Monday, January 31, 2011

Pantech's UML290 LTE modem for Verizon gets official Mac support

Though it was predated by a usable hack, the Pantech UML290 USB modem -- one of just two devices launched so far for Verizon's LTE network -- has finally been blessed with an official Mac OS driver. What does this mean? Well, technically, it means that this is the very first time Mac users are getting any LTE love in the US whatsoever -- though with that Samsung-sourced mobile hotspot on the horizon, USB modems might be a tough sale at this point. On a bright note, the availability of the driver today means that Verizon beat its own estimate of February; the UML290's counterpart from LG, the VL600, is still Windows-only, though we imagine that'll be hitting soon as well.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Modders Build A Windows Phone 7 Skin for iOS Because… Uh… Because They Can?

Based on my lengthy explorations through all depths of the Internets, I’m quite comfortable in saying that their probably aren’t too many people out there looking to make their iPhone look more like a Windows Phone 7 phone.

But if, somehow, there is some massive horde out there all clamoring for a WP7-themed overhaul, let them know: it’s here. And it’s actually… pretty dang impressive. You’ll need to jailbreak the phone and install the theme via Cydia — but then you’re free to go about your way, installing WP7-themes on iPhones, singing to cats, eating paint chips, and whatever other crazy things you might do.

Droid Bionic appears on Amazon with $150 price tag, quickly disappears again

Something's seriously going on over at Amazon's Wireless store where the Droid Bionic, a Verizon sibling to AT&T's Atrix 4G, has today been spotted listed for sale with a $149.99 price. That matches the levy Amazon asked for the Atrix last week (before promptly yanking the page) and seems to confirm that the $150 price point is receiving some sincere consideration for these 4G-equipped handsets. The Bionic's page has now also disappeared into the ether, but the memory of its delectable promise remains.

[Thanks, techcruncher]

Official Kim Kardashian App for iOS Devices

For all you iOS device owners out there that happen to be a fan of Kim Kardashian you can now have your very own mobile app for the Apple iPad, iPod Touch or iPhone and it’s called the official Kim Kardashian app.

With the Kim Kardashian iOS app users can get a glimpse into Kim Kardashian’s life, watch as she blows as kiss or strikes that signature pose and discopver different ways to interact with Kim, such as shaking your device so she speaks.

The official Kim Kardashian app from Appetizer Mobile also enables the user to watch the latest Kim Kardashian videos, images, and latest tweets and the user can even find their closes Sephore to locate Kim’s perfume.

Apparently Kim Kardashian manages to pull in a cool 5 million per year, and in an interview with Piers Morgan recently confessed that her most extravagant purchase was a watch costing $115,000, and we have that interview for your viewing pleasure below courtesy of eWeek.

Furthermore according to an article over on the NY Daily News, when Kim saw a sneak peak of her November 2011 W Magazine shoot, she burst into tears as the photos apparently showed more flesh that her Playboy shoot.

The official Kim Kardashian app for the iPhone, iPod Touch and Apple iPad won’t cost anywhere near that price though as you can download the app to your chosen device for just $1.99 by hitting up iTunes…enjoy the video.

Nokia E7 Striking in Indonesia for Pre-Orders

Well it’s quiet stunning to know that Indonesia has been one of the largest users in Asia. And currently, Nokia E7 has been largely promoted in the country.

In reference to Slash Gear tipster, Francisco’s Nokia has just been taken three pages newspaper ad for just to advertise the QWERTY Smartphone.

Good news for all the customers in Indonesia is that Nokia E7 is merely to be available till February, pricing at 6,800,000 Indonesian Rupiahs which approximately is $749 USD, and provided with free sim.

E7 contains a QWERTY keyboard, 8MP camera, packed with a 4-inch capacitive touch screen, and Symbian^3 OS. The E7 is available in five different colors which are blue, orange, silver white, dark grey, and green. The company is curious regarding promotion of E7.

Source: Slash phone

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Nokia’s Q4 2010 Earnings: A Faint Glimmer of Hope

It could happen.

It could happen.

So, yesterday Nokia announced its first-quarter earnings. The numbers kinda sucked, to put it bluntly, but they beat the estimates. Still, there might be some light at the end of the tunnel, and no, we’re not talking about MeeGo.

Some of the highlights:

Overall sales rose 6% to 12.7 billion euro, compared to last year. Devices & Services rose 4%, but was offset by a 37% jump for NAVTEQ and 9% increase for Nokia Siemens Networks (gasp!)

Profit fell 23% (from last year), to 884 million euro.

Nokia shipped 28.3 million smartphones/mobile computers in Q4

The average selling price (ASP) rose to 69 euro vs. last years 65 euro

Market share fell to 32%, from 34%

Nokia will host a Strategy and Financial Briefing in London on Feb. 11

That last one matters for a very interesting reason:

“Nokia must compete on an ecosystem-to-ecosystem basis. In addition to great devices, we must build, catalyze, and/or join a competitive ecosystem.”

Spoken by the CEO himself, Mr. Stephen Elop, it’s the “money quote” according to Business Insider. And the biggest shred of evidence so far that suggests Nokia just might be considering a foray into the Android or Microsoft “ecosystem.”

Branching out makes sense on a lot of levels.

Symbian, as proven by reviews of the latest Nokia high-end devices, is not going to cut it. It would take a complete makeover to become a viable high-end consumer OS, and that would take time. A lot of time. And a lot of positive PR. But let’s not forget MeeGo: as of three months ago, it was ridiculously slow, unfinished and unusable. As of April 2011, it’s supposed to be handset-ready. At that point, Android will be 2 years, 7 months old. iOS will be 3 years, 3 months old. And Windows Phone 7 will be 5 months old.

That’s problem one. Problem two is that each “ecosystem” already holds a competitive advantage that’s attracted some kind of consumer following. Windows Phones have Xbox Live, Office, and Zune integration. iPhones have iTunes, the highest (and maybe lowest?) quality apps, and the most intuitive interface. Android phones have Google services, lots of apps, and a large variety of handsets.

MeeGo has its open-source nature, which is great for developers/stakeholders, but not something most consumers will care about.

In other words, it’s a tough bet for Nokia, and an uphill battle for MeeGo at this stage of the game.

Investing resources into either Android or Microsoft, however, would be the equivalent of hedging its bet. If MeeGo does well, Nokia loses little by producing, say, Android phones. If, however, MeeGo does not (in my opinion a larger possibility), Nokia has something to fall back on, besides selling all those “budget” priced handsets.

Either way, we’ll find out on February 11.

Nokia Q4 2010 Press Release
Is Nokia About to Embrace Android?

Verizon iPhone to Be Available on Month to Month Plans, Possibility of Prepaid

PhoneNews.com has confirmed with Verizon that the forthcoming iPhone will be available on its month to month hybrid plans, with the possibility of availability on its realigned prepaid plans allowing smartphones, pending further confirmation.

Should the iPhone 4 be made available on Verizon’s prepaid plans, this would mark the first time since the launch of the original iPhone that the smartphone would be available for activation on a prepaid service plan and officially supported, as AT&T ended support for prepaid iPhone activations and service with the iOS 3.0 update and subsequent iPhone 3G release.

In related news, Verizon has also confirmed that the pre-order window for current customers to order the iPhone 4 will begin on February 3rd at 3AM EST, with invitations for pre-order being sent out.

SaskTel rolls out LG Rumour Plus, LG Flick

SaskTel has just added to LG phones to their line-up – the LG Rumour Plus and the Flick.
SaskTel LG Rumour Plus LG Flick

Available on Bell since last year, the LG Rumour Plus sports a slide-out QWERTY keypad complemented by a 2.4-inch touchscreen, 2-megapixel, GPS, Bluetooth, HDPA connectivity, and a microSD card slot (up to 16GB). It’s retailing for as little as $25 on a 3-year contract or $240 without one.

