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mardi 8 novembre 2016

CyanogenMod 14.1, based on Android 7.1 Nougat, begins rolling out tonight

cyanogenmod nexus 5 boot screen aa 2

cyanogenmod nexus 5 boot screen aa 2

Many devices that support the popular CyanogenMod custom ROM should be able to download the latest edition later tonight. The new build, CyanogenMod 14.1, will also be the first that will be based on Android 7.1 Nougat.

See also:

What is CyanogenMod?

September 19, 2016

Here's a list of the devices that will be able to download the latest edition of CyanogenMod tonight, if they have an unlocked bootloader:

  • Nexus 6P
  • Nexus 5X
  • Xiaomi Mi3/Mi4
  • LG G3
  • Moto G variants
  • LG G4
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
  • OnePlus 3
  • ASUS ZenFone 2

Today's announcement adds that more devices will be able to download CyanogenMod 14.1 in the near future. Also, since this is the first nightly build, many features are not yet available, including Themes. Again, more features and improvements will be made available via updates in the coming weeks.

Cyanogen's co-founder Steve Kondik added:

Bug reports are OK, but please don't file bugs for missing features since this is all a work in progress. Now is a great time to get involved with the project too- CM is returning to it's community-driven roots and there are endless ways to help out.

If you are a CyanogenMod user, are you in line to get the latest 14.1 version of the custom ROM?



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OnePlus 3T to get its official reveal on Tuesday, November 15

oneplus 3 gold aa (3 of 22)

oneplus 3 gold aa (3 of 22)

One day after Qualcomm confirmed that its Snapdragon 821 processor would be in the next smartphone from OnePlus, the company has issued its own Twitter teaser. It says that its new phone will be officially revealed on Tuesday, November 15 at 1 p.m. Eastern time.

The phone is already the subject of a lot of rumors, including its name. Most reports claim it will be called the OnePlus 3T, and today's Twitter post would seem to confirm that with its "T-7" statement. Other rumors about the phone include it having an upgraded Sony IMX395 sensor for its camera, 6GB of RAM and Android 7.0 Nougat out of the box.

While the phone itself may be revealed in just one week, it's more than possible that it might not go on sale until sometime in December, again according to unconfirmed reports. Pricing for the new OnePlus phone could also be higher than the current OnePlus 3 by as much as $80. Thankfully, all this speculation and rumor will soon come to an end. In the meantime, are you excited about the prospect of an upgraded version of the OnePlus 3.

See also:

OnePlus 3T: all the rumors in one place

1 week ago


from Android Authority http://www.androidauthority.com/oneplus-3t-reveal-november-15-727643/
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What’s the difference between a Li-ion and solid-state battery?

lg g5 camera module demonstration aa-14lg g5 camera module demonstration aa-14

A couple of weeks ago, Kris introduced us to the topic of solid-state batteries and how they might be the next major advancement in smartphone battery technology. In short, solid-state batteries are safer, can pack in more juice, and can be used for even thinner devices. Unfortunately, they're prohibitively expensive to put into medium-sized smartphone cells right now, but that might change in the coming years.

So, if you've been wondering what exactly a solid-state battery is and how it's different to today's lithium-ion cells, read on.

See also:

Should I leave my phone plugged in overnight?

July 14, 2016

The key difference between the commonly used lithium-ion battery and a solid-state battery is that the former uses a liquid electrolytic solution to regulate the flow of current, while solid-state batteries opt for a solid electrolyte. A battery's electrolyte is a conductive chemical mixture that allows the flow of current between the anode and cathode.

Solid state batteries still work in the same way as current batteries do, but the change in materials alters some of the battery's attributes, including maximum storage capacity, charging times, size, and safety.

Current inside a battery passes between the anode and cathode through a conductive electrolyte, while separators are used to prevent a short circuit.

Space saving

The immediate benefit of switching from a liquid to solid electrolyte is that the energy density of the battery can increase. This is because instead of requiring large separators between the liquid cells, solid state batteries only require very thin barriers to prevent a short circuit.

