Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Surface Pro 2 review: This is the Windows tablet you're looking for






You have to appreciate Microsoft’s tenacity. After launching the original Surface Pro tablet to mixed reviews, the company opted not to rebuild from scratch but to refine its vision for a thick and heavy, but powerful, tablet. The result is Surface Pro 2.


Much like Windows 8.1, Surface Pro 2 is less conflicted on both the laptop and tablet sides of the hybrid equation, arriving with a more flexible kickstand, improved Touch and Type Covers, longer battery life, and better thermal design. It’s still less than the best of both worlds, but the balance between them no longer feels so uneasy.


The Surface Pro 2 is also a better lesson in compromise than the just-released Surface 2. Both hybrid devices sport incremental rather than revolutionary upgrades, but the Pro version is simply more useful when you’re working with your hardware in the field.


Image: Michael HomnickThe Surface Pro 2 is a tablet that leans toward a laptop, and does a better job of it than most hybrids currently available.

As with the original Pro hybrid, the Surface Pro 2 resembles a plain old tablet until you unfurl the integrated kickstand and attach a keyboard cover to the base, transforming the device into a small, funky-looking laptop. It retains the satisfying clicking sounds as you close the kickstand or snap in a keyboard cover, and the trapezoidal design still looks vaguely like a piece of Imperial architecture straight out of Star Wars.


Many other details are unchanged. The tablet alone weighs 2 pounds and measures 0.53 inch thick, and boasts a 10.6-inch, 1920-by-1080 display. You’ll find a full-size USB port and a headphone jack on one side, and a MicroSD card slot and a Mini DisplayPort output on the other.


The included active digitizer stylus has the same mechanical-pencil vibe as the original, and allows for pressure-sensitive drawing while resting your hand on the screen. Pricing is similar to that of the original, too, at $900 with 64GB of storage and 4GB of RAM, and $1000 for 128GB of storage. Now, however, you can bump up to 256GB for $1300 or 512GB for $1800, both versions with 8GB of RAM.


Image: Michael HomnickThe angled, trapezoidal profile of the Surface Pro 2 helps it stand out among tablet competitors.

Why so bulky and pricey? Because Microsoft wanted to make a tablet that handles robust productivity tasks, such as video editing and image processing. The Surface Pro 2’s Intel Core i5-4200U processor is what you’d typically find in an Ultrabook, and it doesn’t flinch under heavy loads. As a side benefit—or perhaps a main draw—the integrated graphics on the 256GB, 8GB RAM model do an admirable job on fairly recent PC games, at least at 720p resolution. Where’s the Surface-ready Bluetooth Xbox controller, Microsoft?


PCWorld benchmarked a 64GB version of the Surface Pro 2 with 4GB of RAM. Compared with the original Surface Pro (128GB), the Surface Pro 2 (64GB) was about 9 percent faster in WorldBench 8.1. The Surface Pro 2 was also about 16 percent faster than the new Sony Tap 11, which carries a slower Haswell-class processor. The Asus Transformer Book T100T, which uses an Atom processor, was barely half as fast as the Surface Pro 2.


The Surface Pro 2 outpaces the original Surface Pro, as well as other recent Windows tablets.

Microsoft would prefer that you think of the Surface Pro 2 as a laptop first, and that you not compare the product directly to Apple’s much thinner and lighter iPad. But it’s hard to ignore the iPad given the Surface Pro 2’s ability to act as a tablet.


Let’s state the obvious: The Pro 2 can be tiresome to hold, its selection of touch-optimized apps is inferior to that of the iPad, and its battery doesn’t last nearly as long. But those drawbacks aren’t as pronounced as they were when the original Surface Pro launched in February.


Since that launch, Microsoft has also secured some key apps for its tablet-friendly modern interface, including Facebook and Twitter, with Flipboard on the way. Microsoft has also made improvements to its own built-in apps in Windows 8.1, and the modern version of Internet Explorer 11 has helpful new features, such as the ability to open unlimited tabs across multiple windows. (Check out our review of Windows 8.1 for more details on what’s new.)


As for the hardware, the Surface Pro 2 benefits in the battery department from Intel’s fourth-generation “Haswell” processor, though not quite as much as we’d hoped. We’re still doing formal testing, but my experiences juggling lots of browser tabs and a few modern apps on the Surface Pro 2 yielded about 6 hours of battery life—basically the same as PCWorld Labs' benchmarked result of six hours and nine minutes. That’s an hour or two better than the original Surface Pro, and more than adequate for an afternoon working at Starbucks or an evening on the couch. But an entire day of use would require a top-up in the middle.


