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Scrabble app changes anger players

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 18 Juni 2013 | 23.44

14 June 2013 Last updated at 07:25 ET By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

Thousands of players have taken to Facebook to complain about changes made to a popular mobile Scrabble app.

The changes have been made by Electronic Arts (EA), which took over the running of the app from Scrabble brand owner Mattel at the end of May.

Players are angry that their player histories have been wiped, the dictionary has changed and the board no longer refreshes itself after a turn.

Mattel apologised but added that the update had also attracted new players.

The firm said new features included the ability to play the game in six languages, customise the board, and pay for an ad-free version.

The game also uses the Collins dictionary rather than the traditional Chambers edition.

The app's official page on Facebook has more than 3.6m "likes" but most of these were amassed before the update and almost all of the recent comments are from players asking for the old version to be returned.

A Facebook group set up by players called "please bring back the Scrabble we love" has more than 2,000 members.

Lost history

"Who wants to play it in six languages?" player Helen Hawkins, from Kent, asked the BBC.

"I've been playing for over four years, I had 5,000 games on my statistics, I'd won 71% of them, I had my best scores recorded - and now it's all lost."

Mattel confirmed that players' previous data could not be restored.

"As part of the transition [to EA Mobile], we were unable to carry over ongoing games and statistics, the timer mode and the manual match-making function. The new version will have the same robust statistics moving forward," it said in a statement.

Ms Hawkins said the ability to play quick games, in which each player had to make a move within two or five minutes, had also been lost in the upgrade, and that people who played regularly together but were not Facebook friends could no longer contact each other.

"I haven't played it since the upgrade," she said.

"A lot of people have stopped, the new version is just hopeless. You have to refresh the board every time you play, it's hopeless compared with the old version."

A spokeswoman for Mattel told the BBC the firm was sorry for any upset caused.

"We are sorry we weren't able to please everybody," she said.

"The number of people playing has also increased significantly since the update.

"We produce the board game but we're not experts in electronics."

EA was unavailable for comment.


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Zimbabwe hackers hit ANC website

14 June 2013 Last updated at 08:46 ET

Opponents of President Robert Mugabe have targeted the website of South Africa's governing ANC, accusing it of backing Zimbabwe's leader.

Anonymous Africa said it had also hacked into the sites of Zimbabwe's defence ministry and the state-run Herald newspaper.

The ANC said its site had been "flooded" by a Distributed Denial of Service (DDS), which overwhelms sites with huge amounts of traffic.

Mr Mugabe has called elections in July.

South Africa's President Jacob Zuma is the lead mediator between Zimbabwe's leader and his long-time rival, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

At 12:30 BST (11:30 GMT) all three websites were working again.

ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu said the party's website team was "currently working on the problem, including assessing means to strengthen our security so that such does not recur in future".

On its Twitter feed @zim4thewin, Anonymous Africa said the ANC was an "enabler" of Mr Mugabe's government.

It said it had targeted the Zimbabwe defence ministry because of the "genocide" of 20,000 Ndebele people in the 1980s.

Zimbabwe's government has always denied accusations that it deliberately killed civilians because they were ethnic Ndebeles, seen as supporters of Mr Mugabe's rival, the late Joshua Nkomo.

It says it was targeting criminals.

Some of Mr Tsvangirai's supporters want South Africa to put more pressure on Mr Mugabe to ensure that elections are free and fair.

On Thursday, Mr Tsvangirai accused Mr Mugabe of acting "unlawfully" by saying elections would be held on 31 July.

The prime minister wants more time to ensure that reforms are in place before polling day.

Mr Mugabe says he is complying with a court order, which said the elections must be held by the end of July.


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Google beams internet from balloons

15 June 2013 Last updated at 07:55 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter, BBC News
Balloon flying

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The giant balloons carrying computer equipment are being launched in New Zealand

Google is launching balloons into near space to provide internet access to buildings below on the ground.

About 30 of the superpressure balloons are being launched from New Zealand from where they will drift around the world on a controlled path.

Attached equipment will offer 3G-like speeds to 50 testers in the country.

Access will be intermittent, but in time the firm hopes to build a big enough fleet to offer reliable links to people living in remote areas.

It says that balloons could one day be diverted to disaster-hit areas to aid rescue efforts in situations where ground communication equipment has been damaged.

But one expert warns that trying to simultaneously navigate thousands of the high-altitude balloons around the globe's wind patterns will prove a difficult task to get right.

