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Monthly Archives: March 2010
Nokia and Microsoft cosying up for 2011
Nokia and Microsoft are working on some projects together which are likely to come to fruition in 2011. Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, in an interview witth Bloomberg’s Arik Hesseldahl also talks about “efforts to make Symbian, the operating system acquired by Nokia in 2008, more attractive to software developers.”
This is an alliance which is not new, but could be a powerful one for the future. From BusinessWeek- “Nokia is the global cell-phone leader, with sales of 329 million units in 2009. Yet when it comes to feature-packed smartphones in some markets, including the U.S., analysts say Nokia (NOK) is under threat from rivals Apple (AAPL), Research In Motion (RIMM), and Google (GOOG).
Case in point: Nokia’s “Comes With Music” service, which adds music to the purchase price of a handset, was introduced in 2007 just as Apple’s music-playing iPhone was gaining momentum. “Comes With Music” has failed to attract large numbers of users, according to Music Ally, a U.K.-based digital music research firm, even as iPhone demand has surged.
Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo spoke with Bloomberg BusinessWeek’s Arik Hesseldahl on Mar. 16 about Nokia’s plans for the U.S. market, its acquisition strategy, and an alliance with Microsoft (MSFT) to create mobile applications for businesses. He also addresses efforts to make Symbian, the operating system acquired by Nokia in 2008, more attractive to software developers…”
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Doodle Jump tricks, tips and the hell it contains!
Doodle Jump has been an enormous success on the iPhone platform and is going from strength to strength all of the time. I have owned the game for a while now, but it was only when my son started getting bigger scores than me that I decided to become competitive Dad and try to beat him. My life has become one long straight of jumping doodles. The developer calls the game insanely addictive and for one a developer is not overdoing the bluster. It is addictive in a way that could ruin your life!
Few games have the immediate appeal of Doodle Jump and the ability to be playable by anyone over the age of four, but this one manages to cater for all age ranges and to keep you coming back for more over and over and over again. Getting a good score is the task in most games, but it is almost an obsession with Doodle Jump players and my current high of just over 33,000 is poor in the wider doodling world.
Let us know what score you are up to on Doodle Jump and even better, any tips so that I can beat my son? He is only 9 years old, but has already developed his Dad’s smugness and it is driving me crazy! In the meantime, here are some tricks you can use in Doodle Jump-
- Choose Classic mode to avoid the manually movable blue tiles- makes the game easier, but you lose some of the perks such as jetpacks.
- Change your name to ‘Ooga’ to get a different character which fires the weapons slightly differently- can make the game slightly easier.
- You can also change your name to ‘Creeps’ to get a different character.
Any more?
The nuclear powered smartphone
Battery life is a constant issue for all smartphones and one which has not greatly improved over the past few years. We have seen improvements in so many areas, but the battery always seems to be last on the list of improvements.
The thought of nuclear powered batteries is one that scares people who expect them to blow up next to their ears and to leave them looking like a fried cartoon character with a large puff of smoke emmiting from where they were previously standing.
widetronix has created a semiconductor materials solution for betavoltaic batteries which in theory could power themselves for 25 years. If they can be made affordable, which this solution goes some way to making a reality, we could start to see this technology in all sorts of equipment from mobile phones to medical implants.

Deal of the Day: Missed Call Alert down to $2.48
Missed Call Alert for BlackBerry is today’s special deal and is on sale for only $2.48. It’s a simple app, but one which may have a place in your mobile life. “Must Have App for every BlackBerry®! Return your missed calls sooner.
Missed Call Alert detects missed phone calls and creates a recurring audible alert based on active profile settings.
Missed Call Alert seamlessly integrates with the sound profiles and options of your BlackBerry® Smart Phone.
Down the 7 day free trial now!
Once installed, you must navigate to your sound profiles to configure “Missed Call Alert” audible alert details to your personal preferences. Navigate to your Blackberry Options screen to set your alert frequency. Choose for the alert to repeat every 30 seconds, 1 minute, 2 minutes, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, or 15 minutes.
