Monthly Archives: October 2009

Is there life beyond the iPhone and beyond mobile applications?

tomThomas Husson has witten an interesting piece called Is there life beyond the iPhone and beyond mobile applications? which looks at the iPhone in Europe as it spreads over more than just exclusive carriers. He makes some good points which I agree with, but I believe it is still too early to judge if the iPhone will truly dominate in Europe. I am fairly certain it will not because the European market is too diverse for any platform to dominate. However, it will have a very ‘big’ part to play going forward. How’s that for vague sitting on the fence analysis?

“Bear with me one second. I am not saying Apple’s iPhone won’t continue to overperfom the market, gain significant market share, expand in China and be profitable. The iPhone is probably the best thing that happened to the mobile services’ industry. There’s little doubt that the iPhone has acted as a powerful catalyst for mobile services adoption. The list of brands that have launched iPhone applications is comprehensive and covers many different industries. Apps can offer a truly rich media experience that matches brands’ quality standards and can interact with higher-end consumers that are more likely to buy their services. However, iPhones are not necessarily a panacea…”

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Palm Pixi Available November 15 for $99.99 from Sprint

pixiSprint has announced November 15th as the date Sprint users can purchase the Palm Pixi. It is of course a budget webOS model, but may find favour with larger numbers of user than the Pre, then again I suspect people are happy to pay more for top quality smartphones these days.

“OVERLAND PARK, Kan.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Oct. 26, 2009– Sprint (NYSE: S) today announced Nov. 15 as the first day of nationwide availability for Palm® Pixi™, exclusively available on America’s most dependable 3G network1 from Sprint2. It will cost just $99.99 with a two-year service agreement, after a $50 instant rebate and $100 mail-in rebate and be available at Sprint stores, online at www.sprint.com, through telesales at 1-800-SPRINT1, and at Best Buy, RadioShack and select Wal-Mart stores.

“We are excited to offer the new Palm Pixi to our customers in time for the holiday season, and it’s a great addition to Sprint’s industry-leading device portfolio,” said Kevin Packingham, senior vice president – Product Development, Sprint. “Simply put, this phone is fun and easy to use; with its multi-touch screen and full QWERTY keyboard, it’s a great device for messaging and social networking at a price everyone can enjoy, and delivers so many of the great features people love about Palm Pre™ in a fantastic new form factor, making it a huge hit for consumers.”

Running the Palm webOS™ mobile platform, Palm Pixi lets the user keep multiple activities open and move easily between them, like flipping through a deck of cards, using natural gestures. This allows for easy movement between messaging and email or searching the Web while listening to music, and items are rearranged simply by dragging them. Universal search also makes finding things easy, providing results from both the device and the Web…”

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Symbian Executive Rips Into Google’s Android

GIGAOM managed to grab an interview with Lee Williams, executive director at Symbian, and he then said what he really thought about Android. Well worth a watch because it does offer a view many would not have previously thought about.

Some of the comments are extraordinary from a senior person such as “I don’t view Apple as evil, just greedy” and “Google, when you have to say in your motto that we are not evil, the first question in my mind is why do you have to tell me that?” Phew!

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inPulse smartwatch for BlackBerry now available for pre-order

inpulseThe much talked about inPulse smartwatch for BlackBerry is now available to pre-order $149. This may be an accessory which many of you will look at and think of as a gimmick, but I sort of like the idea.

“inPulse is the perfect BlackBerry smartphone accessory – it’s a watch which connects wirelessly to your phone by BlueTooth®, alerting you instantly to incoming emails, SMS and calls. inPulse extends the functionality of your BlackBerry smartphone, so when you’re in a pinch you can check your inPulse instead of fumbling around with your phone.

Using your inPulse, a glance down at your wrist is all it takes to discreetly check recently received email and SMS messages. New messages are pushed directly to your inPulse. Instead of pulling out your phone to figure out who keeps texting you, just keep an eye on your inPulse.

