Huawei’s P8 is a winner on all fronts



Procrastination isn’t always a bad thing. In fact, if you’ve been putting off a decision on which top-end smartphone to buy, your dithering could turn out to be downright inspired.
That’s because Huawei’s new flagship handset, the P8, has just landed on market, offering most of the premium features of devices like the Apple iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S6, but without the wallet-walloping price tag.
I attended the Chinese manufacturer’s global launch in London in April and my initial impressions of the P8 were overwhelmingly favourable. But I did wonder whether it would stand up to prolonged scrutiny away from all the glitz and hype.
Well, I’ve since had a chance to test it out over an extended period and I’m pleased to report that the P8 has more than lived up to my high expectations.
Pick up the device and you can tell immediately you’re dealing with a high-quality piece of kit. At first glance it’s quite starkly rectangular, but thanks to some subtle chamfering there are no sharp edges and it feels comfortable, solid and surprisingly light in the hand. That’s because its chassis is milled from a single slab of aluminium.
Although its 5.2-inch display is bigger than that of its aforementioned rivals, Huawei has managed to make the phone slimmer than either, an astonishing 6.4mm to be precise.
This makes for a handset that’s approaching a “phablet” in screen size, which makes it perfect for watching videos, browsing the web, or catching up with your e-mail on the go. At the same time, it’s petite enough to slip into your pants pocket without leaving the kind of tell-tale bulge that invites winks and jokey questions that end in, “… or are you just pleased to see me?”
Although the touchscreen is not as pixel dense nor quite as bright as that of the Galaxy S6, this does mean it gobbles less battery power and brings down the overall cost of the device, a worthwhile compromise in my books.
Speaking of the battery, Huawei has somehow squeezed a pretty beefy 2 680mAh fuel cell into the P8’s slim body. It says this can provide enough juice for a day-and-a-half of moderate use. I’m the polar opposite of a moderate user.
Under the merciless barrage of web browsing, e-mail and social media monitoring I subject them to, I’m lucky if most phones I test last until mid-afternoon. I was, for example, able to drain the Galaxy S6 dry by midday on several occasions. The P8, by contrast always got me through the day, and well into the night, often with plenty of power to spare.
Under the glass and metal exterior purrs a powerful eight-core 64-bit, 2GHz processor. There’s 3GB of RAM. The model I tested had a rather miserly 16GB of internal storage, although I’m told 32GB versions will be available. Samsung and Apple offer models with more storage, but unlike either of them the Huawei’s storage can be beefed up with an aftermarket microSD card of up to 128GB.
Cleverly, the SD card slot can also take a second SIM card, giving its owner the choice of switching between two cellular networks, depending on who offers the best data and voice rates.
The 13-megapixel camera with optical image stabilisation is another big selling point of the P8. Huawei claims it can take better shots than the iPhone and Galaxy both in low light and in bright daylight.
In my experience, the Apple and Samsung retain the edge in the photography stakes, but only by the narrowest of margins. And the P8 has managed to keep up without its camera protruding awkwardly from the rear of the phone as it does on both its rivals – quite the industrial design coup.
The eight-megapixel front facing “selfie” camera is pretty impressive too, although you may want to dial the “beauty” level down from the maximum if you want to avoid looking like a creepy wax doll.
The P8 runs Google’s Android 5.0 Lollipop operating system although it is buried under a layer of Huawei’s own Emotion user interface. And that’s really the only significant gripe I have about the P8.
Emotion removes Android’s app drawer so that all installed apps appear on the home screens. And I found that it sometimes clashed with several Google Now features, including voice search. I’ve also heard from fellow tech journos that Google’s Android Wear operating system, found on many smartwatches, doesn’t work with Emotion.
Unless you’re an avid stock Android or wearable fan, these won’t be deal breakers.
My only other quibble is that there’s no fingerprint reader. Not a biggie, but with fingerprint authentication increasingly set to be used for online and real world purchases, it would have been a great future-proof feature to have included, one I’d have been willing to pay extra for.
On the subject of prices, these weren’t available at the time of going to press. But I have it on good authority that they will start at several thousand rand cheaper than entry level Galaxy S6 or iPhone 6 models.