The LG Flick, meanwhile, comes with a larger 2.8-inch touchscreen display sans physical QWERTY keypad, a 2-megapixel camera, Bluetooth, and GPRS/EDGE connectivity. Surprisingly, this one’s pricier than the Rumour Plus on a 3-year contract basis at $50 even though its cheaper off-contract-wise compared to the former at just $215. Weird, huh?

Anyway, for more info about SaskTel’s LG Rumour Plus, you can head on over here, or if you prefer the LG Flick, just click here.

[source]

Mobile Phone Market Grows 17.9% in Q4 2010

IDC

The worldwide mobile phone market grew 17.9% in the fourth quarter of 2010 (4Q10), a new quarterly high driven by smartphones. According to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker, vendors shipped 401.4 million units in 4Q10 compared to 340.5 million units in the fourth quarter of 2009. Vendors shipped a total of 1.39 billion units on a cumulative worldwide basis in 2010, up 18.5% from the 1.17 billion units shipped in 2009.

The strong quarterly and annual growth comes after a weak 2009, which saw the market decline by 1.6%. A stronger economy and a wider array of increasingly affordable smartphones helped lift the market to its highest annual growth rate since 2006 when it grew 22.6%.

 

"The mobile phone market has the wind behind its sails," said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC's Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker. "Mobile phone users are eager to swap out older devices for ones that handle data as well as voice, which is driving growth and replacement cycles."

It's not just smartphone-focused suppliers that capitalized on the mobile phone market's renewed growth last year. ZTE, a company that sells primarily lower-cost feature phones in emerging markets, moved into the number 4 position worldwide in 4Q10. It is the first quarter the Chinese handset maker finished among IDC's Top 5 vendors.

"Change-up among the number four and five vendors could be a regular occurrence this year," added Ramon Llamas, senior research analyst with IDC's Mobile Devices Technology and Trends team. "Motorola, Research In Motion, and Sony Ericsson, all vendors with a tight focus on the fast-growing smartphone market who had ranked among the top five worldwide vendors during 2010 are well within striking distance to move back into the top five list."

Market Outlook

IDC believes the worldwide mobile phone market will be driven largely by smartphone growth through the end of 2014. "Feature phone users looking to do more with their devices will flock to smartphones in the years to come," noted Restivo. "This trend will help drive smartphone sub-market to grow 43.7% year over year in 2011."

Regional Analysis

The Asia/Pacific mobile phone landscape was driven by low-cost and high-end devices in 4Q10. Domestic brands in India like G-Five, Micromax, and Karbonn grew with aggressive advertising and branding activities for entry-level phones, while ZTE and Huawei worked closely with carriers to push low-cost Android smartphones in China. High-end smartphones, however, were equally well-received, resulting in higher shipments from Apple, Samsung, and HTC in 4Q10. Korea had the biggest smartphone appetite accounting for two-thirds of phones shipped in 4Q10, up from one-eighth a year ago.

In Western Europe, carrier smartphone promotions motivated more users to scrap their feature phones, resulting in strong smartphone sales. The iPhone 4, HTC Desire, Nokia N8, Samsung Galaxy S, and Blackberry 8520, which were among the region's top sellers, contributed to the overall market's growth. Consequently, the feature phones experienced their sharpest decline ever. In CEMA, quarterly volumes breached the 70 million unit threshold for the first time, marked by an influx of Chinese and unbranded handsets. Meanwhile, smartphones experienced brisk growth due to falling prices and more Android-powered devices.

The United States mobile phone market closed out the year with more vendors becoming more active in this space. Market leaders RIM and Apple maintained a healthy lead, while newcomers Dell, Huawei, Kyocera, and Sanyo launched their first smartphones to the U.S. market. In addition, 4G took another step forward with the commercial launch of Verizon Wireless' LTE network. Similarly, in Canada, the focus was on smartphones. Android-powered devices from multiple players, along with incumbent vendors RIM and Apple, pushed shipment volumes to a new record level.

In Latin America, sustained user interest in smartphones drove the market, resulting in strong results for Nokia, RIM, and Samsung as well as relative newcomer Huawei. Smartphones, as well as QWERTY-enabled feature phones, helped boost social networking and messaging, two fast-growing trends in the market. Finally, Alcatel and ZTE once again thrived in the inexpensive entry-level device market.

Top Five Mobile Phone Vendors

Nokia overall unit volume slipped 2.4% in the fourth quarter, which the vendor attributed to the "intense competitive" environment and component shortages. The result was lower feature phone shipments. The company did, however, grow smartphone volume by 38% compared to the same prior-year quarter. Nokia launched the C7 and the C6-01 touchscreen smartphones as well as the C3 combination touchscreen & QWERTY device in the fourth quarter. Still, smartphone ASPs dropped 16% on a year-over-year basis.

Samsung reached a new milestone in 4Q10, pushing through the 80 million unit threshold for the first time in the company's history and improving its profit margins for the second straight quarter. Driving shipment volumes was the continued success of its Galaxy S smartphones, of which the company sold nearly ten million units worldwide for the year. Similarly, Samsung's mass-market and touch-screen phones earned a strong following in emerging markets.

LG crossed the 30 million unit mark for the quarter, due in part to the success of Optimus One smartphone sales across multiple regions. LG's smartphone strategy is paying off; the company sold more than a million units in the first month of availability, and newer versions (Optimus 2X, Optimus Black) are expected later this year. Meanwhile, LG's feature phones comprised the majority of shipments, but an aging portfolio and lower prices within emerging markets left the company vulnerable to the competition.

ZTE finished the quarter in the number four position with shipments steadily spreading from its home country of China to developing regions such as Africa and Latin America. ZTE has also recently made inroads in developed markets such as Western Europe and the U.S. as well as Japan. While most of its shipments have historically concentrated on entry-level and mid-range devices, some of its recent success is directly attributable to its rapidly expanding smartphone line, such as the Android-based Blade and Racer devices. Meanwhile, its S- and C-series entry-level feature phones provided additional competition within emerging markets.

Apple The iPhone maker slipped to the number 5 position despite a record quarter for unit shipments and the departure soon thereafter of CEO Steve Jobs on medical leave. It was the company's second straight quarter on IDC's Top 5 list. The iPhone sold particularly well in developed regions of the world, such as North America and Western Europe. Apple, which said it could have sold more iPhones last quarter had it been able to make more, is set to introduce the touchscreen device on Verizon next month.

HTC Evo Shift 4G: Premium Design, Good Price

There aren't many 4G phones in the market right now, so we aren't exactly bombarded with too many choices yet.  As such, it's quite easy for handsets to separate themselves from the pack with just little changes and the HTC Evo Shift 4G manages to pull that off nicely.

Physically, the handset brings a high-quality design that makes you feel like you're handling a really premium phone.  The aluminum accents, soft-touch finish and beefy dimensions take it a step up the style ladder.  Display is a 3.6-inch capacitive touchscreen (800 x 480 resolution) that manages sharp and clear pictures, with plenty of bright colors.  The slide-out landscape QWERTY keyboard works great, although the lack of dedicated number keys might put off some users.  Regardless, it's one of the best keyboards for its size and makes a good case for choosing the Shift over the other keyboard-less 4G offerings from Sprint.

As a phone, the Evo Shift 4G makes for above average call quality.  Everything went through clearly on both ends of conversations, with no background noises to disrupt.  Speakerphone, however, was just average, although we appreciate the high volume level.  Battery should last you over six hours in continuous talk time.

The phone comes in at a cheaper price than other 4G handsets right now.  To allow that, it makes some compromises, such as the lack of a front-facing camera and an HDMI port.  Most notable, though, is the 800MHz processor, which is a downgrade from the 1GHz standard for other 4G devices.  For the most part, though, you'll only notice the slight drop in speed when you've got a plethora of apps open -- for regular use, it should be fine.  Plus, it plays Flash even with the lower CPU clock.