Solid-state batteries can pack in twice as much energy as Li-ion

Conventional liquid-soaked battery separators come in with a 20-30 micron thickness. Solid-state technology can decrease the separators down to 3-4 microns each, a roughly 7-fold space saving just by switching materials.

However, these separators aren't the only component inside the battery and other bits can't shrink down as much, putting a limit on the space-saving potential of solid-state batteries.

Even so, solid-state batteries can pack in up to twice as much energy as Li-ion, when replacing the anode with a smaller alternative as well.

solid-state-battery-size

solid-state-battery-sizeCleanTechnica

Longer life spans

Solid-state electrolytes are typically less reactive than today's liquid or gel, so they can be expected to last a lot longer and won't need replacing after just 2 or 3 years. This also means that these batteries won't explode or catch fire if they are damaged or suffer from manufacturing defects, meaning safer products for consumers.

Solid-state batteries won't explode or catch fire if they are damaged or suffer from manufacturing defects.

In current smartphones, replaceable batteries are often sought after for those looking to use the same phone for many years, as they can be swapped out once they start to break down.

Smartphone batteries often don't hold their charge as well after a year or so and can even cause hardware to become unstable, reset, or even stop working after several years of use. With solid-state batteries, smartphones and other gadgets could last a lot longer without needing a replacement cell.

There are plenty of solid chemical compounds that could be used in batteries, not just one.

Talk of liquid versus solid batteries is an oversimplification of the subject though, as there are plenty of solid chemical compounds that could be used in batteries, not just one.

Types of solid-state electrolytes

There are eight different major categories of solid-state batteries, which each use different materials for the electrolyte. These are Li-Halide, Perovskite, Li-Hydride, NASICON-like, Garnet, Argyrodite, LiPON, and LISICON-like.

As we're still dealing with an emerging technology, researchers are still coming to grips with the best types of solid-state electrolyte to use for different product categories. None have come out as clear leaders just yet, but sulfide-based, LiPON, and Garnet cells are currently seen as the most promising.

You'll probably have noticed that many of these types are still lithium (Li) based in some regard, because they are still using lithium electrodes. But many are opting for new anode and cathode electrode materials to improve performance.

solid-state-battery-technology

solid-state-battery-technologySpring8

Thin film batteries

Even within solid-state battery types, there are two clear cut subtypes – thin film and bulk. One of the most successful thin-film types that is already on the market is LiPON, which the majority of manufacturers produce with a lithium anode.

The LiPON electrolyte offers excellent weight, thickness, and even flexibility attributes, making it a promising cell type for wearable electronics and gadgets that require small cells. Going back to the subject of longer lasting cells, LiPON has also demonstrated excellent stability with only a 5% capacity reduction after 40,000 charge cycles.

LiPON batteries could last anywhere from 40 to 130 times longer than Li-ion batteries before they need replacing.

For comparison, lithium-ion batteries only offer between 300 and 1000 cycles before showing a similar or greater fall in capacity.  This means that LiPON batteries could last anywhere from 40 to 130 times longer than Li-ion batteries before they need replacing.

LiPON's downside is that its total energy storage capacity and conductivity are rather poor by comparison. However, alternative solid-state battery technologies could be the key to bringing longer battery life to smartwatches, which is currently putting off a number of customers from picking up a wearable.

Bigger, bulkier batteries

So far, solid state batteries aren't yet suitable for larger cells found in smartphones and tablets, let alone laptops or electric cars. For larger bulk solid-state batteries with a greater capacity, superior conductivity that comes close to or matches liquid electrolytes is required, which rules out otherwise promising technologies like LiPON. Ionic conduction measures the ability of ions to move through a material, and good conduction is a requirement of larger cells to ensure the required current.

solid-state-battery-conductivity

solid-state-battery-conductivity

LISICON and LiPS have overtaken research into LiPO, LiS, and SiS batteries, the previous leaders in the solid state field. However, these types still suffer from lower conductivity than organic and liquid electrolytes at room temperature, making them impractical for commercial products.

Highly conductive

This is where research into garnet-oxide (LLZO) electrolytes comes in, as it boasts a high ionic conductivity at room temperature.

The material achieves a conduction that comes in only slightly behind the results offered by liquid lithium-ion cells, and new studies into LGPS suggest that this material could even match it.

