Monthly Archives: April 2010

Marble Merge for iPhone goes free

Marble Merge for the iPhone is free until the end of the day (be quick!). By all accounts it is a very good game and today is definately the day to try it.

“Marble Merge brings you a refreshing and original action puzzle game designed only for the iPhone. Touch, move and stack marbles as they fall while you merge them in a frantic frenzy of action and strategy.

There’s something here for everyone. Easy Mode for those short boring moments offering fun gameplay easy on the brain. Hard mode for anyone seeking a mental workout or the classic survival mode for the hardcore action puzzle gamers.

Still want more? Then play any of the 3 bonus mini games that are jam-packed with action specifically designed to test your skills to the limits.

If you’re looking for a genuinely original and fresh puzzle game then Marble Merge is the game for you. A must-have for any arcade puzzle action fan!”

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Mobile Phone Recovery Continues with Nearly 22% Growth in First Quarter

The mobile market is back on track according to IDC and posted 22% growth in the first quarter. Nokia still dominates, but RIM has clawed itself into the top 5 for the first time ever.

The worldwide mobile phone market grew 21.7% in the first quarter of 2010 (1Q10), a strong rebound from the market contraction in Q1 2009. Growth was fuelled by increased demand for converged mobile devices, more commonly known as smartphones, and the global economic recovery. According to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker, vendors shipped 294.9 million units in the first quarter of 2010 compared to 242.4 million units in the first quarter of 2009.

Converged mobile devices, which allow consumers and business people to trade wireless e-mails for example, have become increasingly popular as a wider and more powerful array of devices have become available. The device class and a recovering traditional mobile phone category helped the market avoid a repeat of 1Q09, when the market declined 16.6% in the midst of the global economic recession.

Growing demand for smartphones also helped Research In Motion (RIM) move into the top 5 vendor rankings for the first time. RIM, which replaced Motorola in the top 5, tied Sony Ericsson for the number 4 position in IDC’s 1Q10 vendor rankings. RIM shipped 10.6 million units in the first quarter while Motorola, which had been a top 5 vendor since the inception of IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker in 2004, shipped 8.5 million units. Motorola, the number 2 overall vendor in 2004, registered a fifth place finish last year by virtue of its overall strength in the lower-growth traditional mobile phone category. Motorola has steadily lost share since 2004 when the market started its shift toward higher-end feature phones and smartphones. The ongoing shift has given rise to converged mobile device vendors such as RIM and Apple.

“The entrance of RIM into the top 5 underscores the sustained smartphone growth trend that is driving the global mobile phone market recovery,” noted Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC’s Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker. “This is also the first time a vendor has dropped out of the top 5 since the second quarter of 2005, when Sony Ericsson grabbed the number 5 spot from BenQ Siemens.”

“That the mobile phone market has rebounded by double digits year over year in a post-holiday quarter is definitely good news for the industry,” said Ramon Llamas, senior research analyst with IDC’s Mobile Devices Technology and Trends team. “Whereas last year we saw much uncertainty around demand and overall reluctance to introduce new devices, vendors have been very vocal about their intentions this year, with some even launching new devices in the first quarter of 2010. In addition, the continued emphasis on converged mobile devices points to greater revenue generation and profitability opportunities for vendors, which is a welcome change compared to the same quarter a year ago.”

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QOTD: Big tariffs?

Do you use your mobile tariff wisely or are you on a tariff which offers too much for your needs? Must admit I rarely check mine, but I suspect I am definitely not using it to its full value.

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You will be given a phone number at birth…

“You will be given a phone number at birth and will stop answering it when you die.” Those, or something like them, are the words of Martin Cooper who is widely regarded as the inventor of the mobile phone.

When those words were spoken there was no doubt some cynical chuckles because almost everyone in the world did not own a mobile phone at the time. Fast forward 30 years and almost everyone owns one, and increasingly many are using their phones for much more than just voice calling. Indeed, voice calling is a dying art and the phones that sell well are predominantly entertainment hubs which have cell phone capability built in just so they can be called phones.

I often wonder how much we will let the mobile phone dominate our lives and if we will reach a time where we have to be contactable 24 hours a day. Lots of BlackBerry owners are glued to their handsets by their employers, lots of iPhone and Android owners are voluntarily glued to their handsets and teenagers would rather text than actually speak to each other. The fact that voice is becoming a dying art in the mobile industry is actually a good thing.

As we lean more towards the impersonal methods of communication like email, text, instant messaging and social networks we are more likely to find time for ourselves when we can relax and not think about anything in particular for a little while. It is far easier to ignore digital communications than a phone call and this could be a saviour in a world where communication and content are two commodities that are more and more valuable as each month passes.

Some people worried about the mobile phone when it was first invented, but if you think about it this invention allows you to communicate more with people on a personal level. We should be more worried about the fact that we are always contactable and that those moments when the world does not know where you are or what you are doing are diminishing all of the time. Maybe I sound paranoid, but I do realise that I am in control of how much free time I have away from all things digital. I just wish I could tear myself away more often…

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ST-Ericsson enables much greater choice in smartphone market

The press release below from ST-Ericsson may not gain much attention in the online media, but has the potential to be a game changer.

ST-Ericsson, a global leader in mobile platforms and semiconductors, has expanded its smartphone portfolio to enable device manufacturers to quickly develop handsets with open operating systems and high-end multimedia features at a range of different price points.

ST-Ericsson’s new family of platforms will move the smartphone market forward by enabling consumers to choose a device that both suits their budget and provides the right combination of multimedia capabilities for them. The new platforms support open operating systems, such as Symbian and Linux, a rich web experience, a wide range of immersive applications and high-definition video. They also use ST-Ericsson’s new power-efficient dual-core architecture to ensure that manufacturers can create powerful advanced smartphones with long battery lives.

Based on the existing U8500 solution, the extended smartphone portfolio allows handset manufacturers to reuse software across both high-end and mainstream smartphones, significantly speeding up the development cycle and reducing their R&D costs. ST-Ericsson will also add TD capabilities to the new portfolio so that handset makers can quickly develop smartphones for China’s rapidly growing TD-SCDMA mobile standard.

“We are on the cusp of a new era in the smartphone market in which consumers across the world will be able to find a model that exactly meets their price and features criteria,” said Marc Cetto, Senior Vice President and head of 3G and Multimedia division at ST-Ericsson. “This new range of platforms will make it cost-effective for handset makers to dramatically expand their smartphone portfolio.

Today, ST-Ericsson unveiled the U5500 – the second member of the extended smartphone family after the U8500. With a dual-core application processor, an HSPA+ broadband modem, support for high-definition 720p video, up to 12 Mpixel cameras, 80 hours of music play time, up to 10 hours of talktime, 35 days of standby and enhanced 3D, the U5500 will enable handset makers to bring next-generation smartphone technologies to the mainstream market. The U5500 will be sampling in the third quarter of 2010.

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RIM to make Podcasts official

RIM is developing an official Podcasting app and BlackBerry Leaks has nabbed some images of the app. One more step in the more towards consumer smartphones for the masses…

“We had these images sent in, showing the upcoming Research In Motion BlackBerry Podcast app. We don’t know too much about the app just yet. We have heard that there is not a large selection and you cannot add a podcast of choice. From the first screenshot, it appears that RIM is designing it similar to the new layout for music that we saw in the BlackBerry 6 promo video. It will be pretty cool to eventually see how the RIM-made version compares to third-party podcast apps. More images after break…”

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CoPilot Live HD for iPad: where will I put it?

There is little doubt that the iPad version of Co-Pilot Live looks brilliant, but I have to ask where exactly in my car I can put it?

CoPilot Live HD makes complete use of the iPad’s large touch screen in portrait or landscape, displaying the route ahead clearly and with beautiful hi-resolution graphics. The split screen navigation view uses the 768 x 1024 screen real estate to maximum effect—combining uncluttered 3D or 2D map views with clear, non-distracting turn instructions. Four dual view options available.

With CoPilot Live HD, you don’t have to download maps for each trip or worry about being left stranded without maps in mobile dead spots. CoPilot Live stores detailed street level maps of the U.S. and Canada directly on the iPad 3G—allowing offline GPS navigation and comprehensive trip planning. Free MapSure map improvements and updates keep your CoPilot Live current with changes in the road network.

More than just voice-guided, turn-by-turn navigation. CoPilot Live HD’s powerful offline trip planning and route preview features let you plan complete door-to-door itineraries on your iPad 3G before you hit the road. You can enter multiple stops for a single journey and optimize to calculate the most efficient route. Additional features include a fuel cost estimator and the ability to create customized routing profiles for your personal preferences.

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1112 episode 02 for iPhone released

1112 episode 02 has been released for the iPhone and looks like an improvement on the far too short episode 01. The environments look beautiful and should help you to emerse yourself in the game play very quickly.

The long-awaited sequel to the 1112 phenomenon is finally available on the App Store!

Louis has arrived in New York in a rather mysterious way…
Help him discover why he has ended up in New York and follow his adventure promising unexpected developments and encounters.
1112 episode 02 is full of surprises and offers hours of amazing gameplay!

