Monthly Archives: July 2010

BlackBerry Desktop Software 6.0 Limited Beta

If, like the rest of us, you find the current BlackBerry desktop software somewhat limiting you will want to sign up for the limited beta of BlackBerry Desktop Software 6.0. It certainly looks a lot better now, but the proof will be in the testing.

“Today I am very happy to share some exciting news about the upcoming BlackBerry® Desktop Software v6.0 release this summer. We did some major changes to the product inside and out, all to make it a true part of the overall BlackBerry® 6 experience. The first invitations to join our BlackBerry Desktop Software v6.0 Limited Beta will start going out today to some of you who have already joined BlackBerry® Beta Zone. If you haven’t joined BlackBerry Beta Zone yet, sign up at www.blackberry.com/beta.

Stay tuned for more posts here at Inside BlackBerry from myself and Vikram, where we will dive into the detailed feature sets and user interface walkthroughs for all the new goodness we added in BlackBerry Desktop Software v6.0. For now, here are a few screenshots to give you an idea of the new look and feel of the software – let us know what you think!”

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The BlackBerry ‘Death Grip’ App

Xtreme Labs and Fixmo have come up with the BlackBerry Death Grip app which lets you test how well your BlackBerry reacts when you hold it. A harmless bit of fun, but I am still struggling to reduce the bars on my device no matter what I do.

From BlackBerryCool- “Antennagate has been a public relations nightmare for Apple and in an attempt to deflect the pressure, Steve Jobs claimed the Bold 9700 has antenna issues as well Xtreme Labs let us know that that they have made an app that might prove or disprove the claim. The Antenna Meter application auto-samples your BlackBerry’s antenna signal strength once every second. The app lets you experiment with different ‘death grips’ and submit your results if you noticed an increase or decrease in antenna reception…”

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Handango “Free App Friday” returns

Handango’s Free App Friday is back.   Today’s is NetworkAcc Mobile Network Accelerator.  It’s available for Blackberry, Windows Mobile, and Symbian. presumably free until midnight.

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Smartphone shipments jump 43 percent

There is now little doubt that the smartphone is becoming the dominant mobile phone form factor and the latest report from Strategy Analytics is further evidence of the trend.

From cnet- “The second quarter saw 60 million smartphones shipped around the world, a 43 percent jump from a year ago, according to a study released Thursday by research firm Strategy Analytics.

Growth was driven by robust subsidies from carriers, strong competition between high-end vendors, and a rising selection of lower-cost phones running systems like Android and Symbian, according to the study. Overall, smartphones accounted for 19 percent of all handsets shipped during the period.

But the dizzying array of smartphones and the increasingly competitive market could pose a challenge to manufacturers trying to ramp up profits.

“The global smartphone industry is growing volume, but the industry’s value is beginning to feel the effects of intensifying competition,” Neil Mawston, director at Strategy Analytics and the author of the study, said in a statement. “Dozens of vendors from the telecoms, PC and consumer electronics industries are piling into the market and driving down prices. Even established brands such as Nokia, RIM, and Apple are finding it increasingly hard to raise prices and profits in the face of such fierce competition.”

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QOTD: Memory?

How much memory should a high-end smartphone have? I would like to see a 64GB iPhone 4, but suspect that Apple didn’t want to push the price to a level that would bring in criticism. Even better, I would like to see expandable memory- give me the choice!

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Brando iPhone 4 Case and Screen Protector Reviews

Brando iPhone 4 Case and Screen Protector Reviews

Available from this page. Price: Various

I promised myself I would have my HTC HD2 for 2 years. Well I managed 9 months, a record for myself I believe. Anyway, as most of you are aware, I bought an iPhone 4 and Brando Shopping very kindly sent me a small selection of their iPhone 4 cases, ultra clear protector for the front and/or back, and micro sim adapter. Brando Shopping has a number of other accessories for the iPhone 4 as well as other phones.

