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iPhone 5 price cut on Phones 4u, now free from £31 a month

Apple iPhone 5 white back (generic banner) 

The retailer is currently offering Apple’s latest flagship smartphone free on Orange’s Works 31 and Panther 31 tariffs for just £31 a month on a two-year term.
The former endows takers with unlimited minutes and texts, plus 500MB of mobile internet. The latter provides a less enticing 400 minutes a month, but still comes with unlimited texts and ups the data allowance to 750MB.
Both offers are web exclusives, so you can only take advantage of them by ordering online.
If you’re not too keen on joining Orange, you can also pick up the iPhone 5 free on Vodafone for £33 a month. This gets you 600 minutes and unlimited texts, along with 500MB data and 2GB of Wi-Fi per month.
iPhone 5 white on hand (promotional)
Launched in September last year, the iPhone 5 is home to a four-inch Retina Display with a pin-sharp 326 ppi density, an eight-megapixel camera with an improved iSight lens that offers even better low-light performance and the new A6 processor that’s twice as fast as its predecessor but still consumes less power.
Phones 4u’s price cuts for the iPhone 5 come ahead of the imminent launch of the Samsung Galaxy S4.
Samsung’s fourth-generation kit lands on April 26th and is expected to be one of most sought-after handsets at release with record-smashing pre-order demand reported by the retailer.


iPhone 5 price slashed on EE, Orange and T-Mobile

iPhone 5 black on hand 

EE has dropped the upfront fee for Apple’s latest flagship smartphone from £99.99 to £49.99 when you take up a contract for £36 a month over a two-year term.
This entitles you to unlimited minutes and texts, plus 500MB of mobile internet allowance per month for browsing and downloading at up to five times the speed of 3G.
Orange is also offering the iPhone 5 for £36 a month on its Works 36 tariff with a one-off charge of £49.99 (£69.99 previously). This furnishes takers with unlimited texts, minutes and 1GB of data every month.
Orange’s partner network T-Mobile, meanwhile, has confirmed a price cut on the iPhone 5 on its Full Monty plan, although at the time of writing it has yet to update its website to reflect that.
Assuming it’s still going ahead with the reduction, punters will have to pay £69.99 for the iPhone 5 as opposed to £99.99, with a monthly outlay of £36 a month, which comes with unlimited minutes and texts each and every month, as well as unlimited data.
The price drops are only available until April 30th, just days after the hotly anticipated release of the Samsung Galaxy S4, which lands on April 26th.


HTC 8X and 8S hands-on review

Apparently the result of an internal mandate to design devices inspired by the Windows Phone operating system and the challenge of making the iconic Live Tiles into as close to a physical, tangible product as possible, the 8X and 8S (or the Windows Phone 8X and Window Phone 8S by HTC, to give them their full names) certainly exude a sense of fun and breathe fresh air into HTC’s line up.
Designed by HTC’s lauded design agency One & Co, the 8X and 8S attempt to differentiate themselves with colourful hues, a strong visual identity, and a nice line in hardware specs to boot.

HTC 8X

htc 8x blue
The flagship Windows Phone 8 device from HTC is a looker in anyone’s books. It’s certainly an impressive size and exhibits the keen attention to aesthetic detail the manufacturer has become known for.
Boasting an expansive, vivid 4.3-inch 1280 x 720 super LCD display (with Corning’s now-famed Gorilla Glass, naturally), a 1.5GHz dual-core processor and 16GB of on-board storage, it would be easy to dismiss the 8X as merely ticking all the boxes for a current-generation smartphone.
However, the attractive tapered frame - delicately crafted from anodized aluminium - as well as an 8-megapixel autofocus camera and built-in amplifiers with Beats Audio support set the 8X apart from the pack when it comes to hardware.
The selection of striking colourways for European editions of the 8X - California Blue, Limelight Yellow and Graphite Black are promised for Europe – was a little more muted than expected, especially given that the Lumia range from Nokia is promising an equally vibrant set of Windows Phone 8 devices in October.
In the flesh, the 8X is a solid handset, the 10.1mm thinness accentuated by the design and a matte finish that lends it a sense of confident build quality.
Whilst we weren’t able to tinker with the Windows Phone 8 innards as much as we’d like, a nice – if subtle – touch, is that the device matches the theme to the colour chosen out of the box.
It is these details and accents to an HTC phone that so strongly emphasise their focus on the overall experience for the user, something which is effectively conveyed in the 8X.
In the audio stakes, whilst the 8X won’t be supplied with Beats By Dr. Dre headphones upon purchase, the software side tweaks are still present and correct, revealing themselves as soon as an audio-outputting device is connected to the phone.
The reassurance of ‘authentic sound’ and dedicated audio amplifiers with a higher voltage output that offset pesky distortion issues at higher volumes are welcome, but the absence of any official cans is sorely felt from HTC’s new WP8 poster child.
The HTC 8X holds its own in the snapper stakes, an 8-megapixel 28mm lens is supported by an LED flash, physical camera key, an f/2.0 aperture as well as a BSI sensor to avoid capturing poor low-light images. And to help out less able snappers, the 8X also equipped with a dedicated HTC ImageChip, which apparently enables a quicker focus speed and clearer action shots.
A nice boost comes to the front-facing camera too, with fans of video calls or self-portraits able to enjoy a 2.1-megapixel effort with a wide angle lens and support for 1080p HD video recording, just like the effort on the rear. You’ll be glad to know that the ImageChip also does the business with the second camera, souping-up photos over here too.
Whilst the 8X won’t be riding on the 4G super-highway any time soon with only a UMTS model due for Europe, quad-band support compliments Bluetooth v2.1, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n and NFC support in terms of connectivity.
As odd as it sounds, Windows Phone 8 is the least thrilling part of the 8X, HTC’s inability to customise, tweak and tinker leaves an altogether slightly over- familiar selection of Live Tiles to greet you on its crisp touchscreen.
That's not a downer by any means, but when you’ve witnessed some of the trickery HTC has managed to create on Windows Mobile and Android in the past, the restraint that the company is showing in the 8X is palpable.
With HTC’s Sense ethos confined to the addition of Beats Audio and improvements in imaging and their Hub present once again to deliver a portal to unique applications, you can’t help but feel the manufacturer is somewhat hamstrung by Microsoft’s insistence on uniformity in the operating system.
HTC certainly achieve what they set out to do in terms of creating a smartphone that appeals to the eye and to the touch with the 8X, perhaps inviting those unfamiliar with the unique language of Windows Phone to try it, engage with it, and most importantly have fun with a robust, slick device.