NEW FEATURES:

- All new advanced graphical design and artistic direction
- 25 new larger than life environments
- 14 new characters
- Various puzzles, each with a specific gameplay
- An incredibly responsive Multi-Touch user interface
- Original score
- Elaborate interactive narrative
- Totally redesigned game engine

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MS Courier: the dream is over, for now

Frank Shaw from Microsoft has dashed the MS Courier hopes of many with the following statement- “At any given time, across any of our business groups, there are new ideas being investigated, tested, and incubated. It’s in Microsoft’s DNA to continually develop and incubate new technologies to foster productivity and creativity. The “Courier” project is an example of this type of effort and its technologies will be evaluated for use in future Microsoft offerings, but we have no plans to build such a device at this time.” In the meantime, check out the video below and think about what could have been one more time… Thanks to Trevor.

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Thoughts on Flash by Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs has published his thoughts on Flash at Apple.com. Some of what he says makes sense, but other parts are a lesson in hypocrisy. Here are some selected bits (my thoughts in blue)-

“Adobe’s Flash products are 100% proprietary. They are only available from Adobe, and Adobe has sole authority as to their future enhancement, pricing, etc. While Adobe’s Flash products are widely available, this does not mean they are open, since they are controlled entirely by Adobe and available only from Adobe. By almost any definition, Flash is a closed system.

Apple has many proprietary products too. Though the operating system for the iPhone, iPod and iPad is proprietary, we strongly believe that all standards pertaining to the web should be open…” What he means is that it is closed to Apple and thus that is wrong in his view. He seems to want the world to be a one-way street flowing towards Apple.

Flash has not performed well on mobile devices. We have routinely asked Adobe to show us Flash performing well on a mobile device, any mobile device, for a few years now. We have never seen it. Adobe publicly said that Flash would ship on a smartphone in early 2009, then the second half of 2009, then the first half of 2010, and now they say the second half of 2010. We think it will eventually ship, but we’re glad we didn’t hold our breath. Who knows how it will perform?” No argument there.

Our motivation is simple – we want to provide the most advanced and innovative platform to our developers, and we want them to stand directly on the shoulders of this platform and create the best apps the world has ever seen.” And we want to own every single aspect of anything that touches our products. It’s an old argument and it has some benefits, but it has never sat right with me just how excluded some larger companies are from the Apple eco-system.

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Nokia N8. Is it enough?

Nokia have announced their latest top end Smartphone this week, the N8. Will it be enough? I don’t mean to save the company, or anything dramatic like that, Nokia is big enough that they will be around for years in one market or another. But will it be enough to stop the tech bloggers complaining? (and I include myself in this group). On paper it looks very good, at least as good as the N95 looked when it was announced, surely the last great smartphone from Nokia. Compare that with the N97, which at announce time looked pretty average, and when it was available something like ten months later, was even more underwhelming. At least the N8 has a top specification now, and will be available in a few months, so should still be able to compete. I think hardware wise, the N8 is up there with the best, all that remains is to see if Symbian3 is good enough to go up against a revitalised iPhone OS, Android 2.x and even Blackberry v6. Nokia have a few months to sort out a decent set of applications to have in the Ovi store and make sure the thing runs smoothly. A series of well placed and relevant ads to get people aware and a good set of deals with carriers, something Nokia has always been good at, and they might have a chance.

Could this be the phone that makes Nokia cool again?

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QOTD: Backup devices?

Do you have a backup smartphone? I still have an old BlackBerry lying around and an iPod Touch which I could steal from my wife if needs must.

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Retro Review: Psion 3a

The Psion 3a was launched in 1993, 17 years ago, which seems like more than a few lifetimes in the mobile industry. In an industry where two years always brings change that would have been inconceivable 24 months earlier, the Psion 3a defies everything we think about the mobile industry and presents an experience that does not seem possible. It is surely impossible that a 17 year old PDA can be useful in 2010. Looking at the specifications you would believe that it the case-

7.68Mhz processor, 480 x 160 pixel monochrome LCD, 19,200 bit/s RS-232 connectivity. Expansion via solid state disks; flash which need to be formatted to reclaim space and RAM which require a battery to hold the data.

It sounds pathetic doesn’t it, but those specs highlight everything that was great about the Psion PDA setup. The minimal processor and mono screen helped to produce a battery life measured in weeks, not hours. Two AA batteries would last over a month for typical users and it does put the rechargeable batteries we use today in context. Of course the batteries of today have to cope with the technology of today so it is not a good comparison, but what would you choose? Thirty days of use on replaceable batteries or one day on rechargeables?

