Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Clueless: RIM Releases The $120 BlackBerry PlayBook Mini Keyboard



Research In Motion announced the PlayBook 17 months ago. Then, eleven months ago, the company actually launched the product. It took them another 10 months to finally bring a native email and messaging app to the product. Now, almost a full year after the product hit stores, RIM is releasing a keyboard folio case for the struggling tablet. Oh, and it costs $120.

I’m fully convinced Research in Motion is stuck in some sort of time warp where hours equal days and days equal months. It’s the only logical explanation regarding the company’s product release cycle. That or RIM is run by ignorant executives that spend more time on the golf course than in the office. Maybe both.

The Playbook is a quality product ruined by an incompetent company. It feels great in the hand and the OS is actually pretty slick. But RIM clearly didn’t throw the proper resources behind the product’s development. It should have launched with apps that users expect from a BlackBerry device: email, messaging and calendar. Instead, RIM took its merry time to develop these key applications and just recently pushed them to the device. The tablet’s launch could have also benefited from a large offering of accessories including the keyboard folio that was just announced. It’s not like the idea of a keyboard case is novel. These sort of cases were around back when RIM announced the Playbook in 2010.

I’m sure the new keyboard case works well. RIM makes quality, but often overpriced, hardware. The company just doesn’t know how to launch them in a timely manner.

iPhone

For New iPad, But The Spec Is Still Dead

Good news, everyone! It’s confirmed that the new iPad is indeed slightly “faster” than the iPad 2. Early benchmarks of the new iPad show that the actual clock speed of the A5X SoC is still set at 1GHz, the same speed as the iPad2. But the new model also rocks 1GB of RAM, which should make for a smoother and faster experience. Plus, as Apple stated in the announcement keynote, the A5X rocks a quad-core graphics chip for better graphic performance.

Apple rarely talks nerd-level specs. The company would much rather talk about marketable improvements based on user experience — you know, general arbitrary nonsense. That’s why Tim Cook & Co. just glazed over the technical improvements during the new iPad’s launch and instead focused on new features. It was mentioned that the new tablet has an updated A5X SoC but the actual clock speed and amount of RAM was never mentioned. In many ways Apple’s method is right. The spec is dead — but just for Apple. Listing specs is only important when comparing competing products. There is no direct competitor to the iPad.

Android tablets are locked in a sort of spec race. Slightly different hardware is the only differentiating factor between Android tablets since they all run the same OS and have the same form factor. But there is only one iOS tablet out there: the iPad. Comparing the specs between an iOS and Android device is a fool’s affair. It only matters in fanboy flame wars.

Specs like clock speed and RAM for iOS hardware should only really matter to developers planning product road maps — not that they should be coding just for the new hardware. Smart developers will use this information to plan future products but continue to optimize their apps to work on a broad number of devices instead of limiting themselves to the newest model.

You’ll never see a post-PC era Apple video ad running through a list of specs or acronyms. The company doesn’t need to get into a pissing match. Apple would rather sell you on fun new features than boring new hardware.

View the original article here

Now You Can Make Your AT&T Galaxy Note Play Nice With T-Mobile HSPA+



Know what I love about Android hackers? They’ve got moxie. Take a look at these folks on the XDA-developer forums: a user named itsjusttime put up a bounty post offering cold hard cash to whoever could get AT&T’s Galaxy Note I717 up and running on T-Mobile’s HSPA+ network.

Now, just over two weeks later, a solution has been found, and it’s surprisingly easy to pull off if you’re willing to get your hands dirty.

It probably goes without saying, but you’re definitely voiding your warranty if you decide to take your Note for a spin on T-Mobile’s spectrum. That’s part of the thrill right? The fix also requires your Galaxy Note to be unlocked and rooted, though apparently it’ll work no matter what ROM you’re running on your device.

A developer who goes by the name Tomin.FHL figured out how to make this happen, and while he offers up some considerable detail in his post, the simple version of the process boils down to two steps. First, flash one of the modem files to your device (your choice, really) using ClockWorkMod recovery, and then reboot the device. Really. That’s it. Once the Note awakens from its slumber, it should be ready to play with T-Mobile’s HSPA+ without any additional coaxing.

As easy as the process can be, this isn’t exactly a project to be undertaken by the squeamish. Reports from people who have already taken the plunge indicate that speeds aren’t yet as fast as a stock T-Mobile HSPA+ device, but it definitely gets the job done and leaves room for other developers to pitch in.

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Sony Unveils The Xperia Sola: Look, Mom! No Hands!



