Most Spotify users now listen on mobile


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If you're a Spotify user, the chances are you listen predominantly on a mobile device, according to recent figures.


Though it started off as a predominantly desktop-based service in 2008, a major shift in general computer usage has seen the emphasis shift to mobile phones and tablets.


As reported by TechCrunch, Spotify has been telling advertisers that most usage of its service comes through mobile. The precise breakdown is 42 percent on smartphones, 10 percent on tablets, 45 percent through its desktop software, and three percent through a web player.


As that suggests, the traditional PC and laptop is still the biggest single means through which Spotify users listen, but mobile as a whole - smartphones and tablets combined - is the new preferred Spotify destination.


As the report notes, it could be the addition of features such as shuffle play and an ad-funded option to Spotify's mobile offering that has finally swung things around.


Another interesting stat to come from the report is that engagement with Spotify - that is, the amount of time people actually spend listening to music on the service - is at its highest when a combination of mobile and desktop software is used. These cross-platform users average 150 minutes of listening per day.



Read More: Best music streaming service


So, despite the swing towards mobile, Spotify will probably continue to push the whole multi-platform angle.


A final interesting figure to emerge is that 55 percent of Spotify users choose to connect their Facebook accounts to the service. That might sound like a lot, but it highlights the importance of Spotify making this optional. It didn't used to, and continuing to do so would have meant limiting its subscriber base to almost half of its current figure.




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LG ColorPrime TVs TV Review


LG ColorPrime TVs – First Impressions from CES 2015


While LG was keen to stress that its main CES 2015 story is its new OLED TVs, that OLED range isn’t yet extensive or affordable enough to enable the Korean brand to leave LCD behind. In fact, LG had a strikingly wide range of LCD sets on show, headed up by its rather confusing ColorPrime UHD series.

Why confusing? Because the ColorPrime name is used to describe two quite different colour technologies, and because LG is taking a more ‘neutral’ – as in, not wanting to place greater importance in one above the other – approach to these technologies than most rival brands.


First, let’s look at the two technologies involved. The most familiar to anyone who’s been following reports from CES is Quantum Dot technology – or rather, LG’s proprietary ‘nanocrystal filter’ take on Quantum Dot technology. The other is a wide colour gamut technology delivered by using different types of phosphor in the LED illumination system.


Related: Samsung JS9500/JS9000 SUHD TVs – First Impressions


LG ColorPrime TVs


Actually, this latter approach is also common; Panasonic in particular is making much of its use of a similar system in its new TVs, and both Sony and Samsung have used wide colour gamut systems of their own on their 2014 high-end TVs. But LG seems so bullish about its own WCG system that, unlike other brands, it seems to be positioning its WCG sets as at least equal in picture quality to the Quantum Dot models.


In fact, in the configuration shown at CES the flagship WCG models, the UF9500 series, were arguably the premium option thanks to their use of new Auditorium stand designs. These feature striking curved shapes designed to reflect the sound from the down-firing speakers out towards the viewer for a more potent and immersive soundstage.


The bottom line, though, is that really LG doesn’t want to get involved in preferring one of its ColorPrime technologies over the other, stressing that both approaches are reckoned to deliver a colour gamut boost over normal LCD TVs of around 30%. Instead LG just wants consumers to understand that the ColorPrime sets will offer improved colour in different ways to suit different tastes.


What are those different tastes? On first impressions, the WCG sets appear to be the best options for serious cinephiles, delivering a less aggressively vibrant and bright picture than the Quantum Dot screens, focusing instead on producing a more subtly nuanced, natural palette.


LG ColorPrime TVs


The Quantum Dot sets, meanwhile, produce a markedly more bright, vibrant picture that really pops off the screen and so could be the best option for a bright room. Or for people who just like their TV picture to be up in their face. The downside is that the extra colour boldness comes at the cost of some of the tonal subtlety seen on the WCG models, especially in particularly heavily saturated areas. I also felt more aware of the contrast weaknesses sometimes seen with LG’s IPS panels on the Quantum Dot models than I did with the WCG models.


It wasn’t possible to tinker with any of the settings on the ColorPrime models I was looking at, so maybe when we get to see these TVs under review conditions our first impressions might change.


Considered not just against each other but in the context of the wider TV CES showing, these LG TVs look like promising additions to 2015’s LCD fray. They appear even more appealing when you add in their use of LG’s highly attractive new ‘Art Slim’ design concept, still impressive webOS Smart interface, apparently improved 4K upscaling and, based on past experience, likely quite aggressive pricing.