HTC 8S

htc 8s official
The HTC 8S’smaller 4-inch display is WVGA as opposed to the 8X’s Super LCD screen. The processor is indeed down to a dual-core 1GHz affair and the internal memory has been quartered to 4GB (but is upgradable via microSD, unlike the 8X). Meanwhile, the front-facing camera is gone and the rear-facing effort is now sporting a 5-megapixel lens, shorn of all that ImageChip goodness.
But with those gripes out of the way, the HTC 8S still has one thing going for it: it looks fantastic.
A more affordable Windows Phone 8 entrant, HTC’s 8S definitely lends a heightened sense of fun to proceedings, the gorgeous two-tone design immediately carving the handset a niche amongst fashionistas and the anti-slab brigade alike.
The unique, slender frame evokes memorable HTC handset designs past like the Hero, Legend and HD Mini, with Black-on-White, Red-on-Blue and Grey-on-Yellow colour clashes looking incredibly attractive, cool and certain to turn heads at the right price point.
htc 8s
It pares back on the right features to make it more of a mid-level offering, meaning the Windows Phone 8 experience loses little of its snappiness on the 8S’ leaner processor.
The Beats Audio support may have also lost its dedicated amplifiers in the 8S, but will make more than enough noise in public with some incredibly bold, eye-catching looks.
A smaller, lighter frame makes for a more pocketable (or purseable) device in the HTC 8S, and is sure to go head-to-head with the Nokia Lumia 820 in the ‘cheaper-but-still-cool’ Windows Phone 8 stakes.
According to HTC themselves, Microsoft feel the same way, with the 8X and 8S both receiving a great reception from Redmond, so much so that they will be the faces of Windows Phone 8 in a joint marketing campaign later in the year.
With reassurance that HTC’s dynamic duo will receive ‘prominent placement’ in building awareness for Microsoft’s latest mobile effort, it will be an interesting battle for supremacy between the 8X and 8S with a blessing from on-high (they have Windows Phone 8 right in the name) against a pair of powerful phones from Nokia attempting to convince floating fans to make the switch to Lumia.
Either way, the 8X and 8S are said be landing within days of the launch of Windows Phone 8 in late October, and are due to bring a splash of colour - and a bit of punch - to the smartphone battle.
At the right price and with the right levels of support from networks, these two could well bring the much-needed ‘wow’ factor to Windows Phone this winter.

Samsung Galaxy Beam review

First impressions

samsung galaxy beam 1
So far, projector phones have been a tough sell for Samsung. But the Galaxy Beam is a darn sight better-looking than Sammy’s earlier efforts: the bulky Pico and the Halo, which rocked a candy bar form factor that meant it looked more like a superannuated feature phone.
Boosting the Beam’s appeal is that this time around the projector promises to be more powerful than we’ve seen before. And offers some modes that could transform it from a novelty into a handy tool.


Design

samsung galaxy beam 2
With its yellow trim, rubbery backplate, mostly metal construction and weighty, chunky feel, at first glance the Beam appears to have copped more than a few moves from JCB’s range of ruggedized tough phones. Natch, this approach is surely due partly to the need to protect the projector, which sits flush at the top of the handset.
But while those JCB handsets’ form factors sacrifice style on the altar of shock resistance and solidity, the Beam has also been taking notes from the iPhone 3GS. Most obviously in its single home button, rounded corners and all-black slab-like frontage. As someone who - controversially - thinks that the 3GS and not the iPhone 4 is Apple designer Jonathan Ive’s finest hour, the Beam’s sharp looks come as a pleasant surprise.


