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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Review: HTC Hero



PureMobile sent us in the GSM version of the HTC Hero, one of the most popular Android-based smartphones out there. There are already a number of in-depth reviews about this phone out there (here's one), but here's my own take on what I liked, and what I disliked.

Before we start, let me say right off the bat that my husband works for Google, at the open source side of Android (not directly with the operating system's development). However, this is not a "with Google" phone like the T-Mobile G1 was, it's an independent HTC-only phone. And most importantly, it does not use the default Android UI (UI that I will be mostly discussing), but HTC's own flavor. So I felt that I could give it a whirl, and see if it can compete with the iPhone (despite my husband working for Android, the iPhone has been my personal phone choice so far).
Specs

The Hero comes with 2G GSM 850/900/1800/1900 Mhz and 3G HSDPA 900/2100 Mhz. It weighs 135 gr, it has a capacitive LCD with 65k colors, at 320x480 resolution and 3.2" size. HTC has some elements of multi-touch in its input method, an accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate and a trackball. It also has a 3.5mm audio jack, 288 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM, Qualcomm MSM 7200A processor, a microSD card slot with a 2 GB card coming in the box. It also comes with Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, and Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP support. It has a 5 MP camera with autofocus and touch focus. It can also shoot video, but only at 352x288 at just 15 fps. Finally, it has A-GPS support, and a digital compass, all running under Android 1.5 Cupcake. Recently, HTC said that they will offer an Android 2 release for this phone, sometime in the next few months.

The Hardware

I love the way this phone looks. In some ways, it reminds me the design of the original Motorola cellphone! But in a good way!

I absolutely hated the G1 because of its "Jay Leno" chin, but it is not a problem on the Hero because it's so thin! On the G1 I simply could not type because my small hands could not go over the chin and easily reach the keys at the bottom. But on the Hero this is not an issue, because the LCD is on a higher ground than the hardware keys are on the G1, and the Hero is thinner anyway (so my small hands have an easier time going around it).

The device also feels very nice in the palm. It is less wide than the iPhone, and it can rest on my palm with ease.

The Hero comes with the standard Android buttons, plus a dedicated search button. I wish that the buttons were a bit bigger and easier to hit though. Another problem are the volume buttons on the left side that are way too easy to hit. While grabbing the phone from the table, 2 times out of 5 I would be pressing the volume buttons by mistake. They should have been more rigid and more difficult to get pressed.

Battery life is about 3 days with light usage (considering that this is an always-online, syncing with Gmail, phone). Phone call quality is top notch.

The camera is ok (samples), and there are some nice white balance and other settings while shooting. I can't really ask anything more regarding the still capabilities (except maybe a flash light). The video mode is a disaster though at 15 fps CIF resolution (sample).

The HTC Sense UI

As mentioned above, HTC has written from scratch their own UI on top of Android's. Some components are completely replaced, other just modified, other are vanilla. Basically, HTC has rewritten the launcher application, the Phone/Contacts application, the virtual keyboard application, and quite a few new screen widgets: twitter, calendar, weather, pictures, contacts, email, music player, browser bookmarks, "footprints" (a traveling app), and more.

There are 7 "virtual" screens on the HTC Sense UI, there are 3 in the default Android home screen. You can easily fill up these virtual screens with widgets and shortcuts. The widgets are very nicely designed, with beautiful icons, animations and interactive elements. You can simply flick through images or emails with really nice animations for example. Originally, the HTC Sense UI had speed problems doing all that, but the latest update (that the phone comes with by default) fixes a lot of these problems.

The virtual keyboard is definitely better than Android's default one. Its multitouch ability and easy way to switch between languages, and auto-correction, give it the upper hand. However, the HTC virtual keyboard is not without its bugs, creating incompatibilities occasionally for some apps (e.g. an SSH app we tried).

The phone screen was re-written as well. The dialing screen is now rendering on top of the contacts, meaning that the dialing screen takes half the screen, and you can just scroll the contacts list on the other half of the screen. The same application includes a full screen view of all your Gmail contacts, ability to edit these, create "teams" of contacts, call history, and get this: Facebook updates. Unfortunately, Facebook doesn't work properly for me (info below).

The music player is re-written too. It takes a while to load the album art of all the music in the cache, and until it does, scrolling through the music list can become slow. But after it does load, it works wonderfully, and all my album art was recognized (something that is not true for Nokia phones, and even Sandisk players). It can play MP3, AAC(AAC, AAC+, AAC-LC), AMR-NB, WAV, Ogg Vorbis, MIDI and Windows Media Audio 9.

The HTC Hero is the first Android phone to come with Flash, but it's very slow, doesn't work most of the time (e.g. vimeo), and when it does work (e.g. Youtube) there's already a dedicated app for it. So basically that Flash port feels very much like a throw-in.

Overall, the HTC Sense UI feels more modern, more impressive and cooler than the default Android UI. It's true that while I did try to get into Android in the past, its UI was holding me back. On the iPhone, multi-touch and the very consistent usability were always big features to me; Android doesn't exactly have that. HTC Sense is not as polished and consistent as the iPhone either, but it fares better than the default Android.

Complete walkthrough on HTC's UI, here.

What I disliked

There is no "additional languages" installation ability. However, the situation is more complex than that. When I used my Greek SIM, the phone asked me if I would like to change the language to Greek, and I said "yes". It made everything Greek, as it was supposed to, but when I am going to the language settings, only Polish and English are available there (as these are the phone's original languages). I mean, if the phone comes with all these languages pre-installed (it certainly didn't download anything off the web to enable Greek), why not let me make "Greek" the "official" language on the phone?

Unfortunately, while the above might not sound like a big problem to you, consider the following: for some applications that get their text from the web, if that text is not in Greek, then it doesn't show it to me at all. What I mean is this: Comments in the application pages of the "Market" application DO NOT RENDER on this phone when it's set to Greek. It would ONLY render comments, and let you read them, if the comments were *written* in Greek! And my friends' Facebook updates are also not loading at all because they are not written in Greek (I presume)! While I understand the need to hide text of weird languages from the user (although this is debatable usability), I don't agree that this should also be done for plain English. Heck, most Greek people can read English, thank you very much.

The launcher comes with a big button that gets you to the Phone screen, and a smaller button to open the application launcher window. Personally, I am more of a PDA-like user rather than a caller, so it would have been nice to be able to exchange the position of the two buttons (so the app launcher has a bigger button).

The Contacts application loads all the gazillion of my Gmail contacts that I don't want there. It doesn't try to only show the contacts that actually have a phone number, I am ending up having thousands of "contacts" that have emailed me at some point in the past. People that I don't really know. It's impossible to find a true contact in that screen just by flicking.

There are two ways to lock the phone's screen: one is with a special visual pattern that you can draw (part of standard Android), and the other one is simply to double-click the "menu" button, or slide down the whole screen. Unfortunately, that second way is way too easy to unlock the phone by mistake. The slide-down way should have been slide-horizontally-a-small-icon like on the iPhone, because right now, even by touching the screen on your trousers can cause it to unlock the screen.

There is no usable VoIP application right now for Android, and this has an impact for me, since I use it to call my mom in Greece. The single one popular SIP app that's available for Android and kinda works, requires to use the developer's PBX rather than your own SIP provider directly (something that I am not willing to do because there are too many hoops between countries adding to the lag). Update: SIP Gizmo5 has trouble registering with the SIPdroid application on my network. Manages to register only once every so often.

Skype is a disaster on Android, as it doesn't work via Wifi-only, it requires that you enter your cellphone number and works through it (something that I don't want to do either). Android 1.6 is the first version of Android that comes with VoIP API hooks, so hopefully Skype and other SIP apps will get updated soon.

The HTC Sense's Bookmark widget does not sort the widgets the way you request the web browser to do so, so you end up with only one sorting order: chronologically created. And because most people would create the bookmarks they most care about first, these will show up at the bottom every time, requiring the user to scroll each time. Poor thinking here.

The HTC Hero can't play iPod videos (DRM-free, of course). It is able to playback MP4/H.263/H.264/WMV9 on paper, but in reality, it required 480x320 or smaller resolutions, while I already have a few iPhone/iPod-encoded videos at 640px wide widescreen format. I mean, the Hero should have been able to play these (the Nokias can, and besides, it should always be a strategic target to be able to play the same formats as the iPhone/iPod).

The Weather widget has no option to follow the weather for the cities of Nancy (France) and Preveza (Greece). The iPhone uses a service that does have support for these cities.

No "week view" in the HTC Calendar app.

No Amazon MP3 application. USB is the only way to add music to the phone.

The "pinch" on the web browser is not great. It is not as smooth and precise as the iPhone's.

The "Market" app is a disaster. Although the newer version of the app (e.g. v1.6) is a bit better.

