
Launch events may matter again as Evleaks retires from leaking

Thanks to the efforts of Evan 'Evleaks' Blass tech fans have gotten an early look at some of the most high-profile smartphones and tablets, often months before they're officially outed.
Now, after two years of prolific tweets, many of which have spawned reports on TechRadar, the tech journalist turned full-time leak artist has announced he's giving it all up.
Blass, who earned a reputation for accuracy with his many leaks, says he's quitting because divulging photos and spec sheets on Twitter had proved difficult to monetise.
He told The Next Web he had tried sponsored tweets, accepted donations and pushing folks towards his website, but found users had little incentive to visit after seeing his pics on Twitter and across the web.
Retirement
So, as a result of all that, Evleaks, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis a decade ago, is plugging the holes and hanging up his wrench for good in search of a new career.Mobile companies like Samsung, HTC, Motorola, LG and Nokia will surely be breathing a sigh of relief tonight with the most prolific leaker of modern tech is deciding to call it a day.
Mobile fans across the world will surely be congratulating Blass on a job well done. Who knows, perhaps those glitzy launch events might actually be worth looking forward to again now?
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Google exploring custom cases and live wallpapers with Workshop tool

Google may be planning to launch a customisation tool for Nexus 5 devices, which would allow users to create personalised cases and live wallpapers.
AndroidPolice has obtained evidence of a Google Workshop tool, an interface within the Google Play store that can be used to make "your device unique inside and out," according to the blurb.
The unreleased and unannounced tool features two main components "MapMe" and "Moments."
The former allows users to create custom cases based on a certain location, while the accompanying live wallpaper will show weather information and tweets from the same place.
Moment will enable Nexus 5 owners to upload their own photos, manipulate the image, add filters and tex, which can be built into a wallpaper or a case.
Moto Maker Mk.2?
Google, of course, has experimented with device customisation before with the Moto Maker, during its brief time in charge of Motorola.It's unclear how close Google is to launching the Google Workshop tool, or whether it is just experimenting with the possibilities right now.
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NFL teams recieving a tech upgrade courtesy of Microsoft's Surface Pro 2

The NFL is receiving a major tech upgrade in time for the start of the 2014 season, thanks to the Microsoft Surface Pro 2 tablet.
As part of a lucrative deal with the NFL, Microsoft is providing 13 tablets to each team, running a single programme that can quickly show photographs of how the opposition is lining up during each play.
Currently, coaches rely on team photographers taking snaps before and after each snap, printing them out in black and white and rushing them down to the field in binders for analysis.
If teams choose to adopt the new tech, full colour digital photos, which can also be annotated and saved for later review, will be delivered directly to the Surface Pro 2 tablets up to half a minute faster.
No 'Spygate 2'
Because of previous incidences of cheating - yes, we're looking at you, New England Patriots - the Surface Pro's cameras have been disabled, the device's software is locked down to only show the photos.The tablets can only be connected to the special private wireless network Microsoft has installed in all NFL stadiums around the United States.
In order to prevent potential tampering, teams won't even be able to keep the devices. They'll be possessed by the NFL and delivered to the teams on game days in a temperature controlled storage box.
The devices are also coated in thick rubber cases and have waterproof screens, in the hope they can survive the vigours of an NFL season and a Pittsburgh snow storm in mid-December.
The tablets will debut at the Hall of Fame game between the New York Giants and the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.
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Inflame: Facebook's compulsory Messenger push angers the commenting horde

