Thursday, 29 December 2011

Apple looking to expand iPhone and iPad accessories support

Apple has shown interest in expanding support for third-party accessories for the iPhone and iPad, with a new system that would detect an external device and recommend compatible applications available on the App Store.

The concept was unveiled this week in a new application published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Entitled "Method and System for Locating an Accessory and an Application for Use With a User Device," the filing describes a system that would identify a range of applications usable with a connected accessory.The system could also work in reverse, and let users know of available hardware accessories that are compatible with applications they already have installed on their iOS device. Such accessories could include game controllers, wireless headsets and external speakers.

Apple's filing even describes a system where a kiosk at a store could connect to a user's iPhone and analyze the applications that are installed on it. From there, a user could be given a list of compatible accessories and their exact locations in that store, such as the aisle and bin numbers.

Accessories could also be sold through online vendors in the same manner. A user could find out on their iPhone what accessories are compatible with their installed applications, and Apple would provide links to online stores where the compatible accessories could be purchased.

"With the number of available accessories growing at an exponential rate," the filing reads, "it is often difficult for a user to determine which accessory supports which software application and vice versa."

Apple has had more limited accessory support in its iOS mobile operating system for years. Starting with the release of iOS 3.0 in 2008, some compatible hardware accessories have automatically prompted users to download a necessary application from the App Store.

The "Application Not Installed" notification alerts users that "This accessory requires an application you do not have installed. Would you like to install it from the App Store?"

But Apple's proposed invention would go multiple steps further, providing users with an extensive list of compatible applications once an accessory is connected. And it would also allow users to discover and purchase accessories compatible with their currently installed software.

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Plantronics Explorer 320 Bluetooth headset - Review

The good: Comfortable fit; stylish design; user-friendly controls; acceptable call quality.

The bad: Troublesome pairing process; dim LED light; not great in windy conditions.

The bottom line: Although it's not perfect, the Plantronics Explorer 320 is a solid lower-tier Bluetooth headset.

Although the Discovery 640 and Voyager 510SL were top-range models that came with loads of accessories, the Plantronics Explorer 320 is better suited for novice and low-maintenance Bluetooth users.

Included in the package are just the headset and a compact wall charger, with no additional parts to confuse things. Fittingly, it also comes at a reasonable price less than $30. The headset itself has a clean and stylish design with silver and black coloring, rounded edges, and an overall streamlined look. It's relatively compact and lightweight (2.5 by 0.3 by 0.75 inches; 0.67 ounce), and since there's no extendable boom mic, you won't look too conspicuous when it's on your ear.

The Design:
The Plantronics Explorer 320 employs a traditional over-the-ear fit with a flexible, rubberized ear hook. We had no trouble slipping it on and off quickly, and switching the ear hook for wearing on either ear was a simple process. The minimalist form factor should also please users with smaller ears, longer hair, or earrings. A soft earpiece protrudes only slightly into the ear, which makes the overall fit comfortable and secure. Controls on the Explorer 320 are unique in that a single two-way toggle activates all functions, including turning the headset on and off, readying it for pairing, adjusting the volume, and managing calls. The toggle could be larger, but it was exceptionally user-friendly and easy to locate when the headset was in use. The final feature in the headset is a tiny status-indicator LED light.


Tuesday, 27 December 2011

Motorola Xoom tablet gets Android Ice Cream Sandwich Update

Only a day after Google released Android version 4.0.3, one XDA developer has already installed it on his Motorola Xoom WiFi tablet -- making it the first slate to run the frosty Ice Cream Sandwich upgrade. Of course, trendsetting is nothing new for the Xoom, which was also the first to ship with Honeycomb's sweetness back in February. Being first does have its disadvantages, though, as some of the features like the camera don't work, and there seems to be a green overlay on the screen from time to time. If you're willing to overlook these early adopter flaws, head on over to the source to satisfy your ICS-inspired sweet tooth and try it for yourself.

Google to introduce new Android Tablet to compete with Apple's iPad

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt has revealed that the company is planning to bring its flagship Android tablet to the market in the next six months to rival Apple’s iPad.

In the next six months we plan to market a tablet of the highest quality,” Schmidt told an Italian newspaper.

Google has already had a hand in the development of the Motorola Xoom, but like other Android tablets, it suffered disappointing sales in a market dominated by the iPad.Since then Google has itself become a major hardware manufacturer via its 12.5 billion dollars acquisition Motorola’s devices division, which is currently under consideration by competition authorities.

According to The Telegraph, Schmidt paid tribute to Steve Jobs'' role in kickstarting the tablet market, describing the iPad as “amazing”.

Steve Jobs was the Michelangelo of our time. A friend of mine and a unique character, able to combine creativity and visionary genius with an extraordinary engineering ability,” the paper quoted him, as saying.

Steve realised the revolutionary potential of the tablet and created an amazing product like the iPad,” he added.

Schmidt said that competition between Android smartphones and the iPhone will be “brutal”.

In the smartphone market, Google designs the Nexus range as both a testing ground for new versions of Android and to show off cutting-edge hardware. Samsung manufactures the most recent device, the Galaxy Nexus.

Monday, 26 December 2011

Apple's App Store hits 500,000 app milestone - revealed in a press release by Apple

Google’s Android Market may be going great guns at the moment, but Apple has just delivered a timely reminder that its own App Store is as popular as ever by revealing it has just hit the 500,000 app milestone.

It’s testament to just how fundamentally Apple has changed the face of the mobile industry that before the iPhone came along – or the iPhone 3G to be specific – app stores didn’t even exist.

But Apple changed all that by introducing the App Store in July 2008, and it set up a mobile ecosystem blueprint that the entire industry has followed. Apple has since applied the same formula to its Mac OS X desktop software, and it’s clearly been a success, as the Mac App Store has taken just a year to rack up a whopping 100 million app downloads.

Apple revolutionised the app industry with the App Store, which now has more than 500,000 apps and where customers have downloaded more than 18 billion apps and continue to download more than 1 billion apps per month,” Apple revealed in a press release to announce the twin milestones.

In just three years the App Store changed how people get mobile apps, and now the Mac App Store is changing the traditional PC software industry,” Apple vice-president Phil Schiller adds.

These days the App Store is playing second fiddle to the Android Market, however, with Google’s OS marketplace having gone past the half a million apps landmark at the end of October. But Apple will argue that quality is more important than quantity, and it’s telling that while iOS users have now downloaded 18 billion apps in total, Android has only this week manage to pass the 10 billion mark.

Samsung sold 300 millions handsets in 2011

Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd said on Sunday its annual mobile handset sales this year had exceeded 300 million units for the first time in the company's history.

The world's second largest handset maker by volume said in a statement it had broken its sales record by the end of last month.

Handset sales in 2010 were about 280 million.

"We look forward to extending this success going into 2012," JK Shin, President and Head of Samsung's Mobile Communications Business, was quoted as saying.

Samsung said the company's flagship Galaxy S smartphone series - Galaxy S and Galaxy S II - contributed significantly to the results.

The GALAXY S II, launched in April, set a new sales record for Samsung, generating 10 million-unit sales.

The Future:

Next up for Samsung in the U.S. is the launch of the hyped Galaxy Nexus, which has a 4.65-inch screen and blazing 4G data speeds but still has not been given a release date. The phone was supposedly delayed because Verizon wanted Google Wallet software removed before the launch. Google, Samsung and Verizon’s last official comment about the release date said the phone would launch before the end of the year.