Conclusion

Overall, the HTC Hero is so far the best Android phone for me (not talking about the Motorola Droid, since it's not out yet). And the announced update is obviously going to bring new life to this Android 1.5 device.

The question is: would it knock me off the iPhone? And the answer is "not yet". It's not as polished as the iPhone. However, if my iPhone was to stop working tomorrow morning, the HTC Hero would be the phone I would reach out first to use instead. It's dangerously close!

Wi-Fi-free iPhone officially lands in China


It could be the Year of the iPhone in China, as Apple officially started selling its iconic smartphone in the world's largest mobile market Friday night.

While China saw nothing near the frenzy of the first iPhone launch day here in the U.S., crowds there did honor the tradition of lining up for the phone many hours in advance at several locations. A few hundred people queued up in the rain and cold outside The Place shopping center in Beijing, for example. There, Zhi Xianzhong became the first person to get the iPhone from Apple partner China Unicom after waiting 7 hours and 40 minutes, according to China Daily.

As expected, China Unicom, the country's second largest telecom operator after China Mobile, is selling two versions of the iPhone in China under a three-year deal with Apple. But cost could prove to be a deterrent. Prices range from 4,999 yuan (about $732) for the 8GB 3G model to 6,999 yuan (about $1,025) for the 32GB 3GS phone (sans contract).

Consumers can get cheaper, cracked, gray-market iPhone models at local electronics stores or bring them in from other markets. But price isn't the only potential obstacle here. In accordance with Chinese government regulations, the handsets also lack a key feature--Wi-Fi capability, though reports say China Unicom hopes to offer Wi-Fi-enabled iPhones within a few months.

China Unicom is starting off by selling the iPhone in 285 cities. The carrier hopes to sell 5 million devices in three years, according to Chinese news reports, but the company wouldn't confirm that figure.

Sony Ericsson Rachael (Xperia X3) teaser video out

The Sony Ericsson Rachael has been a medley of rumours so far, but this video gives those rumours a little credence. The phone has a rumoured November 3rd launch, now seems possible. The video
doesn�t have many details, but the URL at the end did point us to a teaser page that says, �We're looking forward to November 3rd. We think you should be too.�

Nokia Shutters Mobile-Gaming Service N-Gage


Nokia plans to stop producing mobile videogames for its N-Gage platform next year, it said Friday.

Bloomberg News
An N-Gage demo at videogame retailer GameStop in 2003

In a blog post, the cellphone maker said it will continue selling games through its Ovi app store. Customers can download games through N-Gage until September 2010, it added, though new games will not be published there. Previously purchased games will also continue to work on handsets, though the community features will be disabled in September as well.

Nokia, which faces cellphone rivals such as Apple and Samsung, once saw N-Gage as a way to help tap into consumers’ appetite for mobile games, but the service got off to a rocky start, including several launch delays. It had previously developed a gaming handset, also called N-Gage, that sold poorly and was pulled in 2006.

The company has since turned its attention to Ovi, which competes with Apple’s larger App Store, as well as other devices like netbooks, which it expects to begin selling next month.

While Nokia’s post elicited condolences — “Next year will be a sad day when Ngage closes its doors,” one wrote — commenters on gadget blog Engadget, which said it wasn’t an unexpected move, were less supportive. “I thought it ended before it began,” one wrote.

Wireless Phone Company Launches "Don't Text & Drive" Ad Campaign

HUNTSVILLE, AL - Despite the dangers, people do it every day, texting while driving. The message of "don't text & drive" is coming through loud and clear from an unlikely source: a cell phone provider.

Verizon Wireless launched a new "Don't Text & Drive" ad campaign.

The last week, or so has been tough for so many people after several car accidents. Some were caused by speeding, some by alcohol, and some just by not paying attention to the road. Verizon, a company that serves close to 90 million customers, is now dialing your number to talk safety.

Kelly Shrout is a District Manager for Verizon Wireless in Huntsville. Her company is behind the "Dont Text & Drive" campaign.

"The message is very simple, if you're in the driver seat, keep your hands on the wheel," said Kelly Shrout.

The point seems easy to understand for some, but why is the nation's largest wireless service provider pressing the issue?

"We really don't feel that any text message is worth risking a life," added Shrout.

Some people do think a text message is important even while driving.

"I look down for a second, read the message, and look back. I text back and drive," said High School Student Tekeria Rainey.

Others just don't think it's smart to take their eyes off the road if only just for a little bit.

"If you text and drive, but look off the road, you can end it in a couple of seconds," said High School Student Billy Maddox.

Verizon's safety campaign was launched to change the behavior of drivers who choose to hold a phone instead of a wheel while driving.

It's set to blanket the television, radio, newspaper, internet, and several billboards.

Huntsville Police say there is proof why drivers need to keep their eyes on the road.

"Over 90% of all accidents are caused by inattentiveness. It's just that simple," said Huntsville Police Lieutenant Mark McMurray.

As for folks at Verizon Wireless, they would like to see you use hand free devices.

"We've always supported legislation that ban texting and anything that would be a distraction to drivers. We're continuing to support the national efforts," added Shrout.

The Governor's Highway Safety Association says only six states ban the use of handheld cell phones while driving for all drivers. The association says 18 states ban texting while driving for all drivers. Alabama does not have either of the

Motorola Droid




Motorola Droid will be available on Verizon, on November 6th for $199 on contract. It is the first smartphone using Google's Android 2.0 operating system. Featuring a 3.7 inch touch screen(480x85), a slide out QWERTY keyboard, 5 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash, GPS, Bluetooth and 16GB of storage. Watch the video of Droid Demo!

Research and Markets: Global Top 10 Mobile Phone Companies - Industry, Financial and SWOT Analysis

DUBLIN--(Business Wire)--
Research and Markets
(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/906670/global_top_10_mobi) has
announced the addition of the "Global Top 10 Mobile Phone Companies - Industry,
Financial and SWOT Analysis" report to their offering.

Scope:

'Top 10 Global Mobile Phones Companies Report: Strategic evaluation of industry
and key players' is a business report that provides a comprehensive view of the
mobile phones market and its top 10 companies.

The report includes the following:

* Industry analysis including market value, market volume, market share and
forecast growth till 2012
* Assessment of intensity of competition based on five-forces model including
degree of rivalry, substitutes, new entrants, buyer power and supplier power
* SWOT and 5-year financial analysis of top 10 players in the industry
* Descriptive profiles of the leading players including the strategic
initiatives undertaken in the last 12 months

Reasons to Purchase

* Gain insights into the industry, leading companies and competitors through a
single report
* Benchmark the leading players using 5-year financial analysis, ratios and
adjusted financial statement data
* Form opinions about key players using SWOT Analysis to understand internal
factors (strengths and weaknesses) and external factors (opportunities and
threats) influencing the companies
* Determine industry attractiveness from five-forces analysis of constituent
segments

Key Topics Covered:

Executive Summary

* Industry analysis
* Industry definition
* Research highlights
* Market Value
* Market Volume
* Market Segmentation-Geography

Five Forces Analysis

* Summary
* Buyer power
* Supplier power
* New entrants
* Substitutes
* Rivalry

Top 10 Companies Landscape

* Revenue analysis
* Financial performance analysis

Companies Mentioned in this Reports:

* Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
* Nokia Corporation
* LG Electronics, Inc.
* Motorola, Inc.
* Apple Inc.
* Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB
* Research In Motion Limited
* ZTE Corporation
* HTC Corporation
* Palm, Inc.
* Financial Analysis
* Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
* Nokia Corporation
* LG Electronics, Inc.
* Motorola, Inc.
* Apple Inc.
* Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB
* Research In Motion Limited
* ZTE Corporation
* HTC Corporation
* Palm, Inc.

For more information visit
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/906670/global_top_10_mobi

Source: Datamonitor

Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
press@researchandmarkets.com
U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

Copyright Business Wire 2009

Friday, November 13, 2009

ReprintPrint Email Font Resize Google to launch free phone navigation service


Google is set to launch a free service for smart-phones that will combine GPS navigation, voice-activated search and real-time traffic updates.

Other telecommunication companies already offer turn-by-turn navigation systems that talk drivers through a route and run on smart-phones, although many are not free and would not offer the same connectivity to Google's massive store of data.

There is no handset on the market that runs Google's Android 2.0 operating system, required by the new application, although the Motorola Droid will be sold by Verizon Wireless next week. Google said it is "eagerly working" with Apple to bring Google Maps Navigation to the iPhone.

But CEO Eric Schmidt said Google's navigation service reflects the rapidly growing power of mobile devices, particularly when they are linked to Google's power to process data using its "cloud" of networked computers.