Have you ever missed a call because you didn’t hear your phone ringing or couldn’t feel the vibration? inPulse has a built-in vibrating motor which alerts you immediately to incoming calls. Glance down at inPulse to quickly see who is calling.”

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QOTD: How backed up is your phone?

qotd25What was the date of your latest smartphone backup? Also, how often do you back yours up? I am on every day at the moment, but that will no doubt slip as compliancy grows…

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2 Months Later – Living with Android and the HTC Hero (part one)

heroDate of Review – 25th October 2009 by Gavin Fabiani-Laymond

Available from – http://www.clove.co.uk

Price – £315 + VAT

Back again. It’s been over 2 months with the HTC Hero and what a great 2 months too. I am going to split this review into 3 parts. First examining my thoughts on the HTC Hero as a device and then looking at Android, the applications and games.

Part One – The HTC Hero

Living with this new phone has been a joy. It is without exception the first smartphone I have had whereby it just worked without too much fuss. HTC have done such a great job integrating their magic and customisation into the Hero. At every stage you are left with professional looking screens with lots of functionality. For example the Clock program has everything from alarms, world clocks, stopwatch and timer, all executed beautifully. Also, the alarms always go off in the morning. I like the fact I can adjust the sound and level of the alarm too. Then there is 7 homescreens, all customisable. Across the 7 screens I use the HTC Stocks, Weather, Twitter, Digital Flip Clock incorporating weather, settings flip switches (wifi, gps, Bluetooth, airplane on/off), Bookmarks and People. I have a free widget on one screen called Calwidget. Then I save my 7 home screens as a custom scene. HTC provide a number of default scenes. So if I was going on holiday, I could switch to a different scene with 7 different homescreens. And naturally if I was at work, play etc I could have a different scene for each of my moods. Now that is seriously cool. There are some many widget options that you could spend months deciding on your new look.

In daily use, I use my Hero as my satnav (using Copilot 8), phone, camera, sms, email, rss feeds, twitter, web browsing and the odd game. I love how you pull down the notifications screen to see what’s happening. I find the web browser to be the best I have used, even better than my iPod Touch. Why? It has flash for some websites, but the way you can easily read everything on the screen is wonderful. Talking about the screen, as it is capacitive this makes data entry a lot easier. Also, the built in keyboard is excellent. Google search is very intuitive too. Start typing a few letters and its starts to auto suggest search results based on your location. So if I typed pizza, it would list Pizza places nearby. Talking of satnav, I use a custom Hero car kit. I got this via Grey Mobiles Ltd on eBay.   This is the best gps screen mount I have used. So adjustable its great. I also learnt that attaching the screen sucker to your car screen is best done using a tiny amount of vegetable or olive oil. Push and hold on. Leave for a few hours and it will never fall off.

Speed. The Hero is quick. It can multitask very well. By default Android will close non essential applications if you need more memory.
Android has been an easy learning curve. It works really well and then new Android updates at version 1.6 and 2.0 look pretty amazing. The Hero is running Android 1.5 at the moment.

The negatives. Android by default requires all apps to be saved in main memory. Whilst the Hero does have a lot of memory this will soon be lost if you start buying games, so I wish you could save and run apps from the memory card. If I was being picky a faster processor would really make the Hero perform like a bullet. It is not slow at all, but seeing the new 1ghz devices does seem to make a difference. But if one takes into account the cost of the Hero, then really it is a great value piece of kit. Also there is no ereaderpro reader or the ability to take screenshots. I would love to be able to read my encrypted books and take screenshots to show you some of my slick homescreens.

The positives. It is open source. This means the negative above has been solved by a clever developer. More on that later. It’s brilliant and everyone agrees, so much so that HTC are having trouble keeping up with demand.