Sony’s been bringing it lately, with a trifecta of monosyllabic Xperia goodness at CES and MWC. I personally believe that a key ingredient in the secret sauce may be Sony’s ability to keep the new phones classy — the Xperia S, U, and P all got high marks from us in terms of build, feel in the hand, and overall aesthetic quality. But the newest member of the Xperia clan may have trouble living up to the standard; that is, if the reality of this “floating touch” thing is anything close to what I’m imagining.

The freshly announced Sony Xperia Sola is definitely trying to be a forward-thinking phone. Sony’s packed it full of fun technology like NFC-enabled Xperia SmartTags, a (relatively small, yet actually perfectly proportioned) 3.7-inch Reality Display with a Sony Mobile Bravia Engine, 3D surround sound audio tech, and access to the new Sony Entertainment Network. Oh, and we can’t forget that whole “floating touch” thing.

The idea is that you hover your finger above the screen, “so it acts like a moving cursor” without ever having to actually touch the screen. Then you can highlight and tap links to load the page. I’m not exactly sure about the potential of this, nor the need, but we’ll just wait and see.

The newest Xperia will come in white, red and black color flavors in Q2, and while it’ll ship with Android 2.3 Gingerbread, Sony says it should see ICS by summer. We have no word yet on pricing.

View the original article here

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Samsung Finally Pushes Ice Cream Sandwich To The Galaxy S IIs Of The World



Well, after a bit of a false start, Samsung finally seems to have done it. According to a new blog post on the official Samsung Tomorrow blog, the Korean consumer electronics giant has finally begun to push their Ice Cream Sandwich update out to the Galaxy S IIs of the world.

And with that, Galaxy S II owners began once again to feel the love. Or at least, most of them did. The update in question is meant for international spec Galaxy S II (the GT-I9100), so State-side owners of a AT&T/T-Mobile Galaxy S II or a Sprint Epic 4G Touch won’t be joining in the official fun just yet.

Aside from going live in the company’s native Korea later today, users in Poland, Hungary, and Sweden will be among the first to get the long-awaited update via the Kies software manager. Rest assured that other markets will soon follow, though Samsung doesn’t get any more specific than that.

In their official announcement, Samsung has also confirmed that the Ice Cream Sandwich update will “follow soon” for the Galaxy Note, Galaxy S II LTE, and the 8.9 and 10.1-inch Galaxy Tabs. On top of that, Samsung will soon push out new updates that bring features like Face Unlock and a revamped photo editor to devices like the Galaxy S (and its Super Clear LCD variant), Galaxy Tab 7, Galaxy S Plus, and the Galaxy W.

Though there’s no word yet on when any of these updates will hit, expect Samsung to mistakenly announce it on their Indonesian portal before pulling the post and telling people to watch their Twitter account for news instead.

View the original article here

Lytro Light Field Camera


To publish a “review” of the Lytro as it is today is, in a way, very premature. But it’s also only fair. The product is shipping and, to an extent, complete. But given the number of features and planned improvements in the pipes, a review today will be obsolete in a few months. Nevertheless, an initial judgment on the device must be made.

So here is what can be said of the Lytro in a form that can only really be called a public beta.

Pros

    Camera is well-built and extremely easy to operate
    Uniqueness of the imaging technique makes you think differently about photography
    Could be good for kids

Cons

    Image quality isn’t particularly good
    Composition options are, in some ways, extremely limited
    Many desirable ways to manage and adjust your photos are absent

A quick explanation is probably in order for people who have not handled the camera. The Lytro Light Field Camera lets you take pictures in which you can adjust the focus after the fact. It has two modes: everyday, in which you only control the zoom and shutter release, and creative, which lets you zoom more, focus closer, and control the depth of field more — but you have to manually tell it where to focus, which is kind of backwards for a device meant to remove the process of focusing from the equation.

The photos, or “living photos” as they call them, can then be transferred to your computer and uploaded to Lytro’s website, where you can then embed or share them elsewhere online.

We recently got to talk with Lytro founder Ren Ng and their director of photography, Eric Cheng, at an event in San Francisco. I cornered them for a few minutes to talk about the product and their plans for the future.


Hardware and design

The designers of the Lytro camera itself should be congratulated for creating a device that is unique, functional, and attractive all at once. That’s not easy to do. The square-prism shape is strange at first, being unlike almost any camera on the market, but once you think of it more as a kind of telescope than a camera as far as handling is concerned, it’s quite natural.

The shutter button is easy to find and pleasant to activate; the touch-sensitive zoom area is responsive; the textured rubber finish is grippy and attractive; overall the feeling of the device is one of solidity and simplicity. It’ll survive a fall or a splash of coffee and look good doing it.