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Samsung reportedly testing new Windows Phone 8.1 devices


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Samsung hasn't given up on Microsoft's Windows Phone platform, according to a new report from Korea.


The world's biggest smartphone maker has all but abandoned the third biggest smartphone platform in recent times. Windows Phone has dwindled far behind iOS and Android in terms of market share, and only Nokia (now Microsoft itself) has continued to support the OS with fresh hardware in any major way.


But that may not always be the case. According to the Korea Times, Samsung is considering launching some cheaper smartphones running on Windows Phone 8.1.


Indeed, one official directly involved in the project claims that Samsung has run pilot programs to test the stability of the Windows Phone 8.1 OS on the company's hardware. The company is said to be "interested in promoting Windows mobiles."


Why would Samsung still be interested in an OS that appears to have been cut adrift (even Microsoft is moving on to other things with Windows 10)?


It's that age old problem for Samsung - its over reliance on Google. Samsung might make the most popular phones around (combined, at least), but they're all powered by Android.


Because of this undue (if you're Samsung) influence, it would be in Samsung's interest to promote a little healthy competition from a software rival - no matter how far behind it might be.


Of course, there's one big stumbling block in the way of a renewed partnership between Samsung and Microsoft. The two are at loggerheads in the courts.


Read More: Best mobile phones


Microsoft is suing Samsung for late royalty payments relating to the Android platform, while Samsung continues to petition the Chinese and Korean anti-trust authorities with regards to Microsoft's acquisition of Nokia.


Should these legal issues be settled, then it seems as if Samsung will start making Windows Phone hardware once again.




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Sony 65X9005C TV Review


Sony 65X9005C – First Impressions from CES 2015


Although it’s not the most premium model on Sony’s CES 2015 stand, the 65-inch 4K 65X9005C seems to be the TV the Japanese brand most wants to shout about.

As soon as you approach Sony’s booth you’re presented with a huge line of these striking sets standing edge to edge, while another couple of models spin endlessly round on turntables in front.


As you might guess from this bold display, the main feature of the 65X9005C is that it looks a million dollars. In fact, its design is not only its killer feature but also a record breaker, as it delivers the slimmest body ever seen on an LCD TV.


Its chassis is just 4.7mm deep for the whole top two-thirds of its design. And although the set juts out further over the bottom third to accommodate cooling systems, speakers, tuners and the like, even here it’s still way slimmer than most other LCD TVs. The bottom line is that the 65X9005C looks more like an OLED TV rather than an LCD TV. And it looks drop-dead gorgeous in the process.


Related: Panasonic 65-inch OLED TV – First Impressions


Sony 65X9005C


Sony has had to come up with a number of innovations to make such extreme slimness possible. For starters, the attractive and robust bodywork used to make the screens feel sturdy despite their slimness is created by externalising the bonding system that holds together all the layers that go into creating an LCD screen. This bonding system would normally be tucked underneath an outer skin.


Next, in order to retain the super-slim feel of the set even when hung from a wall, with the deeper section resting flush against the brickwork, Sony has had to develop a new vertical cooling system that takes in air at the bottom and ports it out through the deeper section’s top edge.


Of course, trying to connect your sources to such a skinny TV sitting so flush to your wall could be hideously fiddly. But Sony’s engineers have got your back here, too, thanks to a clever curved bar wall mount system that lets you pull the TV’s bottom edge away from the wall to access the connection ports.


If you decide you’d rather stand the 65X9005C on a tabletop, the simple legs that support the screen can be mounted either at the extreme edges of the screen or set more towards the centre if your table doesn’t happen to be as wide as the screen.


Sony 65X9005C


In short, the 65X9005C is a marvel of design – and it delivers an emphatic two fingers up to those who’ve moaned in recent years about Sony TVs tending to be bulkier than most.


While there were limits to what we were able to judge about the 65X9005C’s pictures at Sony’s booth, the continually bright, colourful 4K/UHD sequences from some sort of beach and sea sport paradise all looked uniformly spectacular. Colours were blisteringly intense thanks to a combination of Sony’s Triluminos system and a greater brightness output than we might have expected from such a skinny TV. The 4K detailing looked stunning, letting us feel like we could see every ripple of every wave, or every grain of sand.