As a full-fledged Android 2.2 smartphone running HTC Sense, you get all the usual features you'll expect: a variety of calling options, basic and advanced messaging and a variety of preloaded apps (both Google's Mobile Suite, as well as HTC's own apps and widgets).  Connectivity support is full-blast, with 4G, 3G (when WiMax isn't available), WiFi, GPS and Bluetooth.  It also supports mobile hotspot capabilities for up to eight phones at a time.

On the multimedia end, it provides average playback of content.  Naturally, Sprint loaded it with their various streaming services, which you'll likely find plenty useful over the high-speed 4G network (hopefully, you have coverage in your area).   The 5.0 megapixel camera offers plenty of editing options, all while taking above average shots and very watchable 720p clips.

Overall, the HTC Evo Shift 4G is an excellent choice for an Android smartphone, provided you spend most of your time in an area with Sprint's 4G coverage.   The $149.99 price further makes a compelling case, especially if you’d like a physical keyboard to go with your Android smartphone.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Nexus S’ Random Reboot Bug To Be Squashed By Mid-February

The Nexus S is a pretty wonderful phone, in most regards. Built by Samsung after months of finetuning the process with their Galaxy S line, it’s a stunning piece of hardware in person — amongst Samsung’s best, perhaps. More importantly, it’s one of the few high-end handsets that gives a pure, unadulterated Android experience as Google sees fit.

Alas, it has its flaws. Namely, it seems to reset whenever the hell it wants to. Amidst much clamoring and bickering around the Internets, Google has stayed mostly mum on the issue. Until now. Google’s go-to community rep, Ry Guy, weighed in on the matter:

The initial results of our tests look very promising. At this rate we will most likely be rolling out an OTA to resolve this issue within one to two weeks. We really appreciate your patience as we do our final verifications on this fix before sending it out.

So, only two more weeks of anxiousness, knowing that a surprise reboot might come RIGHT as you finally 3 Star that one level in Angry Birds. Think you can take it?

[Via AndroidPolice]

BlackBerry and Internet Blocked in Egypt

If you enjoy using the Internet or own a BlackBerry smartphone you don’t want to live in Egypt at the moment as apparently the Egyptian government has blocked all international Internet connection along with blocking service for BlackBerry smartphone users.

According to an article over on Technobuffalo, and by way of Reuters, on Tuesday Egypt began by blocking Twitter and on Wednesday blocked Facebook and Google as apparently many people were protesting on Facebook calling for the end of the 30-year rule by president Hosni Mubarak.

The blocking of service to BlackBerry handset user along with SMS messages is an attempt by the Egyptian government to put a halt the way protesters were organising.

Having said that, if people want to protest loud enough simply cutting the Internet and BlackBerry service isn’t going to stop them, and if it does then what does that mean for the people of Egypt, will they be forever cut off from the world wide web, and never again have use of their BlackBerry handsets?

What about other smartphones, surely there must be other handsets in Egypt that can send SMS messages and access such things as Facebook and Twitter, so does the government completely shut down all communications for good?

If the people of Egypt have had enough of their president then surely it is their right to get rid of him?

HTC Releases Source for Shift 4G and Froyo Source for myTouch 3G

HTC SourceFor those that want to see the building blocks of Android or are looking to jump into custom ROM or software development, HTC has released the source code for the Shift 4G and the Froyo build of the myTouch 4G.

It should be noted that the build omits HTC’s own proprietary components such as the Sense user interface, but is otherwise complete and ready for use in development.

Verizon iPhone iTunes 10.1.2 Released by Apple

If you are one of the iOS faithful eager to get your little mitts on the Verizon iPhone, you might like to know that you will be required to download a new version of iTunes, which will work with the CDMA iPhone.

According to an article over on 9to5 Mac, Apple has now made available for download the updated iTunes version 10.1.2, which is available from Apple’s iTunes download page and is for the “CDMA iPhone 4.”

As Apple has stated iTunes 10.1.2 is for the “CDMA iPhone,” and not “Verizon iPhone” one could presume that a CDMA iPhone could possibly come to other CDMA carriers outside the US, although that is just speculation.

Apparently iTunes 10.1.2 delivers some important performance and stability enhancements such as syncing movies, music and more to the CDMA iPhone and the ability to use AirPlay to stream video from iTunes to the Apple TV.

So if you are of a mind to purchase the Verizon iPhone you may wish to update your iTunes ready for when the day comes.

Motorola Atrix 4G goes up on AmazonWireless, $150 on February 11th -- mistake? (update: Inspire 4G, too)

We suspect the boys and girls over at AmazonWireless threw their Atrix 4G product page up early, because -- among other red flags -- the buy button doesn't work, but one important detail we can glean from it is that they seem interested in selling it for $149.99 on a new contract or $599.99 off-contract. Now, there are a couple of possibilities here; first off, since the page likely isn't supposed to be online, these prices might just be guesses or placeholders, but furthermore, keep in mind that AmazonWireless and other third-party wireless resellers typically charge less for devices on contract than carriers do, so we'd expect this to be at least $50 more directly from AT&T. Oh, and one other tidbit: searching for the phone on Amazon reveals a possible release date of February 11th, which would be even more aggressive than Moto's end-of-February guidance. Again, possibly another guess or placeholder on Amazon's part... but it's a date to keep in the back of your head nonetheless.

[Thanks, Roman]

Update: Turns out the Inspire 4G is listed, too, for $99.99 on contract or $499.99 contract-free. Thanks, Justin S.!

Update 2: ...and they're gone. Whoops!

BlackBerry Monaco Touch, Bold Touch, Sedona, and more leaked for CDMA

CrackBerry looks to have just gotten the inside scoop on everything RIM has planned for the CDMA side of the wireless divide in 2011 -- and as usual, it seems they'll be supporting it just as well as they do the GSM guys. Going chronologically, first up will be a CDMA PlayBook in the second quarter of the year; so far, Sprint's WiMAX version (sans CDMA support) is the only carrier-partnered version of the tablet announced. Next comes Montana -- a CDMA version of the Dakota -- which may come to market as the Bold Touch; as the name implies, you can expect the classic portrait QWERTY Bold form factor with the addition of a touchscreen. Look for that one in the third quarter alongside the Monaco (pictured above), which looks like a much sleeker Storm successor featuring a 1.2GHz Qualcomm core, a 3.7-inch WVGA display, and a 5 megapixel camera with HD video capture. Next, we'll get a CDMA flavor of the Apollo dubbed Sedona, a next-gen Curve with NFC support; that'll happen sometime around fall. Finally, looking into early 2012 we'll get a device codenamed Malibu that looks to be a full-screen Curve Touch with slightly lower specs than the Monaco.

On the technology side, most of these new devices will be adopting a handful of technologies not seen on BlackBerrys before, including digital compasses, NFC, HD video recording and "management," and better HTML5 media support; they'll also be getting OpenGL support, mobile hotspot capability, 24-bit color, a better web browser, and an overhauled virtual keyboard by way of BlackBerry OS 6.1, which should be present in everything that gets launched here. Caught up? Given the lack of dual-core processors here -- the kind of CPUs Lazaridis says he needs to drop QNX on phones -- we'd say "no," but they might be getting within earshot. Follow the break for a shot of the full roadmap.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Amnesia Connect Content Sharing Via Single Gesture: Video

So imagine being able to transfer content from your smartphone to another device instantaneously simply by dragging your content from your handset to a Microsoft Surface Table and then over to your other device, sounds simple doesn’t it?

Well apparently you can now do that with Amnesia Connect from Amnesia Razorfish, and have replaced the normal “send and receive” interface with a “natural gesture-based interface.” And we have some video footage of Amnesia Connect in action for your viewing pleasure below.

The video demo comes our way courtesy of the guys over at Daily iPhone Blog and delivers two minutes of demonstrating the new software.

Iain McDonald the founder and executive creative director of Amnesia Razorfish has said…” The previous barriers which stood in the way of getting content on or off your phone have been completely removed with this software.”

Word is the Amnesia Connect software works with all iOS devices and is being further developed to work with Android, BlackBerry and Windows Phone devices.

So with all that said all you need do now is jump on down, hit that play button and check out Amnesia Connect transferring content by simply dragging…enjoy.

AT&T Is Now The #1 Carrier In The US — But For How Long?

Oh snap, girl — It’s on.

Back in January of 2009, Verizon acquired Alltel, along with Alltel’s customer base of around 13 million subscribers. When they threw that lot in with Verizon’s already massive customer base, it earned Verizon the crown as the biggest carrier in the US (a title previously owned by AT&T as a result of their merger with Cingular)

A year later, however, AT&T has managed to snag the crown back.

In an earnings call this morning, AT&T announced that their subscriber count now came in at a grand total of 95.5 million. Compare that with Verizon’s earnings call from earlier this week, when Big Red announced a cumulative headcount of 94.1 million.

The current quarter, however, will be the one to watch. Why? It’s all about the Verizon iPhone, which launches next month. Between AT&T ship-jumpers and those who have been waiting through years and years of VZW iPhone rumors before finally stuffing their crummy old phones in a sock drawer, Verizon will almost certainly be swimmin’ around in a monsoon of new subscribers by the time this quarter closes.

What do you think: will the launch of the VZW iPhone be enough to turn the tide back in Verizon’s favor?

MTA LIRR Info: TransitGuru Subway App The Trip Planner

If you are looking for MTA info direct from your Apple iPhone then look no further than TransitGuru MTA LIRR iOS app, this is a fantastic rail application that has an interactive map and so much more.

This app offers a superb interactive system map where users will be able to tap on a station of their choice in the map to see all the stations info, zoom in and zoom out. All station info including Google maps shows nearby attractions and restaurants provided by Yelp.com.

Other Main features Include: Offline train schedule, Directions between two stations and see the direction visually in the map including estimated arrival at each transfer and the destination, Built-in timer, Intuitive user interface to navigate among transit map, line, station, route and the bookmarked Favorites and Top five nearest stations using GPS.

You can sync the schedule database and keep up-to-date with latest schedule published by the transit authority and so much more.

For more information about TransitGuru MTA LIRR iOS app please visit iTunes, we would love to hear from you if you already have this app installed. Thanks

This Is The T-Mobile Sidekick 4G

Do you know how much I loved the original Sidekick? Seriously — Picture me spreading my arms REALLY, REALLY far apart, as if I’m bragging about the size of a fish I caught. That’s how much I loved the original Sidekick. It was, for the most part, the first phone that made me really, really like phones.

Then the Sidekick 2 came along, and it was amazing. Then the Sidekick 3 came along, and it was… not as amazing. Then a bevy of crappy Sidekicks came along and sort of stomped all over the Sidekick name.

Well, friend, the Sidekick is back. And it’s running Android.

Of course, to call this a “Sidekick” is sort of cheating. Danger, the team that designed the original Sidekick and built its software, has long crumbled following their acquisition by Microsoft (You remember the Kin? That was Microsoft’s misuse of the Danger team.) Matias Duarte, the man oft credited with designing the Sidekick’s awesome user interface, has moved on (though he moved on to the Android team, so his work is still here in some sense) — and so far, it looks like this thing’s running a standard Android skin rather than a Sidekick-themed UI overhaul.

In other words, it’s seemingly only a Sidekick in name and in form factor — but as long as they pull off that form factor (and, more importantly, that sweet, sweet keyboard) well enough, that should be enough.

[Huge high five to our buds at TmoNews for nabbin' the spy shots]

Motorola Confirms Atrix 4G and Xoom Launch

Motorola MobilityDuring its 4th quarter earnings call last night, Motorola Mobility CEO Sanjay Jha confirmed that the show stealing Motorola Atrix 4G and Motorola Xoom are set for launch in late February, though he did caution that the Atrix 4G could slip to early March while the Bionic for Verizon and the LTE update for the Xoom would not be available until the second quarter.

Atrix 4G

The Atrix 4G features a Tegra dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM and support for up to 48GB of memory, a 4-inch quarter HD display (or 960 x 540), a front-facing VGA camera and 5.0 megapixel main unit with an LED flash, a 1930 mAh battery that promises nine hours of talk time, fingerprint login security and Android 2.2.

The smartphone will also be offered with a companion laptop-alike dock with an additional large capacity battery, three USB ports, 12-inch display with keyboard and touchpad for $150.

The Motorola Xoom will be the first Android Honeycomb-based tablet to be released around the same time as the Atrix, with the 1GHz dual-core Tegra 2 processor 10.1-inch capacitive display at 1280800, while 4G connectivity will be made available as an update in Q2. Other specs include a 5.0 megapixel camera, 720p video recording and 1080p video playback, 802.11n Wi-Fi radio, Bluetooth, and 32GB of onboard storage.

Motorola Bionic

The Bionic features a dual-core processor with each core running at 1GHz, a 4.3-inch quarter HD screen, 512MB of RAM, a front-facing VGA camera, an 8-megapixel on the rear, HDMI out, and a Mirror Mode that will allow simultaneous streaming of video to the TV and on the phone.

Top Tax Saving Tips in 2011: WriteTax App

WriteTax Tax Saving Tips iOS app is a must and we all know that we all like to save tax wherever possible; well this application will help you along the way.

WriteTax: Tax Saving Tips is an iOS universal app that has been iOS 4.0 tested and is compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Requires iOS 3.2 or later. This app is only 0.2 MB in size so nothing really and really quick to install.

The seller of this app is Stimulus (UK) Limited, the app features 21 practical tax saving tips explaining general applications, tax areas can be very hard indeed and each person is different and we do suggest you take professional advice. This app is just a guide but a clever one.

You can buy WriteTax: Tax Saving Tips via iTunes for 8.99 please let us if you already have this app installed on your iOS device. Your reviews are very important to us.

Smartphone OS Swapping Cartridge Concept HTC Tube

Have you ever thought that you’d love to try out different mobile operating systems without the necessity of having to go purchase a new smartphone or hacking your handset? We’ve seen many smartphones hacked to run other operating systems in the past, such as the dual boot HTC HD2, but what about a device that could easily swap to another OS?

Well what we have for your consideration today is a concept phone courtesy of PC World and by way of Yanko Design; a concept phone that allows the user to swap their mobile operating system by using cartridges much like a video console.

The concept is called the HTC Tube and would enable the user to swap their OS via a cartridge system and also upgrade their storage capacity, so in other words if your Tube was running say Android and you wanted to try Windows Phone 7 you’d simply swap the Android cartridge for a WP7 one…simple.

The HTC Tube concept was designed by Antoine Brieux, and personally I think it’s a great idea and one that would take off well with the public if it ever became a reality.

What do our reader’s think about this cartridge OS swapping concept, would you love to be able to change your operating system without too much hassle, or do you think the OS makers would never let it happen?

LG Vortex Commercial Song In Your Eyes Video

These days when a smartphone is released it’s usually followed by a TV commercial and sometimes there is more interest in the song used in the commercial than the actual handset. Lately there seems to be quite a bit of interest in the LG Vortex commercial song.

Apparently many people want to know what the LG Vortex commercial song is called and have been searching Phones Review but have been searching for “In Your Eyes,” and a quick search in Google reveals that the song is in fact called “Eyes” and is by Rogue Wave who is an indie rock, Lo-Fi band that originates from Oakland California according to Wikipedia.

The LG Vortex commercial song, Eyes is also the soundtrack to Just Friends, a romantic comedy released back in November of 2005 and staring Ryan Reynolds and Amy Smart, so perhaps that’s where people have heard the song before.

So there you have where the Android LG Vortex commercial song comes from, who sings it, and its title, so we hope this information helps our readers out.

We also have that LG Vortex commercial which is called LG Vortex Carousel for your viewing pleasure below courtesy of YouTube user adsocitythailand, and if you wish to learn the lyrics to Eyes we also have a video with lyrics courtesy of YouTube user Lasange123, so check them out and enjoy.

HTC's newest Android flagship phone revealed

Why bother waiting for its official Mobile World Congress reveal in February when you can view the newest HTC flagship today? The touchscreen slate prototype (notice the serial number stamped along the bottom of the handset's face) you're looking at above matches the leaked Pocketnow render exactly including the arcing earpiece and isolated front-facing camera with chrome ring. It was just spotted by an eagle-eyed tipster while waiting for a Taipei metro system. Sorry Windows Phone 7 fans, this baby is Android through and through. And seeing it in the wild lends credence to all of the HTC devices pictured in that leak. A couple more snaps after the break.

[Thanks, LIMIX]

Worldwide Mobile App Store Revenue Forecast to Surpass $15 Billion in 2011

Worldwide mobile application store downloads are forecast to reach 17.7 billion downloads in 2011, a 117 percent increase from an estimated 8.2 billion downloads in 2010, according to Gartner, Inc. By the end of 2014, Gartner forecast over 185 billion applications will have been downloaded from mobile app stores, since the launch of the first one in July 2008.

Worldwide mobile application store revenue is projected to surpass $15.1 billion in 2011, both from end users buying applications and applications themselves generating advertising revenue for their developers. This is a 190 percent increase from 2010 revenue of $5.2 billion.

"Many are wondering if the app frenzy we have been witnessing is just a fashion, and, like many others, it shall pass. We do not think so," said Stephanie Baghdassarian, research director at Gartner. "We strongly believe there is a sizable opportunity for application stores in the future. However, applications will have to grow up and deliver a superior experience to the one that a Web-based app will be able to deliver. Native apps will survive the Web enhancements only when they will provide a more-personal and richer experience to the ‘vanilla’ experience that a Web-based app will deliver."

Gartner analysts said the hype around application stores in 2009 continued through 2010 with alternative offerings to the Apple App Store gaining some traction. Android Market, Nokia's Ovi Store, Research In Motion's (RIM's) App World, Microsoft Marketplace and Samsung Apps are the key competitors that saw the number of application downloads grow in 2010.

Free downloads are forecast to account for 81 percent of total mobile application store downloads in 2011. This percentage has been decreasing since the first launches in 2008, and Gartner estimates free downloads will continue to decrease in 2011, but it will increase again from 2012 through 2014. Users will begin paying for more applications as they perceive values in the concept of mobile applications, and they become more trustful of billing mechanisms.

In 2010, application stores' revenue is estimated to have reached $5.2 billion, both from end users buying applications and applications generating advertising revenue for their developers. The growth between 2010 and 2014 is forecast be over 1,000 percent.

Application stores' revenue is split between the store owners (such as Apple, in the case of the App Store, or RIM, in the case of App World) and the application's developer. The average revenue share is based on a 70/30 split, with 70 percent going to the developer. By the end of 2014, advertising will be generating a little under a third of the revenue generated by application stores, up from 16 percent in 2010.

"While the average number of downloads per device onto a smartphone will remain stable as the market grows, it must be assumed that media tablets will drive more downloads from consumers, boosting the overall average downloads per device," said Carolina Milanesi, research vice president at Gartner. "We estimate that Apple's App Store drove close to nine application downloads out of 10 in 2010 and will remain the single best-selling store across our forecast period (through 2014), although to a lesser extent, as other stores manage to gain momentum."

"Application stores have become a highly visible and potentially lucrative part of the smartphone 'ecosystem, largely due to Apple's App Store. As well as promising revenue, application stores allow store owners to leverage innovation from a community outside their own R&D department," said Ms. Baghdassarian. "However, setting up a successful application store is far from simple. Application store owners need to rise to the challenges of attracting developers, organizing content and engaging users throughout the life of the store in order to remain profitable."

Additional information is available in the Gartner report "Forecast: Mobile Application Stores, Worldwide, 2008-2014." The report is available on Gartner's website at http://www.gartner.com/resId=1498914.

Motorola BRUTE i686 coming to Mike (Telus)

Into rugged phones? If so, here’s a new one you can keep an eye out for, the Motorola BRUTE i686.

Motorola Brute i686

This tough Motorola flip phone packs a 2.2-inch 176×220 resolution internal display, 2-megapixel camera with flash, Bluetooth2.1, GPS, and a durable 1700mAh battery that can reportedly provide up to 350 minutes of continuous use/up to 150 hours of standby time. Just like most phones in its category, this baby is US defense standard Mil0Spec 810G certified, and is water submersible up to 1 meter for up to 30 minutes. We still don’t know though how much it’ll cost or when it’ll exactly debut, but it is confirmed coming to the Mike (Telus) network.

For more info on this, you can check out the BRUTE at the Motorola Canada website.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Ubiquisys unveils Attocell: personal femtocell designed to work internationally, make dreams come true

It's definitely one of the first things we thought of trying with AT&T's 3G MicroCell back in 2009, but our dreams were quickly dashed after finding that said device was hard-wired to only operate when receiving a GPS lock within the United States of America. Thankfully, it looks as if at least a few engineers at Ubiquisys are riding our same train of thought, and come Mobile World Congress, it'll be debuting the device of our dreams. The Attocell is described as a personal femtocell for use with 3G smartphones, and best of all, it's designed for use internationally. In essence, this would allow a smartphone from one country to use their international web connection to tunnel a cell call through -- presumably free of charge -- and definitely bypassing those nasty roaming fees that are incurred when ringing through an overseas cellular network. The company admits that it has been tested with the iPhone, BlackBerry handsets, a few Nokia phones and a gaggle of Android handsets, and we're guessing that Windows Phone 7 and webOS users won't have any issues, either.

The idea is fairly simple: connect the Attocell to your laptop via USB, which provides power and an internet connection. From there, it'll analyze the IP address and radio environment to determine which country it is in, and sets its 3G radio power accordingly to below the licensed level. In some countries its range will be just five millimeters, in other countries, it could cover a whole room. For those in the former, you'll need to place your phone atop the dongle and use a Bluetooth headset to make a call, but hey, it's still better than paying AT&T two arms and the vast majority of a leg just to phone home from wherever you may be. Crazier still, Ubiquisys thinks that the device's low power output -- coupled with its ability to "continuously monitor its radio environment to ensure that there is zero impact on existing mobile networks" -- will make the Attocell exempt from regulatory controls and the requirement for type approval. Here's hoping it flies through just as the company hopes, and we'll be hitting the floor in Barcelona to pry out a price point, release date any carrier deals they've managed to land.

Samsung adds four handsets to Galaxy range

Samsung announces the launch of four new Android running Galaxy handsets in the UK in March and April

Samsung has added four smartphones to its Galaxy range which will become available in the UK in March and April.

The expansion comes on the back of the successful launch of the Samsung Galaxy S of which 10 million devices were sold in seven months.

All of the devices, the Samsung Galaxy Ace, the Samsung Galaxy fit, the Samsung Galaxy Gio and the Samsung Galaxy mini will run Google’s Android 2.2 platform.

The Ace, Mini and Fit will all be released in March while the Gio will go on sale in April.

Samsung UK and Ireland managing director Simon Stanford said: “Following the phenomenal success of the Galaxy S and the growing popularity of Android, we wanted to make the smartphone experience accessible to a wider audience through an extended portfolio.

“With the Galaxy Family now offering a complete range of smartphones, combining excellent hardware technology and the latest operating system, as well as engaging interactive content, we firmly believe there is something for everyone, irrespective of whether it is their first smartphone or their fifth.”

Samsung will also make a new free entertainment bundle available to customers purchasing a Samsung galaxy S between February 1 and March 31.

The package will include a choice of three movies or six games downloads.

Verizon Retail Pricing for iPhone Adds $50 Premium

Verizon iPhone FAQ PricingBuried in the FAQ pages for the Verizon iPhone on its dedicated portal, Verizon has revealed its retail pricing for the 16GB and 32GB iPhone and the carrier is adding an additional $50 premium on both models compared to retail pricing for the AT&T version.

Retail pricing for the 16GB version on Verizon is set according to the page at $649.99 compared to the $599.99 charged by AT&T, while the 32GB version is set at $749.99 compared to $699.99 for the same on AT&T.