"The mobile platforms, Android and the others, are so powerful now that you can build client apps that do magical things, that are connected to the cloud," Schmidt told reporters in a briefing this week. "This is the most visually obvious example of that."

A Google Maps Navigation user would be able to use voice search to find a destination or other attraction and listen as the app talked the user through their route.

Even an inexact verbal search, such as "Take me to the museum with the King Tut exhibit in San Francisco," would produce meaningful results,
Advertisement
said Vic Gundotra, vice president for engineering and mobile for Google.

The application would allow a driver to look ahead at traffic along the route, seeing green when the route miles ahead is clear, yellow when traffic begins to snarl. As a driver approaches a destination, the display would switch to Google's "Street View" technology so users could recognize their destination.

Analysts said the application also could offer Google significant revenue opportunities from businesses that would want to be listed on Navigation searches. There is no guarantee, however, that Google's turn-by-by-turn navigator would replaced standard windshield-mounted GPS units.

Much of the product's success will depend on the quality of its speech recognition and its graphics displays, experts said.

Will Stofega, an analyst who follows mobile phone handsets for IDC, a research firm, said there could also be safety issues if users start doing too many traffic or restaurant searches while they are driving.

"You don't want to be squinting at a cell phone display and having to take your glasses off or put them on," he said. "Some of these cell phone screens might be even smaller than the iPhone."

For people who don't have an unlimited data plan on their phone, an application like Maps Navigator could also prove costly, he said.

Apple had no comment on whether the Google service might be available for the iPhone, although Google clearly hopes it will be soon.

"Apple is clearly one of our most important partners," Gundotra said. "Millions of consumers today experience Google mobile apps on the iPhone, and so we are eagerly working with them to provide that."

Sony Ericsson launches three smart phones

NEW DELHI: Mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson Wednesday launched three new smartphones in the Indian market, priced between Rs.16,950 and
Rs.35,950.

The phones, "Satio", "Aino" and "Yari", will set the trend for the new age smart phones, said Anil Sethi, president of Sony Ericsson Mobile India.

He said the company would focus on the smartphone category for the next two-three years to boost sales.

"Once the 3G spectrum allocation happens, we can roll out more features with better network," Sethi said.

Built on Sony Ericsson's strengths in music, imaging, gaming, applications and content services, the new phones bring alive entertainment on the go for consumers, the company said.

The Satio, priced at Rs.35,950, comes with a 3.5-inch screen and offers a 16:9 widescreen format with 12.1 megapixel camera.

The Aino offers services to access content stored on a PlayStation 3 from anywhere in the world through a Wi-Fi connection.

It also gives remote play access to videos, television shows and photos
. The mobile has an eight megapixel camera and is priced at Rs.28,950.

Yari debuts Gesture gaming that enables users to make the moves in front of the screen and play games without even touching the phone. The Phone comes with a five megapixel camera and is priced at Rs.16,950.

Motorola Introduces Second Android-Powered Phone

By Hugo Miller

Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Motorola Inc. introduced its second phone based on Google Inc.’s Android software, fighting for a bigger share of the growing market for Web-equipped phones to reverse more than a year of sales declines.

The phone, called the Droid, features a larger screen than Apple Inc.’s top-selling iPhone and has higher resolution, said co-Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Jha. It will be available Nov. 6 on the Verizon Wireless Web site and in retail stores, Motorola said. The price will be $199.99 with a two-year agreement after a $100 mail-in rebate.

Motorola is rebuilding its mobile-phone division around the Android operating system to entice consumers who abandoned its handsets in favor of the iPhone and Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry. Motorola’s share of the phone market dropped by almost half in the second quarter from 10 percent a year earlier, according to Gartner Inc.

“We’ve been missing from the market,” Jha, 46, said in an interview. The Droid “absolutely does” get Motorola back into the game with a better operating system and a faster Internet browser, he said.

Based on Android 2.0, a newer version of the Google operating system, the device allows users to run multiple applications at once, features voice-driven Web searches, and has one of the “fastest Web browsers available today,” Jha said.

‘Favorable Reviews’

T-Mobile USA Inc. will begin selling the Schaumburg, Illinois-based company’s first Android phone, the Cliq, on Nov. 2 for $199.99 with a two-year contract.

“Droid boasts impressive specs and reviews from the blog community have been very favorable thus far,” said Matt Thornton, an analyst with Avian Securities LLC in Boston. “This should give some indication as to how the device will be received by the consumer, the press and the investor community.”

Thornton has a “positive” rating on the stock.

Motorola plans more Android devices. At least one of those will be sold through a third carrier, Jha said. The Droid will be available through multiple carriers outside the U.S. later this year, he said.

Jha declined to comment on how Android phones will affect earnings. The company will report third-quarter results tomorrow. Analysts predict profit of less than 1 cent a share, excluding some items, the average of estimates in a Bloomberg survey.

Motorola is trying to stop losses of more than $4 billion since 2007 and recapture the success it had with the Razr phone five years ago. Revenue at the mobile-phone business, run by Jha, dropped 45 percent to $1.83 billion in the second quarter. The rest of the company is run by co-CEO Greg Brown.

Motorola rose 6 cents to $7.96 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have climbed 80 percent this year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Hugo Miller in Toronto at hugomiller@bloomberg.net

Mobile Phone Wars!

Profit, excluding severance and other costs, amounted to 60 cents a share, New York-based Verizon said today in a statement. That compared with the 59-cent average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales rose 10 percent to $27.3 billion, compared with the average $27.2 billion projection.

Yeah, but....

Verizon added 1.3 million wireless customers in the quarter, including customers obtained through acquisitions. That surpassed Fritzsche’s 1.13 million projection. Sales of data services rose 48 percent and accounted for about one-third of customers’ bills. Customer turnover rose to 1.49 percent from 1.33 percent a year earlier.

A bit of hair on that dog - acquisitions tells you nothing about organic growth. The other interesting component is the data services pricing and growth - this has been a push for a long time, and remains so. The surprise is that 1/3rd of customer billings is now data, and that it continues to accelerate.

On the worrisome side is the growth in churn - that's a 12% increase and definitely not going the right way. It's showing up in the internals of the firm's performance too:

Net income attributable to Verizon fell 30 percent to $1.18 billion, or 41 cents a share, from $1.67 billion, or 59 cents, a year earlier.

Verizon said in July it planned to cut 8,000 employees and contractors in the second half, with additional cuts to come in the next few years. AT&T reported last week it had almost 19,000 fewer employees as of Sept. 30 than a year earlier.

I hope Verizon likes competition, because there are two potential cannibalization effects staring them in the face.

The first is "Straight Talk" from WalMart, which is Tracfone's latest foray. It is a "you buy the phone" plan with the price of the phone being anywhere from ~$40-100 (depending on device) with service plans being either $30 or $45/month - the latter being unlimited voice, text message and (on-device) data. There are no contracts - and Tracfone runs on top of Verizon's service as an MVNO (essentially a bucket shop that buys blocks of time and resells.)

In the "more conventional" carrier arena T-Mobile launched "Project Black" Sunday. This is a direct assault on Verizon and AT&T, and comes in two "flavors" - a subsidized contract-style agreement (2 year) as with everyone else where the phones are cheap, and then a second, non-subsidized plan that is $10 cheaper per month.

The "gotcha" here is the non-contract plans for places like Verizon. Now you can buy from a national carrier unlimited talk and text (SMS, MMS) service for $60 - if you bring your own handset. Being SIM based, this means you can buy the phone you want from anywhere, including on eBAY, have no contract commitment (get upset, you leave!) and pay $60/month (plus taxes of course.)

The same plan from Verizon is $119 - twice as expensive.

Yes, you get a handset subsidy. So? That handset subsidy costs you $60/month, or $720 a year! If you want the handset subsidy (and contract) from T-Mobile it is available - for another $10/month.

If you don't need unlimited talk the contrast is still striking. A 1,000 minute plan from T-Mobile on their new plan is $50/month, while the same thing from Verizon (900 minutes, as close as they get) is $80.

Eek.

Now Verizon will counter, I'm sure, with "the nation's largest 3g network." And this means what, when the price is nearly double?

What's even worse for Verizon is what will happen to them when people figure out that "Straight Talk" (sold only at WalMart) offers the same network for $45/month - unlimited use, or $30/month for 1,000 minutes and 1,000 text messages.

Sprint started this price war several months ago with their "unlimited everything" plans in an attempt to halt what had become arterial bleeding in their subscriber count. It doesn't appear to have worked all that well, but it has put incredible pressure on the other carriers, with the MVNOs (Straight Talk, Boost, etc) coming at everyone from the bottom end and now T-Mobile coming at them from the "nationally-recognized carrier" side.

I can't get excited about Verizon, given the pricing realities.