Airborne for months

Google calls the effort Project Loon and acknowledges it is "highly experimental" at this stage.

Continue reading the main story

Superpressure balloons are made out of tightly sealed plastic capable of containing highly pressurised lighter-than-air gases.

The aim is to keep the volume of the balloon relatively stable even if there are changes in temperature.

This allows them to stay aloft longer and be better at maintaining a specific altitude than balloons which stretch and contract.

In particular it avoids the problem of balloons descending at night when their gases cool.

The concept was first developed for the US Air Force in the 1950s using a stretched polyester film called Mylar.

The effort resulted in the Ghost (global horizontal sounding technique) programme which launched superpressure balloons from Christchurch, New Zealand to gather wind and temperature data over remote regions of the planet.

Over the following decade 88 balloons were launched, the longest staying aloft for 744 days.

More recently, Nasa has experimented with the technology and suggested superpressure balloons could one day be deployed into Mars's atmosphere.

Each balloon is 15m (49.2ft) in diameter - the length of a small plane - and filled with lifting gases. Electronic equipment hangs underneath including radio antennas, a flight computer, an altitude control system and solar panels to power the gear.

Google aims to fly the balloons in the stratosphere, 20km (12 miles) or more above the ground, which is about double the altitude used by commercial aircraft and above controlled airspace.

Google says each should stay aloft for about 100 days and provide connectivity to an area stretching 40km in diameter below as they travel in a west-to-east direction.

The firm says the concept could offer a way to connect the two-thirds of the world's population which does not have affordable net connections.

"It's pretty hard to get the internet to lots of parts of the world," Richard DeVaul, chief technical architect at Google[x] - the division behind the scheme - told the BBC.

"Just because in principle you could take a satellite phone to sub-Saharan Africa and get a connection there, it doesn't mean the people have a cost-effective way of getting online.

"The idea behind Loon was that it might be easier to tie the world together by using what it has in common - the skies - than the process of laying fibre and trying to put up cellphone infrastructure."

'Low risk'

Previous proposals to provide connectivity from the upper atmosphere suggested floating high-altitude platforms that stayed in one place and were tethered to the ground.

Google rejected this idea as it involved fighting the winds, meaning the equipment would have to be large, expensive and limited to a fixed area.

But using free-floating balloons introduces another problem: how to ensure they are where they are supposed to be.

"We didn't want them to go just wherever the winds took them, we wanted them to go where the internet is needed on the ground," said Mr DeVaul.

"You have to cause them to move up or down just a little bit through the stratosphere to catch the appropriate wind - which is how we steer them.

"So we have to choreograph a whole ballet of this fleet, and that requires some impressive computing science and a whole lot of computing power."

The balloons will communicate with Google's "mission control" where computer servers will carry out the calculations needed to keep them on track, monitored by a small number of engineers.

The software makes adjustments to each balloon's altitude to take advantage of forecast wind conditions, and nudges the balloons up or down to find a more favourable stream when the predictions are not accurate.

Since the equipment is dependent on solar power, the algorithms must also ensure there is enough charge left in the batteries to allow them to carry on working as they travel through the night.

At the end of their working life, the software initiates a controlled descent so that the kit can be recovered by teams of locally-based employees.

"They have aviation transponders on them and we're in constant contact with civil aviation authorities while the balloons are going up and coming down," Mr DeVaul added.

"They have flashing lights and radar reflectors, so as far as aviation hazards go these Loon balloons present very low risk to aircraft.

"And they also pose low risk to anybody on the ground because even in the unlikely scenario that one suddenly and unexpectedly fails, they have parachutes that are automatically deployed."

A group of about 50 testers based in Christchurch and Canterbury, New Zealand, have had special antennas fitted to their properties to receive the balloons' signals.

Google now plans to partner with other organisations to fit similar equipment to other buildings in countries on a similar latitude, so that people in Argentina, Chile, South Africa and Australia can also take part in the trial.

Tough challenge

The search firm is not the first to pursue such an idea. An Arizona-based firm, Space Data, already provides blimp-based radio repeaters to the US Air Force to allow it to extend communications coverage.

Another Orlando-based firm, World Surveillance Group, sells similar equipment to the US Army and other government agencies.

However, they typically remain airborne for up to a few days at a time rather than for months, and are not as wide-ranging. One expert cautioned that Google might find it harder to control its fleet than it hoped.

"The practicalities of controlling lighter-than-air machines are well known because of the vagaries of the weather," said Prof Alan Woodward, visiting professor at the University of Surrey's department of computing.

"It's going to take a lot of effort to make these things wander in an autonomous way and I think it may take them a little longer to get right than they might believe."


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Google to tackle child abuse images

17 June 2013 Last updated at 06:10 ET

Google has announced a plan to do more to tackle online images of child sexual abuse.

Using both technology and funding, it hopes to find and eradicate images and track down abusers.

Google said it was helping create a database of images to improve collaboration between law enforcement, companies and anti-abuse charities.

It has also set up a $2m (£1.3m) fund to bankroll developers creating better tools to tackle images.

Spot and stop

Web firms in the UK have been at the centre of the debate about online images showing the sexual abuse of children following two high profile court cases in which offenders were known to have sought child pornography online.

Google said that since 2008 it had used technology that classified images giving them a unique identifier or "hash" to make it easier to spot abuse pictures.

The blogpost said it was going further by helping to create unique fingerprints of images it saw and then contributing them to a larger industry-wide database. This, it said, was helping police forces, companies and charities working together to detect and remove images. This co-operation would also help track down abusers, it said.

Google has also put $2m into what it called a Child Protection Technology Fund that would reward software developers who were working on programs to help eradicate abuse images.

"We're in the business of making information widely available, but there's certain 'information' that should never be created or found," wrote Jacquelline Fuller, director of Google Giving, in the blogpost.

"We can do a lot to ensure it's not available online - and that when people try to share this disgusting content they are caught and prosecuted," she added.

Christian Berg, co-founder of NetClean which helped to pioneer the classification of images shared online by abusers and paedophiles, said there were many other initiatives already underway that helped to spot the pictures Google was targeting.

As well as hashing systems, police forces around the world and cross-border agencies such as Interpol were using a tool known as PhotoDNA to identify images. This, he said, was a more reliable way of producing a signature of an image as it could survive changes made to images as they were cropped, re-sized or manipulated by paedophiles in a bid to hide them.

Microsoft, Facebook and others had already adopted PhotoDNA and were using it to stop images of child sexual abuse being shared by their users, said Mr Berg.

Despite this, he said, Google's initiative was a good move.

"We welcome them to the field and it's great that they have put attention on the problem," he said.

Google's announcement comes as BT and TalkTalk refine they way they block access to sites known to harbour images of child sexual abuse. Instead of a generic "page not found" error, people will instead get a detailed warning which says access was denied because the page may contain illegal images.


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China retakes supercomputer crown

17 June 2013 Last updated at 09:39 ET

A China-based supercomputer has leapfrogged rivals to be named the world's most powerful system.

Tianhe-2, developed by the government-run National University of Defence Technology, topped the latest list of the fastest 500 supercomputers, by a team of international researchers.

They said the news was a "surprise" since the system had not been expected to be ready until 2015.

China last held the top rank between November 2010 and June 2011.

According to the list, the US has the world's second and third fastest supercomputers, Titan and Sequoia, while Japan's K computer drops to fourth spot.

Continue reading the main story

1. Tianhe-2 (China)

2. Titan (US)

3. Sequoia (US)

4. K computer (Japan)

5. Mira (US)

6. Stampede (US)

7. Juqueen (Germany)

8. Vulcan (US)

9. SuperMuc (Germany)

10. Tianhe-1A (China)

The latest version of the twice-yearly list - which is overseen by Hans Meuer, professor of computer science at the University of Mannheim - was published to coincide with the International Supercomputing Conference in Leipzig, Germany.

Unique features

According to the Linpack benchmark, Tianhe-2 - meaning Milky Way-2 - operates at 33.86 petaflop/sec, the equivalent of 33,860 trillion calculations per second.

The benchmark measures real-world performance - but in theory the machine can boost that to a "peak performance" of 54.9 petaflop/sec.

The project was sponsored by the Chinese government's 863 High Technology Programme - an effort to make the country's hi-tech industries more competitive and less dependent on overseas rivals.

It has said it intends to install the equipment at the National Supercomputer Centre in Guangzhou, based in the country's south-eastern Guandong province, where it will be offered as a "research and education" resource to southern China.

The machine uses a total of 3.12 million processor cores, using Intel's Ivy Bridge and Xeon Phi chips to carry out its calculations.