This suggests that while Verizon is offering the same contract pricing as AT&T at $199.99 and $299.99 respectively, retail pricing was increased by $50 to reflect the subtle but significant changes made to the CDMA version.

Apps Store Revenue To Rise 1000 Percent in 3 Years

These days it’s not all about just the smartphone you own by the apps and quantity of apps available to your chosen platform as mobile applications is obviously big business, and a business that is expanding at a fast rate.

According to an article over on V3 by David Neal, recent figures from Gartner, revenue from mobile apps on stores will grow by 1000% over the next 3 years and reach a staggering $58 billion, which is 36 billion.

According to the figures, Gartner says that 17.7 billion apps will be downloaded during 2011 and will grow to 185 billion come 2014. Apparently free apps count for 81% of all app store traffic, which they say that percentage has been on the decrease since back in 2008, but may rise again during 2012 and 2014.

Research director at Gartner, Stephanie Baghdassarian says…“We strongly believe there is a sizeable opportunity for application stores in the future. However, applications will have to grow up and deliver a superior experience to the one that a web-based app will be able to deliver. Native apps will survive the web enhancements only when they provide a more personal and richer experience to the ‘vanilla’ experience that a web-based app will deliver.”

Apple began the wave of apps with their App Store and several other manufacturers jumped on the bandwagon such as Android with the Android Market, Samsung with Samsung Apps, BlackBerry with BlackBerry App World and Nokia with the Ovi Store.

Gartner also believes that with the arrival of the tablet device, such as the Apple iPad, and increased interest from customers will add to app download demands.

Smartphones Top Handset Sales In Japan, Galaxy S Is No. 1

Things are slowly changing in Japan, land of the super-advanced feature phones (which have always been smartphones in disguise as far as features are concerned). Market research firm Gfk Japan [JP] is reporting that no less than seven of the top 10 handsets sold in the country between January 10 and 16 were smartphones.

Smartphones occupied the top six spots in that week, with the Galaxy S still enjoying brisk sales in Japan.

Here’s the full top 10 (feature phones in italic):

Samsung Galaxy S

iPhone 4 / 16GB

iPhone 4 / 32GB

Sharp IS03

Sharp LYNX 3D SH-03C

Toshiba REGZA Phone T-01C

Panasonic P-07B

Sharp GALAPAGOS 003SH

Kyocera Kantan Keitai K005

Sharp PANTONE 3 001SH [JP]

With prices falling and acceptance growing rapidly, expect smartphone adoption to further accelerate in Japan in the near future.

Via IT Media [JP]

Apple Store Back: No White iPhone 4 or iOS 4.3

Earlier we reported that the Apple Store was down and we was hoping for a new White iPhone 4 and then we thought it could be a site update for the new iOS 4.3.

Well the Apple site is back up and running and with nothing new to report seems a major disappointment, no white iPhone 4 and no new iOS 4.3. So now everyone will be thinking when will the iPhone 4 in white and the iOS 4.3 will release, the operating system will indeed release soon enough but as for the iPhone 4 in white we cannot see this happening.

Well it proves that the source via Twitter is wrong and was not a good source after all, the source had a list showing parts called MC604X/A (16GB) and MC606X/A (32GB) for the White model.

It seems that all eyes are on the Verizon iPhone for now until something new happens on the Apple front, we would love to know if you are waiting more for the Verizon iPhone, White iPhone 4 or you waiting for the iOS 4.3.

Please use the comments area below and let us know what you are waiting on the most, your comments are important as it lets us know what readers want.

White iPhone 4 rumored as Apple Store goes down globally

It was bound to happen sometime, and today is as good as any other post-holiday day to launch the mythical white iPhone 4. While normally we'd consider a Wednesday night shuttering of the global Apple store to be maintenance-related, a tweet identifying a pair of supposed white iPhone part numbers -- MC604X/A (16GB) and MC606X/A (32GB) -- has surfaced, attributed to an established last-minute Apple insider known only as "Mr. X" in various tech forums. Mind you, "spring " was the last official timeframe for a white iPhone release. But please, we beg you... don't say that it's early if it does appear when the Apple Store returns to business later today -- we don't want anyone to get hurt in the comments.

Update: Apple.com has undergone a subtle redesign, with the navigation bar up top taking on a shinier new look, though the Store remains down. A little bit of web-based multitasking, eh Apple?

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Verizon's 4G LTE dongles get Mac support in February

Verizon's LG VL600 LTE modem received a software update today, but there's no need to wake your MacBook from its peaceful slumber -- there still aren't any drivers for Apple computers, over a month after we were promised a relatively imminent update. That said, Verizon told PhoneScoop today that the carrier's LTE dongles will indeed support Apple at some point next month, which is itself only days away. Pantech UML290 owners can bide their time with a workaround, but we LG users will take what we can get, eh?

Verizon BlackBerry Bold 9650 and Curve 3G To Get BlackBerry OS 6 Tonight

Hey, you! Owner of a BlackBerry Bold 9650 or Curve 3G on Verizon! Are you ready to join an exclusive group of energetic and intelligent individuals looking to explore the furthest reaches of the Galaxy?

That’s cool, but you’re going to have to settle for an operating system update. Verizon has just announced their plans to give the two aforementioned handsets the BlackBerry OS 6.0 upgrade treatment later tonight. You’ll have a brand new UI to explore, a shiny new web browser to surf with, and things like a much improved camera app and aggregated social feeds to keep you entertained.

Expect the over-the-air updates to start trickling out at 8 PM Eastern. Want to make sure you get yours the second it goes live? Try the BlackBerry Desktop Manager application; that tends to do the trick.

[Via Phonescoop]

Samsung Galaxy Ace Shows Up On Company Website

While there's no official announcement, the Samsung Galaxy Ace S5830 showed up today at the Indonesian section of the manufacturer's website.  The page comes compete with product shots, so this is probably as official as it gets, with a formal unveiling likely to go down at MWC.

Aimed at the mid-range market, the handset comes with an 800MHz CPU under the hood, which should make for a fairly usable ensemble.  It runs Android 2.2, likely with TouchWiz layered on top, as has been Samsung's regular resort.

Details of the Samsung Galaxy Ace include a 3.5-inch capacitive touchscreen (320 x 480 resolution), a 5.0 megapixel camera module with LED flash (no 720p recording, though), aGPS, WiFi, 3G with HSPA, Bluetooth 2.1, 158MB of onboard storage and microSD card expansion (up to 32GB).  Battery is 1,350mAh, rated at up to 6.5 hours of talk time and 17.5 days of standby.

Design appears to be lifted directly from the iPhone 4, with 112.4 x 59.9 x 11.5 mm dimensions and 113 grams of weight.  Based on the product pictures, the back cover will come in two colors: black and white.

No word on either pricing or release plans for the Samsung Galaxy Ace.  Given that it's already gone up on the Samsung website, though, we doubt it has a long wait ahead of it.

[Samsung via GSMArena]

Follow-Up: Samsung Responds to Samsung Fascinate Dialer Issue After DL09 Update

Samsung FascinateAfter this weekend’s initial report where Samsung Fascinate owners discovered the Emergency Call button was not working in the pattern lock screen after the DL09 update, Samsung has issued a statement on the matter.

“It has come to the attention of Samsung Mobile during the recent DL09 OTA (Over-the-Air) update for the Samsung Fascinate that some users utilizing the Pattern Lock are finding that the Emergency Call shortcut is not automatically launching the dialer. However, unlocking the device will allow the user to make calls as they normally would, including emergency calls. We apologize for the inconvenience and are continuing to evaluate the issue, including if the issue is linked to the update. If you have experienced any issues or have any questions, please contact Samsung Customer Care – www.samsung.com/contactus.”

Yours For $1,270: FRANCK MULLER Case For iPhone 4

Truth be told, I never heard of FRANCK MULLER before, but the (apparently quite famous) watch brand from Switzerland has designed a special case for the iPhone 4 that can now be pre-ordered in Japan. And as FRANCK MULLER is a luxury brand, each case will set you back a cool $1,270 [JP].