Saturday, 24 December 2011

Johns Phone Provides a Free Johns Phone App for Android

Smart phone becomes simple phoneThe Johns Phone app turns every Android smart phone into a simple phone. The Android phone will look like a Johns Phone, with its -very- basic functions: to call, or to be called. And to receive messages. Everything else will be automatically shut down. Nice and easy.

The app is available in colours white, black, pink, green and brown. Only the special Golden Edition will cost the same as the real phone: 100,- Ridiculously expensive? Most certainly. But that does give you a 24-karat virtual golden phone. The app can be downloaded through the Android Market; Download Here

About Johns Phone:
The simplest phone ever. SeriouslyJohns Phone is the worlds most basic mobile phone. Johns Phone allows you to make and receive calls anywhere in the world: no frills and no unnecessary features such as a camera, text messaging and an endless number of ringtones. Johns Phone keeps things simple.

User friendly:
Johns Phone requires no explanation. Use the phone to call and hang up, turn the sound up or down, and lock or unlock it: it couldnt be any simpler. The speed-dial feature, which allows to save speed-dial numbers under every number key, makes Johns Phone perfect as a kids cell phone.

Large keys, address book, penPhone is a large-key phone. The back of the phone features a flap containing an address book and a pen this makes Johns Phone perfect for older users too.

Dutch designJohns Phone is designed by John Doe Amsterdam. John's Team has embraced this concept and is responsible for the development and launch of Johns Phone in the Dutch market.

Merry Christmas to all of YOU!

Thursday, 22 December 2011

Recover lost contacts on your iPhone

Accidents happen and sometimes you happen to delete a contact on your phone on accident. It could happen because you’re trying to enter a new e-mail address or phone and accidentally remove a previous one.

Don’t worry too much, you can get those lost numbers back. It’s not lost forever to the ether.

1. Open iTunes on your computer.

2. Plug your iPhone in to your computer using the USB connector cable.

3. Go to “Devices” on the left-side of the iTunes window and click the iPhone tab.

4. Right-click on the iPhone icon in the “Devices” column and select “Restore from Backup”. Select one of the backup versions from the drop-down menu. Click the “Restore” button. This will restore any contacts that you may have deleted since the last time that you synced your iPhone with iTunes.

5. Eject your iPhone. Go to your contact list. Your lost contacts should be restored.

A couple of notes for you to consider for the future:

It is recommended that you occasionally make separate backups that aren’t the ones that iTunes automatically does when you sync the iPhone. iTunes replaces the previous backup each time it syncs. To ensure that you keep things that you want or as a just in case, it’s good to have different back ups. Create a separate backup by right-clicking on the iPhone under the “Devices” tab in the left column. Then select “Back Up”. You can also restore contacts manually if you sync contacts with your contact list in either Outlook or Address Book (Mac) and re-entering the info by hand.

If you haven’t synced in a while you might have to re-download any firmware updates or apps that you have added to the iPhone since the last backup. They won’t be kept in the previous backup file.

RIM postponing the launch of next generation phones till late 2012

BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. said Thursday that new phones deemed critical to the company's future will be delayed until late 2012.

Mike Lazaridis, one of the company's co-CEOs, said the BlackBerry 10 phones will need a highly integrated chipset that will not be available until mid-2012, so the company can now expect them to ship late in the year. He disclosed the delay on a conference call with analysts.

Analysts say RIM's future depends on the new software platform. RIM needs to come up with a compelling BlackBerry as U.S. users have moved on to flashier touch-screen phones such as Apple's iPhone and various competing models that run Google's Android software.

Earlier Thursday, RIM said BlackBerry sales will fall sharply in the holiday quarter, providing further evidence that it is struggling to compete. It also has been having a hard time finding a niche in the tablet-computer market, which is dominated by Apple's iPad.

RIM continues to enjoy success overseas, but market researcher NPD Group says RIM's market share of smartphones in the U.S. has declined from 44 percent in 2009 to 10 percent this year.

The company's stock fell 7 percent in extended trading Thursday.

The delay in BlackBerry 10 phones is the latest in a series of setbacks for the once-iconic Canadian company. Its PlayBook tablet computer hasn't been selling well, forcing the company to sell them at a deep discount. A widespread outage frustrated tens of millions of BlackBerry users in October. RIM fired two executives after their drunken rowdiness forced the diversion of an Air Canada flight. The head of its operations in Indonesia faces charges related to a stampede at a recent promotional sale where dozens of consumers were injured.

RIM said its net income sank 71 percent as revenue fell and the company took a large accounting charge on the PlayBook, which uses the same operating software that RIM's new phones will use.

"We ask for your patience and confidence," Lazaridis said.

RIM earned $265 million, or 51 cents per share, for its fiscal third quarter that ended Nov. 26. That compares with $911 million, or $1.74 per share, a year ago. The company said revenue fell 6 percent to $5.2 billion. The PlayBook charge was $485 million before taxes.

The company shipped 14.1 million BlackBerry smartphones during the third quarter and 150,000 PlayBook tablets, but its fourth-quarter guidance was what investors focused on because it had warned about the third-quarter results earlier.

Although RIM has said it would sell fewer BlackBerrys in the current quarter, the forecast given Thursday appeared worse than expected.

RIM said it would only ship between 11 million and 12 million BlackBerrys in the fourth quarter compared to 14.8 million in the previous fourth quarter.

RIM also said its fourth-quarter earnings would be in the range of 80 to 95 cents per share on revenue in the range of $4.6 billion to $4.9 billion. Analysts had been expecting earnings of $1.15 a share on revenue of $5.04 billion, according to FactSet.

Peter Misek, an analyst at Jefferies & Co. in New York, said earlier that if RIM reveals that it will ship no more than 12 million BlackBerrys in the current quarter, then the company needs to get its new phones out fast. Otherwise, RIM could lose money in future quarters as it continues to struggle to sell the current, stopgap models.

Misek said late Thursday the BlackBerry 10 phones will now be released three to nine months later than people believed.

BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis said the guidance was terrible and wondered if it was the start of a collapse.

"If consumers abandon this platform it can happen pretty quickly," Gillis said. "Don't think this is the bottom."

Jim Balsillie, the other co-CEO, said the last few quarters have been among the most challenging times in the company's most recent history. He said executives are working to turn it around, but said it may take time.

"We are not satisfied with the performance of the business in the United States," Balsillie said.

Balsillie said he and Lazaridis have reduced their cash salary to $1 per year, though they will continue to earn stock options and other compensation.

RIM's stock fell $1.15 to a new seven-year low of $13.98 in extended trading Thursday after the results were released.

The stock has lost about 75 percent of its value this year. A company that was worth more than $70 billion a few years ago now has a market value of around $8 billion.

"We recognize our shareholders may feel we've fallen short," Balsillie said


Saturday, 17 December 2011

Remotely Search PCs or Macs using your Android device - Android app enables remote search of PCs and Macs - Wyse Technology releases Android app

Wyse Technology has launched an Android app that lets people search remotely for files on their PCs and laptops, then download them, copy them, or send them to another person, all from inside the app.

The idea behind the app, called PocketCloud Explore, is to help people who have multiple computers and can't always remember on which machine they stored something. One snag: The app can't search Apple's iPhone or iPad devices.

Wyse is best known for its thin-client computers, but two years ago it made a bit of a splash at the International Consumer Electronics Show with an app called PocketCloud Remote Desktop Access, which lets people access a Windows desktop from an iPhone by streaming the desktop over the network. A year later, it released a version for Android.

PocketCloud Explore, released Thursday, is an add-on for the Remote Desktop app. Explore lets users type a query on their smartphone, initiating a full-text search of their other computers, as well as the Android phone itself, to return documents, images and any other type of file that matches the query.

"With the range of devices people have today -- computers, smartphones, tablets -- getting to the files you need has become a problem," according to Daniel Barreto, general manager of the Mobile Client Business Unit at Wyse. "The idea is to provide a friendly user interface that makes it easy to search across all those devices."

To enable the search, users must first install another, free app, called PocketCloud Companion, on each of the computers they want to be able to search. It indexes the content on those computers, making it faster to search.

Friday, 16 December 2011

Amazon's Kindle Fire is having security issues

Security concerns are giving some consumers another reason to hold off on the Kindle Fire, one of the holiday's hottest gadgets.The Fire, launched with heaps of hype as a possible competitor to the Apple iPad, is a more inexpensive option for buyers looking for a tablet-like experience in an e-reader.But concerns grew this week over the device's security.

In order to use the Fire, users must tie it to an Amazon.com account -- with credit card on file -- that is set up to purchase items with just one click.

This means that anyone given access to the device can buy, with just a tap, e-books, apps, TV shows and music.

Even more concerning: If a user has recently logged into the Amazon.com shopping app, the next person who picks up the Fire can use that app to buy anything from the Web giant's catalog, even if the device has briefly gone dormant between uses.

Any items purchased will ship to an address on file with the account. If the second user tries to ship to a new address, the user does lose access to the account holder's credit card.

Amazon said a software fix would come for the device in less than two weeks to address some of the security concerns.

"As with all of our products, we continue to make them better for customers with regular software updates," said Kinley Pearsall, an Amazon spokeswoman.

Easy one-click purchasing has always been standard with the e-ink members of the Kindle family, but the security concerns didn't become such a hot issue until the release of the Fire.

E-ink devices, by their limited nature, are more personal devices. It's also a more cumbersome process to use the device to purchase a book, as it slowly loads each page required in the process.

But the Kindle Fire is a device that many are hoping to share with family members. Some are also hoping to gift the Fire to teenagers - a sort of starter tablet. Giving a teen one-click access to a credit card is not exactly ideal.Also concerning to some, the Fire's homescreen includes a carousel of all of a user's most-recently touched content. When a user opens a book, it will revert to the front of the carousel. When a user then browses to a website, a screen grab of that website heads to the front of the carousel.That carousel is not editable by the user, so there's no way to hide any of your recent activity from other users.

Amazon confirmed Wednesday to the Detroit Free Press that the pending software update would provide a fix to be able to decide which items appear to be recently used. It will also improve overall performance, Pearsall said.

The Fire's Web browsing history is able to be deleted and a passcode can be set on the device to prevent others from using it.

Amazon's chief competitor here, the Nook Tablet ($250) from Barnes and Noble, does include some security settings.The Nook Tablet allows users to change the settings to require a password to be typed in for each purchase made on the device.Barnes and Noble's tablet also allows users to keep recently read items from being displayed as such and can keep a separate area on the device for just apps for kids.

"We like the idea of families being able to share devices," said Wendy Bronfin, Barnes and Noble's senior director of children's digital products.

There have been complaints about the Fire's hardware, too - most notably the lack of volume buttons, Bluetooth support and a touchscreen that often lags.

Amazon is still expected to sell millions of these devices this year, several analysts have predicted.

For many, the pains of being an early adopter will be worth it. For others, it might be a good time to sit on the sidelines for a bit.


 Brian Hartman A Google Plus user corrected me, immediately after I posted this article. His words are:
Actually, the security issue you bring up (about the Kindle Fire going dormant and someone being able to go into the shopping app when it wakes up) is easily guarded against now. You can put a password on your screen lock so that when it goes to sleep, you need a password to go back in.

Thursday, 15 December 2011

Android Ice Cream Sandwich gets NetFlix

On 15th December, 2011 NetFlix has announced support for Android 4.0 - Ice Cream Sandwich.
Here is the complete announcement from NetFlix on their blog:

Today we launched support for Android 4.0, also known as “Ice Cream Sandwich.” With this added support, streaming movies and TV shows from Netflix over the Internet will be available on an even greater number of Android devices.

I’m Roma De and as director of product management at Netflix, helping to expand the number of the devices that support streaming from Netflix is a major part of my job. Device expansion is also a key part of the company strategy.

As you may remember, in October we launched a new application in the Android Market to support Android 3.x (Honeycomb) tablets. At the time we also extended Android support to Canada and Latin America for the first time.

I’m glad to say that all phones and tablets that support Android 4.0 will run the new Netflix application. Download the free Netflix app from Android Market and start watching.

Sunday, 11 December 2011

Coby Readies Five Ice Cream Sandwich Tablets for 2012

Consumer electronics maker Coby Electronics is set to release five new tablets running Google's Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich mobile operating system in the first quarter of 2012, the company said Friday. Coby will unveil the tablets, among the first to run Google's next-generation OS, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in early January.


"Coby is thrilled to announce our premiere range of feature-packed Android 4.0-powered Internet tablets that will put the world in consumers' hands as never before," said Jodi Sally, vice president of marketing for Coby, in a statement. "We also are proud to be among the first companies to make available a wide range of the newest, Ice Cream Sandwich-operated units, helping to further underscore our commitment to meeting the demands of a broad base of consumers with innovative products in the hottest CE categories."

Coby's new tablets are the 7-inch MID7042, 8-inch MID8042, 9-inch MID9042, 9.7-inch MID9742, and 10-inch MID1042. The company didn't divulge prices for the new devices, but did say that the tablets sport a 1GHz ARM Cortex A8 CPU, capacitive multi-touch screens, up to 1GB of RAM, expandable memory up to 32GB, Wi-Fi, and HDMI 1080p output.

Earlier tablet efforts from Coby include the Kyros MID7015, a 7-inch tablet priced at $199 with a resistive touch screen rather than a multi-touch display, running Android 2.1, a version of the OS not built for tablets.

The new units look a lot more promising. Users will be able to pinch and expand for zooming just like on popular tablets like the iPad, and Ice Cream Sandwich is a major OS upgrade. We'll be getting our hands on the new Coby tablets at CES and will let you know how they test drive.

src: [PCMag]

Saturday, 10 December 2011

T-Mobile customers may be offered Nokia's Lumia Windows Mobile Phones

T-Mobile and Nokia are expected to announce next week that the Lumia 710 Windows Phone, and possibly the Lumia 800 as well, is headed to the U.S.

Nokia's Lumia phones are the handset maker's first devices to run Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system, the product of a deal between Nokia and Microsoft announced in February and signed in April that's reportedly worth billions of dollars.

The colorful new handsets are already available in Europe, but so far Nokia hasn't announced a U.S. carrier for the Lumia, despite saying that its intent is to have at least the Lumia 710 available in America by sometime next year.

Nokia hasn't yet said whether the Lumia 800 will also be available stateside. Nokia also hasn't introduced any other planned Windows Phone devices outside of the Lumia 710 and Lumia 800.

On Friday, T-Mobile sent an invitation to the press for an event in New York on Wednesday, Dec. 14, that reads "T-Mobile and Nokia have something exciting in the works. Be amongst the first to experience it."

For details on the Lumia 710 and the Lumia 800 Mobile Phones - Click Here

Asus' new Tablet is a powerful Apple's iPad rival

Given the flood of tablets, news of yet another iPad challenger won't exactly make you scream for joy.But some new tablets do get you jazzed. And one deserving recognition is the alluring Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime that I've been testing. Available the week of Dec. 19, it vaults to the top of the list of available Android Tablets.

Why the lust? Asus has produced a tablet that is fast, beautiful and generous with power. It costs $499 for a version with 32GB of internal storage or $599 for 64GB. Asus is throwing in a year of unlimited Web storage for free. Machines are Wi-Fi only.

What's more, if you spring for the optional $149 keyboard dock accessory  the tablet can function as a notebook. You won't mistake the qwerty keyboard for one of the superior keyboards built onto an actual laptop, but typing on the Asus accessory is still better than typing on the tablet's virtual on-screen touch keyboard. The keyboard dock also gives you extra battery life and extra ports.

I've never gone gaga for Android software on tablets. There still aren't a lot of tablet-specific apps available for Android, certainly nowhere near what's out there for iOS and the iPad. And the slightly modified version of Android Honeycomb running on my test unit isn't as inviting as iOS software on the iPad.

What's promising, though, is that Transformer Prime will soon be upgradable to Android 4.0, dubbed Ice Cream Sandwich, which unifies Google's operating system on smartphones and tablets. Asus expects a free over-the-air upgrade for this next-generation version of Android to hit late this month, making Transformer Prime one of the first Ice Cream Sandwich tablets in the U.S. (A sub-$100 tablet called Novo7, initially available in China, has apparently beaten Asus to Ice Cream Sandwich.)

In demos on a tablet, Ice Cream Sandwich looks slick, but we'll have to wait and see what the experience is like.

In the meantime, the Transformer Prime hardware is worth gushing about.With a metallic swirl aluminum design that hints at gray and purple, my test machine is lovely to look at. It's less than a third of an inch thick, a hair thinner actually than the iPad 2. It weighs 1.29 pounds, slightly below the weight of Apple's tablet.

Even so, Asus managed to include a micro HDMI port and a micro SD card slot.If you slide the tablet into the optional keyboard dock, you can take advantage of a full-size SD and a full-size USB 2.0 slot. Adding the dock nearly doubles the weight, but this is still a light and compact notebook substitute. Among the supplied apps are a note-taker called SuperNote and Polaris Office, which lets you read, edit or create Microsoft Office-compatible files.

Transformer Prime sports a brilliant 10.1-inch so-called Super IPS display with a wide viewing angle, protected by Corning's scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass. You can choose a brightness setting that improves viewing outdoors.

The tablet is billed as the first with Nvidia's Tegra 3 quad-core mobile processor. Key takeaway: The machine is a powerhouse. Expect it to make a splash with gamers.

The stunning graphics and fluid game play were evident as I immersed myself in the adrenaline-inducing Riptide GP, a speedy water-racing arcade game. Gamers will also appreciate that Transformer Prime comes with support for popular video game controllers, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Nintendo Wii.

We don't expect people to take a lot of pictures with Transformer Prime, but it has a decent rear 8-megapixel auto-focus camera with flash, capable of capturing high-definition (1080p) video. A 1.2-megapixel front camera can be used for videoconferencing.

• A few frustrations: The video player crashed at one point. The tablet is slow to boot.

Under optimum conditions, Asus claims up to 12 hours of battery life for the stand-alone tablet or up to 18 hours when the tablet is docked. The quad-core processor consumes less power than its dual-core predecessors.

Our Battery Test: With Wi-Fi on, brightness cranked way up, high-definition video playing in a continuous loop. We went a shade past 6 hours before the battery pooped out, an impressive showing that suggests the slate will fare much better under more "normal" use.

Asus has done its part on the hardware side. Help needs to come from Android, in a fuller supply of apps.

Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime

$499 for 32GB or $599 for 64GB; Optional mobile dock accessory is $149

Pro. Slim and attractive. Powerful quad-core processor. Impressive battery. Bright screen. Optional dock adds keyboard, extra ports and longer battery life. Upgradeable to Ice Cream Sandwich

Con. Relatively few apps. Some bugs.

src: [usatoday]

Friday, 9 December 2011

Nokia to sell luxury phone unit Vertu

Nokia, facing fierce competition to remain the world's top mobile phone maker, plans to sell its luxury unit Vertu that makes niche handsets, the Financial Times reported on Thursday.

No buyer was mentioned and the sale is still in the early stages, the newspaper said, noting that Vertu has yet to be given a value though annual revenue is estimated to be between 200 and 300 million euros.

Nokia refused to comment on the report.

"We can't comment on those reports," Nokia spokesman James Etheridge told AFP.

Vertu was established in 1998, when the concept of haute-couture mobile telephony was approved by the board of leading mobile handset maker Nokia.

The corporate headquarters was later set up in England in 2000 and the first phone, the Vertu Signature, was launched in Paris in 2002.

A luxury smartphone, the Constellation Quest was introduced in 2010.

Vertu luxury mobiles, typically adorned with diamonds and other gems, run on the Symbian operating system with prices starting at around 4,000 euros for the Constellation model.

In keeping with its up-market profile, Vertu phones have a "concierge" button, which launches a global bespoke lifestyle assistance service providing priority bookings, recommendations and other exclusive services.

Vertu currently has more than 600 points of sale globally, including more than 90 Vertu boutiques in almost 70 countries worldwide.

The company now operates as an independent division of Nokia.

Thursday, 8 December 2011

Android Market Marks 10 Billion Served with Dime Downloads

To celebrate the milestone of 10 billion apps downloaded since its Android Market opened for business in October 2008, Google is presenting a set of featured offerings through Dec. 16 for 10 cents each.

Clearly tickled pink by the development, Google boasted that downloads to the millions of Android-based devices made by Samsung, HTC, LG, Pantech, Motorola and others for all major carriers have reached 1 billion per month.

"One billion is a pretty big number by any measurement," wrote Eric Chu, director of the Android Developer Ecosystem, on the Official Google Blog on Tuesday. "However, when it's describing the speed at which something is growing, it's simply amazing.

"We can't wait to see where this accelerating growth takes us in 2012."

Ready for Dime Time

The apps available for 10 cents, as of Tuesday, are Asphalt 6 HD, Color & Draw for Kids, Endomondo Sports Tracker Pro, Fieldrunners HD, Great Little War Game, Minecraft, Paper Camera, Sketchbook Mobile, SoundHound Infinity and SwiftKey X.

According to Mountain View, Calif.,-based Google, the Android Market reached its billionth download in July, 2010, its three billionth download in March of this year, and its 6 billionth download in July.

The Android Market has an estimated 580,000 offerings as of November, and as of last month now includes a music store, helping it compete with Apple's iTunes and App Store for iOS devices, which also has about 500,000 offerings but boasts about 18 billion downloads so far, reaching the 10 billion mark in January. The App Store now has about 140,000 apps for its hit iPad tablet.

