November 15, 2024

Month: October 2016

Samsung Note 7 users in South Korea file Class-Action Lawsuits

samsunglogoBloomberg is reporting that the number of users who had a Galaxy Note 7 and are filing class-action lawsuits are starting to rise - especially in South Korea.

So far, 527 users are demanding Samsung Electronics pay each of the plaintiffs about 500,000 (about $440.00) for there time and effort that were lost when the phones was first recalled and then taken off the market over reports of them catching fire.

Ko Young-yeel, an attorney for Seoul-based Harvest Law said, "We’re now planning to file a lawsuit every month.”  Ko Young-yeel filed the class-action lawsuit with the Seoul Central District Court Monday. The firm took just five days to have the more than 500 Note 7 owners sign up for the class-action lawsuit, he said. Consumers are “very angry.”

To read the rest of the article, click here.

 

Why AT&T wants Time Warner

attandtimewarnerlogosTo some, it boggles the mind as to why a wireless company (AT&T) would want a giant media company (Time-Warner).

Well, the answer is how you use and view media now-a-days.

There are also practical corporate concerns. AT&T thinks it needs to diversify; wants to own programming; and wants to keep Time Warner out of the hands of its huge rivals. Owning brands like HBO would give AT&T a lot more leverage.

The answer to what's in it for Time Warner is fairly obvious: Billions of dollars. Analysts have long believed that Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes has been preparing the company -- a collection of businesses that make TV shows, movies and web sites, including CNNMoney -- for a sale.

What's in it for AT&T? Growth and power. The constant connectivity provided by the likes of AT&T is powerful and profitable, but so is content.

Think about the way you use your phone. Even in the age of Snapchat, you spend a lot more time watching media than you spend making it. And if you're anything like me, you're increasingly watching that media right on your smart phone and other mobile devices.

These changes have meant the introduction of new ways to pay for entertainment; new ways to interact with sports; new ways to distribute news.

That's where Time Warner comes in.

Owning valuable programming -- in this case everything from "Game of Thrones" to "The Big Bang Theory" -- gives AT&T more power. It gives AT&T more influence over what the "future of media" looks like.

Other companies will have to negotiate with AT&T to gain long-term licenses for channels like TNT and the Cartoon Network, the same way they negotiate with Time Warner now.

As evidenced by our consumption patterns, it is clear that the future centers around mobile viewing of TV, movies and other forms of video. AT&T's slogan is "mobilizing your world." Soon it could add "mobilizing your media."

To be sure, synergy talk during a merger is sometimes overstated. The promised synergies during the disastrous AOL-Time Warner merger of the early 2000s failed to materialize.

But it is easy to imagine connections between the distribution side and the programming side of the house AT&T would be building with this deal. Subscriptions to HBO and news apps from CNN could be sold right alongside wireless service -- all bundled as a part of a customer's monthly bill.

AT&T already sells a combo package of wireless plus DirecTV satellite TV. And the company is preparing to launch a streaming version of cable, called DirecTV Now, that will let people stream dozens of TV channels for a monthly fee.

Owning Time Warner could help AT&T with those ambitions. AT&T also gains Time Warner's 10% stake in Hulu, the streaming video service.

The deal also elevates AT&T into rarefied air -- right alongside Comcast, which owns NBCUniversal.

"AT&T acquiring Time Warner makes a great deal of sense, and it gives Comcast a real competitor with content and lots of conduit," cable industry consultant Paul Maxwell told CNNMoney.

"But any real outcome depends upon government OK," he emphasized.

The addition of Time Warner could also give AT&T a big advantage over Verizon, its primary wireless competitor.

Both companies are running out of ways to grow in wireless, since most households have all the phones they need, and are already tethered to some company for service to those phones.

Programming and advertising present new ways to grow -- though, given the problems the media industry is having, which are part of the reason that Time Warner is up for sale in the first place, they are not sure things.

Verizon has shown interest in owning both content and the technology that controls digital advertising, as reflected by Verizon's purchase of AOL and its pending purchase of Yahoo.

Both those deals are a fraction of the size of AT&T-Time Warner.

Additional Source: CNN/Money, CNBC.

How to check or change iOS settings with Siri

New-Siri-iconEven though changing a setting on an iOS device is rare, it does happen.  Normally, we would have to unlock the device, find the settings icon, and find the setting that we want to change.

But not many people know that most settings can be changed and/or referenced via Siri.

To do this, you'd activate Siri normally, and then ask it one of the below questions:

  • Is Wi-Fi enabled?
  • Is Bluetooth enabled?
  • Is VoiceOver enabled?
  • Is AirDrop enabled?
  • Is Do Not Disturb enabled?

Siri will report back with the answer as well as show you the toggle switch where you can change the setting right from Siri.

You can also ask Siri to change settings for you so you don't have too.  Like this:

  • “Turn Off Wi-Fi”
  • “Turn On Airplane Mode”
  • “Turn On Do Not Disturb”
  • “Increase screen brightness”
  • “Decrease Screen brightness”
  • “Enable Wi-Fi”
  • “Enable Bluetooth”

Siri will still show you a toggle switch so you can change your mind without asking him/her to change it back.

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