Emerging markets drive global smartphone sales up 19%: Gartner

According to the research firm, over 281.6 million units of smartphones were shipped worldwide in the first quarter of 2014.

Emerging markets drive global smartphone sales up 19%: Gartner
NEW DELHI: Led by emerging markets like India, global smartphones sales to end users touched 336 million units in the March quarter, up 19.3 per cent from the year-ago period, Gartner said today.

According to the research firm, over 281.6 million units of smartphones were shipped worldwide in the first quarter of 2014.

"This growth was led by strong smartphone sales in emerging markets (excluding China); the fastest growing regions were emerging Asia/Pacific, Eastern Europe, and the Middle-East and North Africa," Gartner said in a statement.

Due to these high-performing regions, the emerging markets achieved a 40 per cent increase in sales during the quarter.

In terms of overall mobile phone market (smartphone and feature phone), sales grew 2.5 per cent to 460.2 million units in the reported quarter from 448.9 million units in March 2014 quarter.

Samsung led the market with 21.3 per cent share, followed by Apple (13.1 per cent), Microsoft (7.2 per cent), LG Electronics (4.3 per cent) and Lenovo (4.2 per cent).
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During the said quarter, local brands and Chinese vendors came out as the key winners (in smartphones) in emerging markets, Gartner Research Director Anshul Gupta said.

"These vendors recorded an average growth of 73 per cent in smartphone sales and saw their combined share go up from 38 per cent to 47 per cent during the first quarter of 2015," Gupta added.

Samsung continued to see a decline in sales and share during the first quarter of 2015 at 24.2 per cent (81.1 million units) from 30.4 per cent share (85.5 million units) of smartphone sales in the year-ago period.

"We expect Samsung's drop rate to be slower than that seen in recent quarters with sales of its new S6 smartphones starting in the second quarter of 2015, and its Galaxy Alpha receiving good response," he said.
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Apple continued to exhibit a strong performance in the quarter, particularly in China. iPhone sales were up 72.5 per cent (60.17 million units) during the first quarter of 2015.

"Apple's extension into more Asian markets helped it close the gap with Samsung globally," Gupta said.
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Lenovo, Huawei and LG Electronics followed in the smartphone tally with 5.6 per cent, 5.4 per cent and 4.6 per cent share, respectively in the reported quarter.

In terms of operating system, Android's share fell by 1.9 percentage points to 78.9 per cent, while iOS (Apple) grew year-on-year (to 17.9 per cent) for the third consecutive quarter.

"The performance of Windows Phone (2.5 per cent share) remained flat, mainly due to a weak ecosystem and a less desirable mobile brand, together with a strong and established competitive smartphone market," Gupta said.

The upcoming Windows 10 will create a consistent user experience across all devices, but it remains to be seen whether developers will follow, he added.
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Five awesome ways to use multiple smartphones
1/6
Text: Hitesh Raj Bhagat & Karan Bajaj, ET Bureau

What’s better than a smartphone? Two or more smartphones, of course. By combining the power of multiple smartphones or in some cases, by linking them together wirelessly, you can do some of these amazing things – ET explains how to get started
Text: Hitesh Raj Bhagat & Karan Bajaj, ET Bureau

What’s better than a smartphone? Two or more smartphones, of course. By combining the power of multiple smartphones or in some cases, b..
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You might have seen multiple televisions/monitors linked together to make one giant display at events or shopping malls.

The same concept can be applied to smartphones and tablets.

While there is no ready solution available for purchase right now, there are three ongoing projects which deliver this kind of functionality.

An upcoming technology called the Nanoport Magnetic Connector keeps your devices stuck together to form a single giant display. The company behind the technology claims that the device will be able to transfer data and power quickly from one connected device to another without using any cords.

A similar concept developed by the Tokyo University of Technology is called Pinch. Instead of being a hardware connector, Pinch is an interface that needs to be installed on all devices and it works over WiFi.

Once installed on all the devices, you need to place the screens next to each other (in any alignment), ‘pinch’ the screens together and it will link them to work as a single large display.

If you feel you have to try this for yourself, you can connect multiple devices using their native web browsers and something called the Junkyard Jumbotron.

This is a free, web-based tool by MIT that links multiple smartphones or tablets into a large display. This is a tool for the computer geek because it requires you to download the source code from www.github.com and then install it on top of a nod server.
You might have seen multiple televisions/monitors linked together to make one giant display at events or shopping malls.