Note: Missed Call Alert does not create an application icon, it integrates with the profiles and options icons of your BlackBerry® Smart Phone.”
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A day with a Nokia 5800
I have always been a fan of Symbian, right back to the days of Psion, and regularly use and recommend the Nokia E71 as a good business phone. So yesterday I decided to give up my beloved iPhone for the day and try a Nokia 5800 just to see how S60 fifth edition was for day to day use and to see if some of the naysayers had a point. What a shock! I have updated the device with the latest firmware, which is a huge improvement on the rather dodgy builds that came before, but it still has a few things lacking. The first thing I noticed was that although the version 40 firmware gives you kenetic scrolling, it’s not implemented throughout the interface. Sometimes you can flick scroll and other times it just refuses to work, however when it doesn’t work you inadvertently launch an application instead because it interprets your touch as a double tap. It’s very frustrating. Speaking of this double tapping business, it’s just another problem in itself. You can tap once to select, and again to action, which is completely fine, but again it’s not consistent throughout. It’s a bit like explaining single and double mouse clicks to a novice PC user, there is a method and reason there, but I’m dammed if I can see it!
So, not off to a good start, and it just gets worse!The Ovi store looks like it was thrown together in a few days, possibly by a toddler, and I always got the feeling it was going to crash at any moment. It actually did, once or twice. The design of the entire thing is terrible, with tiny little icons that are a struggle to touch with a finger. The choice of applications was pretty dire, too, though in comparison to an iPhone this is always going to be a weakness. Back on the phone several times applications just gave up and exited, returning me to the home screen. However, even the crashing on this phone is inconsistent, as the next time I used them they would run perfectly! Remember, this is a device with supposedly stable firmware and I was only running the supplied applications.
Typing on the on-screen keyboard was sort of okay, but not a patch on the iPhone, and the whole experience felt a bit cramped. A resistive screen rules out any sort of multitouch abilities, so browsing the web and pictures is not an enjoyable experience. One strange thing is that the picture browser looks for any picture file on the device, so you get album art and backgrounds mixed in with your actual pictures, which is very odd.
As a phone the thing works well, and it gets a far better signal than any other of my devices and therefore the call quality is excellent. The camera takes pretty good pictures and the free Ovi Maps application is almost a reason to buy the phone on its own. Sold with UK maps pre-loaded and given to a user who is not very demanding (surely the majority of people who buy this) and free on contract, I can see why the device has sold millions. It will do most things an Android or iPhone can do, and at a much cheaper price, it’s just the experience that is not as pleasurable.
For me though, it was a thoroughly frustrating experience and I can only conclude that S60 does not make the jump to touch very well. I have tried a few other fifth edition phones, and they seem to suffer from the same (but not quite as bad) problems. The older S60 third edition is still a good phone OS; on non-touch screens the interface makes sense, and I stick by my recommendations for the E71 and such devices. For touch, however, the current form of S60 just doesn’t cut it.
I’ve seen several Symbian advocates online recently, picking on Palm and almost laughing at how badly the Pre is doing and predicting the death of the company. Well based on my experience, WebOs and the Pre is a hundred times better than S60 touch and unless Nokia make a radical change, in a few years time we could be laughing at them.

The iPhone 4G arrives at last
The iPhone is limited to 3G of course, but Sprint has put together a simple and clever advert which shows how to increase your smartphone speed by 10 times. The iPhone is used as the example.
PDA-247 review of the week (13th-19th March 2010)
So what happened in the smartphone world last week, and more specifically what did we get up to on PDA-247? TomTom announced an update to its iPhone offering and brought in HD Traffic with a clever one day PAYG option. An image of the Nokia C6 got leaked and it looks decidedly OK at this stage- need more information to see if it will shake things up a little. Is Apple the only smartphone maker providing a complete solution for third party apps. We think so. A new survey suggests that 40% of BlackBerry owners want an iPhone and that 33% are looking to Android. Will the flip phone form factor come to the smartphone world? You decide. Here are some mockups that Palm would do well to consider. The iPAD has done well in pre-orders, but how will you use yours? On the subject of Apple, what have we learnt about the next iPhone so far? Palm has had a dire week, but is there some room for optimism. Probably not which is a shame…
Next week we have some good stuff coming up. The highlight will be the arrival of the HTC Legend for review and I hope to have the first part up on Wednesday. There will be 50% discounts on selected BlackBerry apps every day plus the usual chatter, discussion and (maybe) raised voices, but be polite if you can. This is a nice place to visit and we want to keep it that way. Good weekends!