Features

Of course, the unique selling point of the Beam is its projector. So how does it shape up?
Well if you’re measuring it against a dedicated projector, not brilliant. But for a neat additional function on a smartphone, it’s not bad either.
For starters, it’s easy to use. Firing it up is just a case of long-pressing the button on the side of the handset or touching the built-in projector app. And we awarded extra points for being able to project everything from a blockbuster to lo-fi YouTube clips.
With the Quick Pad mode, you can scribble or point at the screen – rendering the handset a fairly smart tuition or presentation tool. Or if you’re more of a party type, there’s the ambience option. This lets you put together a montage of images – almost always smiley faces and clips from ’70s Chop Socky movies - that you project in a space to give it that warehouse rave feel.
The downside is that with a brightness rating of 15 lumens and quite muddy sound, you’re not going to be blown away by the quality/production values of any movies that you watch on the Beam. And you’ve got no chance of being able to see anything you’re attempting to project in bright, daytime conditions. But by the same token a night spent with the Beam will be a film-watching experience that you’re unlikely to forget in a hurry.
The handset is also home to a fairly standard four-inch screen, with screen resolution of 480x800-pixels. Alas, there’s no sign of the Super AMOLED display technology that has become a hallmark of Samsung’s top-end Galaxy smartphones.
Elsewhere, you’ll find a dual-core processor that keeps things ticking over smoothly and a passable five-megapixel camera with flash.


Software

samsung galaxy beam largest
The Beam runs Android Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) out the box rather than the up-to-the-minute Jelly Bean iteration of Google’s OS, which adds features such as the revamped notifications bar and the Siri-rivalling Google Now. The good news is that despite the Beam’s relative lack of power, Samsung plans to make Jelly Bean available for it later this year.
Of course, as with all Android phones, you’ll get to choose from tens of thousands of apps and games up for grabs as the Google Play download store. You’ll also get multiple home screens to fill with apps and games and whathaveyou.


Ease of use

While the dual core processor and ICS version of Android aren’t going to combine to set any new chipset benchmark records, they do make for a relatively snappy smartphone experience.
As we’ve mentioned, the projector is very easy to get to grips with. It’s just a shame that the projector doesn’t really come into its own in anything but really dark conditions.


Verdict

The Galaxy Beam deserves to be applauded for trying something out of ordinary and, with the inclusion of some cool, value-adding bonus modes, represents by some distance the best example of a projector phone so far.
At not far shy of £400, though, whether that’s enough to sway you away from cheaper phones running the software and similar spec sheets but with no projector is something you’ll just have to decide for yourself. 

Specifications

  • 5 MP camera
  • 4.0″ TFT capacitive touchscreen
  • 8 GB internal storage
  • microSD card support up to 32GB
  • Dual-core 1 GHz Cortex-A9 processor
  • Android OS, version 2.3.6 (Gingerbread)
  • 1.3MP secondary camera             
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Motorola Razr i review

First impressions

Pull the Motorola Razr i from its box and you’ll be immediately struck by two things.
Firstly, the sheer heft of the thing. Secondly, that edge-to-edge 4.3-inch display.
Motorola Razr i review img 1
This is one smartly constructed phone, which despite tipping the scales at a somewhat heavyweight 126g (the iPhone 5 comes in at 112g by comparison), feels reassuringly high-end in the hand.
Fire it up and the OS is a breeze to handle. Google’s Ice Cream Sandwich edition of Android, coupled with Intel’s nippy 2GHz Atom processor, ensures this is a hugely enjoyable phone to use whether you’re browsing the web or snagging apps from Google Play.


Design

Motorola’s design team have done a grand job in making the Razr i feel like a truly premium device.
The Kevlar backing looks the part and protects it from any nasty bumps and scrapes, while the Gorilla Glass panel truly dominates, leaving no ugly, redundant areas on the phone.
Motorola Razr i review img 2
SIM and SD slots are neatly hidden behind a small plastic grommet down the side, which thankfully doesn’t feel as if it’s about to fall off at the first time of asking. The Razr i is a timely reminder that the Google-owned mobile maker is more than capable of producing sleek, slick smartphones.


Features

The key feature here is Intel’s 2GHz Atom processor. It keeps the Razr i ticking along at lightning speed, to the point where using the device never feels laboured.
Sure, it doesn’t stack up to the quad-core delights of Samsung’s top-end devices, but then that’s not really the point. For a device that costs just £349 SIM-free, it’s excellent.
The eight-megapixel camera sits well against rival devices, with the Android camera controls as intuitive as ever.
Motorola Razr i review img 3
That said, the social sharing options are sadly limited to just Google+ and Picasa for stills, with YouTube added into the mix for Full HD video shots.
The lack of Facebook and Twitter sharing is a rather big oversight, but not the end of the world if you’re more focused on sharing your musings rather than your snaps and clips.
The aforementioned Full HD shooting feature is superb and gives the camera a real edge when it comes to the mid-range Android market.
Shots appear crisp and clean on screen, although you’ll need to make sure the ambient light is spot-on to get the very best images.
Battery-wise, we managed to keep the Razr i going for 36 hours, which included hammering refresh on BBC Sport for the latest footie results, watching goal highlights, downloading apps and using the camera.
That’s as good as it gets these days and will stretch on for longer if you don’t use it constantly.