How to Identify A Fake Samsung Galaxy Phone

Samsung smartphones are selling like hot cakes all over the world despite of what ever hardware they contain. Samsung are making lots of smartphones for all and each categories in short period of time that helped to make a internet quote "Another Day, Another Galaxy". While the consumers grabbing their Galaxy phones, Some local phone manufacturers take this opportunity to their advantage. There are number of Replicas to some iconic devices made by Samsung, which makes people confused which one is the original and which one is the fake or the clone.

Difference Between a Clone and an Original Device

There are noticeable differences we can find under Hardware, Software and physical view. Lets see what are the physical differences we can spot.

What you see here is a low grade S4 clone. most easiest clones to spot. Home button is way below the screen, top and bottom bezels are huge, Samsung logo is big, Screen is not an edge to edge one,even it's not an 5 inch and the rear side features cheap plastic cover with pattern less design. Samsung branding could covered by a sticker as it can fade away when we scratch it. even the front side Samsung branding can be removed by few scratches. Battery is surely less than 2600mAh due to smaller dimensions of the phone.




This is the real deal. The above image shows one of the best 1:1 clones in the market. Meet HDC Galaxy S4 Legend. HDC mobiles is no doubt the best clone maker of Samsung handsets. As you can see, it's identical to the original S4 from physical overview. Latest version comes with a glass layer on top of the screen,so we can't scratch the logo off. screen goes edge to edge and features a real 5" screen, home button is on the right spot and back panel have those patterns that an original S4 have. it's an advantage for S4 Legend users they can use original S4's battery and casings thanks to the copying skills of HDC. These clones have only hardware and software differences although the type of plastic used is different.

On the Hardware Side Everything is different and cheap. Most S4 clones uses Mediatek processors clocking at 1.2Ghz, even though they are quad core or dual core chips, the architecture is Cortex-A7. Actually it's not bad for day to day use. but the problem comes when playing heavy graphics games and heavy multitasking.


Storage is limited to 8GB or usually 4GB, and from that around 2GB is user accessible. RAM is 1GB in most S4 clones but pre installed edited AnTuTu app shows different values. As i mentioned before, best clones are made by the Chinese phone manufacturer HDC. if you pay a visit to their HDC Mobiles.com website you can see how the things work. The following image is taken from their site.


These are the specifications of HDC Galaxy S4 Spark, Same conditions apply for S4 Legend. The screen is actually a 5" 720p IPS pannel. But in system info, it shows 1080p. And the Super AMOLED sticker on the phone will trick you thinking it really has a AMOLED panel. Like i said storage is 4GB and system shows 16GB. Batteries are the worst case. Clones bundles with 2 batteries in most scenarios. These batteries are showing 2600mAh but they don't have the real capacity. Original factory made S4 battery weights around 70g while clone batteries just 40g.
Camera in HDC legend is a 13MP shooter but takes verry noisy images. My 3.2MP camera in Nokia 6210 takes much better images than that. 


From the software side, most clones run Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean. Take another look at the spec sheet above. Android version is 4.2.9 what does that mean? There is no 4.2.9 version in Android 4.2.X series. The device could run 4.2.2 or 4.2.1 instead. HDC made custom UI is almost identical to Samsung's TouchWiz UI. Keep in mind you don't have split screen multi-window feature in clones although they have a side app bar.

Those are the major Hardware differences in Clones. Now if you already know you have purchased a replica let's see what are the advantages and down sides. For those who got a replica by cheating sellers who sells these phones as original, i feel sorry for them.

ADVANTAGES -  Relatively newer version of Android covers your needs
                              Play Store Access
                              Feeble chipset and hardware but does your daily needs
                              Big screen entertainment and easy to type
                              Hardware parts are available
                              Original S4 battery can be used (Only with HDC S4 Legend) 

FLOPS               -  No information about SAR values
                              Number of complains of bezel cracking
                              No NFC, Screen Protection               
                              Low capacity batteries
                              Screen get's less sensitive and often dead pixels
                              No Genuine Software Tweaks,camera modes and some sensors.
                              No warranty / hard to claim warranty

 Finally let's move on to spotting a Samsung replica


Most clones comes with a genuine wooden looking Samsung package. But inside contains flip covers and sometimes two batteries and small gadgets like USB card readers. Documentation and USB cable is present in the box but i have no idea about the headset whether it's a original or fake or about it's audio quality.