Updates and custom roms. I do have a custom rom, which I can update in less than a few minutes as I do not need to wipe my Hero, simply run update and all my settings, apps etc are all kept in tact. This is also done without connecting the Hero to my PC. Cool. To help make my Hero faster, I have split my memory card into 3 partitions. Part one as normal for storing all the usual stuff, part 2 for storing and running my apps (using a program called app2sd) and part 3 as a 32mb linux swap (memory card used as additional phone ram). I was also using a program called Swapper which added another 32mb ram, but I felt I didn’t need this.

Part two will be posted tomorrow, looking at the best Android applications.

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BlackBerry reliability?

8900My Curve 8900 died on Sunday and after many attempts to bring it back to life I have to accept that it has a serious hardware issue. I have re-installed the OS and tried everything I know, but still it accepts no commands to run apps.

This follows a BlackBerry Storm hardware failure in which that refused to turn on at all.

That followed my previous Curve 8900 having a trackball failure which also had to be replaced.

My Curve 8310 also had a trackball failure and had to be repaired.

I love the BlackBerry OS and the hardware design, but my faith is being tested at the moment. The only good news is that it is easy to find potential solutions to most BlackBerry problems because so many people seem to suffer similar issues and the route back to RIM is not easy.

Non-business consumers will almost always have to go back to their network operator as a first step and this can be tiresome. I expect my Curve to be away for a while and am missing it already. The next one that breaks will be my last.

UPDATE: After a night left alone it now works again. Confused…

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Going forward: too many operating systems?

shaunThis question comes into my head a couple of times a year and I still cannot decide what to do. PDA-247 covers Android, BlackBerry, iPhone, Symbian, webOS, Symbian and Windows Mobile and this can be seen as a good or bad thing. The good is that it means I get to see multiple devices for multiple operating systems and the bad is that it means the coverage is diluted for each platform.

Having a target audience, i.e. one platform, has many advantages such as less work on the site and more committed readers, but has the downside of being less fun to do. I seem to have a passion for smartphones in general and have no leanings towards one mobile platform in particular. I do change devices a lot and go for what works for me which is useful in gaining an overall knowledge of the industry, and this leaves me open to continue to cover all phones no matter what I am using.

However, this dilution of coverage concerns me because most days each platform is covered by only one news article and that cannot be good for gaining visitors. I realise that I cannot please all of you, and rarely do, but am wondering if it is time to drop a platform or two. Symbian is becoming quite tiresome to cover, but the N900 is an example of what will replace it so that still leaves me with the same number. All of the others have the potential to stay at the top of this industry or to rise to the top so I cannot drop any of them either.

It’s a difficult choice, but somehow I expect the number of operating systems to grow over the next year and this could dilute things even more. If you want to help add ‘good quality’ content to 247, please get in touch via shaun (at) mailstm.co.uk. Thanks for listening to my latest ponderings…

UPDATE: I wrote the above and then decided not to post it because it is of little relevance to anyone but me. However, I then had my operation and still feel unwell so left it up to have some content in place. Expect the site to be fully up and running again from tomorrow.

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ProfilerPro for BlackBerry

Toysoft has released yet another useful app for BlackBerry’s called ProfilerPro- “Profiler Pro is an application that lets you automate system sound profile switching during the day. You can schedule profiles each day to change from one profile to another. Each profile you set the time to switch,
the days which the profile will be active eg: Monday to Friday. Optionally if you have BlackBerry OS 4.7 and higher you can set to change a new Wallpaper on the HomeScreen and change a ringtone.

Profiler Pro also integrates with the BlackBerry Calendar application. You can schedule a profile switch by creating a new appointment. The profile will automatically switch when the appointment starts and ends.

If you are AddOnis user Profiler Pro can bring AddOnis out of standby mode if this feature is enabled in AddOnis.

Note: Profiler Pro can not switch profile when the device is in the Holster, keyboard locked on OS4.6 and password locked.

