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Mo Hall says...


We’ve had two QWERTY Nokia smartphones on the SlashGear test-bench this past week, and the surprising thing is how differently the respective user experience is. Our Nokia E72 review went live earlier today; now we turn to the Nokia N97 mini, viewed by many – for better or for worse – as the Finnish company’s second attempt at the N97. Second-time lucky or still well short?

details, pics, video at link ...

Filed under: SMARTPHONE

Kevin says...

According to the Times Online in the UK, Google will be launching their own smartphone. The article states Google will offer free calls throughout the US and cheap international calls. The Google branded handset will run the new Android OS codenamed Flan, have a processor twice as fast as the iPhone 3GS, and a large touchscreen. Google wants their phone to be carrier agnostic.

The article in the Times Online goes on to say:

The real breakthrough, however, will come with the marriage of the Googlephone to Google Voice, the Californian company’s high-tech phone service. Google Voice gives US users a free phone number and allows unlimited free calls to any phone in the country — landline or mobile.

“We’ve never had this situation, where a single vendor controls the entire stack, from the operating system right up to Google’s cloud services,” says Ashok Kumar, an analyst at Northeast Securities. “It changes the competitive and bargaining dynamics like never before.”

I have been saying since I started this blog that the mobile phone wars would heat up. That will in turn increase competition, drive down prices, and cause widespread adoption. I did not expect this to happen so fast and that Google would throw down the gauntlet in this way. This should be fun to watch. If Google can really pull off free calls from any where that could be another paradigm shift like the first iPhone was.

The implications for education are limitless. I still believe in due time school networks will be irrelevant. Students will just access the cloud via a cellular network and bypass the schools network all together.

Filed under: Smartphone

rojblake says...

While the iPhone and, more recently, Android have been stealing all the headlines in the smartphone world Symbian has been quietly plodding on in the background.  The iPhone's share of the smartphone market is currently running at 17% of smartphone sales compared to Symbian's 39% (Gartner, 2009 Q3) and appears to be increasing all the time.

Undoubtedly the success of the iPhone is down to the usual slick Apple design and clean UI implementation, this is all backed up by the very successful App Store which
is way ahead of Nokia's Ovi Store (although lagging behind in terms of the number of potential customers).  Given this it's very easy to overlook the fact that Symbian is a truly remarkable operating system that has its roots in the low power consumption mobile device world and is still technically very advanced.  Certainly the UI leaves a lot to be desired and the recent S60v5 touchscreen implementation has the feeling of bolting a touchscreen UI onto a creaky old button based interface.

So the release yesterday of Spotify for Symbian S60 is all the more remarkable for the fact that not only does it bring the usual iPhone Spotify functionality to the Symbian platform but that it does it with a really impressively attractive interface that wouldn't look out of place on an iPhone.  This appears to all be due to the use of TAT Cascades, a UI framework library from a company called The Astonishing Tribe or TAT.  Cascades allows the developer to build cross platform applications without the need to customise the UI for each target platform.

Contrast this with Gravity, the current state of the art in good looking Symbian apps, which was written with hand crafted C++ code in order to implement that kinetic scrolling that everyone is, justifiably, very excited about.  Whilst this clearly worked it must have been a complex and time consuming process to code, something that a framework library like that offered by TAT could reduce the need for.  Hopefully Spotify will be one of many new visually attractive applications we see written for the Symbian platform in the near future.

Symbian-Guru.com has a rundown on the Spotify features here

And here is a video from TAT showing Spotify in action on an S60 device.

Filed under: smartphone

gltss says...

Filed under: smartphone

der_rolli says...

In letzter Zeit habe ich immer mal wieder die "Update"-Funktion meines Pre aufgerufen, denn ich habe bei http://precentral.net gelesen, dass die neue Version nun auch in Europa verfügbar sei. Nach einigen Fehlversuchen war ich über die Art, wie Palm die Updates verteilt enttäuscht, denn in den USA ist webOS 1.3.1 bereits seit Tagen da. Heute morgen war es dann um so überraschender, als mein Pre nun die neue Version anzeigte. Nach dem problemlosen Download und ebenso problemlosen Installationsvorgang war das Handy nach 15 Minuten auf dem neuesten Stand und ich gespannt, wie ein Flitzebogen, denn ich hatte bereits im Web gelesen, dass die neue Version einiges schneller sein soll.

webOS 1.3.1 ist in der Tat fühlbar schneller als die alte 1.1.3. die wir Europäer bisher noch nutzen mussten. Die Apps starten schneller, der Screen reagiert prompter und irgendwie ist es "fluffiger" und hakelt weniger. Der gute Eindruck setzt sich auch dann fort, wenn mehr als eine App gestartet ist. Auf weitere Änderungen von webOS möchte ich nicht eingehen, da diese lang und breit an dieser Stelle vorgestellt wurde: http://kb.palm.com/wps/portal/kb/na/pre/p100eww/sprint/solutions/article/50607_en.html

Nun macht das Pre wieder mehr Spaß und ich bin sicher, wenn es sich so weiter entwickelt, hat es eine Chance am Markt zu bestehen. Ein Killer für das iPhone wird es nicht werden, aber ich würde mir eben wünschen, wenn der Platzhirsch den ein oder anderen Bock entgegen gesetzt bekommt, damit Bewegung im mobilen OS-Markt bleibt, denn nur so werden auch Entwickler Spaß haben Apps nicht nur für das iPhone-OS zu entwickeln.