However, the University of Tennessee's Jack Dongarra - a member of the Top 500 list team who visited the project in May - noted that many of its features were developed in China and are unique. These include:

  • A custom-built interconnection network, which routes data across the system
  • The inclusion of 4,096 Galaxy FT-1500 CPUs (central processing units) designed by the university - these have been installed to handle specific weather-forecasting and national-defence applications and are not included in the headline performance figures
  • The use of the Kylin operating system - this Linux-based OS is named after a mythical beast known as the "Chinese unicorn", and was designed by the university to be a high-security option for users in government, defence, energy, aerospace and other critical industries

On paper the Tianhe-2's performance is nearly double that of the next computer on the list.

Titan, at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, clocks 17.59 petaflop/sec of performance, according to the Linpack benchmark, and a theoretical peak of 27.11 petaflop/sec.

Mr Dongarra noted that the US government is not expected to acquire another supercomputer until 2015.

Japan's Fujitsu-built K computer - which displaced China's Tianhe-1 as the world's fastest supercomputer - now comes in fourth on the Top 500 list with a Linpack benchmark performance of 10.51 petaflop/sec.

According to the survey's editors, China now accounts for 66 of the list's fastest computers, which is actually a fall from six months ago when it had 72 in the list.

The US dominates the survey with 252 systems, Japan has 30, the UK has 29, France has 23 and Germany has 19.


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Sharp brings giant 90in TV to Europe

17 June 2013 Last updated at 19:53 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter

Sharp has released what it says is the biggest LED TV ever to go on sale in Europe.

The Aquos LC-90LE757 features a 90in (229cm) screen, trumping an 84in display from LG.

Sharp has offered the size in the US since June 2012 - the world's biggest market for jumbo-TVs - but said it now believed there was demand in the UK and rest of Europe for such a set.

One analyst said the local market was indeed growing, but remained "niche".

Fifty inch-and-larger TVs represent 6% of units currently sold in the UK, according to research firm GfK. However, it adds that the sector accounts for 16% of the sector's value due to the premium prices they command.

The trend is even more advanced in the US. According to the Consumer Electronics Association, 8% of all TVs sold in the country feature screens 60in or larger.

"In the States people have bigger houses and bigger rooms, so large TVs represent a larger proportion of the marketplace," GfK's Nigel Catlow told the BBC.

"But as the TVs get thinner, more rooms are able to take a big TV set, and screen size is the biggest driver for making people want to buy a new product."

Sharp posted a 545bn yen ($5.7bn; £3.7bn) net loss in its last financial year. It has since said that it is pursuing high shares of relatively small markets as part of its turnaround strategy.

Pixel scaffolding

Sharp's new display is based on LED (light-emitting diode) technology, weighs 64kg (141lb), and is less than 12cm (4.7in) deep.

It supports 3D broadcasts, has three tuners - allowing several channels to be watched at once - and also offers a "wallpaper mode", which can display a static picture at a low brightness level when it is not otherwise in use.

The firm says owners need to sit at least 3.5m (11.5ft) away to enjoy its picture.

"The biggest challenge we had was to try to hide the framework that is encasing the screen's pixels," explained Sharp's UK product manager, Tommaso Monetto.

"We used a technology called Fred [frame rate enhanced driving] to minimise the structure holding the pixels together so that you hardly see the lines between them, and it becomes a seamless panel when you look at it from the front."

In the past, Sharp and other firms' 3D TVs created a different image for each viewer's eye by sending two signal lines from the device's motherboard to the display. The firm's proprietary Fred technology uses a single signal line driven at a higher speed to provide the necessary information, minimising the amount of wiring and electrical components needed.

"The plan is definitely to go bigger," Mr Monetto added.

"The long-term view is that eventually you will have entire walls that are made out of LCDs, and you can allocate different spaces for different usage. Part will be used for TV signals, part for surfing the internet and part to show pictures."

Panasonic does sell even bigger displays, offering 103in and 152in screens.

However, they are based on plasma technology making them thicker and heavier than Sharp's LED model. They are also several times the price and Panasonic pitches them at the professional market rather than at consumers.

4K v 1080p

Sharp opted to make its screen support 1080p video and not the ultra high definition 4K format which uses four times as many pixels.

The advantage of the higher definition format is that owners can sit closer to their screen, allowing a smaller set to take up more of their field of view - and thus appear more immersive - than a larger one limited to 1080p resolution.

Sharp said it took the decision because there was a current lack of 4K content.