You will receive a vibrate for these events. When you unholster Profiler Pro will switch the profile but it will not switch if the device is keyboard locked on OS4.6…”

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HomeScreen 2.0 for iPhone

hs2HomeScreen 2.0 is new for the iPhone and a perfect example of why Apple needs to open up to developers a bit more. Your iPhone will need to be jailbroken to use it sadly…

“If you installed the Theme please read on http://touch-mania.com/homescreen20/english/ the Tutorial how to hide the Date and change the Weather Location. A free alternative to intelliscreen, a home screen for lockbackground that shows the weather as well as the status messages. Tap on the Date or the Weather to see more infos.”

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Nokia N900 delayed until November

n900The Nokia N900 release has been delayed a little and should now launch in November. Here’s the official statement below-

The Nokia N900 is a great example of what we and the open source community have been able to achieve with Maemo software. We are working closely with open source developers and for example, at the Maemo Summit in October, we loaned 300 pre-production units to get more feedback from the community. This feedback is extremely important to us and as such we also want to provide the best user experience with the Nokia N900.

We expect it to start shipping during November 2009.

Peter Schneider
Head of Maemo Marketing
Nokia Corporation

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8 years ago the iPod did not exist…

ipodMacworld is reporting on the fact that the iPod turned 8 years old yesterday. When you consider the impact this device has had, it is hard to believe that it is only 8. Few inventions have had so much impact in so little time. Thanks to Trevor.

“Over the years, the iPod has morphed into far more than an MP3 player but today, on its eighth birthday, let us take a moment to remember fondly that simpler time, when seeing someone with white headphones was a rarity and there was a sort of unspoken bond between iPod users. Here’s the news story that ran on Macworld about the announcement, and you can watch the Apple music event in which Steve unleashes the iPod an an unsuspecting world.”

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Sony Ericsson XPERIA X3 photos leaked

ruMobileCrunch has posted some photos of the Sony Ericsson XPERIA X3 which is expected to release in the first quarter of 2010 running Android. Doesn’t look too special from the images, but it could still be great.

“Hello, gorgeous! What a nice way to wake up on a Friday morning. You roll out of bed to make yourself some eggs, hop online to start the daily rituals, and bam! Shots of the unreleased, unannounced, and Android-powered Sony Ericsson XPERIA X3 are sitting in your inbox.

While this isn’t the first time the X3 has been spotted in the wild, these shots show the hardware in a slightly better light than the previous leak. Also worth mentioning, this is the second time we’ve seen the X3 where it appears to be running the stock Android build, rather than “Rachel“, the custom UI Sony Ericsson is purportedly…”

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QOTD: Has Palm done enough?

qotd24In your opinion, has Palm done enough to survive and will it prosper in the future? I am in two minds, but I do think that webOS will still be around in the next 2 years at least.

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Who is the boss?

brainI was discussing smartphones with an iPhone owner the other day who said that he hated the BlackBerry because of what it stood for. When I delved a bit deeper, it transpired that he felt he was tied to work all of the time and couldn’t get away from it. This is a common complaint amongst many BlackBerry users, especially those who have been given one by their employer and not bought one through choice, but I do wonder if this perception that the phone is to blame is the wrong one.

He now uses an iPhone which in theory does exactly the same thing in terms of email delivery, but for some unknown reason he perceives the two to be different. I have a BlackBerry and an iPhone and have learned to compartmentalise my time dealing with mobile email. During the day it will beep quite happily when new PIN messages and emails arrive and this makes for more efficient use of my time, but as soon as I get home it is turned to silent and sits in a cradle on my desk. It will not be checked for emails until the next morning and I have trained myself to ignore the little red star indicating new emails and my life continues without interruption.

It is all too easy to let a phone rule your life and direct you to what you should be doing next, but it is also easy to amend your phone usage and just treat as a piece of equipment which helps you do your work and which does not take away some of your precious time. It took me a few years to do this, but the breakthrough finally arrived and I now just use my phones for specific usage rather than playing with them continually for the sake of it. My phone works for me, I do not work for it…

How about you? Does your phone rule your life?

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