My main criticism hardware-wise is the screen. It’s extremely small and the resolution (hence sharpness and ability to display your photos properly) is poor. It’s responsive to touch, but it can’t display much and getting the focus point right in creative mode can be a pain. It’s also difficult to tell how your pictures turned out in playback mode: the screen often just isn’t good enough to display the nuances of the focus shift. Many times I thought I’d captured a good one only to be disappointed, though sometimes I was pleasantly surprised with the opposite, as well.

One other minor potential concern is that the grid in the rubber might fill with grit and grime over time, but it’s hard to say for sure, only having had the camera for short while.


View the original article here

UK Researchers Plan Mobile Real-Time Sign Language Translation App

With real-time translation of text common on the web and instantaneous speech-to-text gaining popularity, it seems that transliteration is cool again. But less obvious, and more difficult, methods of input are yet to be implemented. Case in point: sign language. The complicated and often contextual gestures form a vast visual vocabulary that isn’t easily captured or interpreted.

A team of British researchers, however, is making the attempt, creating a tool that translates a set of standard signs into readable text, in real time. It’s called the Portable Sign language Translator, and it should be out next year.

The signer would gesture as normal towards a camera on a phone or PC, and it would instantly translate based on a database of signs. Right now they are planning to support British Sign Language, but the system is perfectly capable of handling ASL, Makaton, and international languages and alphabets.

It is possible, however, that the static set of known symbols may still be limiting to signers, so the app will also allow the user to create their own signs for more complicated or personal objects.

The obvious application is for day-to-day communication between someone who cannot speak and someone who cannot understand sign language. But a visual, gestural language could be useful in other situations as well, and not just to people with disabilities. Multimodal communication is becoming the standard for interacting with our technology, and while heretofore we have communicated largely with inorganic tools, so to speak, such as the mouse and keyboard. Directly interacting with a machine that understands our voice, gestures, and position is going to produce extremely rich interaction methods in the future.

In the mean time, the app is being developed by Technabling, a company spun off from the University of Aberdeen. They plan to release it as a product next year, though there is no word of platforms or price. It is being funded by the UK’s Department for Business, Innovation and Skills and the Small Business Research Initiative.

View the original article here

Nokia Exits Mobile Payments Business With Shuttering Of Nokia Money

 Nokia is announcing today it plans to shut down its mobile payments service known as Nokia Money in India, as a part of a shift in strategy that will allow the company to more narrowly focus on its handset business and related location-based services offerings. According to a company spokesperson, “the mobile financial services business is not core to Nokia, so we plan to exit the business.”

Nokia Money was available in India, and had previously been expected to roll out to other emerging markets.

The news, reported by Reuters this morning, notes that Nokia Money only became available across all of India by late last year, but had been on track for further expansion.

For those unfamiliar, Nokia Money was first announced back in August 2009 as a service that allowed users to send money to friends, merchants, and service companies simply by using their phone numbers. It was later showcased in early September at the Nokia World conference, and then began to roll out to regional markets in 2010.

The service was powered by Obopay, a company Nokia was the lead investor in, when it raised a $70 million round in spring 2009. Unlike the new efforts to turn smartphones into digital wallets here in the U.S., Nokia Money was after feature phone users in emerging markets, where many have pre-paid SIM cards but not bank accounts. The service allowed the “unbanked,” and especially those users in rural regions, an alternative means to pay for goods and services besides using cash.

More recently, the mobile payments market has been seeing increasing interest from credit card companies, mobile operators, and even technology companies like Google (with its Google Wallet) and PayPal, all of which believe that mobile payments could potentially be a big business in the future as consumers move away from cash and smartphones become more prevalent. In fact, there are now 130 deployments of mobile money services worldwide, according to the GSMA, and 93 more in the works.

The exit from the mobile payments business is a reflection of Nokia’s new efforts under CEO Stephen Elop to hold onto its position as a leading handset provider in a world that’s been rapidly shifting to smartphones, and in particular iPhone and Android devices. Nokia partnered with Microsoft, killing off its own Symbian smartphone OS, and is now the top Windows Phone vendor in the world. However, it’s so early in the race, it’s still unclear that Windows Phone will even be able to establish itself as a third ecosystem in terms of mobile operating systems. It’s an effort that requires Nokia’s full attention, and financial services were likely a large distraction from that battle.

Nokia Money isn’t the only service to have received the axe in recent days. The company also announced earlier this month it was closing up its Ovi Share service, a web service where Nokia hosted users’ content online. So far, Nokia Life, the company’s suite of information services for emerging markets covering agricultural, healthcare, educational and entertainment offerings, has been spared.

