Tag Archives: Swiss Army Knife

Samsung's New Phone Isn't Just a Shot at Apple

By Rick Munarriz, Munarriz, The Motley Fool

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Samsung turned heads during last week’s Samsung Unpacked event.

Everyone seems to be wondering how the new Samsung Galaxy S4 will eat into Apple iPhone sales when the high-end smartphone hits the market by the end of next month. However, it’s not just Apple that will be challenged by Samsung’s bar-raising device.

Let’s go over three publicly traded companies that may also be in the crosshairs when it comes to Samsung’s new phone.

Nike
The sultan of swoosh would seem to be an odd target for a South Korean smartphone maker, but have you seen the new Galaxy’s fitness features?

S Health is a major component of the new handset. The S4 comes with a pedometer, counting the steps taken in order to track someone’s active lifestyle. Ambient temperature and humidity is also tracked for an accurate fitness read, and an updated app includes food nutrition information.

There are plenty of third-party accessories and devices — from scales to heart-rate monitors — that will play nicely with S Health. There is also the S Band bracelet that can track movements for those who aren’t always carrying around their phones.

This is a full-on attack on Fitbit and Jawbone UP, but it’s also a shot at Nike’s FuelBand wellness bracelets and the whole NikeFuel ecosystem.

Nike bulls will argue that the branded athletic footwear and apparel company is still a winner. Folks who are more conscious about their physical activities will go through more Nike shoes and sweat-wicking shirts. They have a point, but for now the challenge is for Samsung’s S Health to establish itself as an important wellness brand.

Rosetta Stone
S Tranlsate is another feature of the new S4.

The device allows instant speech-to-text and text-to-speech translations in 10 different languages. The ability to translate emails or text messages is novel, but the ability to actually communicate with a local in a foreign country is where Rosetta Stone will feel the pinch.

Rosetta Stone succeeds in getting language learners to pay up for intensive courses, but some may argue that it won’t be necessary when the S4 can do a lot of the heavy lifting.

BlackBerry
Apple may be challenged by the S4’s new features, but the timing of the announcement couldn’t have been worse for BlackBerry.

Samsung’s event was slated just as BlackBerry’s two largest U.S. carriers began to take preorders for the new Z10 device that runs on the BlackBerry 10 mobile operating system. The smarpthone pioneer’s new platform drew some critical praise, but it’s not the Swiss Army Knife of smartphones that the S4 is shaping itself up to be.

Diehard BlackBerry fans are going to get the Z10 when it becomes available domestically, but those straddling the fence about buying now or waiting until a likely summertime release for Apple’s next iPhone now have an even more current reason to reconsider with the S4 April rollout.

Beyond Nike, Rosetta Stone, and BlackBerry
The Galaxy S4 …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Review: Ashampoo Photo Converter 2 handles most basic image editing functions

If you work with images, you probably have a lot of editing tools on your computer which cover a wide range of functions. Going back and forth between these programs and loading and re-loading the same image takes up time and energy. So what if you could do away with all of those programs, and instead have all editing functions under one roof? That is what Ashampoo Photo Converter 2 ($15, 40-day free trial) tries to accomplish.

One thing to say up-front is that this is not Photoshop-grade software. Far from it. If you want to remove an unsightly spot on the end of someone’s nose, then this is the wrong software for you. Instead Photo Converter 2 tries to cover all the basic nitty-gritty editing functions such as resizing, adding a watermark, rotating, flipping, changing the colors (brightness, contrast, etc) and converting to another image format.

You can perform these functions on either a single file or a batch of files, and specify whether you want the original unedited files deleted or kept. Ashampoo uses the tired cliché of “a Swiss Army Knife” to describe Photo Converter 2 and it does a pretty good job of matching up to that image. I just wish the phrase “Swiss Army Knife” would be permanently retired when it came to developers trying to describe their work.

When installing, the software will attempt to install a browser toolbar and change your homepage and default search engine. To avoid this, choose the custom installation option.  When installed, you also need to click configuration>Service Channel and uncheck “recommendations from the Ashampoo team”. Otherwise, every time you close the software, you are going to get a nag screen trying to sell you something else.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld