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Saturday, February 21, 2009

Oscar-savvy iPhone users let their lights shine

Slumdog Millionaire, please collect your Best Picture Oscar.

Oh, sure, the 81st Annual Academy Awards won’t be handed out until Sunday night. But if the users of the Sonic Lighter app for the iPhone and iPod touch are any indicator, then the makers of rags-to-riches story of a Mumbai teen might as well start memorizing their acceptance speech.

Sonic Lighter is a $1 novelty app that turns your iPhone or iPod touch into a mobile lighter. There’s a social network aspect to the app, too, as its developer, Smule, can track wherever someone “ignites” Sonic Lighter anywhere in the world.

To that end, Smule puts out Sonic Lighter updates that let users weigh in on issues of vital import—in this case the winner of the Best Picture award. As of this writing, Smule’s Sonic Lighter map shows Slumdog Millionaire leading the way with 37 percent of the vote. The lamentable Curious Case of Benjamin Button is in second right now with 27 percent, while Milk is in third with 16 percent.

Skeptical about the wisdom of iPhone-toting crowds? Smule notes that past Sonic Lighter surveys have correctly predicted the U.S. presidential election and the outcome of Super Bowl XLIII. (Though to be fair, barring a surprise surge by Ralph Nader either at the polls or on the gridiron, Sonic Lighter really had a 50-50 shot at calling either event correctly, didn’t it?)

Other Oscar-themed iPhone apps available for download in advance of Sunday’s festivities include:

Thursday, February 19, 2009

In pics: Nokia's new phones

In pics: Nokia's new phones
In pics: Nokia's new phones



As the annual GSMA Mobile World Congress began in Barcelona, the slowdown pangs were palpable. The event known for its eye-catching launches looks muted this time, with a thin array of product rollouts. Among these are some additions to Nokia’s line-up.

The world's no. 1 cellphone manufacturer took stage on day 1 of the show to announce two new business handsets, the super-thin E55 and the sliding E75. The company also launched two phones in its Navigator series, 6710 and 6720. And far from Mobile World Congress, the company made another big launch: Nokia N86, company's entry into the `fat' megapixel cellphone club.

Here's further looking into the Nokia's new line-up.


E55
E55

Nokia showed its thinnest smartphone ever, E55, at the mobile show event

What makes E55 Nokia's thinnest ever smartphones are its keys. Nokia claims it is the company's first compact QWERTY device, and has half as many keys as the company's previous thinnest smartphone, E71.

The phone is also Nokia's first smartphone with the longest battery life of up to a month on standby time.

E55 runs on Nokia's S60 software and has an AGPS (Assisted Global Positioning System) receiver, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, a 2.4-inch, 320x240 pixel screen and a 3.2 megapixel camera.

It also packs a 3.5mm headphone socket for listening to the digital music player or the built-in FM radio and support for Nokia's Ngage gaming platform.

According to Nokia's executive vice president Kai Oistamo, "The Eseries phones have traditionally been seen as enterprise devices, but the E now stands for efficiency." The phone will ship in the second quarter for around (US$340).

E75
E75

Nokia also unveiled the successor to the 9000 series Communicators, E75.

The phone sports a QWERTY keyboard that slides out from behind the 2.4-inch, 320x240 pixel display, and a regular dialling keypad just below the display.

The phone packs a 3.2 megapixel camera, AGPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, FM radio and music player.

Nokia's executive vice president said, "E75 simplifies connection to Lotus Notes, Microsoft Exchange, POP3 and IMAP e-mail services, or Web mail services such as Gmail or Yahoo Mail."

E75 will ship in March for €375 before subsidies and taxes. Nokia claimed that E75 will be the first device to provide access to corporate email through the Nokia Messaging service at no extra cost. Nokia plans to make it available across all Eseries models and 40 other devices, extending push e-mail to over 100 million Nokia users.
6710 Navigator
6710 Navigator

Nokia also pulled curtains off its new entrant in the Navigator range, 6710 Navigator, its follow-up to 6210 Navigator.

The phone's 2.6-inch 240 x 320 pixel display has been optimised for outdoors use with a light sensor that adjusts the brightness of the display according to the environment.

6710 Navigator packs AGPS receiver and Nokia Maps software featuring navigation tools for pedestrians. The device has a 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss lens, Bluetooth, WiFi and support for push email.

Nokia's mapping and navigation solution has been upgraded, and comes with a dedicated key on 6710 Navigator. Navigation has also been integrated with Ovi, allowing easy synchronisation between a PC and the phone. The phone also comes with full voice guidance.