The question for T-Mobile is whether they can build out enough 3G capacity to matter. I've been a customer of theirs since 2000, and one of the maddening realities of their service is that in many areas their data is still GPRS (~40kbps), even though EDGE (~160kbps) is only a software upgrade and backhaul capacity improvements. Yet despite EDGE being available essentially nationwide on AT&T for several years, T-Mobile has simply refused to put the (relatively small) amount of money into that network upgrade. When you're in a 3G service area (which isn't much of the landmass, but does cover a fair number of people) the higher speed is nice - but the fallback once you drive outside of a major city is severely disappointing.

Data service is nice and profitable for the operators, but how much monetization of their claimed "best network" Verizon can accomplish given the pricing pressure is another question entirely.

I'd stay away from all of the carriers right now - placing bets in an industry where price wars are active is a dangerous game, as it is difficult to determine what the internal cost structure of the various players really look like, and therefore, who can wield the longest knives and yet not cut their own throat.

Disclosure: No position.

Nokia 6788 Hits China Mobile



Nokia 6788 is Nokia’s first TD SCDMA based device which is the domestic standard in mobile communications for China Mobile, China’s and also world’s largest mobile phone service provider. May be the largest source of mobile subscribers can help Nokia relieve their pain for their low grasp on the smartphone territory. Let’s take a look at its amazing specifications.
Specifications of Nokia 6788

* 2.8-inch QVGA display
* 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss lens and dual-LED flash
* 4GB of onboard memory with microSD expansion
* GPS
* 3.5mm headset jack slot
* Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR
* OS : S60 3rd Edition

It will be available in China at the end of this December.

Big Cellphone Makers Shifting to Android System



New York Times

Since 1996, Microsoft has been writing operating systems for little computers to carry in your pocket. It was a lonely business until the company’s perennial rival, Apple, introduced the Web-browsing, music-playing iPhone. But now that smartphones are popular, Microsoft’s operating system, Windows Mobile, is foundering.

More cellphone makers are turning to the free Android operating system made by Microsoft’s latest nemesis, Google.

Cellphone makers that have used Windows Mobile to run their top-of-the-line smartphones — including Samsung, LG, Kyocera, Sony Ericsson — are now also making Android devices. Twelve Android handsets have been announced this year, with dozens more expected next year. Motorola has dropped Windows Mobile from its line entirely in a switch to Android. HTC, a major cellphone maker, expects half its phones sold this year to run Android. Dell is using Android for its entry into the cellphone market.

So long MS Mobile.

nokia in china



BEIJING—Nokia Corp. unveiled its first cellphone developed with China's homegrown third-generation mobile technology Tuesday, saying it would aim to "democratize" the smart phone market by aiming to sell lower-priced handsets at higher volumes.

The phone and others like it in the company pipeline could help Nokia, which has struggled globally to keep pace with Apple Inc. in the fast-growing, higher-margin market for premium smart phones since Apple's iPhone was released in 2007, to close some of the gap by capitalizing on its strength in developing markets. But its look--a slider-style with a mirror-like screen—isn't much different than what consumers have seen before.

The Nokia 6788 would ship by the end of the year, but hasn't been priced yet, said Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo. The world's biggest cellphone maker has made the "strategic decision to invest" in the Chinese standard, called TD-SCDMA, and will strive "for market leadership" in that technology, he said.
Digits

* A Verizon iPhone Is 'Exclusively in Apple's Court,' Verizon Says

Colin Giles, president of Nokia China and soon to be the head of global sales for the company, said Nokia is still in negotiations with operator China Mobile Ltd. about how to price the future lineup.

At the event, officials from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and state-run China Mobile were present to support the company's first entry into China's TD-SCDMA handset offerings.

Mr. Kallasvuo said Nokia had about 38% market share globally in the third quarter, and that its share in China is in line with that. The company is currently the leading cellphone maker in China, largely thanks to its success in difficult-to-penetrate lower-tier cities, he said.

Mr. Kallasvuo has said the Finnish company plans to upgrade its smart-phone portfolio in the fourth quarter to take advantage of growing consumer interest in the category.

"Mobile Internet usage will only accelerate," he said to reporters. It's clear consumers will want applications like maps and email "integrated into a single mobile device," he said at the event, in which the company commemorated the tenth anniversary of its Beijing product creation center, from which more than 60 handsets have been created for the global market.

Meanwhile, Apple has rapidly gained market share globally. In the second quarter, its smart-phone market share had risen to 13.3% against 45% for Nokia, none of whose smart phones have garnered the same kind of attention as the iPhone. That compares to Apple's 3% market share just a year earlier when Nokia had 47%, according to recent figures from research firm Gartner Inc.

Nokia, which has spent about €40 billion ($60 billion) in research and development, is currently suing Apple for allegedly infringing 10 of Nokia's patents covering wireless data, speech ecoding, security and encryption with the iPhone. Mr. Kallasvuo declined to comment on the lawsuit Tuesday.

China Mobile, the world's largest mobile carrier by number of subscribers, has plans to roll out several smart phones this year in addition to the 6788 in efforts to promote faster 3G service, and expects this market to grow in China. One of its competitors, China Unicom (Hong Kong) Ltd., which operates a different 3G standard called WCDMA, is expecting to launch the iPhone this quarter as well.

Write to Loretta Chao at loretta.chao@wsj.com

Monday, November 2, 2009

motorola news


The Motorola DROID will hit Verizon on November 6th for $199 on contract. That’s after a $100 mail-in rebate. The DROID itself is the first of many Android phones
coming to the carrier. There’s Android 2.0 of course, Visual Voicemail, a 3.7-inch display (854 x 480 resolution), 5 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash, a bundled 16GB memory card and a beta version of Google Maps Navigation.

The DROID is the first phone to offer that last, which which will turn Google Maps into a turn-by-turn routing system. Some other features include a slide-out QWERTY keyboard, 3G, WiFi, voice-activated search and over-the-air Amazon MP3 downloads.

[Engadget]

sony ericson NEWS


T-mobile subscribers looking for a new handset can get their hands on the Equinox from Sony Ericsson very soon. The clamshell phone offers features that will appeal to younger users and the device operates on the T-Mobile 3G network.

The Equinox has what Sony calls pulsating light effects. These effects allow the user to assign special light effects to five of their most important numbers. The light effects are in amber, sapphire, beryl, diamond, and amethyst colors.

Other features include a 3.2MP phone, multimedia capabilities, video recording with direct upload to YouTube, and Bluetooth. Sony Ericsson integrates an FM tuner as well. The main screen of the device is 2.2-inches and has a 240 x 320 resolution. The handset operates on the GSM/EDGE network at 850/900/1800/1900 MHz and HSDPA networks at 2100/1700MHz. The device will be available on October 28.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Motorola Droid Review








You have perhaps already had a sneak peek at the full technical specification of the latest Android phone from Motorola. Google is also in the scenario, because they were behind all the necessary changes done on the device - after all, this is going to be their first Android 2.0 Eclairs Device! The co-operative attempt of Google and Motorola to capture the mobile phone market is destined to be a sensation and yes, Motorola Driod Android Mobile Handset is THE sensation even before its launch as its is said to pack in some extraordinary specs like the biggie 3.7 inch 480 X 854 pixels display (which is, by the way, the biggest display on a mobile handset we’ve seen), the lightening fast processing speed along with its on board 3G connectivity from Verizon Wireless and full touchscreen along with a full sized QWERTY keyboard. You want more? Then it has a 5MP camera with image stabilization, WiFi, GPS, 3.5mm headphone jack to connect your favorite headphones. Satisfied? Lets take a detailed look at these features of this iPhone Killer, or should I say BlackBerry Killer?
Design

The phone packs in a huge touchscreen but still it has space for an actual hardware keyboard. What iDoesn’t .. the Droid does! It is just slightly thicker than the iPhone at 0.5 inches but still manages to pack a full QWERTY Keyboard which makes it the thinnest QWERTY keyboard mobile available in the market. The only comparison that can come in its way is the Nokia N97 but it too can’t match up with its huge screen and its interface offered by Google.
Operating System and Interface

No MOTOBLUR here as you would expect from the previous Android handsets like DEXT or CLIQ. But, as they say, Droid is targeted at users who are seeking to communicate and connect to their world living at a fast pace, taking risk and embracing change. It is made for those who are exited about the new technology producing new mobile handsets with latest range of mobile applications. It is expected to set new standards of smartphone with the Google Search genius going deep into the phone and all the application. Type or speak what you want to search and you’ll not only get the search results from the Web but also from within your phone and it’ll learn from what you search and will give more intelligent search results the next time you use it.

There are all of the Google’s service such as Maps, Search, Talk Voice, Contacts, Gmail, Calender as you’d expect from an Android Device.
moto-tao1
Browser

Mobile internet browsing is the most interesting feature of this handset. The browser is top quality one supporting Flash and HTML 5. They have said that the it will support Flash 10 from 2010.
Display

The display size is a whopping 3.7 inches showing 480 X 854 pixels in 16 : 9 aspect ratio. which makes it the biggest display of its class. The touchscreen is also capacitive unlike the less responsive resistive touchscreens which need some pressure to register the touches. There is a unique docking station which can turn this into a bedside clock or a movie player or just a digital picture frame whatever you like.
Camera

The camera has 5MP resolution and some advanced features like image stabilization along with Dual LED Flash and Autofocus. The DVD quality video capture capability at nice 720 X 480 pixels at 24 fps makes it an alrounder in the camera department.
Memory

The phone can support 32GB Micro SD Card to store all of your favorite music and videos and it comes with a 16GB so that you don’t have to rush to the shops to buy a memory card as soon as you buy the device.
Connectivity

It has EVDO rev A on board for super fast 3G Connectivity on Verizon Wireless. There are GPS, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR and a USB 2.0 port to connect it to whatever you can think of.
Battery Life

The system comes with a 1400 mAh battery which is not bad at all but we expect that it won’t deliver the rated 270 hours standby time or 6 h 25 min talktime, especially remembering the previous CLIQ.

It will be available to every people in North America from 12/1/2009 exclusively on Verizon Wireless. Hey Apple honchos, start scratching your head right now to device a new plan to take on Motorola Droid.

Mobile phone giant Nokia sues Apple over iPhone

HELSINKI — Nokia, the world's biggest mobile phone maker, took on the iconic iPhone on Thursday by suing US rival Apple for infringing 10 Nokia patents on mobile phone technology.

"The patents cover wireless data, speech coding, security and encryption and are infringed by all Apple iPhone models shipped since the iPhone was introduced in 2007," Nokia said in a statement.

Nokia said it had filed the complaint against Apple on Thursday with the Federal District Court in Delaware in the United States.

Nokia earlier this month posted its first quarterly loss in a decade amid falling sales. Analysts said the poor results were partly due to the growing popularity of Apple's iPhone and RIM's Blackberry over Nokia models.

"By refusing to agree appropriate terms for Nokia's intellectual property, Apple is attempting to get a free ride on the back of Nokia's innovation," Ilkka Rahnasto, deputy head of Nokia's legal department, said in the statement.

The company stressed that it had spent 40 billion euros (60 billion dollars) in research and development over the past two decades.

"The ten patents in suit relate to technologies fundamental to making devices which are compatible with one or more of the GSM, UMTS (3G WCDMA) and wireless LAN standards," Nokia said.

Analysts noted it was not the first time a mobile device maker started a court battle against its rival to protect its valuable patents.

"This does not come as a surprise. Nokia has likely been negotiating with Apple since it revealed the iPhone and has failed to reach an agreement," Ben Wood, director of research at CCS Insight, told AFP.

"They (Apple) have sold dozens of millions of phones, and if they haven't paid the patents it could be a several billion euro deal or at least hundreds of million euro deal," analyst Greger Johansson from Redeye explained.

The Finnish firm's net loss in July-September was 559 million euros and its sales shrank by nearly 20 percent to 9.8 billion euros on a 12-month comparison.

Nokia last week said its share of the global mobile device markets remained flat at 38 percent, but in smartphones like the iPhone its market share dropped to 35 percent in the third quarter from 41 percent in the previous quarter.

Industry specialists said Nokia had failed to improve its smartphone selection to attract customers to choose Nokia models instead of iPhone or Blackberry.

The Samsung Intrepid has some great e-mail and messaging capabilities, but navigating its interface can be difficult.




The Samsung Intrepid ($150 with a two-year contract from Sprint; price as of 10/19/09), successor to the Samsung Ace, features a touchscreen and a sleek design, measuring just 4.9 by 2.4 by 0.5 inches. The cover is soft black plastic, and at 3.2 ounces the phone is light. As far as looks go, it's definitely an attractive device--usability, however, is a different story.

*
Would You Buy This?
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* 2No

Samsung Intrepid Test Scores

* Overall 74
* Features 75
* Design 72

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The Intrepid has a full physical QWERTY keyboard as well as a 2.5-inch, 320-by-240-pixel touchscreen. That might seem like the best of both worlds--the convenience of a touchscreen with the typing power of physical keys--and it would be, except for the fact that the commands are split between the touchscreen and the keyboard. It's hard to know when you can use just the touchscreen, when you can use just the keyboard, and when you have to use both in order to get anything done. For example, to set a photo as the background, you can use the touchscreen to select the photo and choose its transparency, but then you must press the physical OK button on the keyboard to set the photo. This procedure is not intuitive; figuring it out cost me an hour of frustration.

Another annoyance: The Intrepid doesn't seem to have a Clear (or similar) button to press to go back. Instead, I ended up having to exit out of whatever app I was running and start over again. I tried pressing the power button (which only set the phone to sleep mode), the delete button (which did nothing, except when it started deleting text), and the phone-off button (which exited the app). I may be missing something, but this was really annoying.

Windows Mobile 6.5, to put it mildly, doesn't have the slickest user interface. It definitely slowed down the phone--I saw as much as a 2-second lag in some cases--and unfortunately it still requires users to go through several steps to perform tasks. You do get a customizable home screen, which is convenient; you can set it to show anything from new messages in your inbox to the time. The start menu is somewhat haphazardly arranged (the icons are in an every-other-square type of grid, which Microsoft has dubbed a "honeycomb interface"), but it is touch-friendly and easy enough to navigate.

The Intrepid supports Adobe Flash Lite (YouTube videos played easily, but somewhat choppily), and it has the Internet Explorer Mobile browser, which works reasonably well. Most pages were fairly quick to load, even if they had a lot of images. The Intrepid has a built-in 802.11 b/g wireless modem, too, for connecting to the Internet without using the network. Music plays well in the drab Windows Media Player, which supports the MP3, AAC, AAC+, WMA, and MIDI formats. The audio was pretty true over headphones, and just slightly tinny on the speakers.

The Intrepid's camera is only 3 megapixels--average, for a cell phone--but it took some decent-quality photos, even under low light. It does not have a flash, but it does have a little mirror on the back for self-portraits.

Call quality on the Intrepid over Sprint's 3G network was fantastic. It did a great job of filtering out wind noise (a plus in San Francisco), and none of my calls dropped--not even in the tunnels on Caltrain (the Intrepid is, in fact, the first phone I've tried that did not drop my calls in those tunnels). Voices sounded clear and not at all tinny on both sides, and the phone was comfortable to hold for long periods of time. According to Samsung, the Intrepid has a talk-time of approximately 6 hours, which is decent for a smartphone.

One thing that worked really well was Microsoft's TellMe application. To activate it, all you have to do is press a button (with a picture of a talking person on it) and tell the phone what you want. For example, if you want to know where the nearest Starbucks is, you can just tell the phone "coffee," and it will pull up a listing (via Microsoft Bing) of coffee places near you (the app uses GPS to determine where "near you" is). You can also use the app for basic phone commands, such as "Call Ron" or "Text Mom." In my tests TellMe was fairly good at recognizing words, even when I spoke with my mouth full, or when other people were talking around me. It recognized words such as "enlightenment," "entrepreneur," and even "Sarah Jacobsson" (though it spelled my name wrong). The only drawback was that if it didn't recognize a command, it went straight to the Bing search engine. For example, when I asked for for e-mail, it didn't give me my e-mail account, but rather a search result for Yahoo Mail.

The Samsung Intrepid is an improvement over the Ace--if not such a great phone otherwise. Like the Ace, it supports CDMA and GSM networks, which is perfect for the international traveler. It syncs up quickly with Microsoft Outlook, and setting up e-mail accounts is easy. While the touchscreen and keyboard combination is not fantastic, the keyboard itself is responsive and easy to use, even for people with large hands. While you can find phones that make similar touchscreen/keyboard combos work (see the HTC Touch Pro 2, also on Sprint), the split-up commands on the Intrepid had me feeling a bit schizophrenic.

cell phone history

Nokia N97 Mini Mobile Phone


How many of us live under the shadow of an elder sibling? Too many to take stock, right? Nokia, the ever daring has come out fearlessly with a younger brother to the celebrated N97 – The Nokia N97 mini. Perhaps given birth to compensate the N97’s bulkiness, its mini version is more than 10grams lighter. Starting with the camera, the N97 Mini sports a top notch 5-megapixel camera capable of recording DVD-quality video with Carl Zeiss optics, auto focus and dual LED flash. Though you might miss the N97’s memory of 32GB, the fact that Mini’s 8GB can be expanded is good enough. You can store a good lot of videos and images even without the need of microSD cards, actually.

This bro of the N97 is equipped very well in the navigation front. Ovi Maps and A-GPS being the reason. So incase you suffer from Mazeophobia, this handset could well be your métier! The touch screen display measures about 3.2” across which tilts to give way to a full QWERTY keyboard. The size of the screen makes web browsing a sheer delight, with the web-pages displayed is full across the display. Also, browsing is fast using the 3G connection with HSPDA high-speed data or Wi-Fi. You can also customise your home screen, adding short cuts of your choice.

The Nokia N97 Mini sports a 3.5mm audio jack which along with Nokia Music Store’s endless array of tracks, makes it perfect for any music lover. Here is a mobile phone that is almost a PC which is capable of satisfying a wide range of users including mazeophobics, lovers of music, photography, messaging, browsing and keeping in touch with friends no matter where they are. Phew, that’s a long list. This hand-held is currently available for preorder for £429. Now, does the N97 overshadow its brother? Some might feel so, but it can’t be denied that despite the feature trim, the Nokia N97 Mini stands out in its own way.

Nokia CORE





It’s been a while since we last saw a Nokia concept phone we really liked and the device pictured below can fit this category perfectly. Nokia CORE is a cool design, based on the Star Wars universe and the core of a solar system. The interface of the handset is the most important feature, since it allows it to control a PC.

Nokia_Core_concept_phone_1

Nokia CORE also serves as a mouse and it can transfer its interface to any PC nearby, via WiFi and Bluetooth. You’ll then control the new device by using CORE’s interface, as if it were the one on the PC. There’s also a camera aboard the phone, plus an OLED display covered with an anti-scratch layer.

All of the contents stored on the Nokia device and its interface get immediately transferred to the PC it connects to, so it should have a pretty cool UI, or else it would look strange on the big screen.

Nokia_Core_concept_phone_2

Nokia_Core_concept_phone_3

Nokia_Core_concept_phone_4

[via Concept Phones]

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5. Nokia N85 and Nokia N79 Available Now in the United States!

Tags: Nokia concept phone, Nokia CORE, Nokia mouse, OLED display, transfer interface

Review: Blackberry Tour Not Ready for Prime Time


Whenever I travel I always take my laptop, and thanks to a Verizon USB wireless modem I can stay connected pretty much anywhere, although twice a year when I am in Chicago getting any signal is a challenge. While I am not such a dinosaur that I don’t have a cell phone, I had resisted the Blackberry temptation, at least right up until my cell phone found itself being left in the pocket of a pair of jeans that was then washed. Not surprisingly, that was the end of the useful life for my Motorola Krzr, which had been extremely dependable. So I decided it was time to at least consider a Blackberry, and when I went to Verizon I quickly gravitated to the Blackberry Tour, which is a handsome phone that allegedly offers a lot of functionality. The key being the word “allegedly.” I have since learned from several others that the problems I was experiencing with the Blackberry Tour are not unique, and indeed have been experienced by many. I realize this post is off topic, but attorneys and other professionals who largely make up the IPWatchdog Blog audience have to make up the overwhelming percentage of Blackberry customers, so I thought I would share my experiences, which were not at all good.

The first Blackberry Tour I obtained looked great, but just did not work very well at all. To be perfectly honest, I can’t even offer an opinion regarding the features of this first model because it was completely unusable. The trackball simply would not work, and it started having troubles just days after I acquired it and progressively got worse for the three weeks or so that I have the phone. The trackball would take many revolutions to even move one space, and eventually it got to the point where no number of revolutions would allow the cursor to move up and down.

It does not seem that I am the only one who have had difficulties with an inferior trackball. If you search Google using the phrase “blackberry tour trackball” you will find numerous articles and consumer complaints regarding the trackball just not working. For example, the blackberry forum has many consumers complaining exactly about this very issue dating back to July 2009. According to TownHall Investment Research as many at 50% of the Blackberry Tour units have been returned due to trackball issues. Both Sprint and Verizon dispute this claim, and instead say that the percentage of returns is consistent with other new products launched, and that RIM is known for quality, but based on my own experience, the experience of other customers I spoke with who were also at the Verizon Wireless store returning the Blackberry Tour and the legions of complaints easily available online, it seems that TownHall Investment Research is closer to being correct than Sprint, Verizon or RIM, all of whom have a vested interest in the Blackberry Tour not being a lemon. Interestingly, Sprint and Verizon will not confirm the return percentage, how interesting!

After returning my first Blackberry Tour, I got another, still not aware of the mountains of evidence that suggest the Blackberry Tour is the cell phone version of the Edsle. This second unit was not any better than the first, but for different reasons. The trackball never seemed to work as one would expect it should, but it seemed to work better than any of the other features of the phone. This second unit simply suffered from terrible reception, dropped calls constantly and callers would call and go straight to voice mail even when I was not on the phone and had what appeared to be a strong signal. On top of that, the pictures it took had a yellowish-green tint, which made every picture approximate the color scheme of a Van Gogh painting. Powering down and powering up the phone would take an extraordinarily long time. Downloaded applications never worked correctly, and then the last straw was the screen going blank and freezing on me, not allowing me to power it down. In short, this version of the Blackberry Tour was completely unusable as anything other than perhaps a paper weight.

I was starting to wonder why anyone liked owning a Blackberry, because my experience was anything but stellar. Nevertheless, when I returned this second Blackberry Tour I was not yet ready to give up completely, although I refused to accept another Blackberry Tour, which seems to be what many are finding to be the appropriate option. The Verizon Wireless sales representative in the store was a real pain, and kept wanting to try and fix the phone for me or show me how to use it. This went on, and on and on. It would seem that he couldn’t understand simple English — “I don’t want a Blackberry Tour because they are junk!” Finally, the manager agreed to take the Blackberry Tour back and exchange it for a Blackberry Curve. So far so good with the curve, and I am starting to understand why folks like a functioning Blackberry. They are quite handy when they work. I am now getting phone calls again, not dropping the calls and the trackball seems fine (knock on wood).

For a very long time people have stayed away from buying the first version of many high-tech gadgets, and that seems to be the appropriate way to deal with the enormously problematic Blackberry Tour. My advice would be to stay away from the Tour, at least until Research In Motion gets its act together and there is another version or two of the Tour that has worked out its many peculiarities.

Verizon's 'Droid' attack on the iPhone elevates Google in mobile air-wars






Competition in the mobile phone arena is about to really get real. Apple's iPhone -- available only on AT&T (T)-- has been the toast of the mobile world in recent years, but now Google (GOOG) is set to unleash a worthy challenger. Through its Android open-source mobile operating system and a pact with Verizon Wireless, the two companies have begun an all-out assault on the iPhone, starting with an in-your-face TV spot mocking the popular handset and introducing consumers to Droid.

Over the weekend, TV watchers got their first glimpse of Verizon's Droid, an upcoming device the mobile giant hopes will give it enough presence to challenge Apple (AAPL) and AT&T's iPhone as well as Canadian smartphone giant Research in Motion (RIMM), which recently released a series of new feature-rich BlackBerry devices.

Verizon Wireless' gambit is nothing if not bold: The mobile giant is trying to convince consumers that while iPhones may be kind of cool for geeks, if you want to be a badass, get a Droid. The mobile giant licensed the name from Star Wars creator George Lucas, and the phones are scheduled to arrive in November.

The commercial, with happy hipster-pop and white letters set against a black backdrop intended to mock Apple's own ad campaign, lists all the things the iPhone "can't" do -- like no keyboard, can't "customize," no widgets, etc. "IDon't allow open development," the spot jabs, in a reference to Apple's closed, proprietary software environment. Then the video signal cuts out, and the camera jerks around, as if to evoke some kind of disruption. "Everything iDon't, Droid Does," the spot intones.


Dennis Crowley, founder and CEO of Foursquare, the red-hot mobile networking service, which boasts both iPhone and Android apps, says teaming up with Verizon Wireless is "a huge win for Android."


"The big question for developers is whether it's going to be as easy to keep building for Android as it's been for the iPhone," Crowley told DailyFinance. "With the iPhone, it's been one phone and one screen size. Until now, Android has been easy because it's been on two to three devices with basically one screen size. But when you roll a new operating system out across a ton of different phones with different screen sizes," it becomes more difficult for developers, Crowley said.

With the arrival of the new phones next month, the market dynamics will be changed in a big way. If Apple set a new benchmark for device design, Google is trying to establish a new standard for open mobile software platforms. And that should mean more innovation and more competition.

"The biggest threat to Apple is that the market is opening up to Palm and Android, with Nokia (NOK) floating around in the background," Charlene Li, a founding partner at Altimeter Group, a Silicon Valley-based tech consultancy, told DailyFinance. "What happens when you have that rich diversity in the space is that it's no longer Apple versus Google, it's Apple versus everybody.

"This is going to force Apple and AT&T to innovate even faster," Li said. "They've been doing a good job with the iPhone, but there are serious compromises people have had to make, from the network, which has been spotty, especially in New York City where the system is really hard to get onto, to features like simultaneous apps that have been missing for two years.

"Apple will try very hard to match the new phones," Li said. "And that will be great for consumers."

Consumers are already benefiting from new upstarts in the market, most notably HTC -- which until recently barely had any brand recognition in the U.S. The company is beginning to win market share with a sleek touch-screen device called the Hero. But whereas the iPhone runs on Apple's proprietary OS, the Hero, as offered by Sprint Nextel (S), runs on Android.

As Verizon Wireless enters the fray with Android, Google is set to become a major player in the smartphone market -- which is exactly where CEO Eric Schmidt wants to be. On a recent conference call, the Google chief said: "Android adoption is literally about to explode." Schmidt noted that Android had gone from being offered by one carrier on one device in one country to 12 devices in 26 countries on 32 carriers in less than a year. Android currently has 10,000 applications available -- not Apple's 80,000, but not too shabby either.

An additional benefit for Google is access to the very fertile mobile web advertising market -- a so-far largely untapped revenue source that is expected to explode in coming years. "We can make more money on mobile than we do on the desktop, eventually," Schmidt said last year.

With heavyweight service providers like Verizon Wireless lining up behind it and next-generation-now devices like HTC's Hero, Google is well positioned to gobble up some mobile market share in 2010. No wonder Schmidt stepped down from Apple's board and Art Levinson stepped down from Google's board, amid FTC scrutiny of Google-Apple board ties. Things might have gotten pretty awkward pretty quickly now that Google and Apple are going head-to-head in a high-profile area of combat.

samsung memory card


premium Samsung memory cards for sale.

“The market for memory cards continues to grow in leaps and bounds as consumers push for added storage in smart phones and other mobile devices,” said Dong Soo Jun, executive vice president, strategic marketing team, Memory Division, Samsung Electronics.

“Our well-established leadership in the digital memory card space provides an ideal footing from which to launch premium memory cards that can match rapidly evolving high-end premium devices such as smart phones and high-performance digital still cameras,” he explained. “Our cards also provide consumers with more of the outstanding reliability that they have come to expect from Samsung semiconductor products.”

Today’s consumer electronics market is rapidly evolving to include more and more multifunctional, content-oriented applications and devices. Samsung already has a strong branded presence in these consumer markets, a presence that will provide a lot of synergy for the new card products.

The NAND flash-memory retail market is estimated to already have reached $12 billion in revenues annually. As a result of continued dramatic growth in the mobile phone market, digital memory card demand is projected to more than double between 2008 and 2011. According to iSuppli, by 2011 more than 61 percent of mobile phones will include a card slot for additional flash card storage, compared to 51 percent of mobile phones with card slots in 2008.

In previous years, Samsung manufactured “white-label” digital memory cards for a variety of leading electronics companies and memory card companies.

Samsung’s new premium “Plus” memory cards, which comply with the Secure Digital class 6 ratings for performance, are available in SD, microSD and Compact Flash (CF) formats with densities of 4-gigabytes (GBs) and 8GBs, with a 16GB density for an SD Plus card.

Designed to ensure that valuable data is not lost, Samsung memory cards are shock-resistant, water-resistant and protected from damage caused by magnetic interference.

Samsung memory cards feature a modern brushed silver metallic design or a natural beige epoxy compound casing, and full compatibility with devices that have memory card slots. Most of the premium Plus memory cards can read data at 17MB/s (megabytes per second), though the CF cards provide read speeds of up to 45MB/s.

The new Samsung memory cards are available in Taiwan this month, with sales in other select countries likely to follow at a later date.

About Samsung Electronics
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. is a global leader in semiconductor, telecommunication, digital media and digital convergence technologies with 2008 consolidated sales of US$96 billion. Employing approximately 164,600 people in 179 offices across 61 countries, the company consists of two business units: Digital Media & Communications and Device Solutions. Recognized as one of the fastest growing global brands, Samsung Electronics is a leading producer of digital TVs, memory chips, mobile phones and TFT-LCDs. For more information, please visit www.samsung.com.

samsung news


If this picture looks a little "off," yeah, we know what you're talking about -- it's hard to say how any graphic designer could've mis-rendered a mocked-up screenshot this badly -- but just squint your eyes a little bit and play along, won't you? This is apparently a conceptual view of Samsung's new SPH-M8400 for South Korea's KT, which will become just the manufacturer's second phone to feature WiBro (and KT's first) after the M830 / M8300. In fact, they've coined a fun little term for it -- 3W -- which means you're getting WiBro, WiFi, and WCDMA all wrapped up in one for the total 3G / 4G experience. Neither a date nor pricing are easy to come by at this point, but unless you happen to be around Seoul, that WiBro compatibility isn't going to do you a heck of a lot of good anyhow.

news from sony

Sony-Ericsson Lands Smartphone Financing

A $676 million financing deal, announced after a string of quarterly losses, will help promote its Satio and Aino phones.

By W. David Gardner
InformationWeek
October 16, 2009 11:33 AM

After five consecutive unprofitable quarters mobile phone provider Sony-Ericsson finally delivered some good news Friday: the company reported it has secured $676 million in financing to fuel a new round of advanced camera phones. The company, however, also reported a third quarter loss of $245 million.

The joint venture between L. M. Ericsson Telephone Co. and Sony Corp. has been hit by a one-two punch of the worldwide economic slowdown and slow sales of mid-range phones, which have been the firm's sweet spot. While Sony-Ericsson had predicted that worldwide sales of all mobile phones would likely to decline 10% in 2009, it said the decline appears to be slowing.

More Mobility Insights
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* Camera Phones With Pen Input as Annotation Devices
* HP Mobile Device Management: The Most Comprehensive Solutions on the Market

Webcasts

* How the cloud makes wireless LAN easier and more affordable for branches and multi-site organizations
* Extending the Reach, Impact and ROI of Mobile Banking and Transaction Services

Reports

* The Price Of Flash
* Hybrid Clouds

Videos
Nokia shows off the new N900 device at Web 2.0 Summit 2009. This is the first tocuscreen mobile device (with phone capabilities) from Nokia that works on the Maemo operating system. Meru CTO Vaduvur Bharghavan provides a tutorial on the crucial new capabilities of 802.11n (which was just recently ratified), and explains why wireless may now be primed to replace the wired edge. Path Intelligence installs sensors in high traffic areas. Those sensors detect cell phones and can use that data to examine traffic patterns and behavior, which can be viewed & analyzed in real time.
Nokia shows off the new N900 device at Web 2.0 Summit 2009. This is the first tocuscreen mobile device (with phone capabilities) from Nokia that works on the Maemo operating system.
The new financing will enable the company to put some additional marketing thrust behind its new camera phones, the Satio and Aino, as well as its gaming-oriented phone, the Yari. The Satio has a 12.1-megapixel autofocus camera with 12 times digital zoom and Xenon flash, making it a pacer in the mobile phone-cum-camera category.

The Aino is packed with advanced features including video recording capability, Wi-Fi support, and a 3-inch touchscreen.

The company clearly turned to Sony to develop much of its consumer features. "Our business in the third quarter started to show the effects of our ongoing transformation program," said Dick Komiyama, outgoing president of Sony-Ericsson, in a statement."Having refreshed our brand we are now better positioned to support the launch of new products such as Aino and Satio in Q4 2009. We have cleared channel inventories, and have continued to realign internal resources and improve efficiency."

In keeping with the company's revolving management structure, Sony's Komiyama left his position Thursday and Ericsson's Bert Nordberg took over the president's post. At the same time, Howard Stringer, Chairman, CEO, and President of Sony Corporation and a member of the Sony Ericsson board, became Chairman of the Sony Ericsson board.


InformationWeek Analytics has published a report on the 10 steps to effective data classification. Download the report here (registration required).

12 Phones Strong, Android Army Mobilizes for Explosive Growth


pr_sprint_android_f

If you’ve thought about picking up an Android-powered phone but found yourself turned off by the hardware choices (ahem, G1), you may soon wish to reconsider.

“Android adoption is about to explode,” said Eric Schmidt, Google’s CEO, in an earnings conference call Thursday. “You have all the necessary conditions.”

Schmidt’s forecast may prove accurate with 12 Android-powered devices available in 26 countries on 32 carriers. Recent Android rumors, announcements and releases further fuel the rumble in the mobile community.