Software

Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich is great as ever, although it’s a shame that Motorola hasn’t managed to load the Razr i up with the latest version of Android Jelly Bean.
Motorola Razr i review img 4
The small design tweaks it’s made to the software are neat and unobtrusive, while the Circles function, which lets you flip through the time, weather and your battery status on the home screen is very neat.
While those after cutting-edge Android will be disappointed, the software here is still excellent and hardly outmoded.


Ease of Use

The Motorola Razr i is an incredibly easy phone to get to grips with. The simple sign-in means you’re up and running in a matter of minutes, while the home screen quick access to settings means you don’t need to go delving into myriad menu trees to get to what you want.
This is unquestionably Motorola’s best handset in years.


Specifications

  • Android 4.04 Ice Cream Sandwich
  • 4.3 inch, 540 x 960 capacitive touchscreen
  • 8 megapixel camera, 1080p HD video recording
  • 3.5mm jack
  • Wi-Fi, HSDPA, 8GB memory, 2GHz processor and microSD expansion

Huawei Ascend P1 LTE review

First impressions

Huawei Ascend P1 LTE version
Huawei doesn’t have the same cool cachet of the likes of Samsung and HTC in the annals of Android phone-makers. But the purveyor of cut-price kit has made a very decent fist of ensuring that the Ascend P1 LTE looks and feels the part.
The black shell of the handset, fairly standard slab form factor and familiar Android phone layout of home, back and menu buttons means that it doesn’t exactly stand out from the crowd. But it’s still a pretty good-looking bit of kit even so.

Design

huawei ascend p1 lte back
Unlike the original Ascend P1, which an angular shape that recalled Sony’s more recent phones, this LTE-toting re-swizzle is a more rounded affair. It’s a cute design, though, and most closely resembles the vanilla Android powered likes of the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.
Where it does lose out a little in comparison is that at 9.9mm thick, it’s 2.2mm beefier than its predecessor. But with that extra bulk allowing for 4G technology to be packed inside and a removable backplate and battery, we think it’s a price worth paying.
Elsewhere, the fact that Huawei hasn’t deviated from the design and three-button layout of the majority of Android phones means the Ascend P1 is instantly familiar and easy to get to grips with.


Features

4G
Huawei's rep rests on the sub-£100 Android kits with the kind of spec sheets that you’d expect for that kind of outlay. Not so this turbo-charged take on the Ascend P1.
Leading the charge is a more than capable eight-megapixel snapper, secondary 1.3-megapixel camera for video calls, a 1.5GHz dual core processor, 4GB of on board storage and scope to add a microSD card. And there’s a 4.3-inch none-more-Samsung Super AMOLED screen on board too, with a 960x540 resolution that we found plenty sharp enough.
But the real meat here naturally is 4G support, which EE reckons offers speeds “typically five times faster than 3G”. While we didn’t experience the kind of 40Mbps speeds that EE claims, tests we conducted pegged the service consistently at between 20-25Mbps in and around London.
With pages loading nigh-on instantaneously and whole albums and data-heavy apps (we tested Spotify and BBC iPlayer) downloading in seconds for a satisfyingly zippy mobile web experience.


Software

Android Ice Cream Sandwich
The Ascend P1 LTE runs an almost completely unadulterated version of the Ice Cream Sandwich version of Android. This is a very good thing, ensuring it’s flab free and sans the sort unnecessary adornments and animations that can blight the Android experience.
But that still means you get the pull down notifications bar, ample scope for customisation, five home screens, resizable widgets, the stock keyboard and Android Beam for sharing content via NFC. And as with all Android phones, you’ll get to pick from the thousands of apps and games on offer at Google Play.
It’s perhaps a little disappointing and somewhat surprising that Huawei didn't see fit to equip the LTE version of its handset with the newer Jelly Bean version of Google’s OS. But given that official beta versions of Android 4.1 are doing the rounds already, it’s a safe bet it’ll come to the Ascend P1 LTE soon enough.


Ease of use

One of the major concerns over 4G phones is that next-gen connectivity will tear through handsets’ battery life.
We didn’t find that to be the case with the Ascend P1 LTE's 2,100 MaH battery and got a full day’s use out of the handset, after putting it through its paces on 4G-hammering applications throughout the day, taking in everything from downloads to streaming via the iPlayer and tethering our lappy.
The stripped-down, familiar button layout and similarly spartan approach to Android also make the handset incredibly easy to get to grips with for anyone who’s used an Android handset before.