Motion was well handled, too, so that even the sports footage remained crisp and distinctly ‘4K’, and we were relieved to see that viewing angles seemed more forgiving than those of some previous Sony TV generations.


Sadly we weren’t able to watch any darker content on the 65X9005Cs or hear any audio from them – two areas where the set’s exceptional slimness could potentially cause headaches. If the 65X9005C turns out to be decent in these two key areas, though, Sony could have a bona fide hit on its hands when these TVs go on sale in the spring.



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Google set to release real time translation app


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Google will soon release a new version of Google Translate that translates speech in real time.


Just last month Microsoft released Skype Translator, and app that could translate between Spanish and English in real time. Now Google is set to launch its own take on such a tool, according to a new report from the New York Times.


Google's effort should reach far more people and be more flexible than Skype's earlier effort.


For one thing, the new Google Translate will initially manifest itself as a free update to the Google Translate app for Android, which means that hundreds of millions of users will see the benefit. Skype Translator is only available to just a few thousand early users.


There's also that whole limitation of the Skype Translator application to just Spanish and English (though there's now a waiting list for the Chinese and Russian languages). It's not known how many of Google Translate's supported languages will be incorporated from the off, but we'd assume that there will be more than two for such a wide roll-out.


Read More: Windows 10: When can we get it?


The new Google Translate app will listen out for when someone is speaking a popular language, and will automatically turn this speech into written text.


Apparently, Google will also soon announce an app that lets you hold your phone's camera up to a foreign street sign and have it automatically translated for you on-screen.




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Epson EH-TW570 Projector Review


What is the Epson EH-TW570?


The TW570 is a new budget LCD projector targeted at gamers and home cinema enthusiasts. It supports 3D as well as 2D playback, carries a built-in audio system, and delivers an HD Ready (not Full HD) resolution of 1280 x 800. Its 3000 Lumens of light output makes it the brightest home cinema projector in Epson’s range, too. And it’s on sale for just over £470 at the time of writing.

SEE ALSO: Best TVs Round-up


Epson EH-TW570 – Design and Features


At just 297mm wide by 234mm deep and standing just 77mm tall the TW570 takes up impressively little space on a coffee table. Yet it manages to cram a little style into its small surface area thanks to its glossy black finish and cutely rounded edges and corners.

Epson TW570

It’s nice to find the small lens protected by a sliding door, too, while the necessary zoom and focus ring plus a keystone ‘slider’ are all integrated quite tidily onto the projector’s top edge.

Connectivity is unusual for a home projector, in that it only includes one HDMI port but lots more multimedia options than you’d typically find. These multimedia options include a D-Sub computer port, a USB-B port for an alternative computer connection method, a USB-A port through which you can play photos off USB storage devices, and even optional wireless network support via a (not supplied) USB dongle.


Install the LAN USB and you’ll be able to stream photos into the projector from your smartphone or tablet computer wirelessly via the Epson iProjection app. If you can’t be bothered to get the wi-fi upgrade, then the TW570’s HDMI socket is equipped with MHL support for direct phone/tablet media playback.


While some of this multimedia support is welcome enough in a modern home environment though, we can’t help but feel the connectivity balance overall feels biassed towards data rather than home entertainment uses. Especially the provision of just one HDMI. Hmm.


Now we come to think of it, the TW570’s pretty extreme 3000 Lumens maximum colour light output is also potentially more suited to data than gaming/movie uses. Though having said that, while we’d always recommend using a projector in a blacked out room we do realise that it’s not always easy or even possible for a typical household to achieve total darkness in their projection room, in which case the sort of brightness claimed by the TW570 could come in handy.


Epson TW570


At least the high brightness figure is joined by a reasonably promising 15000:1 contrast ratio – though this isn't a native ratio, but rather one achieved with the help of a dynamic iris system that adjusts the amount of light emerging from the projector to best suit the images being shown.


Finding a dynamic iris on a projector as cheap as the TW570 is actually quite impressive – alhough we’ll be on the lookout for over-obvious brightness shifts when putting the TW570 through its paces.


The most obvious sign of the TW570’s affordability comes from its resolution, which delivers an HD Ready 1280 x 800 pixels rather than the Full HD 1920 x 1080 we’re becoming increasingly used to seeing, even on very cheap projectors.


