2010년 1월 20일 수요일

Google delays Motorola, Samsung Android launches in China

News by Todd Haselton on Tuesday January 19, 2010.

Today Google said it is delaying the sales of Android phones made by Motorola and Samsung in China, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

Details are still foggy on how Google is postponing the sales of devices, but this is the latest in Google's move to stop censoring in China. The phones were set to be sold through China Unicom beginning on January 20th.

Google told Dow Jones Newswire that it would be "irresponsible" to sell Android devices, which feature a gamut of Google features, including maps and search.

We're still waiting on comments from Motorola and Samsung.

 

http://www.mobileburn.com/news.jsp?Id=8585

Motorola MOTOROI to be sold worldwide, U.S. in March

News by Todd Haselton on Tuesday January 19, 2010.

After unveiling the Motorola MOTOROI in Korea yesterday, Rick Wolochatiuk, president and representative director of Motorola Korea, said that the phone will be launched around the world. More specifically, Bae Joon-dong, senior vice president of SK Telecom, told The Korea Herald that "The MOTOROI is a different model from the Droid, and it will be launched in the United States around March."

While the device may indeed be sold worldwide, we reported on a Dow Jones Newswire story earlier this morning that Google is delaying the sales of Android-powered Samsung and Motorola devices in China.

We reached out to Motorola for comment and a spokesperson told us the following:

"Motorola is proud of our partnerships with all three of China's mobile network operators, and we are working closely with all of them to bring a wide range of Android-powered experiences, starting with our recently launched MT710 with China Mobile and our XT800 with China Telecom. Motorola is committed to offering the most innovative mobile products and experiences in China, including Android-powered devices like the XT800. Android is now the fastest-growing mobile platform in the world, and we look forward to continuing to bring the power and promise of the best of these devices to China."

 

http://www.mobileburn.com/news.jsp?Id=8587

iPhone OS 4.0 details leak

Rumors by Todd Haselton on Tuesday January 19, 2010.

Please note that this story is based upon rumor and/or speculation.

There has been speculation that Apple will launch OS 4.0 for the iPhone at its special event next Wednesday, and now details of what might be included in the update have leaked online.

Boy Genius Report claims that OS 4.0 will add support for multi-touch gestures throughout the operating system, multi-tasking of applications so that more than one can run at once, and new calendar and contact sync options. The quoted tipper also says UI changes and graphic updates will be included and that OS 4.0 will propel the phone past any other smartphone on the market. Rumor has it OS 4.0 will be made available for the iPhone 3G and the 3GS.

Looks like we'll have to wait until next Wednesday to find out for ourselves. [via Boy Genius Report]

 

http://www.mobileburn.com/rumors.jsp?Id=8589

motoROI.mp4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdnzJWN4hpk

Motoroi: Motorola to release another Android phone in March (video)

 

motoroi

Motorola held a press conference in Seoul yesterday to announce a partnership with SK Telecom, a major Korean telecommunications company. The occasion: SK Telecom will be the first company to distribute an Android phone in that country, the so-called Motorola Motoroi.

It’s not a rebranded Droid, but a completely new phone (in Europe, the Droid was named “Milestone” but remained largely unchanged technically). SK Telecom customers will be able to lay their hands on the Motoroi in early February.

motoroi_2

But Motorola Korea and SK Telekom representatives are quoted as saying that Motorola is ready to roll out the Motoroi in the US in March, too. And apparently it will be available in a number of other countries as well.

Here are the main specs:

  • 3.7-inch WVGA 16:9 touch screen (480 x 854 resolution)
  • 8 MP camera with Xenon flash
  • HD video recording (720p)
  • HDMI interface
  • TV tuner (T-DMB)
  • 8GB internal memory (microSD card support up to 32GB)
  • Android 2.0 OS

In Korea, the Motoroi will be sold for $800. Pricing and other details for the US and other territories haven’t been officially announced yet.

motoroi_3

 

http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/01/19/motoroi-motorola-to-release-another-android-phone-in-march-video/

Quick Look: SlideScreen by Larva Labs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUu8Qevx-Hg

SlideScreen for Android borders on information overload (but the good kind)

slide

Let me start off by saying this: I really rather like the default Android homescreen. It’s simple, it’s functional, and above all, it’s endlessly customizable. Thanks to Google’s “do anything” approach to handling app development, end users have countless tools to trick out their phones anyway they want. That, as anyone who’s ever used MySpace knows, is a double-edged sword: the end results are usually range from the rare and wonderful to the terribly tacky.