It has also allowed it to keep its price down. Sharp's new set costs about £12,000 compared to the £17,000 charged for LG's 84in Ultra HD LED model.

Even so, at that price its appeal may still be limited.

"You won't get serious sales volume until you get below around £2,000 to £3,000," said GfK's Mr Catlow.

"However, it will open up a bigger market because there have been some 70in and 84in sets out there that were recently selling for £20,000."


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Yahoo reveals US data requests

18 June 2013 Last updated at 06:21 ET

Yahoo is the latest company to reveal its dealings with the US authorities, following revelations about the Prism surveillance programme.

It said it had received between 12,000 and 13,000 US government requests for user data in the past year and a half.

Most of them had "concerned fraud, homicides, kidnappings, and other criminal investigations", it said.

Yahoo voiced frustration that it was unable to reveal the number of requests that had concerned national security.

It urged the government to "reconsider its stance on this issue".

"Like all companies, Yahoo cannot lawfully break out Fisa [Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act] request numbers at this time because those numbers are classified," it said in a blog post by chief executive Marissa Mayer and general counsel Ron Bell.

Under pressure

FISA is widely seen as the legislation under which Prism operated.

Earlier in the week Twitter also said it was important to be able to publish numbers of national security requests.

And Google said lumping police requests with national security requests was "a step back for users".

Tech firms have been under pressure to disclose information about data passed to the National Security Agency (NSA) since the Guardian and Washington Post revealed the existence of Prism - a programme giving the NSA access to user data held on the servers of tech firms including Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, and Apple.

The NSA later confirmed the existence of the surveillance scheme as well as a separate phone-records programme, which it said had helped it thwart terrorist plots in the US and more than 20 other countries.

Rebuilding trust

Technology companies, which initially denied any knowledge of the Prism project, are now rushing to rebuild trust from users shocked at the idea that their data was viewable by the authorities.

Yahoo laid out plans to publish a twice-yearly global transparency report, the first of which will be issued "later this summer".

"Democracy demands accountability," the blog said.

"We appreciate - and do not take for granted- the trust you place in us."

Other companies have been quick to rebut suggestions they simply hand over data whenever asked.

"Only if appropriate, we retrieve and deliver the narrowest possible set of information to the authorities," said Apple.

Facebook's general counsel Ted Ullyot said: "We aggressively protect our users' data when confronted with such requests; we frequently reject such requests outright, or require the government to substantially scale down its requests, or simply give the government much less data than it has requested."

So far disclosures have revealed:

  • Apple received between 4,000 and 5,000 requests from federal, state and local authorities between December 2012 and May 2013
  • Facebook received between 9,000 and 10,000 requests between July and December 2012
  • Microsoft received between 6,000 and 7,000 requests between July and December 2012

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Huge holograms developed for doctors

18 June 2013 Last updated at 06:37 ET By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

A system which uses giant holograms to help medical students master their subject has been pioneered by two London-based junior doctors.

They have demonstrated a 3D graphic of a kidney measuring 4m (13 ft) to demonstrate renal function at a "test lecture" last week.

It was one of a series of animations they are developing.

However, the university which hosted the event, said it was not ready to be rolled out yet.

"The cost would be prohibitively expensive," said a spokesman for St George's, University of London. "It's more a proof-of-concept at this stage."

Holographic organs

The holograms were developed by Dr Kapil Sugand, who works at St George's Hospital and Imperial College London, and Dr Pedro Campos from St George's Hospital.

They said they wanted to make it easier for students to absorb the large amount of detail necessary to pass their exams. Medical students can attend up to nine hours of lectures per day and typically study for six years in order to qualify.

"Research in educational sciences has shown the attention span of the average student is 20 to 30 minutes, but standard lectures are at least an hour," Dr Sugand told the BBC.

"The human body is a very complex machine. It's very difficult to comprehend and appreciate how a kidney or liver functions, for example, from Powerpoint slides."

The holograms are all animated and can be controlled by the lecturer.

Three projectors are used to generate the full colour images on stage and they are designed to be used in a large auditorium.

While a holographic human body has previously been trialled in an anatomy class at Imperial College, it was not intended for a mass audience, said Dr Sugand.

"This could be a way to teach surgical procedures to a large group of trainees quite easily," he added.

The pair have spent £10,000 building up a small library of 3D holographic animation lecture aids - including a sequence which outlines the various effects of malaria on different parts of the human body.

Funding came from the universities where they work, and also Dr Campos's parents.