The phone is a quad-band GSM with support for tri-band UMTS (depending on region). Both HSDPA and HSUPA high-speed data is supported. 6710 comes with an FM radio and 3.5mm audio socket. It will ship in the third quarter for around €300 before tax and subsidies.
Nokia 6720 Classic
Nokia 6720 Classic

Nokia also unveiled an entry in the classic range, Nokia 6720 Classic. The phone packs plenty of GPS features, including Nokia Maps 3.0 with integrated A-GPS, City compass, map rotation and pre-installed maps in microSD.

6720 Classic sports a 5 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus and full panorama support. The phone runs on Symbian S60 with GPS and offers 3.5G support.

The phone is capable to geo-tag locations and can be shared over high-speed HSDPA technology. It also support's the company's NGage gaming platform.

Nokia said that the handset will come with `active noise cancellation' for clearer voice calls. It will offer around 8.5 hours of talk time, over 20 days of standby time, around 9 hours of video playback and 27 hours for music. It will also deliver almost 14 hours of GPS pedestrian navigation and over 7 hours of in-car navigation.

Nokia 6720 classic is expected to ship in the second quarter with an estimated retail price of $313.
Nokia N86
Nokia N86

Away from all action at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia launched its 8 megapixel phone, N86, in Singapore.

The phone boasts of 8 megapixel Carl Zeiss lens camera with auto-focus running on Symbian OS. The phone has dual flash LED, 8GB of internal memory.

The slider phone has a 2.6-inch non-touchscreen OLED display and packs aGPS, microSD slot (up to 16GB) and 11.5 hours of standby battery time with 3G enabled.

Incidentally, Sony Ericsson too showed of its 8 and 12 megapixel camera phones in Barcelona on the same day.

Monday, February 16, 2009

What all Google killed?

Recession: What all Google killed


Google has often been extolled for its product innovations. However, it seems slowdown has cast its shadow on the company's `innovation spirit' too. The search giant, who is taking a harder line on managing expenses as the recession curbs spending on online ads, has been almost on a shutting spree. The past six months witnessed the company pull the plug on as many as nine of its new products.

Several of these causalities include products launched with lot of fanfare like Google Lively, which was widely believed to be the company's answer to Second Life.

Here's looking into the products/services Google has dumped in the last few months.

Broadcast radio ad business
Broadcast radio ad business

Google Inc has abandoned its efforts to sell advertising for broadcast radio stations, acknowledging that the three-year project has failed.

The leading Web search company said that it plans to sell its Radio Automation business, which created software to automate broadcast radio programming, and phase out its Audio Ads service.

The move will likely result in up to 40 people being laid off, Google said. Google has been re-appraising initiatives intended to expand its income beyond Internet advertising, which accounts for more than 90 per cent of total revenue.

Advertisers will continue to be able to use Audio Ads until May 31, the company said. Google -- which had 20,222 full-time employees as of December 31 -- would instead focus its efforts on placing ads on streaming audio over the Internet, according to company's vice president of product management, Susan Wojcicki.

Google plans to continue investing in its television ad business. It also is seeking ways to sell more advertising on online audio services, which younger audiences are using.
Google Lively
Google Lively

In July 2008 Google launched Google Lively, a 3D virtual reality service, with much fanfare. Four months, and Internet giant's take on Second Life ran out of fuel. Google announced that it is discontinuing Lively by the end of the year.

The shut down reflected Lively's inability to stand out from the rest of the virtual reality crowd. Lively was Web-based and allowed anyone to set up virtual spaces, such as rooms, that could be embedded onto blogs or Facebook pages.

Google management concluded that it needed to sharpen its focus on its primary business of Internet search and advertising as the company's revenue growth showed signs of a deteriorating economy.

"We've also always accepted that when you take these kinds of risks not every bet is going to pay off. It has been a tough decision, but we want to ensure that we prioritise our resources and focus more on our core search, ads and apps business," Google wrote in a blog post.

According to the blog, the employees working on Lively were reassigned other jobs after the service shut down. The pack of virtual worlds is led by Second Life, where people deploy animated alter egos known as avatars to pursue digital fantasies.


Dodgeball
Dodgeball

Dodgeball was a company that Google acquired in May 2005. The location-based meeting service allowed users to share their current locations using SMS messages. Come January 2009, the company announces that Dodgeball will be shut down "in the next couple of months."