Improvements to the Surface Pro 2’s thermal design are more substantial. The tablet runs cool and quiet during lighter use, and it doesn’t spin up its internal fans as often as the original did. Unless you’re putting a heavy load on the Surface Pro 2, it won’t get uncomfortably warm or noisy.


Image: Michael HomnickThanks to a new 40-degree incline, the Surface sits more easily on a table or on your lap.

The other big change is in the Surface Pro 2 kickstand, which can position the machine at a 40-degree angle in addition to the original 22-degree angle. That doesn’t sound like much, but the flatter viewing angle feels more natural when the tablet is resting in your lap, or next to you on a couch. Just having the kickstand helps mitigate the tablet’s bulkiness, because you don’t have to hold up the tablet with your hands.


Many of the tablet-enhancing improvements in the Surface Pro 2 carry over to laptop mode. The added kickstand angle makes the Surface Pro 2 less prone to toppling, even when you have it balanced on one leg with the keyboard attached, and the screen never feels as if it’s aimed in an awkward direction. Battery life is now comparable to that of many other small Windows laptops (but frustratingly it’s still nowhere close to Apple’s MacBook Air).


Windows 8.1 also brings several improvements for desktop users, including better scaling, so things don’t look so teeny on the Surface’s 10.6-inch display. The small screen feels like less of a constraint than before, though text still becomes tough to read if you’re running two websites side by side. You may also find that a lot of desktop software isn’t optimized for the Surface’s higher pixel density, making things look fuzzy. Here’s hoping that software makers will catch up as more high-DPI laptops come to market.


Image: Michael HomnickThe new Type Cover is backlit, but the touchpad is trickier to use than it should be.

Even after all those improvements, the Surface Pro 2 struggles to provide the same experience as a full-blown laptop, in large part because of the optional Touch Cover and Type Cover accessories.


The physical footprint of the Surface Pro 2 limits how large these covers can be. Although the keyboards don’t feel cramped, the small touchpad is tricky to master. Moving the pointer from one corner of the screen to the other usually takes more than one swipe unless you crank up the mouse sensitivity, thereby sacrificing accuracy. (You handle touchpad sensitivity through the Mouse section of Control Panel, separate from the Mouse and Trackpad Settings in the modern interface.)


The touchpad would be more useful if not for some baffling decisions on Microsoft’s part. When you drag down from the top of the pad, for instance, two-finger scrolling doesn’t register right away, so you get a dead zone that occupies roughly the top fifth of the pad. Clicking and dragging is even more of a nightmare: To begin a selection, you can’t just double-tap anywhere on the touchpad. Instead, you must hold one finger down on the tiny sliver that represents the left mouse button, a process that often takes two or three tries to get right, and more frequently messes up midselection. Expecting users to attach a mouse for reliable text selection is unacceptable, and a software fix needs to be high on Microsoft’s priority list.


Image: Michael HomnickGood news for assertive typers: The new Type Cover’s keys are firmer and less springy, though the travel is also shorter.

Thanks to firmer, less springy keys, typing on the Type Cover 2 feels solid, and the keyboard seems sturdier than its predecessor for in-lap use. Typing still takes getting used to, as the keys don’t travel as much and they have no space in between them, but the touchpad is the bigger hindrance.


A few other nitpicks come to mind: First, when you’re using the Type Cover with scrolling inverted, on occasion the Surface can scroll in the wrong direction, forcing you to detach and reattach the cover. Second, the built-in stylus still connects magnetically to the same slot as the charger, so you can’t attach both at the same time. And finally, Microsoft exacerbates the Surface Pro 2’s battery woes by forcing hibernation when your machine has only a little life (8 percent) left in the tank. You can dig into the Windows settings to give yourself more time, but Microsoft shouldn’t be leaving a half hour of battery life on the table by default.


Bottom line


Clearly, Microsoft has lots of refinement left to do. But despite all the Surface Pro 2’s flaws, there’s something alluring about it. No other touchscreen laptop or convertible device plays the hybrid game as well as the Surface Pro 2 does. The kickstand is a brilliant flourish that compensates for the tablet’s weight while solving for the top-heaviness you find in other detachable hybrids. The Touch and Type Covers are so thin and light that you can keep them attached, and the total package still feels light enough to rival the slickest laptops.


Image: Michael HomnickThe second-generation Surface Pro is a refinement rather than a total rebuild.

The Surface Pro 2 is a different kind of device, aimed at people who need to edit videos, create digital art, run a dozen applications at once, or kick back with some full-blown PC games. The fact that you can do those things on a tablet that still feels comfortable for Facebook, Netflix, or solitaire is no small achievement, and a sign that the best of both worlds might be attainable if Microsoft keeps chipping away.