I bought a Psion 3a last week specifically for this review for the huge amount of £5 + postage and using one again has not only brought back some memories, but some surprises as well. It says as much about what is wrong with smartphones today as it shows off the great strides that have been made in the past seventeen years. It is far from small by today’s standards, but it does have an aesthetic quality that verges on beautiful. That may sound over the top, and it is, but the way in which it opens with the super clever icon panel pivoting out from nowhere still enchants me today. The 2D icons above the rounded keys, none of which quite match each other, exemplify the 1990’s from a gadget point of view more than anything else in the mobile world.

The keyboard is big and is actually too big to thumb type comfortably, but the space between the keys makes typing far easier than it should. Of course Psion nailed the mobile keyboard with the 5 series that followed, but this one is capable of allowing comfortable periods of data entry. The monochrome screen is perfectly viewable in all conditions, except the dark due to no backlight until the 3c, and has a good resolution which makes word processing and spreadsheet management a breeze.

In terms of pre-loaded software, the 3a had a lot included; Data (contacts), Word, Agenda, Time, Calc and Sheet offered everything that was needed in 1993 to replace the dreadful Filofax. When you consider the thousands of applications that became available the Psion 3a was the very first PDA to offer a flexible mobile experience that was suitable for the organised and the tinkerers. The Apple Newton MessagePad 100 was released in the same year, but from a personal point of view it offers a backwards scenario to what we see today. At the time Apple offered a clunky solution that was not suitable for the masses and Psion nailed it first time. Today the reverse is true; Apple has nailed the mass mobile market.

Every part of the OS on the Psion is consistently implemented and the Agenda has, to the day, never been beaten. It offers a split screen day view, week view, year view, To-do list, Anniversaries and a list view. The wide screen form factor helps, but it looks so natural and is perfect for those who like a calendar to be visually organised. The contacts app offers everything you need to keep a huge database of contacts handy and you can even dial numbers audibly by clicking one simple key combination.

Word includes word counts, pagination, outlines, style galleries and all sorts of other features that were not standard at the time. The Sheet application contains a huge number of features that can be used to create quite complex files which are almost as featured as can be created on a smartphone today. Even the calculator comes with powerful functions such as logs, radians and trig. Throw in OPL which allows you to create apps directly on the Psion and you start to see how powerful this PDA was at the time.

If only it was super quick and never crashed. Oh yes, it is super quick and never crashes. The fact is that the Psion 3a was remarkable at the time and in many ways is still remarkable today. I am not saying for one moment that it competes with smartphones of today, but that it not to say that it could not be used as an organisational tool and one which will do almost everything you need. With the addition of some powerful apps it could be used for serious activities too; I remember the official Money application which was way ahead of anything I had used elsewhere and even TomTom started out by producing mapping solutions for the Psion range. There were some excellent games released as well of which HomeRun and Jumpy are still firm favourites of mine.

I admit that sentimentality plays a big part in this review. I admit to once spending over £100 on a 1MB Psion flash expansion card. I admit to owning as many Psion accessories as I could lay my hands on and I admit to being completely besotted with the device at the time. The real surprise is that seventeen years later, it is still a joy to use and is an object that holds its own in a world of super stylish smartphones that have ten times the power my first PC had, and a thousand times the power this little (big) Psion has.


The Psion 3a had a big impact on me at the time, so much so that I started my first website dedicated to Psions (see here) and it will always have a special place in my heart. Seventeen years later I spend hours each day writing about smartphones for PDA-247 and freelance projects, and it is all because of this PDA which was further ahead of its time than any mobile device has been since.

Look out for my retro review of the iPhone 3GS in 2027, which would also have cost me £5 from eBay.

I will try to write a retro review once a week and will be looking at influential PDAs, mobile phones and smartphones from times gone by that helped to shape what we use today.

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AdMob: Android’s impression share in the USA has overtaken the iPhone

In the latest Admob Metrics report (PDF here) Android has overtaken the iPhone for US impressions, albeit it with many more phones. It isn’t significant at this time, but does represent extremely fast growth in a short period. Thanks to Paul.

“Over the last two and a half years, we have openly shared data from our network to help shed light on the trends occurring in the mobile ecosystem.  We’ve recently covered growing mobile Internet device usage, mobile trends in Southeast Asia, and a survey on app usage habits.

In this month’s report, we look at the impact of the launch of new devices on the Android ecosystem.  Only seven months ago, the HTC Dream and HTC Magic collectively represented 96% of Android traffic.  In March 2010, 11 devices represented 96% of Android traffic in the AdMob network.  The chart below illustrates the impact of new handsets.”

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Steve Jobs Email Reply Generator

Geek Culture has created the Steve Jobs Email Reply Generator which is quite amusing. I love the list of potential replies and I have to wonder if it was created in secret and if he has been using it himself for quite a long time…

“Do you admire Steve Jobs’s ability to create short, concise email replies? We do too! Now you can use this handy tool to practice and hone your own terse skills!”

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