The cases will be sold as a limited edition, with Japanese iPhone provider SoftBank offering a total of 6 different models that will be produced 500 times each (click here for a complete overview).

SoftBank will start shipping the cases in April. Contact specialized stores like Rinkya or Geek Stuff 4 U if you’re ready to spend that kind of money on such an accessory.

US District Court Holds Nokia-Siemens-Motorola Purchase at Huawei’s Request

Motorola logo Huawei logo

Following up on yesterday’s news of Huawei filing suit against Motorola, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois issued an order to halt the Nokia Siemens Networks purchase of Motorola’s wireless radio business late last night.

The judge presiding over the case sided with Huawei, which wants to block the purchase over concern that Motorola would sell Huawei’s intellectual property to Nokia Siemens Networks and agreed that the sale would impact the manufacturer negatively, as Huawei and Nokia Siiemens Networks are competitors in the network hardware business.

The judge then stated, “Defendant Motorola [is] hereby ordered not to disclose any of Plaintiff’s confidential information to Defendant Nokia Siemens Networks.”

The judge also ordered both companies to notify Huawei if China’s Ministry of Commerce takes any action regarding the acquisition, since it is the final regulatory body that needs to approve the Motorola-Nokia Siemens Networks transaction based on Motorola’s previous 10 year partnership with Huawei.

Rural Telecom Group Files FCC Appeal to Block AT&T Spectrum Purchase

AT&T logoThe Rural Telecommunications Group has filed an appeal with the FCC to intervene in the the purchase of 700MHz spectrum assests from regional telecom services provider Windstream by AT&T and is asking the regulator to block the transaction.

Six blocks of 700MHz C block spectrum are being purchased by AT&T, with the group fearing that the completion of the transaction would lead to control of a major part of 700MHz spectrum by AT&T and Verizon in three of the six Pennsylvania markets in the region and crowding out smaller carriers that typically serve rural areas, leading to less partnership opportunities for roaming agreements.

The group goes on to state that the deal would “further consolidate the already scarce amount of spectrum below 2.3GHz into the hands of the nation’s second largest mobile operator. This transaction is further proof of a mobile wireless marketplace slowly devolving into a duopoly at the expense of rural mobile consumers.”

The group is seeking hard caps on spectrum holdings, the blocking of the purchase and a motion to limit license and asset holders from holding more than 110MHz of spectrum licenses below the 2.3GHz band.

AT&T is already awaiting approval from the FCC on its recent purchase of Qualcomm’s former blocks of 700MHz spectrum formerly used for its failed MediaFLO mobile television venture, with the telecom group seeking and failing to block that transaction as well.

The group goes on to state that if the FCC does approve the transaction, the regulator should impose conditions on the purchase such as prohibiting exclusivity agreements between carriers and device manufacturers, require all devices in the lower 700 MHz band be operable on all blocks within the band, and to extend automatic roaming obligations to data networks.

AT&T is currently working towards launching the first phase of its LTE network later this Spring, with the goal to cover all of the country by 2013.

iPhone 5 and iPad 2 will come with NFC built in, suggests well-connected analyst

You'll no doubt be aware of our (well justified) distrust for anything that passes a tech analyst's lips, but this time's a little different. Richard Doherty of Envisioneering Group cites "engineers who are working on hardware" for Apple's latest project in asserting what that project actually is: NFC capabilities are apparently being built into the next generation of iPhone and iPad devices. Contactless payments via NFC have been steadily building up in hype and adoption recently -- at least in the western hemisphere, the stuff is commonplace in Japan -- and Doherty predicts Apple will make its move into the field with some new hardware and an accompanying "revamp" of iTunes. The idea would be to allow the use of iTunes gift card balances and the credit card info Apple already has from you to make swiping payments at compatible retail outlets. Apple is said to be planning enticements, like loyalty credits and points, to get you using its service in the place of the competition, and there are already a couple of software patent applications from the company detailing other potential uses for the technology. All of which could mean absolutely nothing, of course, but this seems like an awful lot of smoke for there not to be a fire under it.

Bing for Mobile App Updated for BlackBerry OS6 and OS5

Bing today is releasing updates to the Bing for Mobile app to be compatible with devices running BlackBerry OS6.  Bing has also made performance improvements to BlackBerry OS5 devices and added several new features including image search, Bing homepage hotspots, flight Instant Answers, Safe Search and “What’s Nearby.”  Building on our existing feature set, these updates are based on feedback from the RIM community.

Homepage Hotspots:

If you have a little time to spend and want to explore the day’s image, point around it until you find a hotspot. Hidden in the image, hotspots are intended intrigue and inform you. If you look, you’ll find four of them every day. Each gives you a chance to find out more about the subject of the image.

Flight Status Instant Answer:

Never miss a flight again.  Simply enter your flight number and Bing for mobile will provide you with the status at a glance.

 bing-on-blackberry.PNG

Bing Image Search

Find the perfect image while you’re on the go.  Bing Image Search provides you with gorgeously rendered images formatted for easy viewing on your phone.

“What’s Nearby”

Bing for Mobile has a smart experience for finding local listings like restaurants and attractions using your location to serve up “what’s nearby.”

If you have one of the following devices, you can download the app from the BlackBerry AppWorld or simply visit m.bing.com from your browser. 

BlackBerry Bold 9000

BlackBerry Torch 9800

BlackBerry Curve 2 8520/8530

BlackBerry Storm 9530

BlackBerry Storm 9550 (Storm2)

BlackBerry Tour 9630

BlackBerry Bold 9650 (Essex)

Monday, January 24, 2011

Verizon axing low-end data plans, making $30 unlimited data plan 3G only


With user’s appetites for data growing as smartphones become more prevalent, it kinds makes sense that 150MB plans would eventually go the way of the Broad-faced Potoroo.

The peeps over at Verizon clearly agree with me, as Engadget have landed their hands on a shot of their upcoming range of data plans, and, as you can see, it’s unlimited or nothing for all future smartphones (including this one).

But the lack of a tiny allowance isn’t the only thing of note in this crimson image. Note the wording for the unlimited plan: “Feature Phones and 3G Smartphones”. The upshot of this? All you lucky folks riding on 4G/LTE waves won’t get access to this plan.

Yup, premium speeds come at premium prices, my friends.

[via Android Police]

Boost Mobile Increasing International Connect Rate On April 1st

Boost MobileBoost Mobile will be increasing the current monthly rate for its International Connect add-on from its current $5 to $10 beginning on April 1st. The discounted rate is also increased to the $10 rate if the account is canceled after March 31st or the add-on removed and re-applied to the account. The fine print for the offering states the following:

$5/month offer ends 3/31/2011. If you remove the add-on service from your account or if your account is cancelled after 3/31/2011, the add-on will be available for $10/month.

The virtual operator began to offer the discounted rate for the add-on last year, which discounts calls and includes international messaging/push to talk to select countries around the world.

Customers with the add-on can call cities in Mexico including Tijuana, Puebla and Ciudad Juarez, landlines in the Dominican Republic, unlimited calling to China, Malaysia, Hong Kong, South Korea and Singapore, unlimited calling to Canada as well as unlimited international text messaging from the United States. Customers using iDEN phones and devices are able to contact iDEN users in the United States, Canada and Baja California (Mexico) along with Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Peru and Chile.

With The White iPhone 4 Still A No-Show, A White Nexus S Appears

If you’re still waiting for the thus-far-mythical white iPhone 4 to actually ship, you’re probably feelin’ pretty burned by now. Perhaps you’re even feelin’ burned enough to jump ship over to Android? Perhaps you’ll fill that gap in your heart and that space in your pocket with a Nexus S, instead? If this latest leak is any indication, you won’t even have to forego your love for white phones; the Nexus S, it seems, might just be gettin’ a white variant of its own.