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Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2058685/surface-pro-2-review-this-is-the-windows-tablet-youre-looking-for.html#tk.rss_reviews
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Free iWork upgrade angers Mac users


Apple's iWork free upgrade has angered longtime Mac power users, who have flooded the company's support forum with complaints about lost features.


One customer called Apple "serial software killers," while others collaborated to list the features Apple dropped in Pages, the word processing application and the most popular of the three that make up the iWork suite. Among the Pages tools that went AWOL in last week's upgrade: endnotes, the outline view, selection of noncontiguous text, facing pages, saving files in RTF format, significant limitations in automating workflow using AppleScript, and more than 100 ready-to-use templates.


[ Also on InfoWorld: The must-have iPad office apps, round 7. | Get the latest insight on the tech news that matters from InfoWorld's Tech Watch blog. ]


"Even the things you can still do are harder to get to now," argued Alistair Cullum. "Having a minimal interface makes sense in iOS, where space is limited, but in OS X I don't see the need to strip away toolbars, sidebars, etc."


Two pertinent threads on Apple's support forum -- here and here -- combined for nearly 900 comments and had been viewed almost 50,000 times, both large numbers by any measure and an illustration of how many have been affected by the update. Few of the customers commenting in the two threads had anything nice to say about Apple's move.


Last week, Apple released new versions of iWork for OS X, and announced that the three applications would be handed free of charge to buyers of new Macs. Users who had previously purchased Pages, Numbers, or Keynote would also receive free upgrades.


Apple last shipped a major upgrade for OS X's iWork in 2009.


The move followed a similar announcement Sept. 10, when Apple said it was giving the iOS iWork apps to customers who bought a new iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch.


Bloggers and pundits also weighed in on the move, speculating that Apple's prime motivator was to make the iOS and OS X editions file- and feature-compatible, a decision that required it to scale back the desktop applications' feature sets.


"The fact that iWork on the Mac has lost functionality isn't because Apple is blind to power users. It's because they're willing to make a short-term sacrifice in functionality so that they can create a foundation that is equal across the Mac, iOS, and Web versions," said Nigel Warren, a user experience designer.


But that explanation didn't sit well with users.


"One of the problems with never doing consumer research is that Apple has lost touch with how serious users actually use the product," said Luke Christian. "Quite simply, I would never, ever, want to write a Pages document or a Keynote presentation on my phone.... What might seem supercool to Apple dudes on campus in California is not very practical in the real world of making a living in London."


Source: http://images.infoworld.com/d/applications/free-iwork-upgrade-angers-mac-users-229644?source=rss_applications
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Sprint announces LTE service in 45 more cities!

Sprint announces LTE service activation in 45 more cities

Sprint has flipped the switch on LTE service in 45 more markets today. That bring's the carrier's total LTE coverage to 230 markets. LTE coverage from Sprint is now available in Lexington, Kentucky, New Haven, Connecticut, and Spokane, Washington. Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island, N.Y. now have LTE coverage as well. Sprint also says that their 3G service has been improved with better signal strength and call quality.



Not sure if you're in an LTE area? Check out Sprint's Coverage Map to find out.

Source: Sprint







    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/wr6BEt0rm30/story01.htm
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Loretta Lynn delays 2 Iowa shows, cites exhaustion

(AP) — Country music legend Loretta Lynn is postponing two shows in Iowa because of exhaustion.

A statement from Lynn's representative on the singer's website says the 81-year-old started feeling poorly midway through her three-week tour and is taking some time off to be treated.

The statement says Lynn, who just finished a Canadian tour, is rescheduling both Iowa shows.

Last year, the singer postponed two shows to undergo more physical therapy following total knee replacement surgery.

Lynn was born in the coalfields of eastern Kentucky and chronicled her life in an autobiography and song, both titled "Coal Miner's Daughter."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-29-Loretta%20Lynn-Exhaustion/id-d7148e9431884ca1be5a9f4b86294ad7
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Google+ wants you and your photos to never, ever leave






Google+ has struggled to persuade the Internet that it’s more than Facebook Lite, so Google’s social network is taking a new approach: repositioning itself as a hub for photographers.


It’s not exactly an abrupt shift for the network, which overhauled its image and launched new photo enhancement and organization tools at Google I/O in May. But Google vice president of engineering Vic Gundotra on Tuesday made photography the prime focus of Google+ going forward with a slew of new photo and video features.