The Ultra Clear Screen Protector for the Front and Back is brilliant to be honest. All the photos of the phone have the ultra clear protector fitted. Can you tell? It’s perfectly clear. I had initially some Griffin Protectors that were matt but they ruined the retina display and the screen got muffled. Other protectors leave an orange peel effect.

Below is the iPhone 4 Royal Patterned case and Parallelogram Rubber Case with Perforated Bottom.

The above cases are available in several colours and have all the necessary cutouts. I like the fact that these and all of the cases sent to me allow me to connect all my accessories to the sync charge port.  The Royal case has a lovely white button which actually makes pressing the home button easier. This case is made of rubber and provides good protection for the phone. The Rubber case to the right has a slightly different shape and design. The bottom is perforated for effect.

Next up is Brando’s Bumper and standard silicone case.

The Bumper is available is several colours. Not much to say other than its made of a firmer plastic/rubber mixture for rigidity. It includes all the required cutouts. The rubber silicone case is neutral is finish. No special effects but very professional.

Next up are my 2 favourites cases. The Perforated Back Cover and Radial Soft Plastic case.

The Radial Soft Plastic is great. It really makes the iPhone 4 look posh. It has all the cutouts and allows the antenna to be visible through the case. The Perforated Back cover is another slick and smart solution. It looks like metal but is made of plastic. Easy to take on and off too.

Summary

Just to remind you, the Ultra Clear screen protector is fitted in all the photos. Truly a great protector and easy to fit. Also Brando Shopping has a much wider range of cases and loads of colours including a “Smarties Back case” and other iPhone 4 accessories. Also, all these cases prevented the Death Grip or Antennagate

So which case wins as the best all round solution; the Brando Soft Plastic Radial case and only just, althouth I keep shifting between the Radial and Perforated Back cover.

Once again thanks to Brando Shopping.

Review by Gavin Fabiani-Laymond

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Did the Treo change the World?

Michael Gartenburg has concluded that the Treo should be included in his Five gadgets that changed the World article, and I tend to agree. A worthy read.

From SlashGear- “Treo – I first used a preproduction Treo at the end of the 2001 and wrote my first review in the January of 2002. It wasn’t the first device to merge a Palm OS handheld with a phone but it was arguably the first device that did it well enough to be used on a regular basis. Treo bucked the trend at the time by eschewing multimedia features; there was neither movie-clip playback nor MP3 audio support. Rather, it targeted business users, merging voice and data with personal information management functions and it did it well. Other devices of the era tried to integrate these functions, but they failed because they tried to add either telephony features to PDAs or organizer features to phones and neither approach worked well. Treo was the first device that successfully merged features in harmony, producing a sum that was greater than its parts.

Things that we take advantage today were part of the Treo experience. Flip it open and your speed-dial list was ready to be used. Tap a few keys and you could instantly find the contact you wished to call. All the familiar Palm applications including an e-mail client, Handspring’s Blazer Web browser and an SMS application were present. Take a look at the iPhone’s dialer and you’ll see the direct descendent of the work Handspring did a decade ago. Treo no longer defines state of the art but most devices that are state of the art today would not be here without Handspring’s efforts and the smartphone you might dread to leave behind is the direct heir to the original Treo…”

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Capcom is having an iPhone game sale

Capcom has put a selection of iPhone games on sale and the discounts are fairly generous. The sale only lasts until 25th July so be quick.

From iPhone Freak-

Mega Man II – $0.99/£0.59.
Resident Evil 4 – $2.99/£1.79
Resident Evil 4 iPad Edition – $2,99/£1.79
Resident Evil Degeneration – $2.99/£1.79.
Who Wants to be a Millionaire – $0.99/£0.59.
Are You Smarter Than a Fifth-Grader? 2010 – $0.99/£0.59.
1942: First Strike – $0.99/£0.59.
Dark Void Zero – $0.99/£0.59
Phoenix Wright – $2.99/£1.79.
Street Fighter IV – $6.99/£3.99.