View the original article here










Nokia Lumia Windows 8 Tab Coming Later This Year?



Nokia and Microsoft, sitting in a tree. K.I.S.S.i.n.g. First came WinPhone, then comes ARM tabs, then comes a baby in a baby carriage!

If an unconfirmed Digitimes report is to be believed, Nokia is set to release a 10-inch Windows 8 tablet later this year. The report says the tab would hit the streets sometime in the fourth quarter, which would likely make it among the first batch of Windows 8 tablets. It’s reportedly built on a dual-core Qualcomm ARM chipset allowing Nokia to keep the price competitive with the iPad.

But the timing is perfect. A Nokia tablet, if it’s built to the same quality standards as the Lumia 800/900 smartphone, is exactly what Microsoft needs to kickstart Windows 8 and properly fight the iPad.

Right now Nokia is winning. The company leapfrogged HTC and Samsung in just one quarter to become the top Windows Phone vendor. Consumers are loving the Lumia product line; The Verge’s Chris Ziegler declared that he might replace his Galaxy Nexus with the 900. They’re great products and are quickly making fans. By the time this tablet rolls around, it’s completely plausible that Windows Phones, led by the quality Nokia Lumia line, will be the new iPhone alternative. People are going to want companion tablets.

There is still plenty of room for another tablet platform. iOS is the dominant platform, but outside of highly curated devices like the Fire and Nook Tablet, Android has struggled so far. A Windows device led with a smart and powerful marketing campaign could break the iPad’s tight grip.

Microsoft needs an instant fan favorite to get Windows 8 off the ground. Samsung, Asus and HP’s recent stumbles show they cannot be trusted with such a task. Windows 8 does not need a clusterstorm of Galaxy Tab-ish devices. The platform needs a flagship device to rally behind. Nokia is the only vendor I would trust with the task. I’m that taken by the Lumia 800/900.

It wasn’t that long ago that Nokia was all but dead. But then they signed a deal with Redmond that essentially saved the company by forcing it back to its mass-market roots. The company is still producing a gaggle of low-cost handsets, but its affordable Lumia Windows Phone product line is classic Nokia: solid plastic feel, a forever battery life, and reliable software. Hopefully a Nokia tablet would be more of the same.

Digitimes cites sources at upstream component suppliers for its info. There’s really no way to verify the report. However, Nokia has long talked of a Windows 8 tablet; one is on its way. It’s going to have a seemingly no-win situation no matter when it launches. If this latest report is correct, the Nokia tab would have to battle not only the new iPad but also likely a new Amazon Fire. If Nokia pushes the launch until 2013, it would have to fight for market share against the new new iPad. Still, it’s important to remember that it’s never too late to launch a great product. Hopefully a Nokia/Windows 8 tablet will be such a device.

View the original article here

Galaxy S Blaze 4G Lights Up T-Mobile Shelves On March 28



Word of the Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G first broke around the time Team TechCrunch was roaming the cavernous halls of the Las Vegas Convention Center at CES, but at the time T-Mobile wasn’t feeling very talkative about release dates.

The mangenta-hued carrier seems to have opened up a bit during the intervening months though, as they’ve taken to Twitter earlier today to announce that their latest Samsung handset will hit their sales channels on March 28. If you’re really lucky (or willing to hop in a car and take some chances), you could snag a Blaze 4G even earlier than that, as some stores will be selling the device a week early.

You’d be forgiven for not remembering the Galaxy S Blaze 4G — between all of the nifty new gadgets on display at CES and MWC, a mid-range T-Mobile handset like the Blaze can slip though the cracks pretty easily. Still, while a Galaxy S III this thing ain’t, one could certainly do worse than eye up a device with a 1.5GHz dual-core Snapdragon S3 processor, 3.97-inch Super AMOLED display, and support for T-Mobile’s 42Mbps HSPA+ network.

For better or worse you’ll still have to deal with Android 2.3.6 Gingerbread and Samsung’s hallmark TouchWiz UI but hey, it’s not like the market is swimming in Android 4.0 devices yet. At $150 (after a $50 mail-in rebate, ugh) the Blaze 4G runs squarely in the middle of the T-Mobile pack, and while it looks to be a solid choice for anyone sitting on an upgrade, pulling the trigger on a phone like this still takes some consideration.

A few more bucks nets you a proper Galaxy S II (in white even!), while a few dollars less yields up some solid-if-dated hardware like the HTC Sensation. It’s a perpetually tough call for prospective phone shoppers — should they take a plunge on a mid-range handset now, or wait for prices on high-end devices to drop?

