The Xperia Z will go on sale worldwide later this quarter.Incidentally, a special mention should also go to Huawei's Ascend Mate, a 6.in, 1280 x 800 'phablet' intended to bridge the gap between 5-inch smartphones and devices like the Samsung Galaxy Note II, and 7-inch tablets like the Nexus 7.The world’s TV makers were expected to make a big deal of 4K x 2K resolution Ultra HD at CES, and indeed they did. Most showed off LCD panels running to 3840 x 2160, but Sony and Panasonic both demo’d OLED UHDTVs of 56 inches in size. Of course, Ultra HD is ridiculously expensive right now and likely to remain so for some years yet, not least because it’s arguably pointless on tellies that are smaller than 50 inches in the diagonal - or you want to sit really close to your screen. But it’s impressive technology nonetheless.Sony 56-inch OLED Ultra HD TV
Native content will only be available in limited quantities for some time, but don’t discount these sets’ ability to upscale 1080p imagery to 4K. And don’t forget that even if upscaling video doesn’t improve it, that much higher resolution is going to make these sets’ UIs, apps and associated applications - web browsing, say - so much crisper. Even on a 1080p set, text can look fuzzy - Ultra HD should give you a hi-res monitor experience. Imagine the detail in next-gen games...
“Car markers want to speed up their innovation cycle to internet speed,” he said. “They are actively engaged to find out what is mobile computing in their industry."Healthcare is another field in which Heins has said QNX - and by extension BlackBerry - can "add value" with its combination of specialised devices and a trusted network.Heins' also spoke about his vision for BlackBerry as a service-enabler that just happens to sell hardware in response to questions about the possibility that the firm would once again address the tablet PC market.“If I build a tablet I will not build it for the hardware purpose,” he said. “I will do it around a service or a services value proposition.”“Pure hardware alone is a cut-throat businesses. Our vision for mobile computing is how can we take it to the next stage, not just another tablet or the next design for tablets.”Heins also has an eye on the enterprise market, saying he thinks end users will soon tire of carrying a mobile phone, tablet and laptop. The computing power of the mobile, the thinks, will satisfy most needs, although he did not offer a vision for how it will be adapted or evolve to offer a better user experience for diverse tasks.
Challenged on whether BlackBerry can achieve these goals, he retorted that upon arriving at BlackBerry he was told he had little chance of achieving anything, given the parlous financial state of the company in early 2012.“We have done very poorly in financial management,” he conceded. “I was told in two quarters we would be bankrupt. I was told we did not have enough cash to get BB10 to market.”Both of those predictions were clearly wrong, and Heins says market share growth and net promoter score – a metric that measures how many customers would recommend a purchase – have been “high” in every market BlackBerry has entered with the Z10.Throw in the company's 79 million current customers, plus carriers he says are crying out for an alternative to the iPhone/Android duopoly, and Heins sees plenty of upside.“I am not claiming victory,” he said. “I think we got off the starting grid very well.”
Left stalled in the pits, meanwhile, is Lenovo's reported bid for BlackBerry, which Heins dismissed on the basis that Lenovo executives seem to have little idea of just what they are purportedly buying."The comments surprised me," Heins said. "When you listen to what [Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing] said afterwards, he said, 'I first have to understand what this company is about'. That would tell you a lot about the maturity of the approach." Something for the weekend, sir? Currently, my most generous client has conspired to have me surrounded by shiny glass and plastic rectangles between the hours of 6pm and 6am. Working night shifts always seems a little exotic at first for namby-pampy light-lubbers like myself but the novelty eventually wears off as vitamin D levels decline.To be pedantic, one of the rectangles is not shiny: it’s a Eizo 22in autosensing LCD display with sensible matte coating. The rest, however, are as glossy as the hairless pate of my old school’s headmaster, Mr Ernest Shiney-McSlaphead. There’s a brand new skinny iMac with its depthless black 27in display looming over me like a distorted Clarke-Kubrick monolith. For reasons too complicated to explain, there’s my laptop screen there too, with its super-reflective display surface ensuring I can discern every detail of the light fittings above my head.
Scattered around the desk on either side are a mix of iOS and Android tablets: two 10-inch, one 8-inch and a 7-inch. Oh, and my smartphone is lying there as well because I inexplicably fail to notice all calls and messages when it’s in my pocket.Or in the case of the tablets, shiny greasy rectangles. My propensity to sweat has been hinted at in this column on previous occasions, and I seem to produce so much greasiness from my fingertips that I could probably fix squeaky doors with a touch. I could go into business as a furniture fittings guru, perhaps, adopting a ‘laying on of hands’ approach to the long road towards rust-free enlightenment.Are my hands really that greasy? They must be, judging by the state of these iPad and Kindle Fire screens after ten minutes in my mitts. If I had been born into the Victorian age, there’d be photos taken of me and my mystic digits producing ectoplasmic 3-In-One during séances in Bloomsbury for upper class twits. Well, we freelances have to make money where we can.Last November, HLW bought me a pair of woolly gloves with capacitive fingertips so that I could operate my phone outdoors in the cold. Contrary to all my expectations, they work superbly well and I have considered wearing them in the office. Doing so makes my hands sweat even more, unfortunately, but the real reason that I don’t wear the gloves indoors is because I can’t stand having to explain why I’m wearing gloves indoors to every single fucking person who walks past my desk.
I can hardly blame them, either: wearing gloves indoors is something that only dickheads do. Will.I.Am. Do I need to say more? That said, Will.I.Am has one thing over me in that his gloves are fingerless, apparently so that he can use his smartphone, and this means he must not have greasy fingertips.So in addition to all the shiny rectangles, my overnight desk is adorned with two large lens cloths and a bottle of screen-cleaner spray. The viscosity of my finger-grease is such that the cloths are not that much use: what I probably need is an ice scraper.For the past fortnight, however, I have been experimenting with a variety of capacitive pens. I’ve tried quite a few now, including some crappy little sticks sold cheaply at Maplin (bless ’em) and some effectively disposable capacitive styli that one of my colleagues had picked up for a couple of quid a pop.For the moment, I have settled upon the ludicrously expensive Wacom Bamboo Stylus Duo which has a floppy capacitive rubber balloon at one end and a unremarkable ballpen at the other. This turns out to be very convenient for making floppy interactions on the tablets and taking unremarkable notes in my workbook, and it is fitted with several unscrewable fittings on the nibs and cap so that I have something to fidget with.
It does the trick, too: the screen cleaner is only required once a day now. However, a capacitive stylus is a nonsense tool. The whole point of capacitive touchscreens, which are more expensive to manufacture than stylus-controlled resistive touchscreens, is to support multiple simultaneous touches, enabling such actions as rotate, pinch and zoom. With my trusty £35 biro-cum-floppy-balloon, I have regressed to point-and-click.One answer could be to invest in a second capacitive stylus and use them like chopsticks. I will certainly give it a go and let you know how I get on. The chances are that I’ll end up holding a stylus in each hand and looking like someone on their first visit to a Chinese restaurant trying to pick up a noodle.Worse, the best of capacitive technology is still to come, and it is all dependent on the human sense of touch. Disney Research – yes, such a thing exists – has been working on a project called Revel that sends an electric current through your body to your fingertips, producing programmable tactile sensations as you touch otherwise smooth but appropriately wired-up objects. For example, imagine touching a photo of a brick on an iPad and feeling the brick’s rough surface, or touching the protective glass casing in front of a museum exhibit and having the sensation of what it’s like to touch the exhibit itself.