Gundotra announced that Google+ has 300 million monthly active users today, up from 190 million in May, uploading 1.5 billion photos to the network each week. It took Google+ a year and a half to grow to 190 million active users in the social stream—not just users signed in to other services with a Google+ login—so another 110 million in less than six months is a pretty impressive feat. Photos are key for the network, which needs to set itself apart from Facebook and the hundreds of social apps chomping at its heels.


Now you can turn Auto Enhance on high to turn your beach scene into a stunning work of art.

Put a filter on it


Gundotra demoed 18 new features in Google+ at a San Francisco warehouse on Tuesday in a tribute to the photographers whose work lined the walls.


Many of the features were proof positive that the Instagram-ification of photography is complete. Forget Photoshop; we want an app that will retouch our latte art until its richness bleeds through the screen.


“Photography today is too hard,” Gundotra said. “When I go on vacation, my table is a mass of cables and memory cards and DSLRs and lenses, not to mention more and more photography is taking place on mobile devices. This is not fun. It’s a nightmare. People have beautiful treasures that have become stranded in these various devices.”


Google+ wants to be the place you store, organize, edit, and share those photos. Not to other networks, though—just within Google+.


The stand-out features were improvements to the network’s Auto Enhance function, which edit your photos without any work on your part. Now you can lower or raise the levels of Auto Enhance from low to high, and control that setting on an album-by-album basis.


A couple of other gimmicky tools that Google+ users might fall in love with are Action, which distills several frames of motion into one action shot, and Eraser, which eliminates any unwanted objects that may have entered the frame. Eraser is a tourist’s dream—no more grumpy New Yorkers crossing into your awesome street shot.


On the video front, Google+ added Auto Awesome Movie for creating films out of photos, short clips, and a soundtrack of your choosing, which calls to mind a low-grade iMovie experiment. But, hey, people love creating videos, as Instagram and Vine can attest to.


Annoying people are always blocking your shot. Now you can simply erase them.

If your photography skills are more on the professional side, Google added filters to its photo editors, both the browser-based Snapseed and the Nik Collection, Google's $149 suite of plug-ins for Photoshop, Photoshop Elements, Photoshop Lightroom, and Aperture. Those are the only editors that can post images to Google+, since there are no APIs to let other apps post images on the network—only Google's own products can do that.


Better Hangouts


Google+ also wants to be the place where you have all your conversations, so the network is updating its stand-alone Hangouts app for Android to support SMS texts. Now you don’t have to leave the Hangouts app to keep messaging with friends. This fits with Google’s goal: That you never, ever leave Google+, especially not to use other messaging services.


Hangouts gets in on some animated GIF action.

“You don’t have to deal with multiple clients,” Gundotra said.


What he meant: Feel free to delete Snapchat, Android users.


Google is also enabling one-tap location-sharing—powered by Google Maps, of course—within the Hangouts app, plus animated GIF viewing. Yeah, animated GIFs. That’s something Facebook doesn’t have. Auto Awesome is also coming to video calls on Hangouts, so you can put a filter on your live-action self. Those updates are rolling out in the next few days for Hangouts for Android users. Gundotra didn't say whether the Hangouts improvements will hit iOS anytime soon.


Back on the desktop, Google added some improvements to Hangouts on Air, the company's quest to bring big names like President Barack Obama down to average Google+ users. Now Google lets users create dedicated landing pages to promote Hangout events and added tools to help manage those events once they start.


The Google+ niche


If Facebook is a place for friends, then Google+ can be the place for photos. Videos, too. Being just another social network isn’t an option, not when the landscape is so cluttered. Google+ has some power behind it—now it just needs people to actually post.


Gundotra and co. are betting that catering to photographers—both professionals and those of us who let our smartphones do most of the work—will set Google’s social network apart. Gundotra reiterated several times that Google+ wants to revolutionize photography and help people tell stories with their images. They just might be onto something.








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Source: http://www.techhive.com/article/2058687/google-wants-you-and-your-photos-to-never-ever-leave.html#tk.rss_all
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Taiwan pop star alleges fecal matter thrown at car




FILE - In this July 6, 2013 file photo, Taiwanese singer Jam Hsiao gestures upon arrival for the 24th Golden Melody Awards in Taipei, Taiwan. The 26-year-old singer told reporters Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013 that two motorcyclists approached his van asking for autographs before the attack. He said his driver was hit and suffered bruises while pursuing the motorcyclists, but Hsai himself was unharmed.(AP Photo/Wally Santana, File)






TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwanese pop star Jam Hsiao said he's outraged by an alleged attack in which two autograph-seekers threw a bucket of fecal matter into his van.