Research In Motion's BlackBerry App World has roughly 50,000 offerings, while Microsoft's Windows Phone Marketplace has about 40,000 applications available.

While average individual smartphone or tablet users, even with a healthy appetite for apps, will only mildly scratch the surface of either stockpile of apps in a lifetime of downloading, size clearly matters for platform bragging rights.

Do You Want Fries with That?

"I guess it's mainly meaningful if you ascribed importance to Apple's continuing quantification of downloads, whether they are from iTunes or the App Store," said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT. "For good or ill, vendors have decided to define product success in a way which is analogous to McDonald's chest beating over the number of burgers its served."

King said that while the figure of 10 billion was impressive, "it's not terribly surprising considering the continuing success of Android, the number of existing and potential smart phone customers and how many apps are distributed freely or cheaply."

According to third-quarter data released by Nielsen Research last month, Android remains the most popular platform in the United States, with a lock on 43 percent of the smartphone market, compared with 39 percent in July, while Apple's iOS held steady at 28 percent. That's still impressive, though, considering that Apple only makes one phone.

Novo7 First Ice Cream Sandwich Tablet Computer - The $99 Tablet

The $99 tablet computer called Novo7 that is just recently released by MIPS Technologies is set to arrive in the United States in the coming months, according to PC World.

Reports said that the Novo7 tablet computer is currently being offered in China from Ainol Electronics. There is no specific date yet as to when it would arrive in the US, but it is expected to be available in North America early next year with an expected price of $99 from Leader International and OMG Electronics.

Meanwhile, PC World said in their report that it is possible to get the Novo7 tablet computer right now from Asia for about $50 in shipping costs.

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Dell abandons Android tablet in US - Feared of Kindle?

Dell said it would halt sales of its Android tablet computer in the US market, as rival Amazon's new Kindle Fire has heated up in a market dominated by Apple's iPad.

A message on the Texas-based computer's website said that the seven-inch (17.8-centimeter) Streak tablet powered by Google's mobile operating software would no longer be sold in the United States.

"Dell remains committed to the mobility market and continues to sell products here and in other parts of the world," the company said in an email response to an AFP inquiry.

"We remain committed to expanding our reach beyond PCs (personal computers) with a targeted set of open, standards-based mobility solutions and services designed for commercial and mobile professional customers," it added.

The Streak 7 failed to gain momentum after its debut at the Consumer Electronics Show in January. The tablets were priced at $200 as long as buyers signed contracts with telecom service provider T-Mobile.

Online retail powerhouse Amazon.com has meanwhile reported that its new Kindle Fire tablet was its best-selling product during the Black Friday shopping rush the day after Thanksgiving.

Fire has a seven-inch screen and is priced at $199, believed to be slightly less than what it costs to make the tablets. Fire also synchs with the growing trove of digital entertainment content available at Amazon.

Dell said Streak 7 continues to be available "in many markets" through partners such as Optus in Australia. A 10-inch (25-centimeter) version of the Streak is sold in China.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

RIM target prices factor in white knight scenario - Reported by Reuters

For most brokerages, the question is not whether to cut their price targets for Research In Motion but by how much.

Analysts who see the possibility of a white knight emerging for the struggling BlackBerry maker have favored a target higher than its current trading level of about $17 a share.

For those who see no end in sight for RIM's downward spiral, the target tends to be much lower, especially after Friday's damaging profit warning.

One of those in the latter camp is National Bank Financial, which already recommends avoiding the stock. On Tuesday it cut its target to $10 from $16 on the pessimistic view that a deep-pocketed savior will not step forward and RIM will not itself arrest declining market share, gross margin and earnings.

"We have little confidence that any management team could save RIM in its current form," analyst Kris Thompson said.

Others, such as CIBC and Paradigm Capital, have slashed but only to a point above RIM's current valuation. Many argue the Canadian company would make a viable strategic takeout target or a buyer could break it up and sell off in parts.

Most are using Friday's warning as a peg to redress their own misplaced optimism after the stock plunged 10 percent.

"Target changes are almost completely pointless. They usually indicate that an analyst is trying to play catch-up to what's happening to the ticker tape," independent analyst Chris Umiastowski wrote on his blog last month.

He can afford to be honest these days, after 10 years working in equity research, most recently for TD Newcrest.

"I've been there myself loads of times. It's no fun. It makes you feel like your report is a waste of paper," he said.

Most analysts with wilting views on RIM have suggested alternative routes the company could take that would make them reconsider, such as adopting Google's Android or Microsoft's platform and using its push capabilities to differentiate.

Wunderlich Securities cut its price target to $16 from $24, saying an improvement on that view would require a change of course such as adopting Google's Android, which analyst Matthew Robison admits would be more likely with a management change.

NBF's Thompson expects RIM to earn just $1.74 a share in the fiscal year starting in late March, down from $2.81 previously.

That's substantially lower than the $5.25 to $6 range that RIM on Friday said it did not expect to meet for the current year.

A price target is derived by multiplying expected earnings per share based on expected growth.

The stock has fallen from near $70 in February as RIM bleeds market share, especially in the United States, during a troubling transition to a fresh operating system.

NBF was already pointing to a price below RIM's dismal current price around $17, while others have had to tame much loftier expectations.

Paradigm Capital, whose buy recommendation expresses faith in RIM's ability to turn things around without a major shift in strategy, cut its price target to $40 from $50 in a Monday note.

CIBC cut to $25 from $55 but added a "speculative" qualifier to its "buy" recommendation due to poor visibility into RIM's future earnings. Analyst Todd Coupland also cited the value of RIM's network to an unnamed potential buyer in his valuation.

Goldman Sachs dropped its recommendation to sell RIM shares last month but still lowered its price target, to $18, reflecting in part a declining earnings trajectory. The investment bank now judges RIM using a sum-of-parts methodology that focuses on the value of a break-up.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Zillow Launches Free Real Estate App for Android Tablet


The leading real estate information marketplace, today launched a free real estate app for the Android™ Tablet, Zillow®'s eighth app, adding to the most popular platform of mobile real estate applications. The Zillow Android Tablet App's photo-driven home shopping experience was built specifically for the Android Tablet to take advantage of the high-resolution, touch-screen interface, allowing home shoppers to scroll through full-screen photos of homes for sale and rent, and even compare them side by side.

The free app is the only real estate Android Tablet app where home shoppers can select multiple homes to compare side by side. When comparing homes, home shoppers can view photos, sort by home details and save one or all of the homes to favorites.

With the Zillow Android Tablet App, home shoppers now can:
  • Browse, compare and shop for homes on a large touch-screen map with information on all home types, including those for sale or rent and recently sold
  • View stunning full-screen photos of homes and curbside views with Google® Street View
  • Install a widget to browse nearby homes right from the tablet home screen
  • Search for homes and neighborhoods utilizing voice search – just say an address, neighborhood or city and the Zillow Android Tablet App will take you there
  • Use GPS to find nearby homes on the market
  • Find Zestimate® home values and historical data on more than 100 million U.S. homes
  • Share homes via email, Facebook® and Twitter®


"With today's announcement, we are proud to say that Zillow has the largest collection of mobile real estate apps," said Spencer Rascoff , Zillow CEO. "Zillow continues to reinvent the mobile home shopping experience and the Zillow Android Tablet App is no exception. The app was designed just for the Android Tablet and brings two entirely new features to real estate shopping – side-by-side compare and a nearby-homes widget, giving home shoppers two new ways to shop for homes."