Teething problems

Technical problems prevented the first test - scheduled for last Wednesday - from working, but a hastily rearranged event later in the week was more successful.

The response from first year medical students at St George's, University of London, was positive.

"We spend a lot of time looking through textbooks and listening to lectures to try to get our heads round the subjects and I think this would make a lot of medical areas easier to understand," said Hannah Barham.

Andrew Salmon added: "As a concept it's fantastic, but I don't think it will replace the traditional kind of lecture at the moment though as it's not as customisable."

Dr Sugand acknowledged that the holograms were intended to be an extra tool, and would not be a substitute for using dead bodies.

"Nothing can substitute dissecting a cadaver - it is the optimal and most traditional way of learning anatomy," he explained.

"But multimedia has become a way of complementing, not replacing, that process."


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Huawei unveils 'slimmest' smartphone

18 June 2013 Last updated at 10:03 ET
Huawei's Ascend P6

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Shao Yang, chief marketing officer for Huawei Device, discusses the Ascend P6

Huawei has unveiled what is says is the world's thinnest smartphone.

The Android-based Ascend P6 is 6.18mm (0.24in) thick and is also unusual in that it has a 5 megapixel front camera for "high quality" self-portraits.

The Chinese firm has said it expects the handset to do "miracles" for its brand.

One analyst praised its design, comparing it to a "steamrollered iPhone", but said its lack of support for 4G networks might limit sales.

"It's undoubtedly the most impressive phone that Huawei have launched to date in terms of the design, the materials used and its quality," said Ben Wood, director of research at consultancy CCS Insight, who was at the London launch.

"We've seen mainland Chinese manufacturers rapidly improve their ability to make competitive devices over the last 18 months and this is possibly the best so far. But its 3G status means there has undoubtedly been a trade-off to get it as thin and cheap as possible."

Thinnest phone

Huawei says it designed one of the slimmest and narrowest circuit boards in the industry to squeeze the electronics into the new handset.

The device has a 4.7in screen making it comparable to the HTC One but is more than 3mm (0.1in) thinner.

It is also slightly slimmer than both the iPhone 5 and the Alcatel One Idol Ultra - which previously claimed to be the world's thinnest - but at 120g (0.26lb) weighs a little more than both.

The phone features Huawei's own tile-based user interface called Emotion and proprietary software, including an "auto-facial enhancement" tool designed to make self-portraits look better.

Other specifications include:

  • An 8 megapixel rear camera
  • Use of the latest Android Jelly Bean 4.2.2 operating system
  • 8 gigabytes of internal storage - a relatively low amount - but support for 32GB microSD cards
  • A 1.5GHz quad core processor developed by Huawei
  • Various power saving technologies based on the firm's experience as one of the biggest telecoms equipment makers. As a result, it says the device's battery lasts 30% longer than it would do otherwise.
Building the brand

Huawei is already a well known brand in China where it grew to become the country's biggest maker of telecoms equipment after being founded in 1987.

Its more recent shift into Android phones has also found success. According to data research firm IDC it shipped 9.9 million smartphones in the first three months of the year making it fourth biggest vendor after Samsung, Apple and LG.

However, the firm acknowledges it still needs to do more to make western consumers familiar with its name and has committed 2% of its revenues to try to ensure it is widely recognised as a leading smart device brand within five years.

"Seven years ago nobody would have believed Apple could be so successful, and maybe five years ago that Samsung could be so successful," Shao Yang, chief marketing officer for Huawei Device, told the BBC.

According to a recent study by at Strategy Analytics, Samsung accounts for about 95% of all profits in the Android smartphone market, thanks to "an efficient supply chain, sleek products and crisp marketing".

That has led some analysts to question the wisdom of competing directly against the South Korean firm. But Mr Wood suggested Huawei might be able to make headway thanks to the economies of scale offered by its rapid rise in its homeland.

"This year Huawei is expected to sell 60 million units - double what it did last year - with the lion's share of that coming from China," he said.

"So, when competing with companies like Sony or Nokia it has an inherent advantage which will help with cost.

"It has to make the most of that as it has to pay a kind of tax in the west: since its name is less well known, for big operators or retailers to take its products they expect to get them at a lower price feature-for-feature, spec-for-spec than from a recognised brand."


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Minister hails 'web porn' progress

18 June 2013 Last updated at 11:14 ET
Culture Secretary Maria Miller

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Maria Miller: "The Internet Watch Foundation will be proactive in making sure more of those sites are removed and blocked from public view"

Ministers say agreements reached with internet firms will lead to a "fundamental change" in how images of child abuse are dealt with online.