The shot above comes from German tech blog BestBoyz.de. According to their tipster, this thing is a sure thing to ship in Germany — as for the rest of the world, we’ll have to cross our fingers and wish real hard. Alas, it looks like only the back of the phone rock’s the white hue; the front and bezel are the same black as the standard model.

Fun fact: Ever wonder why there aren’t more phones with white fronts? We’ve asked a bunch of designers at a bunch of big ol’ handset companies the same thing, and they all said the same: it makes the handset look bigger, and the screen look smaller.

Dell Venue review

Yes, it's the Dell Venue, and no, you still can't buy one outside Hong Kong or South Korea just yet. All we can speculate is that this Android phone is facing the same manufacturing issues as its WP7 cousin, but hopefully we're wrong. Anyhow, what matters is that we've finally gotten our hands on a retail unit of the Snapdragon-packing Venue. So is it worth the wait for Androiders distanced from the Far East? And will this handset be the answer for our love-hate relationship with the Streak? Head on right past the break to find out.

Dell Venue review

Hardware

It's hard to deny that Dell's come a long way with the styling of its mobile devices, evolving from the cheap-looking Axim Windows Mobile PDAs (although the X50 series received much love from the community) to the now eye-catching Venue duo. Like the Streak, we've had people inquiring us about or at least eyeing at our Venue -- we're guessing it's mostly to do with the rounded chrome sides contrasting the black body, and the vibrant 4.1-inch AMOLED screen certainly helps as well despite its low visibility under strong daylight. Upon closer inspection, you'll also notice the subtly curved "Shear Design" Gorilla Glass -- which is also featured on the Venue Pro -- that covers practically the entire face of the phone, thus contributing towards the Venue's premium look no matter what angle you look at it from. Funnily enough, Dell didn't place much emphasis on the Shear Design's ergonomic benefits, but some of us feel that the curvature makes our thumb-swiping gesture slightly more comfortable. Maybe it's just us.

On a related note, the Venue's rounded sides and curved back also provide better grip, although there have been a few occasions when our naughty fingertips slipped around the back far enough to interfere with our touch input, especially when we're lying in bed. Looking back at our other phones for a sanity check, we realised that their sharper edges along the screen are actually pretty effective at stopping our fingertips from accidentally touching the screen; whereas the Venue lacks such "feature" to warn our fingers. Ah well, guess we have to sacrifice a little for the looks.

Going back to the glass: despite our careful handling and short ownership so far, our Venue's screen has somehow managed to accumulate a couple of light scratches. It sure was a surprise given the Gorilla Glass' impressive performance in our previous torture test -- perhaps our travel through the different climates of Hong Kong, Las Vegas and London made the material more vulnerable. We've written to Corning to see whether this is a possibility, so watch this space for an update.

Also noticeable at a close distance is the uneven finish on the chrome sides -- slowly tilt them lengthwise under a spot of light and you'll see small ripples running along them. That said, these are hardly noticeable from everyday usage, but we have a feeling that certain design houses like Apple and Nokia would frown upon this seemingly minor flaw. Regardless, we shouldn't complain too much -- HK$3,999 (US$514) isn't bad for a Froyo HSDPA smartphone that packs a 1GHz Snapdragon, 1GB ROM, 512MB RAM, a good quality 8 megapixel camera (we'll come to that later), and a 1400mAh battery that keeps us connected and entertained for a full day (with mainly 3G connection, some WiFi time, Twitter notifications, plenty of camera usage, some Internet browsing, and some music on the go). Speaking of which, we spotted an annoying bug when it comes to charging: we've never managed to charge the phone from zero percent using the wall outlet, even after leaving it plugged in overnight; yet plugging it into the computer gets it charging again, and about an hour later -- yes, just one hour -- we get full juice again regardless of the charging method. Coincidentally, we've also seen the same charging issue on the Venue Pro and the Streak as well, so here's hoping that Dell's engineers are reading this review.

Dell Venue vs Dell Venue Pro

Of course, we haven't forgotten about one of the most important aspects of a phone: audio quality. We have no complaints about the earpiece's performance, and noise suppression isn't bad even in a noisy environment -- it takes just one or two seconds to adjust to your voice. The loudspeaker, on the other hand, gently muddles phone calls from the other end of the line, and distortion is already apparent when playing music at around 70 percent volume (and this is only Diana Krall, not heavy metal). Even the Venue's headphone mode isn't perfect -- we get a fair amount of static noise when our earphones are plugged in; whereas our other phones produce a much cleaner audio through the same buds. Audiophiles need not apply here.

Software

If you've already taken a gander at our Streak 2.2 update review, then you've pretty much seen this all before. Straight out of the box you get the full-screen Stage UI widgets (for music, Twitter, Facebook, recent apps, contacts, and mail), quick scrolling between homescreens in the area below the widgets, a backup and restore app (for SMS, ringtones, bookmarks, apps, etc.), a sync utility to go with its Windows desktop suite (for multimedia and Outlook management; installer preloaded on the 16GB microSD card), Quickoffice suite, TuneIn Radio app (no FM radio, though), and Swype keyboard. The usual every-day apps like Music, Gallery, and Camera are of the stock flavor, and obviously you get Flash and live wallpaper support to boot. All is good here, except for the backup and restore utility: it doesn't really work. Well, it managed to restore once, but then it failed to revive the apps from the same backup after our second and third factory resets, despite the confirmation messages that said otherwise. Until Dell and Nero fix this bug, our advice is to just make a new backup after each restoration.

Even though superficially the Venue's OS is identical to the one on the Streak, we noticed that the former has no landscape mode for the homescreens. Ironically, this is quite the opposite of the portrait-less problem we had on the Streak before 2.2. But on the bright side, the overall UI has been pretty smooth for us, and perhaps that's why Dell's decided to disable homescreen rotation -- we did notice that there was a two to three-second delay between rotation on the Streak. As for benchmark performance, we got about 33 FLOPS on Linpack, 30fps on Neocore, and a humble score between 801 and 827 on Quadrant which is just behind the Galaxy S. Nothing outstanding, but nothing bad, either.

Dell Venue screenshots

Camera

Ah, now this is where it gets interesting. As mentioned earlier, the Venue comes with an 8 megapixel AF camera that doubles as a 720p camcorder, but there isn't a front-facing camera. As with the resolution, picture quality has also been given a big boost compared to the Streak -- the colors are almost spot-on even when cloudy or at night, although sometimes it requires a few shots to get the focus just right in the dark. As far as settings go, you'd struggle to find anything missing -- have a look at our stash of screenshots of the camera app in our software gallery and you'll see a vast number of options to tinker with. Just to name a few: face tracking, macro, exposure, scene modes, color effects, auto exposure modes, and many more. In fact, there are probably too many of them on that messy menu -- we almost missed the nifty panorama mode (it stitches four shots together, and you get visual aid for aligning when shooting) near the bottom of the long list, not to mention what a pain it is having to scroll all the way down to enable or disable it at launch.

Another niggle we have is the lens cover on the battery door. It doesn't cause any problem in well-lit places, but at night, we noticed that the cover is prone to adding haze and reflections to our images, so be warned. A far more serious but less intermittent problem lies in the camcorder mode -- you'll notice that the night time clip in our sample video below suffers from two glitches early on, followed by audio and video going slightly out of sync. But since then we haven't been able to replicate this bug. Otherwise, video quality isn't bad, although it could do with a little bump in frame rate.

Dell Venue sample shots

Wrap-up

All in all, Dell's delivered a solid phone that comes in nice package, as well as a form factor that's no doubt more tolerable for the average joe. For what it's worth, the Venue is certainly a very attractive deal (in Hong Kong, at least), especially with its relatively new OS, slick UI, and a surprisingly good camera. If Dell gets around to tweaking the charging issue, audio quality, camera app, and camcorder performance, then the Venue would pretty much be the must-have phone. Well, except we all know that it probably won't get its 2.3 update until a gazillion months later. Anyway, it'd be good enough if Dell can amend some of these bugs before the Venue lands in other countries, if ever.