Verdict

Huawei’s latest is a solid enough handset that’s made much more attractive by its 4G capabilities. And all at a price that’s not that much more per month than a top-end 3G smartphone.
Given that early EE customers will be first-adopter types who don’t mind paying the premium for bleeding-edge tech, though, we’re not sure who it’s aimed at right now.
Especially when you consider that EE is offering the exclusive titanium version of the Samsung Galaxy S3 for a £29.99 one-off outlay and £46 per month – just a fiver more than you’re paying for Huawei’s kit.
-Eight-megapixel auto focus camera
-16GB internal memory
-microSD card support
-4.8-inch Super AMOLED screen
-Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
-1.3-megapixel front-facing camera

Samsung Galaxy S3: Top 5 reasons it will change the game

1 Simultaneous international launch means its impact is undiluted

samsung galaxy s3 invite
The S2 managed to annex magazine, tech site and newspaper column inches and rack up over 20 million sales despite a botched, staggered release that meant it landed on some US carriers six months after it debuted in Europe.
This time Samsung is giving its flagship a simultaneous global release. With no dilution of its impact at launch, that ought to equate to the Galaxy S3 making a massive splash early on.
Team this with Sammy's rumoured vast ad-spend and the resulting massive visibility for the S3 and it means it’s odds-on to power to a sales record for an Android phone and come close to the kind of numbers usually reserved for iPhones.

2 It’ll engender an age of quad-core apps
exynos processor
The huge sales that the Galaxy S3 is set to rack up will provide a huge financial fillip for devs to create apps that take advantage of its graphical muscle. We think you can start pencilling the first massively immersive, graphically rich games in about 12 months time.
That’s not to say that it’ll kill off the likes of Angry Birds and its 79p, casual ilk. More’s the pity. But quad-core phones like the S3 must mean the clock is ticking for them…


3 It’s going to take 'phablets' to the mass market
Samsung Galaxy Note wide image
The Galaxy Note has done sales of over five million since landing last October. That’s much more than was expected. But still a long way from the numbers needed to say that larger screen devices have come of age.
With a display mooted to be between 4.6 and 4.8-inches, the S3 is a phablet in all but name. And by hipping the mass market to the joys of acres of screen real estate, the S3 could be the gateway device that pushes that much maligned form factor to bigger things.
4 It’ll give NFC the push it needs
BlackBerry NFC
In keeping with Samsung’s status as an Olympics sponsor, the S3 will surely be touted as the event’s official phone.
What will this mean? Well, we think part of the deal will be that it’ll pack NFC support to be used by punters around the Olympic site to pay for low-ticket items and salty sustenance at high-street retailers and restaurants by swiping their phone over a reader.
More importantly, let’s assume the S3 does 30 million units. That’s tens of millions of extra handset owners with NFC-capable phones in their pockets. We think on sheer numbers alone, the S3 will be critical in taking the tech overground.
5 Brand recognition
samsung logo large
Part of the S2’s success was down to Samsung’s greater brand visibility compared with other Android phone makers, not least HTC.
That, teamed with the penetration achieved by the S2 and the Note, and the fact that sales of HTC’s One range don’t seem to be matching their glowing reviews, mean that all the stars are aligning for the S3 to blow a huge hole in the market.


Samsung Galaxy S3: Top 5 reasons to upgrade from an S2

So it's perhaps not surprising that some carping critics have claimed it's a disappointing iterative update from the Galaxy S2.
They're wrong, though. Here's five, cast-iron reasons the S3 is worth every penny of your outlay.
1 4.8” Super AMOLED HD screen
samsung galaxy s3 olympics
The S3’s screen is 22 per cent larger than the Galaxy S2. It’s also massively crisper and brighter, with 309ppi pixel density that puts it up on par with the iPhone 4S’s super high density Retina display. The edge-to edge-design and thinner bezels make it seem even more capacious.
Not convinced you really need all that much display real estate? Well, consider this: there’s a reason why smartphone screens keep getting bigger. And it’s because the things we now most use them for, whether it’s gaming or watching media or surfing the web, just work that much better with more display to play with.
Still not convinced? Try playing any game that features a virtual joypad on the S3 and then try the same title on an iPhone with its 3.5-inch screen and tell us which handset makes it more playable. It's the S3 every time.
2 Quad-core processor
samsung galaxy s3 processor
It’ll drain the battery, claim the naysayers. Benchmarks show it doesn’t outperform dual-core chipsets by that much, the same vinegary churls add.
I’ll address these points individually. First, the S3's 2,100mAh battery – compared with the S2’s 1,650mAh number - ought to handle the extra drain with aplomb. So that's that covered.
And what about the claim that dual core processors are amply powerful to handle any application designed to run on a modern smartphone?
Well, that's partly true. But only because right now there aren’t many apps designed with quad-core chipsets in mind.
Give it a year, one in which the S3 and the similarly quad-core processor-toting HTC One X will ensure a massive potential audience for said apps, and it’ll be a very different story.
Console-quality is often over-used term for smartphone game graphics, but we’ve got a feeling that when the first wave of quad-core games arrive the description will actually be justified.
Just as importantly, the 1.4GHz Exynos quad-core processor will ensure the S3 has got more than enough brawn to handle future Android updates. So you can be sure you won’t be on the outside looking in while your mates get acquainted with all the new features that incoming versions of Google’s OS bring to the platform.
3 Mirroring
sharp tv
The Samsung Galaxy S3 allows you to mirror your PC or iPad screen on your handset. Handy, no?
Less practical, but much cooler is that it can do the same with any large screen. That means you can even use the S3 as a de facto games console and get yourself a massive advantage when you're hammering your way through Halo 3’s multi-player carnage.
4 S-Voice
samsung galaxy s3 s-voice
Although the technology is by no means new, voice controls on smartphones are still at a fairly nascent stage. And right now, although S-Voice lets you schedule alarms, turn on the handset and ask it questions, it’s never going be anyone’s primary means of interacting with their phone.
But, and we admit we’re basing this on the brief hands-on time we had at this month’s launch, that’s not to say that S-Voice isn’t loads of fun to use. And it’s still the best feature the S3 boasts when it comes to showing off down the pub with your chums.
5 SmartScreen
samsung galaxy s3 official
Really good ideas always seem forward-slappingly obvious in hindsight. And SmartScreen is definitely one of them.
This neat addition to the S3 uses the phone’s secondary front-facing snapper to monitor your eye movements. This means it can tell when you’re watching a movie and you wont go into sleep mode when you haven’t touched the screen for a few minutes.
It’s amazing what a difference it makes to enjoying media and is a great way to conserve battery life, too. And it’s proof positive that, as Sammy is wont to claim, this phone really is “designed for humans”.