Type some codes used in original Samsung phones

*#1234# (View SW Version PDA, CSC, MODEM)
*#0*# (General Test Mode) 
*#12580369# (SW & HW Info) 
*#197328640# (Service Mode) 
*#0228# (ADC Reading) 
*#32489# (Ciphering Info) 
*#232337# (Bluetooth Address) 
*#232331# (Bluetooth Test Mode) 

If these codes are working, then it is an original one.


From the screen you can also identify a replica and for that you must have a knowledge about AMOLED screens. take this image for an example, 


AMOLED screens have a deep vibrant colors while clones with normal TFT LCD or IPS LCD has whitish bright colors.

You can also check a Samsung phone with a micro USB Jig. One the jig is connected to your phone (Phone should be switched off before connecting the jig) it turns on and put the phone in to Download mode. if it isn't getting to download mode it's a replica


If the Baseband version is starting from "MAUI" or the Android version shows not official release,something like 4.2.9 like we saw above ,that's a replica too


And some replicas shows Android version as a latest but the build number shows what's really installed. see the image above. Android version is Android 4.2.2 but the build number is GINGERBREAD.25KJB which means it runs Android 2.3.x version.

Finally by removing the back cover you can spot a replica as shown in the image below.

Note : Most HDC clones comes under "Made in Korea By Samsung" manufacturer statement but it's Chinese for real.

FINAL WORDS : If you want to buy an Original S4 from local store make sure to check the facts you saw in the post. If you owning an replica by purpose don't keep it in your pockets (specially males) for long time since we don't know about SAR values. If you want a buy a S4 replica, buy a HDC Legend and also buy factory made Samsung battery since it's the best clone available currently in the market. These factors apply for the other Samsung phones as well. But i wanted to talk specially about Galaxy S4 as it's the device most people wanted to get in their hands.

Hope this post would help you guys and if have any questions or you know anything more than this please feel free to share with us in the comments below.

Mobile porn Trending

Thanks to the rise of smartphones and 4G, mobile porn is booming.
Research has found that more than 136 billion adult videos will be watched this year and by 2020, this figure is expected to rise to 193 billion.
It estimates smartphone owners will watch an average of 348 videos each this year alone.
These figures are taken from Juniper Research’s Digital Adult Content: Market Trends, Forecasts and Revenue Opportunities 2015-20 report.
It continued that, overall, video views were set to grow by almost 55 percent in the next five years.
While there will be a marked increase in developing markets, the analysts see video growing most significantly in the US and Western Europe.
“3G, 4G and wi-fi have changed the nature of video-based services, as they make the streaming of high-quality video quicker and more readily available to users ‘on the go’,” the report said.
The report also predicts the rise in watching porn will be fuelled by virtual reality.