The 26-year-old singer told reporters Tuesday that two motorcyclists approached his van asking for autographs before the attack. He said his driver was hit and suffered bruises while pursuing the motorcyclists, but Hsaio himself was unharmed.

Hsiao said he was outraged by Monday's incident and called on the authorities to find the culprits, saying "I demand an answer."

He said the attackers asked if it was his car, so he believes they were looking for him, but he said he had no known enemies and did not know who would want to harm him.

"I hope whoever hired these two men gets the harshest punishment," Hsiao said. "I hope whoever was paid to do this... I want them to know, they will regret it."

Police are investigating but have taken no one into custody.

Known for his explosive high notes, Hsiao rose to Mandarin pop prominence after appearing on the "Super Star Boulevard" talent show in 2007.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/taiwan-pop-star-alleges-fecal-matter-thrown-car-032430773.html
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Nokia in Q3 net loss as sales continue plunge

FILE - In this Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 file photo, Stephen Elop, chief executive officer of Nokia, speaks during a conference at the Mobile World Congress, the world's largest mobile phone trade show, in Barcelona, Spain. Nokia reports quarterly earnings on Tuesday, Oct, 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)







FILE - In this Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 file photo, Stephen Elop, chief executive officer of Nokia, speaks during a conference at the Mobile World Congress, the world's largest mobile phone trade show, in Barcelona, Spain. Nokia reports quarterly earnings on Tuesday, Oct, 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)







(AP) — Nokia reported Tuesday a third-quarter net loss as sales at the handsets unit it is selling to Microsoft continued to plunge. But the company gave a positive outlook on its continuing operations, including networks, causing the share price to rise.

Third-quarter net loss of 91 million euros ($125 million) compared with a net loss of 969 million euros a year earlier, while revenue fell more than 20 percent to 5.6 billion euros.

The struggling company said it sold 8.8 million Lumia smartphones, a 40 percent increase from 3 million a year earlier and slightly more than markets had expected.

But that was not enough to keep Nokia Corp. from giving a negative outlook for the devices and services unit it has agreed to sell to Microsoft Corp. for $7.2 billion.

Net sales of devices and services fell by 19 percent in the quarter, to 2.9 billion euros, and it sold 64.6 million mobile devices in the period — down from 83 million a year earlier.

Although smartphone sales were up near 9 million, they lagged well behind chief competitors Apple with quarterly sales of 33.8 million and China's Huawei's at 13 million. Even South Korean LG, with 12.7 million units, and Lenovo of China, which sold 11 million, surged past the former world No. 1 that once commanded a global market share with 50 percent. Samsung Electronics, the world leader, sold more than 88 million smartphones in the third quarter.

Without the loss-making handset unit, the Finnish phone maker can look forward to better earnings from its more profitable networks business — Nokia Solutions and Networks, or NSN, which saw 33-percent growth in net profit in the period.

It expects NSN to have a positive operating margin of some 12 percent, with "solid net sales growth on a sequential basis." Nokia announced the purchase of the Siemens half of its 2007 networks joint venture for $2.2 billion this year.

Nokia has also pinned hopes on its mapping services, known as HERE.

Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics near London said the networks figures were "reasonably good" and would be a short term boost for the Finnish company.

"HERE has some decent prospects, and we see it as being the long term profit driver," Mawston said. "Nokia has a huge market share in maps worldwide and maps are core to a lot of the automotive and shopping experiences out there worldwide."

Mawston said he was also "relatively optimistic" about Nokia's Lumia range.

"All the arrows are pointing in the right direction," he said. "Nokia-Lumia still has a long way to go but at least they are headed in the right direction after going in the wrong direction for so long."

The company's share price jumped more than 6 percent to 5.32 euros in afternoon trading in Helsinki.

Nokia board chairman and interim CEO Risto Siilasmaa described the third quarter as "the most transformative" in the company's history, and was upbeat on the purchase of NSN and the sale of the handsets unit to Microsoft.

"Our strategy work is making good progress and it has already become clear that there are meaningful opportunities for all of our business areas: NSN, HERE and Advanced Technologies," Siilasmaa said. "Subject to the completion of the Microsoft transaction, Nokia will have significantly improved earnings profile, strong financial position and a solid foundation from which to invest."

The company repeated its target to save 3 billion euros in operating costs by the end of 2013. Nokia employed 87,000 people at the end of the period, down from more than 105,000 a year earlier.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-29-Finland-Earns-Nokia/id-4fd53938a2ef45fe9d4932fdcfd0e850
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