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Deal of the Day: OneKeyMessage down by 50%!
Today you can buy OneKeyMessage for the BlackBerry for only $4.47 (normally $8.95). “The primary function of this application is to store ready to send emails or text messages to a person or group.
Then, when you are ready, send those messages quickly and easily by clicking an icon or tapping a single key (hotkey) on your device.
The application can be used in times of emergency or any time a predefined message needs to be delivered quickly and efficiently.
Through the use of easy to recognize icons, or a preset hotkey, the application makes it very simple to locate messages on your device and send them.
Also included are specially designed features to help you manage your stored messages.”
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Paying for iPhone reviews…
Wired has posted an expose concerning iPhoneAppReview and AppCraver in which it claims they charge for iPhone app reviews. This is a difficult one to comment on, but you can draw your own conclusions here. I do, however, remember being offered a 10% discount on a Windows Mobile app that cost over $30 if I reviewed it. I don’t ever accept money for reviews and never promise a positive outcome, but do expect to get the software for free if I am reviewing it…
“If you can’t pitch the press, pay them. That’s the proposition some review sites have for publicity-starved iPhone developers.
Several websites dedicated to iPhone app reviews are requesting payments from developers in exchange for writeups of their apps, Wired.com has learned. Those payments are not always clearly disclosed to readers, and the practice hasn’t received much discussion outside of gaming blogs.
Soliciting money in exchange for a product review is not illegal, but the practice should raise questions about the credibility and independence of the review sites, critics say.
“They prey on people who need exposure,” said Oliver Cameron, developer of the popular iPhone app Postman, who has avoided pitching his apps to sites that request payment for reviews. “It strikes me as a paid ad, really. They never seem to actually ‘review’ it.”
The two sites that were most frequently mentioned by programmers who contacted Wired.com were TheiPhoneAppReview.com and AppCraver.com. Both sites appear in the top four Google search results for the search term “iPhone app review.”
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Windows Phone 7 emulator ‘unlocked’: new features spotted
Dan Ardelean has managed to unlock the Windows Phone 7 emulator and discovered some features that were previously hidden. “I still cannot believe it but I did it… After a good idea, 6 hours of work and a lot a lot of digging I’ve unlocked the ROM image in the emulator CTP. I will describe tomorrow the method but right now I will just post some screenshots, upload the bin somewhere so I can give you the link and go to sleep cause it’s almost 2 o’clock in the morning.”
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Inventors of Mac-BlackBerry Sync release more powerful, streamlined PocketMac for BlackBerry 5.0
Here’s some good news for those of you with a BlackBerry OS 5.0 phone and a Mac.
San Diego, CA–March 16, 2010–PocketMac, the creator of the original Mac-to-BlackBerry sync solution, announces the release of version 5.0 of PocketMac for BlackBerry. This is the latest version of the groundbreaking sync solution.
“It’s taken us a long time to get this software upgrade out,” Tim Goggin, VP of Sales & Marketing said.”We’ve wanted to release it for a while, but it was more important to make sure it was solid and super-easy to use.”
PocketMac for BlackBerry comes complete with a synchronization engine redesigned from the ground up for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. The new engine accounts for the new quicker synchronization speeds. Also included are simpler, clearer preferences, reorganized to accommodate the way users want to work.
Goggin continued, “This is the latest chapter in the community we helped establish. When we invented PocketMac for BlackBerry, there was no way for Mac users to sync to a BlackBerry. A few years after we released PocketMac for BlackBerry, the makers of the BlackBerry, licensed our software. It’s that history that informs our desire to ‘get it right.’ We take this product very seriously.”