For a site supposedly built around the idea of maintaining friendships, Facebook's doing an awfully good job of creating large numbers of enemies who seriously 'unlike' its current strategy.
This week saw the social site make a renewed push to get everyone to install its standalone Messenger app, a tool that pulls out the chat tab from the main Facebook mobile app and is compulsory if you want to continue using the service's private chat system.
The idea of having to install a separate app just to access the same features that have been cut from the full Facebook app has infuriated many users, especially people stuck on older phones with their onboard memory already pushed to bursting point.
It's either a cynical advertising space play, a delivering phone numbers and texts messages to the NSA play, or a sign that Facebook's set to do a MySpace by the end of 2014 and explode amid mass user fury.
Either way, plenty of people are (pretending to be) uninstalling the whole thing and (pretending to be) quitting Facebook itself in a massive sulk over the changes.
Spamming permission
PC World commenter Jeannie Oden d'Hal has a surprisingly hardcore, and slightly paranoid, way around it all. She commented: "If you root your phone so that Facebook is not in the bloatware, then don't download either one. I use it straight from the website browser and delete my cache, history, data when I log out. The heavy battery use of the apps following me around like big brother and the slowdown of my phone was enough to justify this option."The next response came from CoachLivi. She made the old, probably not true, claim that she'll be reverting to how things used to be in the olden days, saying: "I guess I'll be taking numbers and sending more text messages. I'm not downloading Messenger and I sure as hell refuse to upgrade Facebook. Haven't upgraded the app since October. The permissions required are beyond intrusive and are absolutely unnecessary."
Which gave CWags334 the opportunity to ZING in with: "'...beyond intrusive and are absolutely unnecessary?' Doesn't that accurately describe Facebook itself?"
Escape velocity
On The Register, reader Nigel Whitfield questions if the average user will find anything positive about the change. He commented: "Sometimes it seems that the people creating these apps assume that everyone uses them in the way they do; that everyone has the latest devices with lots of storage space. With FourSquare/Swarm I honestly can't see the point for me; I don't give a toss where people are right now, because I'm not a 20-something valley geek who hangs out at just a few places with all my mates, which seems to be the point of the new app."Meanwhile, reader SebWear86 published a short sci-fi story over on Cnet, describing how this move may bring about the end of Facebook altogether. He published his workings thus: "I install Messenger. I stop using FB stream because it's all babies and weddings. I delete FB stream. I keep using Messenger but realize my friends are on other chat systems (ie Snapchat which has way better privacy). I stop using and delete Messenger. I am out of the Facebook world. I am happy :)"
But one day you might convince someone to have a baby with you, then who are you going to show (spam) the photos of it to? Will you be printing them out and waving them at strangers in the street?
Reader RetroUltraModern is of the same mind, asking: "This is such a dumb move for Facebook. If Facebook users need to download another app for texting, they have a lot of choices. Why stick with FB Messenger when there are so many better apps out there?"
Because mum's only on Facebook and no one's really as popular and sociable as they pretend to be?
Chatters gonna chat
On Mashable, Anthony Fulginiti is finished with the social site. He raged: "I am officially done with Facebook. I will NOT be forced to use another application just the same that no one can force me to do anything else."Lee Willoughby, on the other hand, thinks this is all just your usual flash-whinge that'll quickly blow over. He commented: "The only objection here seems to be 'I don't want two apps' is that it? Facebook Messenger is a brilliant messaging app. No one will delete their Facebook app -- this is the same reaction people have when Facebook make a profile change, a few weeks of moaning and then they just get on with it. Embrace the change."
Not wanting two apps is a valid moan when the actual Facebook app already takes up 150MB of space on your phone. Try squeezing that and anything else of any use on an old HTC Wildfire and see how happy the process makes you.
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In Depth: What's inside your iPad: A look at the technology inside the iPad Air

Display, graphics & more
According to TechRadar's review of the iPad Air, Apple's fifth generation tablet device is as close to perfection as any slate has ever come.This bona fide five star gadget is the result of years of steady design and technological refinements and improvements.
It's easy to track the improvements through spec sheets; a few more pixels here, an extra megahertz there, faster Wi-Fi, more efficient Bluetooth and so on and so on. It all looks great on paper but how do those specs stack up in the real world?
We delved into the iPad Air to explain what these impressive components really offer the average tablet user.
Display
The 9.7 inch display offered by the flagship iPad Air model has retained the size of the original iPad, first launched in 2010. However, the technology within that display has improved markedly in that time. The display's LCD panel now has a better than HD resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels, which Apple touts as a Retina Display.Basically, the Retina Display moniker is a marketing term meaning super high-resolution display rather than a technological one that can be held to any standard. The iPhone range actually has a much higher pixel density (pixels per inch or PPI), above the number of individual pixels the human eye can discern at arms length. The iPad Air falls short of that mark, but, to put it in perspective, it still has about twice as many pixels as a 50 inch full HD TV.