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The Google Nexus One is gone…

Google recently announced that the last batch of Nexus Ones was available for sell and it seems as though they have all been sold already. You can still buy it from select European carriers, but the Desire is probably a better bet anyway. Still can’t quite understand why Google pulled it so quickly? Surely sales could not have been that bad???

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Blackberry 9800 – Slider; Setup

Salomondrin has posted a new video demoing a part of the BlackBerry 9800. The more I see this phone, the more I am intrigued by it.

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Windows Phone 7: Microsoft confirms launch partners

Microsoft has confirmed an impressive hardware partner line up for Windows Phone 7: Dell, Asus, LG, HTC, and Samsung are already there with others expected to sign up as well. A very good start.

From Pocket-lint- “Microsoft has confirmed the hardware partners that will be launching Windows Phone 7 handsets, at a one-to-one briefing with Pocket-lint.

Although the company still wouldn’t be drawn on any specific dates for the launch of the new mobile phone operating system, beyond some time in the “Holidays”, it was happy to tell us who was making the devices for day one sales.

Greg Sullivan, senior product manager for Microsoft, told Pocket-lint that we could expect handsets from Dell, Asus, LG, HTC, and Samsung at the launch later this year.

It confirms certain former rumours.

We always thought Dell would be launching a Windows Phone 7 device, the Dell Lightning. And HTC exclusively confirmed to us that it was also launching a Windows Phone 7-powered handset too.

In our meeting, Sullivan referenced an LG Pacific, possibly a renaming of the LG Panther doing the rounds, but refused to be drawn further…”

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Nokia announces financials: not great

Nokia has announced its latest round of quarterly results and they are not great news for investors. Operating profits are seriously down and net sales are only up 1%. Here are the highlights (if that’s the right word)-

- Nokia net sales of EUR 10.0 billion, up 1% year-on-year and 5% sequentially (down 4% and up 2% at constant currency).
- Devices & Services net sales of EUR 6.8 billion, up 3% year-on-year and 2% sequentially (down 2% and 1% at constant currency).
- Services net sales of EUR 158 million, up 7% sequentially; billings of EUR 295 million, up 29% sequentially.
- Nokia total mobile device volumes of 111.1 million units, up 8% year-on-year and 3% sequentially.
- Nokia converged mobile device (smartphone and mobile computer) volumes of 24.0 million units, up 42% year-on-year and 12% sequentially.
- Nokia mobile device ASP (including services revenue) of EUR 61, down from EUR 62 in Q1 2010.
- Devices & Services gross margin of 30.2%, down from 34.0% in Q2 2009 and 32.4% in Q1 2010.
- Devices & Services non-IFRS operating margin of 9.5%, down from 12.2% in Q2 2009 and 12.1% in Q1 2010.
- NAVTEQ non-IFRS net sales of EUR 253 million, up 71% year-on-year and 34% sequentially (up 69% and 30% at constant currency).
- Nokia Siemens Networks net sales of EUR 3.0 billion, down 5% year-on-year and up 12% sequentially (down 11% and up 10% at constant currency).
- Nokia Siemens Networks non-IFRS operating margin of 1.7%, up from 0.1% in Q2 2009 and 0.6% in Q1 2010.
- Nokia operating cash flow of EUR 944 million.
- Total cash and other liquid assets of EUR 9.5 billion at the end of Q2 2010.
- Nokia taxes were unfavorably impacted by Nokia Siemens Networks taxes as no tax benefits are recognized for certain Nokia Siemens Networks deferred tax items. If Nokia’s estimated long-term tax rate of 26% had been applied, non-IFRS Nokia EPS would have been approximately half a Euro cent higher.

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QOTD: Games?

