POCO forays into audio category, launches Pods wireless earbuds in India

POCO forays into audio category, launches Pods wireless earbuds in India



Chinese smartphone brand POCO on Friday forayed into the audio category in India with the launch of the POCO Pods. Priced at Rs 1,199, these POCO’s maiden wireless earbuds boast environmental noise cancellation and support for quick charging. The wireless earbuds, POCO Pods, will be available on e-commerce platform Flipkart starting July 29.

“With a vision to empower every Indian with premium technology, we proudly enter the Indian AIoT space, starting with the launch of POCO Pods. The POCO Pods are a perfect fusion of cutting-edge innovation, seamless connectivity, and unmatched audio performance. We remain committed to delivering extraordinary experiences and introducing an exciting technology portfolio for our users,” said Himanshu Tandon, Country Head of POCO India.

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POCO Pods: Features and specifications


The POCO Pods features a 12mm audio driver. The earbuds are rated by the company to offer a battery life of up to 30 hours on a single charge. The earbuds support quick charge, and a 10-minute charge is said to provide the earbuds with a talking time of about 90 minutes.  The pods boast environmental noise cancellation for distraction free experience. The POCO Pods feature touch control. Besides, there is support for Google Fast Pair. Powered by Bluetooth v5.3, the earbuds support Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) mode for efficient connectivity.


As for the design, the earbuds are sweat-and-splash resistant (IPX4 rated).

First Published: Jul 28 2023 | 1:46 PM IST



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Meta’s instant messaging app WhatsApp gets 60-second video message feature

Meta’s instant messaging app WhatsApp gets 60-second video message feature


WhatsApp said the feature will be available to all in the coming weeks

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Thursday announced the launch of video messages on its instant messaging app WhatsApp. Rolling out in phased manner, the feature will allow WhatsApp users to record and share short personal videos of up to 60-second directly in the chat.


“Video messages are a real-time way to respond to chats with whatever you want to say and show in 60 seconds. We think these will be a fun way to share moments with all the emotion that comes from video…,” the company said in a blog.

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WhatsApp said the video messages will be secured with end-to-end encryption. Similar to the voice messages feature on WhatsApp, instant video messages will let users respond to chats in real-time with up to 60 seconds of recorded video content.

The video messages will play automatically on mute when opened in a chat, and tapping on the video will start the sound. To send video messages, users will have to tap to switch to video mode and hold to record the video. Users can also record the video hands-free, by swiping it up.

Also Read: Telegram launches Instagram-like ‘stories’ feature for premium users


The company said the feature will be available to all in the coming weeks.


In other news, Meta recently announced the availability of WhatsApp smartwatch app on Wear OS 3. The app has been rolled out worldwide. Samsung’s just launched Galaxy Watch 6 series is among the first to get native support for WhatsApp. Samsung said the app would let users continue conversations, reply to messages by voice and even answer calls, all without needing to take out their phones, said Samsung.

First Published: Jul 28 2023 | 1:23 PM IST



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AMD plans to invest 0 mn in India to expand R&D, engineering operations

AMD plans to invest $400 mn in India to expand R&D, engineering operations



American semiconductor company Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) on Friday announced plans to invest $400 million in India over the next five year. The planned investment includes a new AMD campus in Bangalore, Karnataka that will serve as the company’s largest design center, as well as the addition of approximately 3,000 new engineering roles by the end of 2028. The AMD new campus is expected to open before the end of 2023.


AMD said its investment is supported by the various policy initiatives of the Government of India focused on the semiconductor industry.


“I welcome AMD’s decision to set up its largest R&D design center in India and expansion of the India-AMD partnership. It will certainly play an important role in building a world class semiconductor design and innovation ecosystem. It will also provide tremendous opportunities for our large pool of highly skilled semiconductor engineers and researchers and will catalyse PM Narendra Modi’s vision of India becoming a global talent hub,” said Rajeev Chandrasekhar, Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Skill Development and Entrepreneurship.


AMD has been present in India’s semiconductor ecosystem since 2001, when the company’s first site was established in New Delhi. The upcoming new 500,000-square-foot Bangalore campus is said to increase its office footprint to 10 total locations across Bangalore, Delhi, Gurgaon, Hyderabad and Mumbai.