Zillow operates the most popular platform of mobile real estate applications across Android smartphones and Tablets, Blackberry®, iPhone®, iPad®, Kindle Fire™ and Windows® Phone 7. In September 2011 , Zillow was used on a mobile device more than 11 million times, with 2.4 million homes viewed on mobile devices each day – or 28 homes a second.

About Zillow, Inc.
Zillow is the leading real estate information marketplace, providing vital information about homes, real estate listings and mortgages through its website and mobile applications, enabling homeowners, buyers, sellers and renters to connect with real estate and mortgage professionals best suited to meet their needs. More than 24.6 million unique users visited Zillow's websites and mobile applications in October 2011 . Zillow, Inc. operates Zillow.com®, Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, Zillow Mobile, Postlets® and Diverse Solutions™. The company is headquartered in Seattle .

The Zillow logo is available Here

Google Android 4.0 - Ice Cream Sandwich


Pros:
All-new, elegant interface. Much faster browser. Great new address book. Merges phone and tablet branches of OS.

Cons:
No Flash. Poor Facebook integration. Some apps are incompatible.

Bottom Line:
The biggest Android update in ages, Ice Cream Sandwich brings real improvements to the leading smartphone platform, and it'll get even better as phone makers fill in its gaps.

Google's Ice Cream Sandwich, Android 4.0, is the biggest update the popular smartphone platform has received in more than a year. It adds dozens of features, changes and improves the interface, and makes much better use of the latest smartphone hardware. It may finally make Android tablets viable, too. At launch, though, it's missing a few things, most notably Flash and Facebook support, which mean that you may do well waiting a few months before scooping out some Ice Cream for yourself.

The New UI:

The new Ice Cream Sandwich UI integrates elements from the Gingerbread phone and Honeycomb tablet UIs into, hopefully, a harmonious system which will work equally well on phones and tablets.
The look employs a lot of subtle shading, a lot of compositing, and a lot of depth, especially compared to the very flat screens in Gingerbread. Powerful GPUs seem to be assumed here, as screens and images almost always have multiple layers. But a generally spare design keeps it feeling like Android: functional, not showy.

The new lock screen shows the date, time, and your wallpaper. To unlock the phone, swipe right, or swipe left to jump directly to the camera. That takes you to one of five home screens, where you can place widgets or icons at will. You can now create folders on your home screens, and the folder layout is witty and smart: it shows the icons of various items in the folder, stacked. Four favorite icons, now customizable, stay at the bottom of every home screen.

The app drawer is still there, but now it's two-paned: you can flip between apps and a full-screen display of available widgets. Sliding between pages of apps, it looks like each one reveals the next under it. The multitasking interface borrows from Honeycomb: press a dedicated multitasking soft key, and thumbnails of the last several apps you've used ghost above the display.

There are a few frustrating touches. Android's old physical buttons have been replaced by virtual buttons, and they can be a little elusive. On some screens, such as the camera, all the virtual buttons go away, leaving only gray dots. The new Menu button also moves around from app to app, and sometimes you have to search for it. As a longtime Android user, I want to know where my Home and Back buttons are at all times.

Text selection is also still an issue. To select text to copy or paste, you're supposed to long-press and then move two nicely-sized bookends, but in some apps I found the selection bookends appeared when I was just trying to drag or scroll the screen.




The Cool Features

Along with the new UI come a bunch of great, entirely necessary new features. Improved Web browser performance is a big deal. The browser benchmarked at double the speed of the Android 2.3 browser, and it has very useful new pop-down menu options: you can easily switch between mobile and desktop views and store pages for offline reading. The browser now scores 100 on the Acid3 test of HTML5 compatibility, as opposed to 95/100 for the Gingerbread browser; font rendering, especially, has been dramatically improved.

Android's contact book got a refit as well. It's borrowed a bit of its look from Windows Phone 7, integrating Twitter, LinkedIn and some other minor social networks, with multiple-pane contact cards showing your friends' most recent status updates, plus the amusing ability to auto-block calls from any of your contacts. While you can manually join contacts from multiple sources, I would have liked to see a smarter auto-join algorithm like the one HTC uses in its HTC Sense software.

The Gmail app is much better looking. You can create new messages without having to press the menu button, there's a bit more preview text for each message in the message list, and in general the new appearance, with more grays and the new Roboto font, is more appealing.

The Camera app has been dramatically improved. It's much, much faster, to the point where I was wondering whether I'd actually taken a picture because it was so fast. That's something we've seen on some devices like the HTC Amaze but appears to be standard in ICS. The new music player integrates with Google Music, so it has a built-in store and lets you stream from your cloud music library. It also shows a cool little VU meter when you're playing songs, and has an extensive graphic equalizer.

We really liked the new data-management screen in Settings, which lets you monitor how much cellular data you've been using day by day, project your usage for the month, and issue automatic warnings. In this era of data caps and prepaid phones, this is an extremely useful utility.

Potential in APIs

ICS brings a lot of underutilized Honeycomb features to phones. They were underutilized because nobody was buying Honeycomb tablets and thus the features never had a market. But they're exciting: accelerated 2D and 3D graphics APIs, more Bluetooth profiles and support for more input devices , and enterprise-level encryption for business devices. Phone makers have been adding some of those features to Gingerbread, but now hopefully they'll have a wide enough base to actually take off.

In ICS, a new "social API" lets third-party social networks integrate into the address book. Third-party apps also get better access to the calendar, and there are a bunch of new streaming media and codec features. Let's not forget the browser, either: a more HTML5-friendly browser means better Web apps. I'm also intrigued by Wi-Fi Direct, which lets devices connect directly to each other without a router or hotspot. That could eliminate the need for syncing cables, if it's easy enough to use.

The Dumb Features

Fourteen pages of upgrades leaves a lot to like, some stuff to ignore, and some stuff that's just silly. Take "face unlock." This gimmick unlocks the phone when it's presented with your face, or a picture of your face, or something that looks kind of like your face. Whoo-hoo. "Live effects" is a silly GPU demo that lets you squish faces or put new backgrounds behind videos you're recording. Sigh.

I'm also cool on gimmicky NFC tricks like Android Beam, which lets two ICS phones share apps and data by bumping them together. The short-distance networking technology NFC has been slow to take off in the U.S. in general. Similar features to Beam have been tried many times (all the way back to the old PalmPilot days), but have never been big sellers.

Every OS has dumb features, and these aren't a minus because they don't seem to have taken attention away from more useful pursuits. But they're getting more press than they deserve, and they shouldn't be part of your buying process.

The Missing Features

Three major missing features may be showstoppers for some smartphone buyers. Fortunately, we're pretty sure that smartphone makers such as HTC will fill these gaps, but until then, these are things Android 2.3 does better.

The first is Flash. ICS phones show less of the Web than earlier models of Android do, because the Adobe Flash plug-in doesn't work. Adobe said it'll have a version working by the end of the year, so that problem should be solved soon. Adobe's move to stop mobile Flash development, in my mind, doesn't change anything, as far too many sites still require Flash. Maybe Flash won't be a useful mobile feature in two years, but it's useful now.