Top 10 Android apps of 2012

1 Swiftkey 3

SwiftKey Keyboard Android
This Swype-alike improves on its predecessors in the alt-virtual keyboard category by adding contextual intelligence. That means that it ‘learns’ your typing patterns and your lexical tics to predict what you’ll input next. It also autocorrects errors and lets you sync it with your written correspondence via SMS, Facebook, Gmail and more to get the best idea possible of how and what you type.

2 Google Chrome

google chrome android
Chrome is fast as mobile browsers go and offers unlimited tabs, which you can flick through like a deck of cards in a UI touch that’s more than a little reminiscent of the much lamented webOS. The real boon for us, though, is that signing in to Chrome means you can sync open tabs and bookmarks across from your desktop, laptop and/or tablet.

3 Google Now

google now
Billed as a challenger to Siri, Google Now features the same voice commands functionality of Apple’s iOS personal assistant. But it ups the ante by intelligently learning from users’ behavioural patterns and serving up reminders according to their location, the time of day and previous search habits. Our advice is: don’t fret about the potential privacy infringements. Just enjoy an app that’s the closest thing so far to a robot concierge.

4 Weather

1 weather
Weather apps are pretty unlovely things most of the time. This great title from OneLouder (we love the Spinal Tap reference) is the exception. It’s exceptionally pretty, with a clean, modern look and some unobtrusive and attractive animations.
It’s great on the function front too, serving up real-time information, as well as oodles of handy gen for forecasts, alerts for extreme weather sent to the notifications bar, as well as sunrise and sundown times. The Radar map that shows weather in your locality and updates as you use it is also a bit of a boon.

5 Flipboard

flipboard android
Seemingly aeons after it landed on iOS devices, Flipboard hit Android. Better late than never.
As reading apps go, it doesn’t get too much better, thanks mostly to a smartly laid-out user interface that makes this supremely simple to use. Naturally, you can also tailor the news and articles it serves up to your preference and check out pieces your friends are recommending too.

6 TED Talks

ted talks android
This is a brilliant repository of talks from the fields of technology, entertainment and design. New speakers are added weekly and there are already thousands to get through. If you’re in the market for something a bit more edifying than a turn on an endless running games, this is just the ticket.

7 Pinterest

pinterest android
Like Flipboard, this also took its time coming to Android. But it’s a neat app that was worth the wait. And also like Flipboard, it’s easy to get to grips with. And because it’s nigh-on identical in terms of form and function to the website, you probably know how to use it already.

8 Google Drive

google drive android
Somewhere between Google Docs and Dropbox, this teams word processing smarts, so you can create new docs on the go, and spreadsheets to work on numbers and whathaveyou, with 5GB of free cloud storage and the option to add more for a smallish charge. Automatic synching across all devices helps offset some of the frustration that movement of files within the app is severely constrained.

9 SkyDrive

skydrive
Another impressive cloud storage solution, this time courtesy of Microsoft which has implemented a lovely UI that takes more than a few cues from the live tiles of Windows Phone. Hotmail account holders get 7GB of free storage.

10 Instagram

instagram android
Photo filters with similar functionality are ten-a-penny on Android. But none have the same hugely engaged user community as Instagram, with whom you’re able to share your snaps instantly.