Windows 10: Microsoft is going big

San Francisco - Microsoft on Monday announced plans for a celebratory debut this month of Windows 10 operating software designed to spread the US software titan's offerings across a broad range of devices.
Word that Windows 10 would be welcomed in grand style came less than a week after Microsoft said it will cut 7 800 jobs and write down the value of its struggling mobile phone division acquired last year from Nokia by $7.6 billion.
The announcement represented the second major round of layoffs in a year for the US tech giant, which cut 18 000 jobs a year ago as part of its effort to integrate the Finnish-based phone group.
Microsoft said in a statement that it would “restructure the company's phone hardware business to better focus and align resources”.
Microsoft will make the latest version of its Windows operating system available on July 29 for computer and tablet users.
Special events are planned in 13 cities around the world in tribute to those who took part in a Windows software test period, Microsoft executive Yusuf Mehdi said in a blog post.
“We will celebrate the unprecedented role our biggest fans - more than five million Windows Insiders,” Mehdi said.
“These celebrations will offer hands-on opportunities, experiential demos, entertainment and opportunities to meet the Windows team.”
The list of cities where Windows 10 launch events will take place includes Beijing, Sydney, Tokyo, London, New Delhi, Sao Paolo, and New York.
The new Windows 10 software will come as a free upgrade to people who already use Windows 7 or Windows 8.1 and will be available in 190 countries.
Windows 10 will come pre-installed on Microsoft-compatible computers and tablets from July 29 and will be available for purchase later in the year.
The move marks a major launch for Microsoft, after the relative failure of Windows 8, which was rolled out in 2013.
Microsoft has high hopes for Windows 10, which it wants to see installed in a billion devices around the world by 2018.
Windows 10 boasts a common base on which developers will be able to build apps that work on smartphones, tablets, PCs and desktops, and even Xbox.
As part of the launch celebration, Microsoft will invest $10 million to support missions of nonprofit groups including Malala Fund, CARE, Code.org, Special Olympics, and The Nature Conservancy.
While it still dominates the market for personal computers, Microsoft has struggled in the market for mobile devices, the majority of which are powered by the Google Android system or Apple's iOS.
Satya Nadella, who became CEO in 2014, is seeking to reinvigorate a company that had been the world's largest but which has lagged in recent years as Google and Apple have taken leadership of the tech sector.

Latest Findings about Apple's Watch

San Francisco - Is the Apple Watch a dud?
Nearly three months after the launch of Apple's fashionably smart wrist wear, some analysts say it's not a mainstream mega-hit. But others see promise in its popularity with internet-savvy young people.
Media outlets last week jumped on a study by research firm Slice Intelligence suggesting that, based on a large sampling of email receipts in the United States, orders for Apple Watch have plunged 90 percent since the week that the wearable computing gadget made its debut.
The estimate did not factor in data about Apple Watch sales at real-world stores. It remains to be seen whether the famously tight-lipped technology company will provide insights into Apple Watch sales when it releases a quarterly earnings report on Tuesday.
While not sounding an alarm, BMO Capital Markets analysts put out word to investors that they were “disappointed” and reduced their estimate for Apple Watch sales in the coming year.
They reasoned that the product was “nice to have but not a necessity, and is a bit hard to use”.
Richard Windsor at Edison Investment Research said that even if Slice is way off the mark about the drop in Apple Watch orders, it was clear the smartwatch has sold far below even conservative expectations.
“My single biggest disappointment when the Apple Watch launched was Apple's failure to come up with a compelling use to which the device could be put,” Windsor said.
“I think that this failing is the single biggest reason why the device is underperforming and why wearables in general continue to massively underperform the hype.”
However, Cantor Fitzgerald experts believe Apple Watch will be a “go-to gift” during the year-end holiday season and become the best selling new product in Apple's history.
Apple Watch was the first new product line introduced by the culture-changing company behind iPhone, iPad, iPod, and Macintosh computers since 2010.
Global Equities Research managing director Trip Chowdhry has estimated Apple could sell 20 million to 25 million of the watches in the final three months of this year.
Jack Gold, President of J. Gold Associates, a research firm, said that it would be no surprise if Apple Watch sales momentum fell after the hype of it hitting the market subsided.
“The Apple lovers are going to buy things as soon as they come out,” Gold told AFP.
“The rest of the market though, the mass market, really waits for more definition around ‘What can this do for me?’”
So far no smartwatch, even a fashionably sophisticated offering by Apple, has hit the market accompanied by uses so compelling that people swarm to snap them up, according to Gold.
“Why do I spend $400 for a screen on my wrist that allows me to do basically the same thing than my phone does?” he asked rhetorically.
This is not just a challenge facing Apple. Rather, it is a gauntlet thrown down before every maker of smartwatches or other forms of what has become known as “wearable computing”, according to Kantar Worldpanel ComTech analyst Carolina Milanesi.
“It's a market issue for wearables,” Milanesi said.
“It makes your life easier, it might help you with fitness, but it doesn't serve a basic need of communication, which is what the phone does.”
And while people in the United States can get smartphones at steeply discounted prices if they sign telecommunication service contracts, such discounting is not done with smartwatches, the analyst noted.
Given those factors, it is unrealistic to expect smartwatches or other wearables to rack up the kinds of sales seen by smartphones, according to Milanesi.
Measuring Apple's success in the sector for now could come down to how much profit it makes per smartwatch and how big a chunk of the market it commands, analysts said.
Kantar research indicated that iPhone owners are more interested in wearable computing overall and more willing to spend money on gadgets, signalling that Apple could be more successful in the sector than rivals.
Eight analysts consulted by AFP anticipated that Apple Watch sales this quarter would range from three million to five million units, and most expected sales by the end of the year to tally slightly less than 20 million.
The figure would eclipse sales posted my big-name makers of Android-powered smartwatches. Apple could clinch 56 percent of the global smartwatch market this year, according to research firm IHS.
“This is a long-term play,” Gold said of Apple Watch.
“It's going to take another year or two, not just for Apple but for the market, to understand what it is that consumers really want these smartwatches to do for them.
“Apple will have to make some adjustments and I think it'll become more popular over time.”