The second, more important issue, is Facebook. Because Google and Facebook are having a nasty spat over APIs, you can't absorb Facebook contacts into your address book and can't integrate Facebook into the messaging apps. This is unlikely to be fixed on the Nexus phones, but I expect HTC and Samsung to fix it on other devices.

Third, some (but not all) ICS devices will lack Mass Storage support. This means those phones won't show up as a drive when you plug them into a Mac; you need to use a clumsy, separate file-transfer app. ICS phones still show up as drives on PCs, because Windows supports the MTP protocol the OS is now using. This could be a deal-breaker for Mac owners.

Finally, ICS causes some problems with the Android Market. Not all apps are compatible with ICS (the Kayak travel-booking app, for instance, had trouble executing searches on my phone) and if the app developers lazily didn't include a "Max API" tag when they submitted their app, the non-functioning apps will show up on ICS devices. This is a bad user experience. Maybe it isn't directly Google's fault, but users will still suffer.

Competing smartphone OSes aren't necessarily much better. Apple's iOS 5 lacks Flash, Facebook integration, and Mass Storage as well. Windows Phone 7.5 "Mango" has Facebook integration, but not Flash or Mass Storage. RIM's BlackBerry 7 OS lacks Flash but has the other two features. Still, though, as these features were popular on Android 2.3 phones, it's tough to see the platform backsliding.

Comparisons and Conclusions

There are four major players in the smartphone OS world right now. In order of market share, they are Android, Apple's iOS, RIM's BlackBerry 7, and Microsoft's Windows Phone 7.

Android hit its lead position by offering the most flexibility for the most people. By being fully open-source and joining the tablet and phone branches of the OS, Ice Cream Sandwich continues that trend. We're going to see a flood of ICS phones and tablets over the next year, on every carrier, in different shapes and sizes. And ICS is ready for new high-res displays and quad-core chips.

ICS isn't the best OS for everyone, but it's the best OS for the largest number of people. iOS is easier to use and has a better app marketplace in every way; the Apple App Store is larger and better curated. But Apple's single phone form factor counts out everyone who doesn't want a slab-style, all-touchscreen phone with a 3.5-inch screen and no 4G.

BlackBerry 7 has excellent messaging apps and is very manageable, but RIM is switching to BBX soon; BlackBerry 7 is the last iteration of an ancient and doomed platform. Windows Phone 7 is extremely easy to use and better for Facebook lovers and beginning smartphone owners than ICS is. But its third-party app selection is far inferior to either Android or iOS, and it has relatively few phones on CDMA carriers.

Who's Ice Cream Sandwich coming to? Of phones released by U.S. carriers, HTC has announced future upgrades for the Vivid, Rezound, Sensation, EVO Design 4G, EVO 3D, and Amaze 4G. Samsung said it's coming to the Galaxy S II. Sony Ericsson said it's coming to the Xperia Play, and Motorola confirmed it'll be available for the Droid RAZR.

So you should scream for Ice Cream. If you're buying an Android phone right now, make sure that the manufacturer plans an upgrade. If you're considering buying a smartphone soon, keep an eye out for ICS phones which fill the OS's gaps, such as HTC and Samsung phones with better Facebook integration.

[src: PCMag]

Saturday, 19 November 2011

Asus not quitting Android tablets - are Dell and Acer?


Contrary to earlier reports, Asus isn’t ditching its Android line of tablets, a spokesperson confirmed to CNET last night.

Digitimes had previously claimed the Taiwanese company was pulling out of Android tabs, along with Acer and Dell. So what of the other two?

“As usual, the rumors and reports from Digitimes are incorrect,” Asus’ Gary Key told CNET. “Asus is not exiting the Android tablet business.”

So, pretty conclusive. Acer and Dell are yet to comment.

Digitimes said in its piece “sources from upstream supply chain believe these players will gradually phase out from the market,” saying instead tablets would be dominated by Apple, Amazon, and Barnes Noble. Considering Apple is the only one of those three that currently sells in the UK, we’re hoping Digitimes is wrong.

It also says due to lower-priced competition from Amazon and the Nook Simple Touch, those making hardware only will be unlikely to turn a profit. It goes one further and says tablets will eventually be given away free, with companies making money from the content they offer instead. So not entirely dissimilar to the mobile phone business model.

The report also says sales of the iPad 2 are lower than the original, pointing out that demand for tablets is already waning. This may be true, but the iPad is still head and shoulders clear of the competition, despite Google claiming over 200 million Android devices have been sold. The Motorola Xoom and RIM BlackBerry PlayBook are two disappointments that come to mind.

Amazon’s Kindle Fire went on sale in the US this week, running a modified version of Android. Priced at $199 (£126), it undercuts most of the big-name competition by some way, so it should prove interesting to see how it fares.

The fight between Apple and Amazon continues on 'app store' trademark



Despite protests from just about everybody else in the mobile sphere, Apple has trademarked the term “App Store” for its iTunes App Store. And since Amazon calls its Android app sales portal the “Amazon Appstore,” Apple has been trying to fight it in court since March.

According to GigaOM, Apple has amended its complaint against Amazon to include false advertising in addition to trademark infringement. Already, the complaint claims that Apple’s iOS mobile operating system brand is synonymous with the words “App Store,” and so allowing Amazon to use it creates confusion among the public and hurts Apple’s brand and sales.

The harm Apple is describing is directly related to the kind of business Amazon runs with the App-store. Apple says that while it tightly controls its own iTunes App Store to make sure only quality apps make it in (itself a debatable assertion), Amazon doesn’t do as much to guard users against things like malware or the misappropriation of user data. And that lack of quality control can damage Apple’s brand by association through the use of the words “App Store.”

Meanwhile, Amazon  argue that “app-store” is actually a generic term for any app distribution portal online, and that Apple can’t patent such generic phrasing. Amazon also responds that, given that the Amazon App-store is for Android devices and Apple’s is for its own iOS devices, there’s no harm done for Amazon using the term, and Apple couldn’t prove that it’s being harmed by the use of the words anyway.

The false advertising accusation from Apple is derived from the Amazon Kindle Fire. According to Apple’s filing, Amazon has de-emphasized the Android identifier with its ads for the bargain-priced tablet. Without the Android moniker, Apple claims, there’s even more possibility of confusion between “App Store” and “App-store.” Here’s an extract from the filing from GigaOM’s story:

Amazon's use is also likely to lessen the goodwill associated with Apple's App Store service and Apple products designed to utilize Apple's App Store service by associating Apple's App Store service with the inferior qualities of Amazon's service.


It’s worth noting that the Kindle Fire, which is available right now, is seen to pose a significant threat to the tablet market – although maybe not to the iPad so much. But with its $199 price tag, it undercuts most of the market pretty deeply, and that makes it about $300 cheaper than the cheapest iPad. That might be something Apple is thinking about when it comes to these fights over app stores.

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Apple has quietly killed off Texas Hold'em, the first and only iOS game the company ever offered.


As spotted by MacRumors this morning, the game is no longer available on the App Store, giving users an error message if they try to click through to its product page.

An Apple spokesman confirmed that the company is no longer selling the app, but declined to elaborate.

The $4.99 card game, which continued the card-playing franchise from the clickwheel iPod era, went on sale just weeks after the launch of the original App Store. Apple pitched it as an example of the kind of things developers could do on its then-fledgeling software development and sales platform.