“From a handful of employees in 2001 to more than 6,500 employees today, AMD has grown its India footprint based on the strong foundation established by our local leadership and the highly skilled talent pool,” said Mark Papermaster, executive vice president and chief technology officer, AMD. “By further investing and expanding our presence in Bangalore, we are committed to driving innovation in India to support the India Semiconductor Mission.”

First Published: Jul 28 2023 | 12:11 PM IST



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Android gets ‘unknown tracker alerts’ feature: What is it, how does it work

Android gets ‘unknown tracker alerts’ feature: What is it, how does it work


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Meta has rare opportunity to seize momentum with Twitter rival ‘Threads’

Meta has rare opportunity to seize momentum with Twitter rival ‘Threads’



By Alex Barinka

 


Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta Platforms Inc. is incredibly good at making money from other peoples’ ideas — see Instagram and Reels. There’s every reason to think it can do the same with Threads, the Twitter-like app the social network launched earlier this month.

 


But that’s not what Zuckerberg needs from his latest product. Threads could help bring the center of internet culture back to Meta, once again making it a place where things happen first. Currently, TikTok is that place, minting trends with its entertaining short videos and exerting huge influence over popular music culture. 


Instagram once ruled the zeitgeist, with perfectly composed photos inspiring wanderlust and aesthetic lifestyles. Now, the joke among young people is that if it goes viral on TikTok, your mom will see it on Instagram six weeks later.


Twitter had its moment, too, as the place where people rushed to when news broke, during the Super Bowl halftime show or when a meme took off. That app, recently renamed X under new owner Elon Musk, has lost its significance, as illustrated by a sharp decline in users and brands who spend time and money there. Still, there’s one foundation of Twitter’s success that TikTok and Instagram don’t have: It’s so much easier to type out and hit send on a few lines of text than it is to capture and post a video.


Threads’ initial success proved that people were hungry for a new app that would satisfy their need to share thoughts — big and small — quickly and succinctly, with millions of people. The tool racked up more than 100 million sign-ups within days of its launch earlier this month and could generate about $8 billion in annual revenue over the next two years, according to Evercore ISI analysts.


“They’re looking at Twitter as a dying carcass that they can pick over and choose what they want to take,” said Lia Haberman, brand adviser and adjunct instructor at UCLA Extension who teaches social-media and influencer marketing. “I think they’re really looking at TikTok and its cultural conversation, saying, ‘How can we be part of that? To spark those kinds of movements?’”


But since the initial flood of interest, activity and hype around Threads has slowed. The early excitement had more to do with the association with Instagram and Facebook than about the app itself. People have been quick to join but slower to return, as daily users fell to 24 million from 49 million in a week, according to estimates from analytics firm Similarweb.


The 22-day-old app is still missing basic functionality people have come to expect from social media apps, like a desktop version that works in a web browser and the ability for professionals to schedule posts. The app has made some recent updates. On July 25, users got the ability to see posts they “liked,” and a button appeared within the list of accounts following you that allows you to follow them back. Meta also split the Threads timeline into two familiar feeds: a chronological list for accounts a user has chosen to follow, and a “For You” feed, including algorithmically recommended accounts — an approach popularized by TikTok and later replicated by Twitter and Instagram.


Threads content also can just repeat what’s on sister app Instagram, as accounts repost the same thing on both sites. “New: I think these raspberry streusel muffins might be the best muffins I have ever made,” wrote food account @smittenkitchen to 1.7 million followers on Instagram and 138,000 on Threads, where there was also a clickable link.


“There’s a lot of goodwill around Threads right now but it needs to hurry up, show the value, have a purpose,” Haberman said. “People will only be generous with their time and attention for so long.”


So far Threads is still squarely grounded in innovations of the past. Though it has a real shot at overtaking X, which Musk has also promised to remake into a super-app, the real test will be whether Meta can do what Twitter couldn’t: Make text content popular again and the basis of a long-term growth machine. The average user spent 95 minutes a day scrolling on TikTok, compared with just 29 minutes on Twitter, according to a report last year from Sensor Tower. Instagram and Facebook saw 51 and 49 minutes, respectively.