Here goes the closure announcemet: "Google has decided to shut down dodgeball. I know this is kind of a bummer, but the site has been in maintenance mode for a while now, and it's just time to shut it down for good."

"We're planning on doing this in two stages. Everything will continue to function as-is until the end of February (can anyone say shutdown party?). At that point, we'll turn off the SMS service and the site will enter read-only mode. We'll leave it like that for about a month giving you time to save or export any of your data that you might want to keep. Sometime around the beginning of April we'll shut the site down for good, delete all the user accounts, and the associated data."

Incidentally, Dodgeball founders quit Google in April 2007. Both were reportedly unhappy with the way Google was handling the service and blamed Google of apathy.

Mashup Editor
Mashup Editor

The online mashup creation service by Google has too become a history now. The company plans to phase out the service in next six months. The service, which was in private beta, is being replaced by App Engine. It was direct competition for Yahoo Pipes and Microsoft Popfly.

Google in a blog post wrote, "we will be shutting down the Mashup Editor in six months. While it is always hard to say goodbye to a product, when we launched the Mashup Editor as a private beta last year, we did so to better understand the needs of you, our developers. And you spoke, and much of what we learned together is now a big part of App Engine, the new infrastructure for hosted developer applications. We look forward to working with you in the migration to App Engine, and can’t wait to see what you build."

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Can Google Android save Motorola?

NEW YORK: Motorola Inc is betting on Google Inc's Android cellphone software to liven up its next generation of devices, but analysts doubt it is enough to revive the fortunes of the mobile phone maker.

The decision by Motorola co-chief executive Sanjay Jha to pare the mobile devices unit by 25 per cent, and to scale back the number of devices and software platforms Motorola develops, are practical moves for a company whose phone sales dropped by a half in just a year.

But even analysts who recommend Motorola shares do not expect these plans to soon revive the company, which is fighting increasingly stiff competition with fewer resources and demoralised workers.

"I'm bullish on the stock, not at all on the handsets," said Goldman analyst Simona Jankowski. "I feel their position in handsets is awful and will get worse."

Jankowski only recommends Motorola shares on the premise that the price does not reflect the value of non-handset businesses, such as television set-top boxes and wireless network gear, and an estimate that an implied valuation handicap of US$5 billion for the cellphone unit is too severe.

Motorola shares have fallen more than 60 per cent in the last year, giving the company a market value of US$10.28 billion on Monday, based on a share price of $4.55.

Analysts say Motorola will find it tough to compete in a cutthroat market where the focus has turned to software and inventive user interfaces, such as touchscreens popularised by Apple's iPhone.

"That's extraordinarily difficult. Motorola has never shown it can innovate in software, ever," said Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart.

He said Motorola's strength in hardware shown by phones such as Razr, a hit in 2004 and 2005, and the Renew, its latest device made from recycled bottles, would be little help.

"They're competing in a software era using hardware and their products have been stale for two years," Greengart said.


Many analysts welcomed Motorola's decision to develop a phone for later this year using Google's open-source Android operating system, instead
of several rival systems including home-grown software.

But the problem is that rivals are also using Android. "If you come out with a plain vanilla Android phone in the second half, you're no better off," said Greengart.

Besides iPhone, market leader Nokia, and Android rivals such as HTC, Motorola also needs to battle Palm and its highly anticipated Pre phone, and Research In Motion, whose BlackBerry email phones have a passionately loyal following.

And Jha has to do this with 5,000 fewer cellphone workers. Nobody disputes the need for cost cuts to reflect shrinking sales, and some analysts are looking for more. But company morale is a worry.

"My sense is that handset employees are more concerned about job security than getting the new products out," said American Technology Research analyst Mark McKechnie.

These employees will be further tested in the coming months as analysts expect continuing market share losses and device sale unit declines for at least two more quarters.

The company, which reports earnings on February 3, has warned it would post a net loss of seven cents to eight cents per share on revenue of US$7 billion to 7.2 billion, with phone sales down to 19 million units from 40.9 million a year ago.

Motorola slid to fifth place in the global handset market in the fourth quarter, down one notch from the quarter before.

Goldman's Jankowski sees Motorola phone sales falling to 14 million in the current quarter and to 13 million in the June quarter, before edging back up to 20 million in December.

UBS analyst Maynard Um said it makes sense for the company to focus on keeping its carrier customers up to date while it develops the new phone. He noted that Motorola still has a recognisable brand and an established distribution channel working in its favour.

"There's always a chance they will (recover)" he said. "Is it going to be more difficult? Absolutely."