Was zu dem neuen Handygefühl nun noch fehlt sind tolle Apps, die ebenso viel Spaß wie auf dem iPhone machen. Als Beispiel sei hier "Facebook" aufgeführt. Für das Pre gibt es FB nun auch als native Anwendung, die aber denselben Stand wie die erste FB-Anwendung auf dem iPhone hat. Nicht schlecht, aber es fehlt eben die Schippe obendrauf, damit das Ganze sexy wird.

Beispielhaft für eine tolle APP ist meiner Ansicht nach Tweed, ein Twitter-Client, der schick aussieht, Funktionen wie "Shake to Reload" bietet und zudem mit webOS 1.3.1 flüssiger scrollt als zuvor. Mehr Features von Tweed sind hier zu finden: http://tweed.pivotallabs.com/

Filed under: smartphone

aricmonts says...

I didn't leave the house anticipating that I would have a new best friend upon arriving back at home.

I really went down to get a haircut, but the wait was so long, I moved on.  I parked a fair ways down the street, so I started walking back toward the car. 

Then the Verizon Wireless store jumped out in front of me and wouldn't let me pass without going in.  Fine, I thought, this would be a great opportunity for me to check out the Droid again.  (You can read my first impression here)

It wasn't long before a sales rep found my weak side and started probing with the the right questions.  Before long, he informed me that I was eligible for a phone upgrade and that the contract was a non-issue.

Then he really got heavy, he put a Blackberry Bold next to the Droid and started pointing out the features:

Video:  The Blackberry seemed tiny and not designed for video.  The Droid was theatre like and the sound awesome (it has a real speaker!) Droid won.

Email: The Blackberry wins for execution, but the Droid is designed to work with my Gmail account.  Access to my calendar and email is just a click away.  Droid narrowly won this one.

Web Browser:  The rep informed me that the browser on the Droid was more robust than the Blackberry, which he said was an add-on. Droid was designed for web browsing, so it wins hands down.

Camera:  Droid has 5mp camera vs a 3mp camera on the Blackberry.  I think the Blackberry wins for quality here, the Droid camera just doesn't take as sharp of a picture as the Blackberry, despite the larger censor size.  Blackberry wins.

Apps: The sales rep pointed to the "Market" icon on the Droid and asked me to find a few apps that I liked.  Then he asked me to find a few apps that were similar for Blackberry.  I couldn't and discovered that the open source Android OS has a lot more apps available to it.  The rep smiled.  Droid Wins.

I then asked about price.  For $75/mo, I can have full functionality, including 3G, wifi, unlimited data and text, and email.  Sold!

So that is how a Droid came home with me.  It is my new best friend and I am happy that I adopted one.  In my mind, the iPhone's market just shrunk.

Grab your new friend and buy a Droid!

Note: If the ringer volume is quiet and you miss calls, reboot it.  Turn it off using the power button and then turn it back on.  Ringer volume will be back to normal.

Filed under: smartphone

Mo Hall says...


Man, the loot you can uncover when you go snooping around spec pages. That most ambitious of Sony Ericsson projects, the XPERIA X10, is still a long way from being released, but already we can narrow down the list of potential US carriers to just one: AT&T. The guys over at Phandroid were the first to spot the newly added UMTS frequency specs for the phone, and the available 800/850/1900/2100 bands fit only AT&T's 3G network.

see link for possible sticker shock ...

Filed under: Smartphone

pressehof says...

München - Das veränderte Konsum- und Einkaufsverhalten der Kunden aus Handel, Versandhandel und Verlage im Fokus: Mit der M-Commerce-Erweiterung von w&co MediaServices kann das Multichannel-System OnlineMediaNet neben Print, Online und Stationär im Marketing-Mix nun auch die mobilen Vertriebs-Kanäle Smartphones und Handys ansprechen.

Marketing und Publishing der Unternehmen wenden sich verstärkt mobilen Anwendungen zu - was in der Konsequenz integrierte Publishing-Systeme vor neue Herausforderungen stellt. "Wir haben mit unserer neu entwickelten M-Commerce-Erweiterung für OnlineMediaNet eine schlüssige Antwort auf diese Herausforderung gegeben", sagt...

Mobile Anwendungen: Der Zukunfts-Kanal im Multichannel-Publishing bei Pressehof komplett lesen

Filed under: Smartphone

Scot says...

The day has finally come, folks. Dell is getting into the smartphone business. It's kind of tough to believe, actually. Dell has been a staple in the PC industry for years, selling customized desktops, notebooks, netbooks, all-in-one PCs, media centers and every possible PC accessory you could ever think of. But what it hasn't done is, well, anything other than that. Until today.

 

Filed under: Smartphone

Mo Hall says...


LG and AT&T announced Monday a successor to its LG Shine slider handset, the LG Shine II. It's just as glossy and reflective as its predecessor, complete with a 2.2-inch mirror LCD. Features include a music player with a customizable equalizer, stereo Bluetooth, the typical messaging features, GPS, and a 2.0-megapixel camera. The Shine II will be available starting November 22 for $119.99 after a mail-in rebate and a two-year agreement.

 

Filed under: Smartphone