Plus, it's not all about PPI; there are other factors to consider too, such as brightness. The iPad Air can hit 426 nits, which ranks in the top three among current tablets on the market. It's also a power saver. As DisplayMate pointed out in its tests, the iPad Air display offers IGZO LCD backplane, which is 57% more efficient than the-Si amorphous Silicon LCDs users in Previous Retina Displays.
Other tests have shown the iPad Air is better than before in daylight, with reflectance at just 6.5%, while colours are reproduced almost 'absolutely' accurately. The result is a detailed, true to life, bright and vibrant display that's plenty usable in sunlight and won't quit on you after a couple of hours viewing.
Graphics
The iPad Air uses IMG's PowerVR G6430 Graphical Processing Unit (GPU), which also sits within the iPhone 5S. It is said to boost performance by 40-70% compared to the iPad 4. The key benefit here is for those who love playing HD games on their Apple tablet. Frame rates are boosted, visuals are smoother and power consumption is lowered so you can keep playing for longer.The iPad Air also embraces the OpenGL ES version 3.0 standard, giving iPad owners graphics and visual effects that have usually been reserved for consoles and PC games up until now - see games like Infinity Blade III for proof. That 64-bit Apple A7 chip helps too. Which leads us on to...
Processor
Apple doesn't release specifics like processor clock speeds, but the 'Apple A7' processor within the iPad Air is a 64-bit processor, which is thought to house two cores based on an ARM V8 Cortex architecture, running at 1.4GHz. Benchmarking tests from AnAnTech clocks the performance at speeds 80% faster than the iPad 4.
The difference made by that desktop class 64-bit chip is also more pronounced on the iPad Air than it is within the iPhone 5S. At its base level, multitasking is faster, performance is smoother, but the key gains could be in the creative industries like 3D modelling, design, photo and video editing, and music creation. You can now create 32 tracks using GarageBand on an iPad Air.
However, due to the limited amount of memory on the iPad Air (1GB RAM), we're only seeing flashes of the 64-bit chip's potential. In future models, such as the rumoured iPad Air 2, improved memory could see Apple's tablet become a true PC replacement.
Motion
There's another string to the A7 processor's bow and that's the added presence of the new M7 "motion co-processor". This chip operates individually from the main unit and is responsible for collecting information more efficiently from the iPad's compass, accelerometer and three-axis gyroscope (we'll get to those in a second) feeding information back to fitness apps like Nike+ Move.Because M7 was engineered for this specific purpose it requires less resources and demands less than the same activities would from the main A7 core. That means battery savings.