By handing out Android as an open source platform, Google aims to help manufacturers focus more time, money and energy on their hardware and specific usability for each device. Using the Android OS, there is no need to re-invent the wheel when it comes to the mobile software. Developmental resources can instead be allocated to innovation and quicker adaptation of emerging technology. This direction in mobile development does seem to create the “necessary conditions” for Android to appeal to an extremely broad range of users.

When the first Android phone, the HTC G1, was released in September 2008, some developers questioned how Google would address making the Android OS and third-party apps work smoothly with various types of hardware. Screen resolution was a primary concern among developers polled by Wired.com: How could an app designed to work with the G1’s resolution, for example, work with another Android phone sporting a different resolution?

Fortunately, the Android team at Google is working to ensure their platform is compatible with every mobile phone, specifically when it comes to screen resolution. The Android 1.6 SDK, the developer’s kit, allows a manufacturer or developer to add code in their application to conform to different handset’s resolutions. (For example, “Do this when the phone has a resolution of 320×480; do that when the resolution is larger.”) They have created three categories of resolution sizes that any given device will fall into, ensuring a single third-party app will work across all phones. There is also a “compatibility mode” developers can incorporate into their applications built prior to 1.6, aka Donut.

Excited by the Android mobile-nova? We’ve created a list of the 12 Android-powered smartphones so you can begin researching and deciding which one is best for you:

* Motorola Cliq (T-Mobile / Available October 19)
* Motorola Sholes (Verizon / Available October 30)
* Samsung Behold II (T-Mobile / Holidays 2009)
* Samsung Moment (Sprint / November 1)
* Huawei Pulse (T-Mobile UK / Available)
* HTC Hero (Sprint / Available)
* HTC Tattoo (Vodafone UK / Available)
* HTC Magic /myTouch 3G (T-Mobile / Available)
* HTC Dream/G1 (T-Mobile / Available)
* Dell Mini i13 (China Mobile / Confirmed, Release Date TBA)
* Acer Liquid (Unknown / Confirmed, Release Date TBA)
* LG GW620 (Unknown / Confirmed, Q4 2009)

nokia n900


N900 on the t-mobile network

Mark Guim from The Nokia Blog just got a Nokia N900, which has 1700 MHz 3G network used by T-Mobile USA. 2.26 Mb/s download, 0.34 Mb/s upload, ping time of 174 ms. That’s fast, almost double the speed of current fastest operator in America.

here some specifications of the nokia n900.

Hardware Specs:

* GPS, along with an accelerometer.
* Dimensions: 59.7mmx111mmx18.2mm
* Weight: 180g
* 3.5″ 800×480 (WVGA) touchscreen
* OMAP3430 500/600 Mhz processor (Fun Trivia: Same CPU as the Palm Pre)
* Bands: GSM Quad-Band 850, 900, 1800, 1900. WCDMA 900, 1700/2100, 2100
* 5 megapixel Carl Zeiss camera with dual-LED flash, autofocus, and sliding cover
* Though the renders we’ve seen show two lens-like circles near the screen, we’ve got no word on what’s behind them. However, we feel safe in assuming that its a proximity sensor and a front-facing camera.
* 1GB total virtual runtime memory (256MB physical RAM, 768MB virtual memory)
* Wi-Fi, HSPA
* 32GB internal storage, expandable up to 48GB via external memory
* Keyboard variants: English, Scandinavian, French, German, South European, Italian, Russia
* In the box: Connectivity cable, headset, charger, battery (1320 mAh), Video-out cable, microUSB adaptor, cleaning cloth

* In all of the renders we’ve seen, it appears to be running Maemo 5.
* Multitasking: “Run all of your favorite applications simultaneously”
* Live Dashboard allows all open tasks and unread messages to be displayed in one view
* Browser: Firefox 3 with support for Flash 9.4
* Built-in automatic update software
* Contacts has some sort of status sharing built in, allowing you to share your status, location, and mood. Support for Contacts on Ovi and Google Talk.
* All SMS and IMs accessible from one view
* Cellular voice or VOIP both supported… maybe UMA?
* Captures video at 800×480 in AVC/H.264
* Image tagging and geo-tagging support
* Nokia intends to have at least a dozen add-on apps available at launch, including a game called “Bounce”, a Jaiku/Twitter app called “Mauku”, and a few widgets.

Via The Nokia Blog

Thursday, October 15, 2009

e55 live short




about e55

Sometimes, a phone is nearly perfect, except for that one small thing you want to change. If you felt that way about Nokia E52, the E55 claims to have the answer. Don't get us wrong - the E52 has killer looks and specs. And the E55… well, like we told you, it's the same phone save for that one little thing.

If QWERTY keyboards are for heavy texters where does half-QWERTY fit? Some would say it's the same target but different goal. You know, like heavy texting is a bad habit and half-QWERTY is the therapy. Now, now, no need to be too smart. But does it really make typing faster or slower, and how hard it is to learn the new layout? We ran a test to find out.

But more on that later. Thanks to the excellent connectivity options and Office editing out of the box, the E55 keeps your office at arm's length - whether you're out to lunch or out of town. Emails, presentations, spreadsheets, memos - you can bring all that everywhere you go. But hey, we're not saying you should. Thanks to Modes, switching between Business and Personal homescreens makes sure you don't have to bring work home.

Texting and email go without saying, but the Nokia E55 is one of the best-equipped Symbian devices around. Here's the rundown:
Key features
Compact metallic body and extra slim girth (9.9mm)
Quad-band GSM support
3G with HSDPA 10.2 Mbps and HSUPA 2 Mbps
half-QWERTY keyboard
2.4" 16M-color display of QVGA resolution
Symbian OS, S60 UI with FP2
600 MHz ARM 11 CPU and 128 MB RAM
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, UPnP technology, DLNA support
Built-in GPS receiver, A-GPS support, digital compass
Accelerometer for screen auto-rotation and turn-to-mute
One-touch shortcut keys mean "business"
3 megapixel enhanced fixed focus camera with LED flash
Secondary videocall camera
60 MB of internal memory, microSD expansion, ships with a 2GB card
microUSB v2.0
Standard 3.5mm audio jack
Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
FM radio with RDS
Class-leading audio output quality
N-Gage gaming support
Ovi Maps preinstalled with trial turn-by-turn navigation license (10 x 1 days, to be used within 3 months) and lifetime City Explorer license
User-friendly Mode Switch for swapping two homescreen setups
Office document editor (with free MS Office 2007 update)
Remote lock/wipe over-the-air
Comfortable keypad
Smart dialing
Great battery life
Main disadvantages
Disappointing camera features and performance
Video recording maxes out at VGA@15fps
No DivX or XviD support (can be installed, possibly requiring a purchase)
No TV-out functionality
Keyboard takes some time getting used to (not too long though)


Nokia E55 live shots

The Nokia E55 has something of a split personality. The business features are complete but wait till you see what it offers for recreation. N-Gage support gives you access to a host of games, the audio quality is up there with dedicated music players and the huge battery won't run out of juice until after hours of games and music.

The weekend getaway is also covered - just punch in your destination into Nokia Maps, and the E55 will take you there. It'll even suggest a list of local attractions.

Head to the next page where we open the box and share our experience with the Nokia E55 and its keyboard.

e55 official review





Sunday, August 16, 2009

How to Upgrade a Nokia n80 to Nokia n80 Internet Edition

How to Upgrade a Nokia n80 to Nokia n80 Internet Edition

ds_jennebl9564 Contributor
By Jennifer Eblin
eHow Contributing Writer
(0 Ratings)

The Nokia N80 was a cell phone the company released that was quite popular with customers. As with any new form of technology, Nokia released a better version not long after. This new version is known as the Nokia N80IE or Internet Edition. The two phones have the same features, but the IE has better software, which makes looking at things online or surfing the web look better. Luckily, you can easily turn your Nokia N80 into the Nokia N80 Internet Edition with just a little work.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  1. Step 1

    Download the Nokia Software Updater and Nokia PC Suite by visiting the official website. This software is free of charge. Simply follow the directions when prompted.

  2. Step 2

    Back up the files on your Nokia N80 because this process will remove all files from your phone. You can do this by saving the information to your SIM card.

  3. Step 3

    Connect the USB cable to your cell phone and plug it into your computer. Make sure that your phone is on the charger and the SIM card is inside before proceeding.

  4. Step 4

    Select the PC Suite button on your cell phone. Your computer should recognize the new software attached.

  5. Step 5

    Run the software updater that you downloaded previously by clicking on the icon on your desktop. This program will automatically download the updates onto your cell phone, but continue to follow the prompts when given.

  6. Step 6

    Watch for your Nokia phone to reboot and return your factory settings such as date and time. Now your old Nokia N80 is a fully working Nokia N80ie.

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