The guys over at Larva Labs have taken a different, almost Facebookian approach. Instead of allowing users to directly get their hands dirty, they completely stripped down the Android into a sparse, information-oriented design they call SlideScreen, which looks something like a mashup between WinMo 6.5 today screen and HTC’s minimalist TouchFLO style. I was given the chance to play with a nearly final build of the app, which is slated for general release within the next few days, and for you info junkies out there, this may be exactly what you’ve been looking for.

UntitledWhat was immediately apparent was the level of work that went into it: the whole shebang runs very smoothly, and at times seemed more responsive than the normal homescreen ever was. Each category is color-coded, and dragging the status bar up and down allows you to cycle through new tweets, stock updates, unread Google Reader items, new text messages, emails, and calendar entries. A quick tap on the corresponding icon opens up the associated app, while a long press lets you create a new entry. Without the traditional homescreen, the menu key is now in charge of bringing up the app drawer, along with a shortcut bar along the top for quick access to the apps that were normally out front.

The text, while small, is totally readable, especially on a high resolution screen like the Droid’s. Full disclosure: I’ve been wearing glasses since the fourth grade, so you may want to take any vision-related judgments I make with a grain of salt, but SlideScreen was just as legible on the G1 and Cliq I tested it with. Granted, the experience wasn’t quite as smooth, but considering the underpowered hardware involved, I still came away impressed by the whole affair. SlideScreen also can be run as a separate application instead of a homescreen replacement, just in case people want a one-stop shop for their personal and public information without having to give up pretty wallpapers and such.

It goes without saying that SlideScreen isn’t going to be ideal for everyone. As much as I like its style and organization, it’s certainly more information in one place than some users will feel comfortable with. Still, for those tired of looking at a stock Android install whenever they fire up their phone, SlideScreen is a solid, stylish homescreen replacement that may do them some good.

 

http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2010/01/19/slidescreen-for-android-borders-on-information-overload-but-the-good-kind/

INFOGRAPHIC: With New Mobile Rates, There Are Now 10 Million Ways to Pay for a Cell Phone

After AT&T and Verizon announced new mobile rates this past weekend, many users were happy to hear that the cost of voice calls would be reduced for two major American carriers.

Today, the restructured mobile plans and packages went into effect, but the costs, benefits and corporate revenues aren't as simple as a few saved dollars for cell phone calls. In a word, what all gadget geeks, tech-heads and mobile users know is that data is one of the more costly - and ever more popular - aspects of any user's mobile plan. As smartphone adoption increases, how do major carriers' plans stack up to one another?

Our good friend (and startup BillShrink rep) Tony Adam wrote today in a blog post, "The real truth behind the story is that the profits are in the data: Verizon's revenue is now up 24% (they reported $15.8 billion in Q309), with 17% coming from data services."

To put it bluntly, we're all texting, emailing, tweeting and updating constantly - who even has time for a phone call these days? The laws of supply and demand state that as demand for voice services wanes and the public consumption of mobile data services rises, corporations will realize that it's worth their while to create a false economic incentive for voice packages while maintaining and increasing rates for data packages.

The tricky part, then, becomes stripping away the marketing-ese, the convoluted packaging structures and the hard-pitch sales routines that go along with them to determine how users can get the best fitting data and voice plans.

Thanks to BillShrink's unwavering focus (and they said the process behind this achievement was "painful... the carriers didn't make it easy"), we have a concise, clear infographic on how mobile plans and rates from Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile all measure up to one another. Or at least we have a start: Based on data they collected, the BillShrink folks estimate there are now 10 million ways to structure a cell phone plan.


To see the full-size, fully detailed infographic, check out BillShrink's large version.

For example, Verizon and Sprint are currently asking $119 for unlimited voice, text and smartphone data plans, while T-Mobile and Sprint's equivalents ring in at $20 less per month. In fact, just about all the plans from these four carriers are identical until you start to factor in text messaging and mobile Web browsing, at which point Verizon and AT&T start to charge more than their competitors.

As smartphones and superphones take over the market, do you think we'll see more network-agnostic devices? And with more network-agnostic smartphones sucking up more mobile 3G bandwidth, do you think all carriers will raise their pricing for data and text packages?

 

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/with_new_mobile_rates_there_are_now_10_million_way.php