Top 5 smartphones of 2012

Samsung Galaxy S3 LTE

It should come as no shock to most of you that the brilliant Samsung Galaxy S3 - voted Best Smartphone at the uSwitch Mobile Awards 2012 - should lead the charge of the year’s very best releases.
Rocking a stunning 4.8-inch HD Super AMOLED display and a quad-core processor that handles multitasking with aplomb, the Galaxy S3 is as powerful as it is cutting-edge. And now with 4G LTE support, the best just got even better.
Samsung Galaxy S3 white official slanted
What’s perhaps even more impressive about the S3 is its amazing array of software that really puts the ‘smart’ back into smartphone and sets it apart from the competition.
From the intelligent SmartStay mode that keeps the screen awake for as long as it’s in use to Pop-up play function that lets you continue watching a video while working on something else, the S3 is packed to the brim with intuitive, well thought out features.
It’s hardly a surprise then that it’s already shifted over 30 million units worldwide and should no doubt be at the forefront of your consideration when picking out a new smartphone. 

Apple iPhone 5

Dedicated smartfans need no introduction to Apple’s perpetually best-selling iPhone and the iPhone 5 lives up to its predecessors’ status by packing yet more improvements in an even slicker and slimmer design.
iPhone 5
For starters it’s the first ever handset from the Maker of Shiny iThings to offer worldwide LTE connectivity. Secondly, it’s fitted with a dynamic antenna that seamlessly switches between 4G and 3G networks to give you a speedy, uninterrupted mobile internet experience.
Apple has also upped the screen size to four inches, which boasts a 16:9 widescreen aspect ratio that makes it ideal for streaming movies and working on the go. The Retina display with an eye-popping 326 pixels per inch density is superb, offering even richer colours and contrast than before.
And if you need more reasons to decide on an iPhone over a sea of iClones, there are literally hundreds of thousands waiting for you at the App Store.

Nokia Lumia 920

Nokia has built its reputation on designing top drawer smartphones known for their sturdy build quality and chic, colourful designs and the Lumia 920 is no exception.
The Finnish phone-maker’s latest flagship kit, featuring a slick, slim and slab-like form factor that comes in an array of bright colours, really is a breath of fresh air in a market saturated with drab and uninspired handsets.
Nokia Lumia 920 colours range
Powered by the latest, snappiest Windows Phone 8 operating system, the 920 makes it a piece of cake to connect with the people and information that matter to you.
And it’s no slouch in the hardware department, with specs that include a 4.5-inch PureMotion+ HD display, an 8.7-megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optic that takes excellent snaps and shoots in full HD, and of course, 4G LTE connectivity for blazing fast internet.
If you’re in the market for a great smartphone that’s not an iPhone or an Android, you need not look any further.

HTC Windows Phone 8X

HTC is not one to be left out of the cool parties and it’s very much an A-List presence with the fantastic Windows Phone 8X, home to a 4.3-inch HD Super LCD2 display, a dual-core 1.5GHz Snapdragon S4 processor and an eight-megapixel camera.
HTC Windows Phone 8X colours
Aside from running on the same, superb Windows Phone 8, which is probably not hard to tell from its name, a stylish design and selection of vibrant colourways also makes the 8X very much an effort in the same vein as the Nokia Lumia 920.
What sets the 8X apart, though, is the kind of industrial quality that’s become a hallmark of the HTC brand, and exclusive features, not least of which includes a built-in amplifier for Beats Audio, a 88° ultra-wide-angle front camera that captures almost three times the area of other phones and an advanced image signal processor (ImageChip) that enables speedy autofocus and continuous burst mode.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg of what the 8X offers, and in our opinion, it’s easily one of the best smartphones HTC has made yet.

Samsung Galaxy Note 2 LTE

Even a year ago, very few would have believed that a smartphone equipped with an utterly enormous 5.3-inch display could ever break into the mainstream consciousness, especially following several long-forgotten attempts failed trying, among which only the Dell Streak rings a bell anymore.
Well, that’s exactly what Samsung’s Galaxy Note did, with over 10 million units sold of a device that not only brought the stylus back into fashion but also transformed a formerly ‘niche’ form factor into one that’s increasingly becoming the norm.
Samsung Galaxy Note 2 flat slanted
The Galaxy Note 2 takes all that its predecessor achieved and enriches it with a better S-Pen stylus, a larger 5.5-inch screen and whole host of features such as MultiView that lets you split the screen into two to keep working while you do something else, Air Play, which enables you to preview content by simply hovering the S-Pen over them and Quick Command, which reveals a list of apposite options with a simple swipe.
Aptly dubbed a ‘phablet’ for combining the size and functionality of a smartphone with the advanced capabilities of a tablet, the Galaxy Note 2 is proof-positive that bigger sometimes really is better.