The same concept can be applied to smartphones and tablets.

..
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At many functions/events/meetups, you’ll see a common sight: numerous people taking photographs from their phones.

However, as a host, getting those photographs from each person is a tedious process. You can try to get everyone to upload them to a shared folder on to a cloud storage service like Dropbox or OneDrive, but there is no guarantee that it will happen. An easy alternative is to use dedicated collaborative photo sharing apps.

One such option is PixWith-Me. Android and iPhone users can create a virtual PixBoard for an event (like a wedding, birthday party or any get together) and invite all the guests in advance to download the app.

At the event, your guests can continue to click as many photos as they like. Any photo clicked using the app will be automatically shared on the board and will be viewable by anyone (they can even like or comment on it).

If need be, you can password protect the board for security as well as customize it with your personal branding graphics. If you don’t like PixWithMe, you can try Photago.

The basics stay the same but it offers 1GB of cloud storage, allows users to join as guests (they don’t need to register for an account) and gives you the option to download photos in full resolution.

Select Samsung smartphones also come with a ‘Group Play’ feature that lets a Samsung user share photos and videos with other Samsung smartphones by acting like a wireless access point.
At many functions/events/meetups, you’ll see a common sight: numerous people taking photographs from their phones.

However, as a host, getting those photographs from each person is a tedious..
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Let’s say you have an Android phone or tablet connected to a TV to use as a media player.

The problem is, each time you want to change something, you have to get up and operate it. Developers Locnet have made a couple of apps that let you use one Android device as a keyboard or mouse for another.

An2An Keyboard and An2An Mouse are the apps – they’re `100 apiece.

To get either of them to work, you first need to download the free An2An Remote app on the device that you want to control. In the same way, you can also use multiple Android devices as a keyboard or mouse with a computer.

You need the free app Mouse & Keyboard for Android (by Suraj Bhattarai) and the free server for MAC & PC which you can download from www.andromouse.com.

With AndroMouse, you can connect to the computer over Bluetooth or WiFi and perform all the usual mouse actions like click, double click, drag, scroll and right click. There is a paid version of the app which removes ads.
Let’s say you have an Android phone or tablet connected to a TV to use as a media player.

The problem is, each time you want to change something, you have to get up and operate it. Developer..
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When you look at footage of an event that has been professionally videographed, chances are that there are multiple shots of the same scene from different angles and they’re all edited together seamlessly.

You can do something similar with smartphones and a free app called Vyclone (available for iOS, Android and Windows Phone). You need to download it on multiple devices, film something and upload through the app — Vyclone will edit them together for you.

For something with much more ‘professional level’ control, you can consider CollabraCam.

This is a US$5.99 iOS app that lets you direct up to 6 other iOS devices in a multi camera setup. You can use multiple iPhones (or iPads) to record your own reality show or talk show and then edit them live before uploading directly to YouTube.

As the director, you can choose which feed to use and direct the six camera operators with on-screen messages. All the devices need to be connected to the same WiFi network and they will work with a wireless hotspot — no internet connection is needed.
When you look at footage of an event that has been professionally videographed, chances are that there are multiple shots of the same scene from different angles and they’re all edited together seaml..
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You’ve probably heard of wireless multi-room audio systems; individual speaker systems, synced to each other wirelessly and controllable from one location.

It’s nice to have the same music piped into different rooms of the house. There is an option if you have multiple Android devices and multiple Bluetooth (or even wired) speakers — a free app called Sound-Seeder.

You need the SoundSeeder app on the controller device (the one with the music) and the other devices (which only receive the audio stream) need to get the SoundSeeder Speaker app.

Hook up each Android device to a speaker and you’re good to go! SoundSeeder is a full-featured music player with media library, graphic equalizer, built in internet radio and it works over WiFi. You can connect up to 16 devices (speakers) simultaneously for synced multi-room audio as long as your WiFi network allows the spread of devices.

iOS users can get a similar app called Seedio (`60) which broadcasts audio over WiFi to other nearby iOS devices. You can try the free version of Seedio to see if it works for you (the free version can receive songs but can only broadcast for 10 minutes every hour).
You’ve probably heard of wireless multi-room audio systems; individual speaker systems, synced to each other wirelessly and controllable from one location.

It’s nice to have the same music p..
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