Despite that initial pitch, Apple did not update the software to keep it in pace with changes to iOS and its own product line, including the iPad, which the title did not natively support.

Since releasing Texas Hold'em, Apple has shifted developmental focus to utility applications for MobileMe, and portable-size versions of its productivity and creativity software for Mac OS X. Any gaming-related resources have gone into Game Center, Apple's social platform that developers can build into their own titles.

Originally posted at Apple Tal.

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Developers Love Kindle Fire - The Amazon's Android Tablet



Amazon's Kindle Fire has managed to do what many other Android tablets have failed to do: drum up interest from developers in North America.

Among developers surveyed by Appcelerator and IDC, 49 percent said they considered the Kindle Fire their primary target. It narrowly beat Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Tab, which garnered 48 percent of the vote. Pocketgamer reported on the survey results. The rival Nook Color from Barnes & Noble only garnered 24 percent of the vote.

The Kindle Fire has managed to captivate the consumer electronics industry with its $200 price point, significantly undercutting other tablets. The lower price point coupled with Amazon's well-known brand and large media library are poised to turn the Fire into the second hit tablet after the iPad. Consumers are already buzzing about the product.

As a result, developers are excited too. The level of developer interest is roughly equal to that of the iPad before it launched, according to the Appcelerator study, which found interest at 53 percent in April 2010.

Globally, Samsung remains the top dog among Android tablets, surpassing interesting in the Kindle Fire. While other companies have slowly rolled out one or even two tablets, Samsung has rapidly released one tablet after another, offering the Galaxy Tab in multiple sizes. The company was the first to follow the iPad with a tablet, the original Galaxy Tab, and kept its momentum going.

Relative to other troubled tablets, including the Xoom, PlayBook and Flyer, Samsung's line has seen modest success.

The Kindle Fire, however, could be poised for an even bigger bang.

Friday, 4 November 2011

Reviewing HTC Flyer - the tablet with HTC Sense


The Pros:
  • Aluminum unibody design with touch and pen interaction make HTC Flyer unique.
  • First tablet with HTC Watch™ video service, HTC Scribe™ Technology and OnLive® cloud gamin



HTC Flyer blends HTC’s trademark design language with an all-new HTC Sense user experience that has been reimagined for the tablets. Using an intuitive and innovative approach to tablets, HTC Flyer combines natural touch and pen interaction. HTC also announced HTC Watch, a new connected video service that debuted on HTC Flyer tablet, and collaborates with OnLive, Inc. to launch the first cloud-based mobile gaming service on a tablet.
Peter Chou, CEO of HTC Corporation, said these words on the launch of HTC Flyer:

 “Clearly, smartphones have transformed our lives but as we observed how people use smartphones, computers and other technologies, we saw an opportunity to create a tablet experience that is different, more personal and productive. We are progressing down a path as an industry when people will no longer be in a single device paradigm, but have multiple wireless devices for different needs; this is the direction we are moving.” 

The Design:


Encased in a sleek aluminum unibody, the HTC Flyer tablet exudes the iconic style and build quality HTC is known for. It is also ultra-light, weighing as little as a paperback book, and compact enough to fit in a jacket pocket only. With a seven-inch display, lightning fast 1.5Ghz processor and high-speed HSPA+ wireless capabilities, the HTC Flyer tablet is perfect for those who have been waiting for a tablet that is both compact and powerful and finally the operating system installed by default is Android 2.3.4.

Here is a mini list of design features of HTC Flyer:

The pen is mightier

Fact: Your finger is not a pen. So why do so manytablets treat it as one? On the HTC Flyer withHTC Scribe Technology™ and the HTC Scribe™digital pen accessory, you’re able to take notes that sync with a recording of your meeting, highlight an important passage of an e-book or document, and even doodle on a picture or create your own.
 

Sync your ink

Capturing ideas is great. Being able to access and search those ideas from anywhere is way better. With theHTC Flyer, all of your notes and annotations are instantly saved to your Evernote account.
 

Your never-ending journal

With an expandable memory slot, you’ll run out of ideas before you run out of places to keep them.
 

Life on the go

You know life happens on both sides of the screen.That’s why we built a 5 MP camera into the back of theHTC Flyer for capturing your vision the world in HD.And a front-facing camera for capturing your expressionsin video chat.

Small. But not small

At 7”, it’s small enough to fit in your pocket, but withAndroid 2.3, HTC Sense™ that has been optimized for your tablet, and a 1.5GHz Qualcomm® Snapdragon® processor, it won’t be spending much time there.



HTC Flyer's Unique Features:


HTC Sense for Tablet

HTC Sense revolutionized smartphones by placing the person at the center of the experience. HTC Flyer’s tablet-focused HTC Sense experience focuses on surprising and delighting people with its gorgeous 3D home screen. A unique carousel of widgets puts a user’s most important content and information at the visual center of the experience. The HTC Flyer tablet also offers uncompromised Web browsing with Flash 10 and HTML 5.

HTC Scribe Technology
Touch interaction lights up the HTC Flyer tablet experience, but it also offers a groundbreaking pen experience. With the new HTC Scribe Technology on the HTC Flyer tablet, people can rediscover the natural act of writing. HTC Scribe Technology introduces a wave of integrated digital ink innovations that make it easy and natural to take notes, sign contracts, draw pictures, or even write on a web page or photo.
HTC Scribe Technology on the HTC Flyer tablet transforms traditional note-taking into smart note-taking by integrating natural onscreen writing with thoughtful and integrated innovations. A feature called Timemark enables you to capture the audio of a meeting in line with your written notes, so tapping on a word in your notes instantly takes you to that exact place in time in the audio recording of the meeting. Notes are also integrated with the calendar so when there is an appointment reminder you are automatically prompted with an opportunity to begin a new note or in the case of recurring meetings, to continue where the last meeting left off. In an industry first, the HTC Flyer tablet also features built-in synchronization with EvernoteTM, the world-leading notes application and service.

Streaming Mobile Movies with HTC Watch

The HTC Flyer tablet premieres HTC Watch, HTC’s new video download service. The HTC Watch service enables low-cost on-demand progressive downloading of hundreds of High-Definition movies from major studios. The intuitive, natural design of the HTC Watch service makes it easy to find the latest movie and video content, while advanced technology on the back-end enables instant playback over the HTC Flyer tablet’s high-speed wireless connection.

Mobile Cloud Gaming with OnLive

HTC takes mobile gaming to an entirely new level by being the first mobile device in the world to integrate OnLive Inc.’s revolutionary cloud-based gaming service. OnLive is leading in the home gaming market by letting people play top video games on their televisions and computers without the need to buy expensive gaming hardware or software. When integrated fully, the OnLive service will enable customers to pipe the OnLive service through the HTC Flyer tablet’s broadband wireless to their television sets, or let them play directly on the tablet. When integrated on the HTC Flyer tablet, people can play a variety of games, including hits like Assassin’s Creed BrotherhoodTM, NBA 2K11 and Lego Harry Potter™.

HTC Flyer Picture Gallery: 

HTC Flyer Front View
HTC Flyer Tablet
HTC Flyer with Stylus
HTC Flyer Back

HTC, the HTC logo, HTC Flyer, HTC Scribe, HTC Sense, and HTC Watch are the trademarks of HTC Corporation. All other names of companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarksof their respective owners