Top 5 phones to look forward to in 2013

1 Samsung Galaxy S4

Samsung Galaxy S4 placeholder
Possibly the most anticipated handset of 2013, the Samsung Galaxy S4 looks set to be revealed at January’s Consumer Electronics Show.
A new official teaser trailer, called ‘Get Ready’, suggests the device will debut between January 8th-11th, the dates of CES.
Samsung is wasting little time in getting the successor to the S3 out of the door, less than a year after its release, capitalising on its new position as smartphone top dog.
A flexible screen, five-inch display, snappier processor and Android Jelly Bean are all expected to form part of the package. 

2 iPhone 5S/iPhone 6

iPhone 5S leaked rear panel vs iPhone 5
Apple’s next phone is already the subject of leaks and rumours, its casing apparently snapped by a French fan site.
Like the iPhone 4S before it, it’s set to be an iterative upgrade. But seeing as the iPhone 5 felt like little more than a minor bump, Apple will need to either serve up something spectacular or placate fans by making this the first of two releases in 2012.
The latter is more likely, with the iPhone 5S arriving earlier in the year with a full-on upgrade following later. Apple must now dance to the Android tune of regular, tech-tastic upgrades. 

3 HTC M7

htc m7
The Samsung Galaxy Note 2’s success has seemingly enticed key rival HTC into unleashing its own, dare we say it, ‘phablet’.
It has already released the HTC Butterfly in Japan and the US, but a different five-inch effort, the HTC M7, has really got smartphone-watchers buzzing.
This hulking device will apparently pack a full HD display, 4G, quad-core Qualcomm tech and a unibody aluminium design, much like the old-school HTC Legend, an early Android winner.
HTC needs a big 2013 and the M7 looks a good bet to help kickstart its ailing fortunes. 

4 Nokia Lumia 940

nokia lumia 940
Nokia will doubtless be looking to make an even bigger push with its Windows Phones in 2013.
The Lumia 940 is for now only a concept, but one with a stunning carbon fibre frame and beefed up screen.
Espoo has done such a great job with its native apps and in trying to push the Windows Phone platform, but it really needs a design-led device that doesn’t come in a range of plasticky colours to give it that extra edge.
Hopefully the Lumia 940 is it. 

5 BlackBerry 10 touchscreen

blackberry 10
BlackBerry 10 has already been widely trailed, with the next-gen OS set to be officially unveiled at the end of January. A touchscreen phone, touting new multimedia access, improved apps and better typing is expected to follow in the spring.
BlackBerry has really been in the doldrums for the past few years, but this is a cool new handset that’s well worth getting excited about.
Expect it to be sleek and work-focused and give RIM new impetus in the smartphone wars. 

Top 5 phones of Mobile World Congress 2013

http://www.thinkdigit.com/FCKeditor/uploads/nokia%20lumia%20720.jpg 

1 Nokia 105

nokia 105 triplicate
Going back to basics is a phrase that’s often used when it comes to struggling mobile makers, none more so than Nokia. And it seems Espoo has really taken it to heart with its new, pared-down 105 device.
This is Nokia doing what it was great at ten years ago – serving up simple handsets with stonking battery life.
In the 105’s case, we’re talking an entire month before you’ll need to find power.
There’s no camera, but classic time-killer Snake is on board. And the clincher? It’s just €15.

2 ZTE Grand Memo

ZTE Grand Memo black official
ZTE has been making waves in China, but its new Grand Memo has all the makings of being its breakout device outside Asia.
It packs in Qualcomm’s latest, fastest 800 processor, a 13 megapixel camera and high definition video playback.
The main thing here though is the 5.7-inch screen, aimed directly at Samsung’s similarly-sized Galaxy Note 2. One to keep an eye on.

3 Huawei Ascend P2

huawei ascend 2
World-record claims should always been taken with a pinch of salt when it comes to mobile manufacturers.
And Huawei’s Ascend P2 would be a winner even if the Chinese giant wasn’t calling it the ‘world’s fastest smartphone’.
That’s down to the inclusion of the newest LTE Cat 4 tech which it says helps it to lightning fast 150 Mbps download speeds.
That aside, we’re looking at another Android phablet with a 4.7-inch display and a quad core processor. One to add to the increasingly impressive list of Google-backed superphones.

4 Geeksphone Keon

geeksphone keon
No, that’s not a name we just made up. In fact, this is the very first smartphone using Mozilla’s much-hyped Firefox OS.
It’s due to cost around £100 and is aimed only at developers, but it could have big implications for the smartphone industry.
Firefox OS was the big story in Barcelona and if devs can get it working to a decent standard, it has the potential to cause a big stir in emerging markets.
So let’s not get too fussy about the Keon’s 1GHz processor, three-megapixel camera and dinky 3.5-inch screen, okay?

5 Samsung Tizen phone

samsung tizen
The Galaxy S4 was perhaps the biggest story of MWC week and it doesn’t even launch until March 14th.
But Samsung was also busy showing off a new phone at the expo which uses the Intel-backed Tizen OS.
This handset is all about offering a more Samsung-centric experience than the Android-stylings of the Galaxy range and a version of it is set to land in July.
A lot of work needs doing for it to be a winner. Still, it’s good to see it’s not all just about Android in the sweaty halls of Barcelona these days.