It also includes two-way sync with the following applications:
(*) Apple Address Book
(*) iCal
(*) Daylite
(*) Entourage 2008
(*) LotusNotes
(*) iTunes
(*) iPhoto
(*) Stickies
In addition, as part of every sync, PocketMac for BlackBerry will quietly back-up all of your BlackBerry’s SMS texts, and your call history. A separate viewer application is also provided so that you can access this data from your desktop.
PocketMac for BlackBerry 5.0 is $19.97 and is available for download now. It runs on Mac OS X 10.5 & 10.6 Intel Only. (Power PC Macs not supported). It includes a complete 90 day money-back guarantee.
Goggin concluded, “There’s no risk to trying this product. If, for whatever reason, you don’t like PocketMac for BlackBerry, just request a refund and you’ll get 100% of your money back.”
More information about this product can be found at: http://www.pocketmac.com/PocketMac_for_BlackBerry.php.
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Palm stock hits 52 week low
Well, I tried to be positive about Palm today, but it seems the rest of the world isn’t. CCNMoney is running an article with the website visit grabbing headline of “Palm shares may hit $0: Analysts” and in it one paragraph stood out to me- “Grozovsky said Palm has attributed its sales slump to salespeople at the wireless carriers not being well enough versed about the potential benefits of new Palm phones such as the Pre and Pixi. So the company is boosting its marketing and re-training sales representatives…”
If the above is true, it is a lame excuse. Since when has any smartphone needed a mobile salesperson to sell it? It needs to sell itself before the prospective buyer goes through the door.
QOTD: Would you swap?
A hypothetical question today. If someone were to offer you the chance to swap your smartphone for any other model at no extra cost would you? If not, why not?
Is Palm in good shape thanks to styluses and patents?
Palms results announced yesterday were not good at all, but there is reason for optimism. Firstly the comment that “we’re making great progress on future products” could be looked at as just corporate bluster, but I believe that there is something special in the works. I am going to go out on a limb here and predict that Palm is working on a smartphone that uses a stylus, but one that is infinitely better than previous stylus driven smartphones. It is a difficult subject to go into detail about for many reasons so just bear with me on this and look out for what the future may bring.
Patents are potentially a hugely profitable area in the smartphone industry at the moment and it seems as though everyone is suing everyone else at the moment. Apple could go after Palm on some patents such as the way a list bounces when you reach the end, but Apple suing Palm would cause a storm that even Apple may struggle to deal with.
Palm holds many patents which date back from the early days of smartphones and some notable ones include the dial screen on a phone, searching for contacts just by typing a few letters, automatically adjusting brightness dependant on ambient lighting conditions, automatic full brightness setting when a power accessory is attached and a conference call system which is almost identical to the iPhone setup.
Read that last paragraph again and consider how much those patents are worth, and then consider how many mobile phones and smartphones use those features. Also, these are useful extras to get if a company like RIM or Nokia decided that webOS is an OS which would benefit them a great deal, which it would.
Just maybe we are worrying too much about Palms future?
Natural text
Taccy came up with the following on 247 yesterday re the MS Courier and the bit in bold sums up my thoughts as well. The reason that it has taken so long is that companies seem really hung up on the idea of turning a paper notebook into a typed up journal.
I have wanted an e-notebook for years. I don’t care about converting the text to perfect type – I can read my own writing (that fact that most other people can’t means it’s semi encrypted).
When I am using pen and paper, I abbreviate in my own style – converting these to typed text would just return rubbish – but in written form the context carries the meaning.
Think about it if you took your moleskin notebook – and got someone to type it out and bind it as a book – would it be usable – probably not as you would lose all the context, the heaviness of the text – flourishes of annoyance – enlarged letters etc.
For me I want an electronic book that lets me write, but that I can easily tag – so I can find that note quickly whenever I want; not just pages but anything, circle a word (e.g. dentist) and set an alarm. I don’t want the note moved – but when the alarm goes off there is the page and the highlighted word. Basically a live evernote sort of app in a handy pen based format. If it does other things then great.
I don’t know what is taking MS so long – get a netbook with no keyboard and couple of screens – bung in a browser and eReader and make One Note the main app.