As well as meaning that the vast majority of the UK’s 1920 x 1080 HD sources will have to be ‘downgraded’ to the projector’s lower resolution, the TW570’s 1280 x 800 pixel count doesn’t provide a native 16:9 aspect ratio. Instead it equates to 16:10 – a ratio which, again, fits better with computer/data use than home entertainment.


The TW570 does thankfully present 16:9 video at the correct ratio rather than automatically stretching it a little vertically as happens with one or two native 16:10 projectors and screens we’ve tested over the years. But it still irks that you’re not getting the full benefit of the pixels you’ve paid for, and if you’ve got a 16:9 projection screen you’ll also feel annoyed by the way the image spills over the screen’s top and bottom edges.


The TW570 supports 3D playback using the active system – though no 3D glasses are included free with the projector, with each pair you want setting you back around £70. Which has to be considered quite an extra investment on a £470 projector.


Other features of note are the provision of two stages of noise reduction processing; Eco and Normal lamp modes (with the Eco one dropping the light output to 2100 Lumens); a built-in 2W speaker system; an unusual but actually quite useful split screen feature enabling you to watch two different inputs simultaneously; and a Turbo mode designed to reduce input lag when gaming.


Epson EH-TW570 – Setup


The TW570 is passably well equipped with setup features. Where the job of physically getting your image in the right place on your wall or screen is concerned, there’s a small amount (x1.2) of optical zoom, and the zoom and focus wheels accessed through a window on the projector’s top edge both move smoothly and respond accurately to your adjustments.

The keystone ‘slider’ at the projector’s front edge is handy too, enabling you to get the edges of your images perpendicular if, as is likely, you find yourself positioning the projector above or below the ideal position of the images on your wall or screen, or even off to the side. Though strangely the horizontal keystone correction is deactivated if you use the Turbo game mode.

Epson TW570

There are also dropdown legs to adjust the height and angle of the TW570’s projection, with the only significant downer being the lack of a vertical image shift tool that might have helped you avoid the keystone adjustment. After all, while the keystone ‘slider’ works well enough, as with all keystone mechanisms it is in reality merely distorting the image’s shape, potentially reducing image clarity in the process.


Picture adjustments in the tidy, clear onscreen menus include a series of sensible themed presets (including Game, Cinema and Living Room colour modes), simple brightness contrast, colour saturation, tine and sharpness adjustments, a three-level colour temperature adjustment, the option to adjust the balance of the red, green and blue colour components, Off/Normal/Fast Auto Iris settings, and a couple of noise reduction options.


Our main guidance over these modes would be that you should use the Cinema setting in a darkened room and the Living Room setting in a bright room, that you leave the noise reduction turned off, that you check the aspect ratio is set to 16:9 with Overscanning off for video playback, and that you engage the Turbo mode while gaming.


If you’re finding the projector’s cooling noise disturbing, make sure the lamp mode is set to Eco rather than Normal, as this improves things considerably.



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LG’s Flexible OLED TV will launch during the second half of the year


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With LG having unveiled the world’s first flexible OLED TV earlier this week, the manufacturer has now confirmed the innovative offering will hit retailers later this year.


Dubbed the LG EG9900, the flexible TV made its first official bow during CES 2015, possessing the ability to transform its 77-inch form from a flat to a curved panel simply with the touch of a button.


Although LG failed to offer any detailed release plans for the futuristic flat screen during its CES press conference, the manufacturer has since stated the innovative home entertainment offering will touch down during ‘the second half of the year’.


“This is the world’s first flexible OLED TV and it gives you all of the great benefits of OLED topped up with the Smart UX of webOS 2.0 and the fact that it can flex forwards and backwards,” Robert Taylor, LG’s Home Entertainment Product Manager said speaking with TrustedReviews.


He added: “It will be available in retail and will launch in the second half of the year.


Related: Hands-on with LG’s 2015 OLED TVs


Although LG has yet to discuss pricing for the TV it has described as being “all about the innovation in form factor,” those tempted by the device shouldn’t expect it to be easy on their wallets.


As well as boasting one-of-a-kind flexible credentials, the LG EG9900 benefits from a 4K panel and the company’s hugely popular webOS Smart TV platform.


What’s more, the TV’s price is sure to be further inflated by its uniqueness within the market.


“This is something that only LG can produce and it benefits from the attributes of having both a flat and a curved TV. It moves in between the two,” Taylor stated.


Would you be tempted by a flexible TV or do you see the idea as nothing more than a novelty? Let us know via the comments section below.




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