useful, and while its automatic nature cuts network management hassles, it doesn't give you enough control.

For that you need QoS features in the router, so it's worth checking to see what's on offer. Billion routers such as the BiPAC 7800N support DSCP (Differentiated Services Code Point) marking, a scheme where sources tag their network packets with information about what they are. If your apps do this then you'll be able to do things like assign a guaranteed level of traffic to media streaming, and a maximum level to P2P apps.

You can apply these rules to particular ports, internal or external IP address ranges or even a set timeframe, maybe restricting P2P to 10 per cent traffic during the day but allowing it 90 per cent between 1am and 8am.

Linksys wrt610n

Linksys routers are generally very configurable, too. For instance, the WRT610N can prioritise traffic by MAC address as well as application or Ethernet port, so you can ensure that a particular network device always gets the same level of priority, whatever it's doing.

Alternatively, if tweaking all that sounds too much like hard work, you might prefer D-Link's solution. Many of its routers include a simple technology ('Wireless Intelligent Stream Handling') that will look for media streams and then automatically prioritise them.

Which QoS solution is best for you will depend on your setup and circumstances, but do take the time to explore what a particular router offers before you buy. Good QoS settings can make a great deal of difference to a busy network.

Speeding into action

Upgrading to an 802.11n router isn't a magic bullet. It's unlikely to have a huge impact on your wireless range (although it should improve performance, even at the outer edges of your network). It won't make 802.11g devices any faster, either. Also note that to get the most out of it you'll need 802.11n clients elsewhere (however, with prices starting at under £10, this needn't be expensive).

Still, once you're properly set up, there are all kinds of benefits on offer. Significantly better speeds; improved WPA2 security; the ability to avoid interference if you've got a 5GHz model; built-in automatic prioritisation of the most important web traffic; bonus extras, such as easy network storage or printer sharing; and a host of other features that come automatically with up-to-date firmware.

So, which router should you choose? Our preference would be a dual-band, dual-radio model, especially if you live in close proximity to other networks: escaping their interference will save you hassle.

The dual-band 802.11n router market is fairly immature, though, and not every manufacturer has yet got the new tech performing at its best.

If interference isn't a problem with your G network, don't feel you have to do dual-band right now. A single-band N router will deliver plenty of benefits at a low price, and you can take advantage of the greater range of dual-band products that will be on offer when you do decide to upgrade.

















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