Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Sony has sold 10 million PS4s since launch

Sony playstation PS4 with controller
SONY HAS ANNOUNCED that as of 10 August it has sold a cumulative 10 million Playstation 4 (PS4) games consoles.
This is a big number for Sony, and it is the most consoles that it has sold in such a short time. Predictably, the firm is rather thrilled.
"The responses we have received for the PS4 system's unique gameplay experiences powered by the network, along with its vast game portfolio has been phenomenal, and I am absolutely delighted that PS4 was able to reach this commemorative milestone in less than 9 months," said Andrew House, group CEO and president of Sony Computer Entertainment.
"We're so grateful for the enormous support from Playstation gamers worldwide, and we look forward to bringing even more exciting content and services in the months ahead."
It is not just gamers that have aided the Sony cause and the firm also blew kisses to its developer community and the sheer volume of games that have been release and sold for the PS4.
The firm said that this games developer support has created a software market that racked up some 30 million sales.
While Sony has released information on its PS4 sales, Microsoft has revealed only the number of Xbox One games consoles it has shipped. This means that not all of those might have all made their way into homes yet.
Microsoft's most recent numbers put Xbox One shipments at around the six million mark. In July Sony crowed over the news that the PS4 was the biggest selling games console for the sixth month in a row.

Samsung makes metal-bodied Galaxy Alpha official: Is this the Apple iPhone 6 killer?

It’s hammer time as Samsung has just made the much-awaited Galaxy Alpha official, it’s much-anticipated rival in the battle against Apple.

As expected this is the first high-end Samsung phone to sport a metal design. Samsung says the Alpha represents “the evolution of Galaxy Design”,  with a metal frame, more rounded corners, and by-now Samsung standard tactile back. The Galaxy Alpha will be rolled out to over 150 countries starting in September, but no official pricing is out yet.

The Galaxy Alpha is seen by many as the company’s rival to the iPhone 6 and it mirrors closely the latter’s expected specs. firstly, there’s Android 4.4.4 KitKat out-of-the-box with the requisite customisations that come with a Samsung phone. It features a 4.7-inch HD (720×1280 pixels) Super AMOLED display, which is likely to be very similar to the one used in the Galaxy S3, though slightly smaller. It’s quite slim for sure at just 6.7mm in width and weighs a mere 115 grams, which is quite superb in this category.

In terms of cellular connectivity, expect the very best as the Galaxy Alpha has LTE Cat.6 support so it can go up to 300Mbps (peak download rates). Inside is an octa-core chipset, Samsung’s own Exynos SoC, though the exact model number is unknown. It’s a quad-core 1.8GHz and quad-core 1.3GHz, working in HMP mode, so all eight cores can run simultaneously, if required. The smartphone also comes in a quad-core variant with a clock speed of 2.5GHz, which could be the much-awaited Snapdragon 805.

What’s the same on either variant is the 2GB of RAM and 32GB inbuilt storage, which is non-expandable. We hope Samsung releases a higher capacity variant, because the phone looks quite sexy. Now, before anyone says that it’s an iPhone rip-off, we think Samsung has done enough to distinguish the Alpha. Things that stand out are the slight bulge on the top and bottom, which presumably is there for better grip, as well as the slightly extended bottom frame that adds a nice profile to the otherwise minimal back.

A dark silver variant
A dark silver variant

The Galaxy Alpha sports a 12-megapixel rear camera and also includes 2.1-megapixel front-facing camera. We expect all the bangs and whistles of Samsung’s custom camera software in the Alpha. It packs an 1860mAh battery, which does sound terribly lean, but we’ll have to see what kind of optimisation Samsung has managed to pack in and the display shouldn’t draw too much power either.

The Galaxy Alpha, much like we expect all future Samsung flagships to be, has a fingerprint scanner embedded in the home button. There’s no heart-rate monitor though, so at least one rumour has fallen flat. At Tech2 we love those exceedingly inane marketing names for colour variants, and the Galaxy Alpha will be available in Charcoal Black, Dazzling White, Frosted Gold, Sleek Silver (pictured above), and Scuba Blue colour variants.