This would mean solid-state batteries of roughly equal power and capacity as today's Li-ion cells, while seeing benefits such as reduced size and longer lifespan become a reality.

Garnet is also stable in air and water, making it suitable for Li-Air batteries too. Unfortunately it has to be fabricated using an expensive sintering process.

This currently makes it an unattractive proposition for use in consumer batteries when compared to the low cost of lithium-ion cells. In the future, costs are likely to fall as manufacturing techniques are refined but we are still some way off from a commercially viable solid-state battery.

Lithium Ion Batteries AA

Lithium Ion Batteries AA

Wrap up

Clearly there is still a lot of ongoing research into solid-state battery technology. We're not going to see mature cells make their way into consumer products like smartphones for another 4 or 5 years, according to the earliest predictions. Solid-state batteries in other devices (like drones) may appear as soon as next year though.

Still, the latest research is finally producing results that can compete with existing li-ion batteries in terms of attributes, while also providing the benefits of solid-state electrolytes. All we need is for manufacturing processes to mature, and there are a number of large and upcoming battery manufacturers with the resources to make this a reality.

In summary, the key benefits of all these chemical differences from a consumer perspective are: up to 6 times faster charging, up to twice the energy density, a longer cycle life of up to 10 years compared to 2, and no flammable components. That's certainly going to be a boon for smartphones and other portable gadgets.



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Google could ban third-party fast charging hardware in upcoming Android phones

google pixel xl initial review aa (29 of 48) usb-c usb

google pixel xl initial review aa (29 of 48) usb-c usb

We all want our smartphones to charge up faster. However, it looks like Google might want to put the brakes on some methods that promise those kinds of fast charging times, but don't use standard hardware. The company quietly updated its Android Compatibility Definition Document, where it offers some strong recommendations on what it wants to see in future phones, in terms of USB Type-C devices.

See also:

10 reasons why your Android battery is charging slowly and how to fix them

October 2, 2015

The most well known third-party fast charging technology for smartphones is Qualcomm Quick Charge, which is now in its 3.0 version. There are also some other non-standard fast charging hardware out there, like OPPO's VOOC and MediaTek's Pump Express. However, the updated documentation from Google clearly wants smartphone makers to stick with the USB Power Delivery standards that are used on its own Pixel phones:

Type-C devices are STRONGLY RECOMMENDED to not support proprietary charging methods that modify Vbus voltage beyond default levels, or alter sink/source roles as such may result in interoperability issues with the chargers or devices that support the standard USB Power Delivery methods. While this is called out as "STRONGLY RECOMMENDED", in future Android versions we might REQUIRE all type-C devices to support full interoperability with standard type-C chargers.

That last sentence should be a pretty clear warning that Google could clamp down on these outside fast charging technologies offered by Qualcomm, OPPO, MediaTek and others in the near future. Do you think Google should try to force smartphone hardware makers to stick to one standard for battery charging?



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Lenovo may reportedly use ‘Moto’ branding for all of its future smartphones

hello-moto

hello-moto

Lenovo acquired Motorola from Google in 2014, but so far it hasn't gotten a lot out of that rather large purchase. According to an unconfirmed report today, Lenovo may be about to put the branding it received as part of the deal to more use. The report claims the famous "Moto" brand will be placed on all future Lenovo headsets.

See also:

Lenovo's sold 1 million Moto Z handsets globally

1 day ago

The report comes from Campaign Asia, citing unnamed sources. There are no other details on when exactly this change will happen. Keep in mind that this report is unconfirmed, so take it with some skepticism. However, the truth is that the Moto brand for smartphones is better known worldwide than Lenovo's, so it would make sense that this kind of change is in the works.

The report comes just a few days after the company released its latest quarterly financial statement, saying that it had sold just over one million units of its recently launched Moto Z phones in its first three months. Lenovo just started selling the Moto M phone in its native China.  However, it is still using its own branding for other phones, most notably on the new Phab 2 Pro, the first smartphone that uses Google's Tango 3D camera mapping technology.

Do you think Lenovo should go ahead and use the Moto branding for all of its upcoming smartphones, and use its own name for other devices like PCs?



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Is this the future of smartphone pairing?

capcam-multiple-device-recognition

capcam-multiple-device-recognition

Imagine a future where Bluetooth pairing is a thing of the past, where all you have to do is touch your phone to a device to have it paired – with no prompts, no menus and no prior knowledge. Unlike NFC, this new technology would offer bi-directional communication for multiple devices, establishing an ad-hoc and anonymous temporary connection. Sound too good to be true?

A new pairing technology has just been presented at the ACM International Conference on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces that can do all this and more. Called CapCam, it is a novel solution to a familiar problem: quick, easy and reliable pairing of devices.

To give you an idea of what it can do, it takes just one second, requires zero configuration and is four times faster than Bluetooth.

CapCam is a novel solution to a familiar problem: quick, easy and reliable pairing of devices.

But what's perhaps most exciting is that this new technology doesn't require heavy investment in R&D, expensive new fabrication processes or even revolutionary new hardware. CapCam works, right now, using your smartphone's existing camera and the kind of capacitive touch screen found everywhere.

capcam-image-transfer

capcam-image-transfer

Imagine walking past a photo wall, placing your phone against it and instantly having that image transferred to your phone for use as a wallpaper. Or pressing your phone to a public touch screen to log into your account. Or being able to drag and drop content from a touch screen onto your smartphone that's sitting on top of it. Sounds pretty cool.

See also:

Is someone stealing your Wi-Fi? How to tell, and what you can do about it

May 13, 2016

How does it work?

The way CapCam works is deceptively simple: it uses the multi-touch capacitive matrix present in the touch screen to recognize an object placed on top of it, in this case a smartphone. The screen transmits basic pairing data by modulating the color of pixels under the device's camera, which the phone then decodes. This information is used to establish a conventional connection (like Wi-Fi), over which content can be sent or received in a highly targeted manner.

The screen transmits basic pairing data by modulating the color of pixels under the device's camera, which the phone then decodes.

CapCam can also track the location of the device on the touch screen, allowing for custom interactions with specific areas of the touch screen to be made locally on your smartphone. In the video below, an anatomical figure provides one example, a game of virtual air hockey another. The phone's speakers and haptic feedback can also be tapped independently to provide another layer of complexity.

CapCam can reportedly pair and transfer data at four times the speed of other camera-based transmission techniques and there's an entire research paper available if you want to read more about the security and reliability of the system. With a good display, CapCam's developers report it can transmit 150 bits/second with a 1 percent packet loss rate.

It's clear that with the rise of IoT and connected devices, a huge, non-tech savvy audience is just waiting to be tapped. It's equally clear that we're in dire need of simpler, smarter and more capable pairing solutions than what we currently have.

While it's too early to say if CapCam is the elegant solution to a very ungainly problem, it certainly provides an enticing alternative vision of just how simple device pairing could be in future.

What do you think of CapCam? What other applications can you imagine for it?



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Facebook testing Prisma-like stylized art filters for video

facebook-video-filter

facebook-video-filter

Facebook is currently working on a new feature for video that will allow users to add stylized art filters to those clips, similar to what the popular Prisma app does for photos. The company says it is testing the feature in a few countries at the moment.

See also:

More than 1 billion users access Facebook on mobile daily

July 28, 2016

Facebook says this "style transfer" feature for video is the result of a new machine intelligence technology the company developed called Caffe2Go. Normally, the processing for creating these kinds of filters would require sending the data to a high-end server, but the company says Caffe2Go allows it to be processed locally on a smartphone. In a blog post, Facebook stated:

With the speed and quality optimizations made in the style-transfer technology, run on the Caffe 2 framework, a real-time image processing system is possible on the mobile experience.

There's no word yet on when these filters will be rolled out for all of Facebook's users. Prisma, which is currently working on adding filters for short videos for the Android app, demonstrated how it could also add this feature to live videos on Facebook in late October. As with Caffe2Go, the processing for Prisma's filter is handled on a smartphone. Again, there's no word on when this feature will be added to the Prisma app on Android.

Would you be interested in adding these kinds of art filters to your videos?



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