How many games are loaded on your smartphone and how many do you play regularly? I have over 50 loaded and I play 5 often. Time for some digital pruning…

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Sony Ericsson X10 Mini Pro Review

Available from Clove for £245.58

Highlights-

* Android Operating System
* Compact easy-to-use design
* Timescape, gather all your communication in one place
* 3G/HSPA connectivity for fast data access
* Customize your home screen
* Download Applications with the Android Market

In an industry dominated by ever larger screens and an emphasis on specifications the like of which we could only dream about a year ago, the X10 range from Sony Ericsson breaks all of the rules and offers something entirely unique. In offers an experience you likely will not have seen before and should never work in any practical sense. It is a bizarre creation that defies everything we know about mobile phones, and especially smartphones, and at first glance looks like a toy phone that you would give your 3 year-old child so that they can be like you. After 2 days use, however, it is certainly not a toy.

In the box

Sony Ericsson has done well with the box contents and thrown in all of the usual stuff (AC charger, USB cable and headphones) plus a good quality screen protector and a microSD USB adaptor. The accessories are of very good quality and even the headphones are better than most smartphones tend to get bundled with these days. Overall, I was impressed with the thought put into ensuring that the buyer has everything they need to get started.

First Impressions

Well, what can I say about the size and shape of the X10? At a mere 90mm high and weighing in at only 120grams it is just daft when you first pick it up. There is surely no way on earth this can be a smartphone that is capable of anything serious!?!  It is bizarre in almost every way; the 17mm depth is quite large for a modern smartphone, but in a unit this size you almost do not notice it. It fits perfectly in the hand and everything from the weight to the form to the size works perfectly in coordination. This won’t make sense, but it almost feels bigger than it is when you start to use it.

It is amazing how quickly the human mind can adjust to new things and I found myself understanding what to do almost immediately. There are of course some compromises made because of the size, but most of them are perfectly logical and do not get in the way of using the phone for various tasks. This design has opened my eyes to what is possible and the inclusion of a keyboard is the most illogical and yet inspired idea for this particular phone.

Let’s look at the individual parts and see if they come together to make a smartphone worthy of your consideration-

Screen

This is without doubt the feature that should be most compromised by the size of the unit. At a mere 2.55” and with a resolution of only 240×320 pixels it does not compare to most of the other smartphones on the market. However, it works well outdoors and I did not feel overly constrained when using it. Some work has been done to ensure that the Android OS works as it should on such a small screen and small additions like icons in each corner to get to most used features work well. The fact that there is a hardware keyboard here as well means that you will always have the full screen available when texting, emailing and the like. Let’s be honest the screen isn’t great by any means, but it does the job and is usable in all conditions which is probably what the target market will want above all else.



General Performance

So far I have not suffered any major slowdowns which I had expected because of the lowly 600Mhz processor and 128MB of internal memory. It seems that the X10 is capable of sustained use, but when you really start to push it there will be the occasional stutter and stalling. This tends to happen with many Android smartphones, but I do wonder how well it will cope when more sophisticated apps are released.

Currently it is running Android 1.6 which is quite a few versions behind, but the good news is that Sony Ericsson is looking to update it to Android 2.1 in quarter 4 so all is not lost. Android 1.6 does not included Exchange calendar support and some other features which will never be used by most purchasers so the inclusion of 1.6 is probably perfectly sensible given who will buy the phone.

On that subject, I do wonder if Sony needed to make this an Android phone at all. This phone is not designed for people who want smartphones, yet it is definitely a smartphone. It is designed for people who want social networking, texting, a good camera and a fashionable design. It ticks the boxes here, but just maybe Android is an unnecessary step on the X10?

Camera

The camera is rated at 5 Megapixels and comes with a flash that can also be used when recording video. I have to say that the flash is not great, but that it is possible to capture some very good snaps if the lighting is good. The auto-focus seemed to be somewhat hit and miss for me, but using the macro setting helped a lot.

Video recording is not good and I could not produce a decent video with adequate sound and visuals. It does the job, as any camera does, but the 5 Megapixel spec sits in my mind and this is yet another smartphone that forgets to match the video to the stills capability.