As we just mentioned, the iPad Air has both an accelerometer and three-axis gyroscope. The accelerometer measures the force of acceleration, direction and speed of movement, while the gyroscope measures rotation around a particular axis.
In the iPad Air they complement each other for supremely accurate motion sensing experience. So when you tilt your device in order to steer in a driving game, or to hit the next platform in Doodle Jump, flip the screen to enter landscape mode or take panoramas in the camera mode, that's the accelerometer and gyroscope at work.
Memory
Unlike its Mac computers, Apple has never specified how much Random Access Memory (more commonly known as RAM) is within its iPad range. Benchmarks and breakdowns show it to possess only 1GB of DDR3 memory, which is much lower than some of the top Android tablets that offer up to 3GB RAM.
This has led to the problem of low memory crashes for many users. The RAM within the device works alongside the processor to allow users to do more things at once. It is thought that as more apps adapt to make better use of the 64-bit processor, Apple will need to include more RAM within the iPad Air 2 to ensure the device can keep up.
Internet connectivity, AirPlay & more
Internet connectivity
The Apple iPad Air boasts dual W-Fi antennas and Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) compatibility, which is a technology that enables the device to access more than one data stream at a time. Theoretically, these innovations combine to double potential theoretical download speeds to 300Mbps, although broadband connections of that speed are still very rare.Regardless, it means sharing files, streaming movies, downloading apps and everything in between can be done a little faster. In terms of mobile or cellular data, the iPad Air can be used with 2G, 3G and, more importantly the next generation 4G LTE networks at speeds up to 100Mbps.
The iPad Air has also expanded the number of 4G LTE bands it supports making it great if you're travelling, as you can just slot in a local SIM card.
Bluetooth and AirPlay connectivity
There's plenty of connectivity tech sitting within the iPad Air, which can allow you interact with other gadgets. The tablet features a Bluetooth 4.0 LE radio, the newest generation of low energy Bluetooth connectivity. The key benefit for users will be the ability to stream music to Bluetooth-enabled speakers, connect to your fitness wristband or use a Bluetooth keyboard for longer without destroying the iPad Air's battery life.Apple also uses the proprietary AirPlay technology, which allows users to send media over Wi-Fi other devices. If you have an Apple TV device you're able to mirror your iPad's screen on your television while also sending video or audio content. There are also plenty of AirPlay-enabled speakers to choose from.
Battery and charging
The iPad Air's battery is slightly smaller than in previous generations (32.4Wh compared with 42.5Wh in the iPad 4), which allows Apple to make the device thinner and lighter than ever. However, the energy efficiency of the A7 and M7 processors and the lower strain caused by the IGZO LCD backplane means Apple is still able to advertise up to 10 hours of constant use from the battery when surfing the web (Wi-Fi), watching video or listening to music.That smaller battery also means it takes less time to charge. AnAnTech benchmarking tests have shown the iPad Air reaches full charge in 4.1 hours, compared with 5.7 hours on the iPad 4. The device is charged through the USB-to-Lightning cable, which is Apple's newer connectivity tech and is 80% smaller than the longstanding 30-pin option. However, Lightning is based on USB 2.0 technology rather than the newer USB 3.0 or Thunderbolt connectivity technology, meaning data transfer is not as fast as it could be.
Camera
Apple has placed far less focus on the rear-facing camera in the iPad Air compared with its prominence on the latest iPhone models, which is no surprise when you consider taking photos or shooting video on a near 10-inch device is an ungainly experience. However, the camera is still capable of surprisingly good photos.Apple has kept the same sensor from the iPad 4 and slotted it into the iPad Air. It shoots at 5MP (very modest by today's standards) with an aperture of f2.4, while serving up a wider-angled 3.3mm focal length. Results drop off in low light conditions but that's to be expected. It can also shoot video at full 1080p HD meaning it won't look out of place when played back on your home television set.
However the real winner is the 1.2MP front facing camera which also offers 720p video calling, for crisp, clear conferencing with your family. It's also pretty good for the odd selfie too. Apple has done well to scale these camera modules down to fit within a tablet that's just 7.5mm deep – 20% thinner than last year's model.
- Take a look at what we think Apple might include in the iPad Air 2.
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Google Now Launcher becomes available on all Android Jelly Bean devices

The Google Now Launcher is now available on the vast majority of Android devices, thanks to a new roll out this weekend.
The tool, which allows users to view upcoming appointments, weather, traffic conditions, public transport, sports scores and more, can now be downloaded for all devices running Android 4.1 Jelly Bean and up.
Previously the launcher, which arrived as a standalone app in February, had only been available for the Nexus and Google Play Edition family of devices.
The arrival of the app for all Jelly Bean devices means users can get the Google Now launcher directly on their homescreens and say "Ok Google" to launch voice searches.
Swipe right
Once installed, Google Now cards can be accessed by swiping right on the home screen.The launch also offers one tap searches, access to Google apps like Maps, YouTube, Mail and more.
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