Firms such as Google, Microsoft and Twitter were summoned to a meeting in Whitehall amid calls for them to do more to remove illegal material.

They have agreed to give the Internet Watch Foundation more powers and resources to search out abusive images.

Prime Minister David Cameron said "important steps" had been taken.

Internet service providers in the UK have been at the centre of the debate about online images showing the sexual abuse of children following two high-profile court cases in which offenders were known to have sought child pornography online.

'Unrelenting'

Mark Bridger, sentenced to life in May for the murder of five-year-old April Jones in Machynlleth, Powys, searched for child abuse and rape images.

And police who searched the Croydon home of Stuart Hazell, jailed for life in May for murdering 12-year-old Tia Sharp, said they had found "extensive" pornography featuring young girls.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

They are two tribes with power over all of our lives - but politicians and internet companies just don't speak the same language"

End Quote

The prime minister has pledged to "put the heat on" companies to make removing obscene material and blocking access to indecent images more of a priority, saying he is not "satisfied" enough is being done.

The meeting, chaired by Culture Secretary Maria Miller, was attended by Yahoo!, Google, Microsoft, Twitter, Facebook, BT, Sky, Virgin Media, TalkTalk, Vodafone, O2, EE and Three.

The government said the companies had agreed to allow the Internet Watch Foundation to proactively search out abusive images, rather than just acting upon reports it receives, and to give it an extra £1m to boost its capabilities.

At the moment, it is estimated that there are one million unique images of child abuse online, yet only 40,000 reports are made to the industry-funded body each year.

'Personally committed'

Culture Secretary Maria Miller said the public expected that everything possible was being done to remove "absolutely abhorrent" material - including images of child abuse - from the web.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

When it comes to child pornography, there should be no debate"

End Quote Reg Bailey Mothers Union chief executive

"What has been agreed today is a fundamental change in the way the industry will approach child abuse images and removing them from public view," she told BBC Radio 4's The World at One programme.

"It does mean that more of those images can be removed too."

Mrs Miller also said the use of splash pages, warning people they may come into contact with indecent and illegal content, would become universal by the end of the month and the government would work with industry to tackle the distribution of obscene images by e-mail and other channels.

Speaking at the G8 summit in Northern Ireland, Mr Cameron said he was "personally committed" to securing action and urged firms to "use their expertise, their brains and their brilliance to get these disgusting images off the internet".

He also said he would be happy to meet the parents of April Jones to discuss what was being done.

'Zero tolerance'

The UK's four largest internet service providers - BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media - said they had a "zero tolerance" approach to child abuse material online and would work with the Internet Watch Foundation to increase its effectiveness as well as taking further steps themselves to help parents protect their children.

Sir Richard Tilt

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Sir Richard Tilt of the Internet Watch Foundation says the abusers are technically skilled

"The ISPs are already the largest funders of the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) making it the most effective hotline in the world at removing child sexual abuse content, and one of the best funded," they said in a statement.

"The ISPs also already work closely with the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) to support its work in eradicating the sexual abuse of children, particularly in relation to online activity," they added.

"The companies will work together with government, IWF and CEOP to establish how best these funds can be spent to tackle the availability of online child abuse content."

BT said recently that any of its customers attempting to access web pages on the Internet Watch Foundation's list of identified images of child sexual abuse would now see a message telling them that the site was blocked and the reason why.

Under the previous system, the site is blocked, but internet users only see an "Error 404" message.

'Virtual dangers'

A 2011 review by Mothers Union chief executive Reg Bailey concluded children were being bombarded by sexual images on the internet, television, videos and in advertising and it should be much easier for parents to block under-age access online.

Parentzone

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Mums from Parentzone explain how they want internet safety to change

Leading internet firms have said they will continue to promote the use of "family friendly parental controls" but have rejected calls for default filters for pornographic content to be introduced from next year - arguing they can be "circumvented".

Mr Bailey said no filters could be wholly effective and he said they risked giving parents a false sense of security and stopping them from talking to their children about the "dangers they encounter in the virtual world".

More broadly, Mr Bailey said he was "very heartened" by the industry's willingness to engage over the issue.

"They don't want to be seen as people who peddle pornography," he told the BBC News Channel.

"When it comes to child pornography, there should be no debate. They need to block that material and block it quickly."


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