It is interesting that Sony Ericsson does not even mention the camera in its features page for the phone and I am started to see why. A half-hearted camera effort.

Keyboard

Brilliant! No seriously. This phone should not have a usable keyboard, but it surely does. There are no standard cursor keys or number row, but somehow that does not matter. I found it very easy to use right from the start and, if anything, the compactness of the keyboard is an advantage in the same way that they are on BlackBerry smartphones.

Too many manufacturers feel that keyboards need to be ‘big’ to be easy to use, but the reality is that if one is designed well and the keys are tactile enough, any size will do. There is something so right about the size of the X10 mini and its keyboard and it produces an excellent data entry experience.



Call quality / Sound

Wow! This is strange, it truly is. I called my voicemail to have a quick check, expecting nothing special, and was amazed at the depth of the call quality. It sounded much better than my landline phone and is quite probably the best phone I have ever used in terms of to the ear call quality. Music quality is also very good through the supplied headphones, but even better when you use proper ones. It’s not iPhone 4 standard, but isn’t too far off and will please most people.

Now, the speakerphone is…. even better! It is simply not possible that a phone this small can produce such a sound. I tested the main speaker in a number of ways playing music, video and calls and it is superb. It is situated on the back which means you may end up putting your finger over it, but besides that this is the ‘best’ speaker I have used on any smartphone, and it is the smallest smartphone I have used. Go figure?

Battery

This is not the best I have seen and at only 970mAh hardly a surprise. When you consider that the X10 Mini has Wi-Fi, HSDPA, aGPS and all sorts of other features it will need more power behind it to survive a busy day. If you push this phone you can expect to be charging it more than once a day. I don’t like charging a phone once a day let alone twice so you can guess my thoughts on this particular feature.

Software

Wisepilot is included for navigation and does an adequate job considering the screen size, but the screen size is not ideal for such a task. I can’t see many X10 users using the phone for navigation anyway so it can be considered as merely a nice extra from Sony Ericsson. Timescape is included which acts as a hub for your communications- Facebook, Twitter, texts and other messages are store here and once you are used to it this is one app that you will want to see on all phones. It is like the webOS solution, but with slightly less smoothness.

Some games are included such as the excellent Peggle and Roller Coaster and there are also some decent business tools including RoadSync, Backup and Restore and NewReader. Creatouch needs to be used to understand (a bit of a novelty) and the rest is made up of standard Android apps that you will expect to find included. It is a comprehensive software setup that appears on most Android phones and one which will help you to accomplish what you need to. However, it does feel a little haphazard and as if lots of titles have been thrown in just to make the numbers up, a continuing problem with Android in my opinion.

Conclusion

The X10 Mini Pro throws the rule book out of the window as far as smartphone design is concerned. It is so tiny yet still works and offers a smartphone experience which is much more usable than could reasonably be expected. The excellent data entry turns it into a capable messenger and the sound quality is almost unrivalled. The battery is a problem though and will require the user to have a charger handy, but my overall impression of the X10 Mini Pro is positive.

It is well priced, imaginatively designed and a highly capable phone which is just too cute to put down.


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Reckless Racing turns a corner

Reckless Racing for the iPhone is still alive and should now be released alongside an iPad version by the end of August. That’s the good news. EA has snapped it up which may delay things a little and likely add a few more dollars to the price. However, if it is as good to play as it looks, it will be worth every cent.

From Know Your Mobile- “Pixelbite’s top-down racer, Reckless Racing, formerly Deliverace, will be coming to the iPhone and iPad thanks to EA.

From the looks of things, Reckless Racing is a throwback to a largely forgotten racing series known as Micro Machines on the Mega Drive, which is not a bad thing.

In fact, although there are no ‘Honey I shrunk my car’ moments, the camera view and style of the game certainly nod towards the Codemasters classic, and that has us pretty revved up.

The idea is to guide your chosen vehicle, ranging from American V8s to trucks, around courses that look pretty damn spectacular. Make no mistake, the graphics are impressive…”

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