“We’re on it, we’re watching it carefully, and I’m cautiously optimistic,” said Julia White, chief marketing and solutions officer of SAP SE. The German software maker quit advertising on Twitter, once its third-largest source of social advertising spending behind Facebook and LinkedIn, after Musk acquired the company and instituted a series of unpopular changes. Meta “has the infrastructure to do proper content moderation and management that would make it advertising-worthy,” she said.


Meta executives have acknowledged it’s a bare-bones experience, and they’re working on things like improving search and the ranking of content on the app. “There’s still a lot of basic functionality to build,” Zuckerberg said Wednesday. “Once we feel like we’re in a very good place on that, then I’m highly confident that we’re going to be able to pour enough gasoline on this to help it grow. When I look at all the different social experiences, it just seems there should be one like this.”


Threads was initially launched quickly by a small team: Less than 100 employees with a few dozen engineers, according to a person familiar with the matter. Those numbers are already growing, said the person, who asked not to be identified discussing company strategy. Meta declined to comment on the size of the team. Zuckerberg has said he plans to add advertising once the app is on a clear path to 1 billion users — something Twitter never achieved. 


The company is investing in Threads even as it scales back elsewhere during its “year of efficiency,” and as growth in its main social businesses have plateaued. Monthly user bases at Facebook and Instagram have stalled at around 3 billion and 2 billion, respectively. Revenue, which mostly comes from digital ads, has been challenged by tough economic conditions, the shift to short-form video as well as a change in Apple Inc.’s iOS privacy policies that made some online ads less effective. 

On Wednesday, Meta projected sales will return to double-digit percentage growth in the third quarter, and the market seems to be willing to trust in Zuckerberg’s vision for now. Meta shares rose as much as 9% after its earnings report and forecast, trading at their highest level since January 2022. 


“While investors have been encouraged by efficiency efforts this year, they may increasingly be looking for Meta to return to double-digit growth for 2023, with the help of Threads,” said Scott Kessler, global sector lead for technology, media and telecommunications at research firm Third Bridge in New York. “When should Meta move to monetize Threads? Perhaps not long after Labor Day to allow advertisers to use it for the holiday shopping season.”


That would be a familiar route for Meta: Improve Threads’ features while not straying too far from the Twitter template, then powering up its advertising machine. That’s what the company did when it borrowed Stories from Snapchat and Reels from TikTok, both of which have become money makers for Meta.


Meta can’t afford to bask in its initial success for too long, UCLA’s Haberman said. TikTok is already on Threads’ heels, rolling out a text-only option for its feed this week



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Samsung to manufacture its most-expensive smartphones in India

Samsung to manufacture its most-expensive smartphones in India


Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5 and Z Fold5


Samsung Electronics revealed its latest foldable smartphones on Wednesday at the same price level, three years in a row, to compete with Apple’s dominance in the premium market.


The Korean company announced the manufacture of its premium segment smartphones, i.e., Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Flip 5 in India to meet local requirements. 


The company also plans to launch the most expensive and high-end devices in India on August 18, and it will start taking pre-booking from July 27 at midnight.


JB Park, the president and CEO of Samsung SWA, said, “As part of our Powering Digital India initiative, these phones will be manufactured at our Noida factory. We are confident that Galaxy Z Flip5 and Galaxy Z Fold5 will help us consolidate our smartphone leadership in the country.”


India’s largest electronic company began manufacturing the Galaxy Fold 4 and Flip 5 series in India from December after four months of its launch. 


Samsung India Senior Vice President Raju Pullan said the consumers in India will get “made in India” Galaxy Fold 5 and Galaxy Flip 5 from the beginning. 


He added that Indian consumers in India buy products that are value for money and add value to them overall.


“I witness this even in rural markets. If these are provided to consumers, we see strong adoption for new categories,” he said.


The all-new Galaxy Fold 5 is priced between Rs 1.54 lakh and Rs 1.85 lakh per piece which depends on its internal storage capacity that ranges between 256 GB to 1 TB. On the other hand, the Galaxy Flip 5 is priced at Rs 99,999 to Rs 1,09,999 per piece.

First Published: Jul 27 2023 | 6:00 PM IST



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