View the original article here

Monday, March 12, 2012

Gap Campaign Rethinks Old-School Bus Station Ads

It’s not just startups that are trying to push what’s possible with mobile advertising — the Gap recently completed an ad campaign combining traditional transit ads with geo-fencing technology.

Here’s how the campaign worked: The Gap worked with out-of-home ad company Titan to place ads at bus stops and other transit locations in New York, San Francisco, and Chicago. Then Titan created geofences around the ads, which activated the mobile part of the campaign for people who were nearby. In other words, you might see a Gap ad at a bus station, then while you’re waiting for the bus to arrive, you open up Words With Friends, which serves another ad, this time with a coupon for $10 off a $50 purchase. (If the app is running in the background, the ad could still deliver if you open the app within two hours of leaving the area.)

Chris Gayton, Gap’s senior director of media and brand engagement, says the campaign was a good way to “close the loop” by giving someone incentive to come into the store right after Gap has delivered its big, colorful brand message. And the results are promising. Gap and Titan say the campaign, which ran from Feb 20 to March 6, delivered 2.5 million impressions, with an 0.93 percent clickthrough rate. (San Francisco did the best, with a 1.17 percent CTR.) That’s pretty good compared to a standard mobile clickthrough rate of 0.2 percent.

Gayton says he’s definitely interested in experimenting with similar campaigns in the future. And while the initial effort was focused on coupons (because that’s an easy way to track how many sales the ads are driving), the technology could also be used to deliver ads that go beyond a static image, say by including a video or a link to more information.

Dave Etherington, Titan’s senior vice president of marketing and mobile, adds that this is part of a larger shift in out-of-home advertising market (a category that includwes billboards and all the other outdoor advertising that you say).

“The lines are kind of blurring,” he says. “You’re only a click away now from rich brand experiences and purchases.”

View the original article here

How Tablets Will Transform Construction

The basic process of any construction project goes like this: A person with a lot of money (called The Owner) decides that, for whatever reason, they want a building and so they go hire an architect. This architect in turn hires a bunch of engineers and all of them start furiously designing the building until The Owner seems happy enough to move forward. Once that happens, the design is printed on piles and piles of paper and then handed to the construction team who starts the actual construction.

This is, of course, a gross oversimplification, but the interesting thing to note is that this entire exchange of information is digital — up until the point where the actual construction takes place. Because all the design information is digital, tons and tons of amazing software have been created to make that part of the process better and more efficient. In fact, architects and engineers have gotten so good at being efficient, that all together they now typically only make up 8% of the total cost of a building. Meanwhile, the poor guys in the field have, by many estimates, gotten worse and worse.



Enter the iPad and other tablets.

Tablet computers will be the things that change all of this. Although the things they do better than laptops — smaller, more durable, longer battery life, doesn’t need a table to be useable — seem more evolutionary rather than revolutionary, in the context of construction field workers, it’s the difference between using a tool that almost works and a tool that can actually get the job done. It’s basically the first computer that is truly usable in the field and as a result they are already starting to be rapidly adopted by construction companies. The third-generation iPad and the improving Android tablets are only going to accelerate things, and so over the next few years we’ll undoubtedly start to see software that will transform construction as much as AutoCAD transformed architecture and engineering.

Here’s just a short list of some things that will transformed in the next few years as the iPad delivers computing to the construction site:

    Adios, blueprints: The first thing that will disappear is paper. It’s expensive, always out-of-date, and with this new push for green buildings, The Owners are asking their contractors to ‘go paperless’.
    Much better communication: Here’s a process that happens every time some guy in the field needs clarification from the architect on how to build something: He leaves the job site, heads to the construction trailer, grabs his set of blueprints, heads back to the job site, looks at the problem and makes notes on his plans, heads back to the trailer, scans the plans, goes to his computer, opens his email, sends the scan to the architect, and then walks all the way back to the job site. This takes at least 20 minutes every time someone has a question! With the iPad, he’ll just open up his blueprints app, markup the problem, and send out an email right there.
    Hello analytics: One of the most frustrating things about running a construction company is that you are constantly writing these huge checks, but you have no idea what is actually going on in the field. No field computing, means no field data, which means you have no idea that your electrician, who you picked because he was 10% cheaper, is 30% slower than the other electrician you used last time. The Google Analytics/Palantir for construction is going to really change how things are done.

And that’s just the beginning. There are already multiple construction focused apps coming on to the market, such as AutoDesk’s AutoCAD WS, Bentley’s Navigator, and my company PlanGrid, but as time goes on we will undoubtedly see more and more useful tools come to market.

View the original article here














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