iPhone 7 to ship with Force Touch

The next iPhone will have technology that will let it know how hard its screen is being pressed, and turn it into one big button, according to reports.
Apple’s next phone – likely to be called the iPhone 6S or iPhone 7 – will have Force Touch technology, first launched in the Apple Watch, according to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report. The company is also considering new colours for the phone, alongside the current grey, silver and gold options.
The Force Touch technology will allow a new way of interacting with the phone, alongside the current swipes and taps.
On the Apple Watch, it allows the screen to act like another button – with long presses bringing up extra options on the screen – and some rumours have already suggested that will be used in the camera app.
The WSJ report chimes with previous rumours, which have suggested that either the next iPhone or its successor would have the technology built in. It also fits with Apple’s apparent strategy to put Force Touch into all of its devices.
The screen sizes will stay the same in the next iPhone, according to the WSJ. Apple currently makes a phablet-sized iPhone 6 Plus, the iPhone 6 and a smaller iPhone 5S – it’s unclear whether the latter form factor will be a part of the new line-up.
It isn’t expected that the next phone will include any significant new external design changes, meaning that it is likely to be called iPhone 6S.
It is expected to be released in September

Solving typical Android development problems

Solving typical Android development problems
Things are not always working as they should during your Android development. This section gives an overview over typical problems and how to solve them.

1.1. Clean Project

Several users report that they get the following errors:
  1. Project ... is missing required source folder: 'gen'
  2. The project could not be built until build path errors are resolved.
  3. Unable to open class file R.java.
To solve any of these errors, go to the project menu and select Project → Clean.
If you have library projects, make sure to clean them too.

1.2. android.content.ActivityNotFoundException

During start or during execution of your application, your application stops. In the LogCat view you see the message:android.content.ActivityNotFoundException : Unable to find explicit activity class; have you declared this activity in your AndroidManifest.xml?
Check in this case if you declared your activity in the AndroidManifest.xml file.

1.3. Problems with Android Debug Bridge (adb)

The communication with the emulator or your Android device might have problems. This communication is handled by the Android Debug Bridge (adb).
Eclipse allows you to reset the adb in case this causes problems. Select therefore the DDMS perspective via Window → Open Perspective → Other... → DDMS
To restart the adb, select the "Reset adb" in the Device View.

1.4. LogCat

The LogCat view shows you the log messages of your Android device and helps you to analyze problems. For example Java exceptions in your program would be shown here. To open this view, select Window → Show View → Other... → Android → LogCat.

1.5. Java7

If Android complains that you cannot use Java7 select your right-click on your project and select the Java Compiler entry. Ensure that Java 1.5 or Java 1.6 is used. You may have to select the Enable project specific settings checkbox.
Java compiler settings

1.6. Eclipse reports file from R.java as missing

Sometimes Eclipse complains that a file, e.g. R.layout.main cannot be found. Check in your source code that you did not importandroid.R. An android.R import will prevent Eclipse from finding your R file.