Posts Tagged ‘Phone’

Windows Phone 8 Apollo details leak, including new hardware options and NFC support

February 6th, 2012

Interested in some Windows Phone 8 Apollo information on a Thursday afternoon? A pair of reports from Pocketnow and Paul Thurrott of WinSuperSite claim to have some details on Windows Phone 8, the former of which has allegedly gotten hold of a video starring Microsoft’s own Windows Phone manager Joe Belfiore that’s intended for partners at Nokia. So what kinds of goodies can we expect from the next major version of Windows Phone? There’s quite a bit of information to digest, so let’s break it down.

Hardware-wise, we’re told that Microsoft’s theme for Windows Phone 8 will be “scale and choice.” The updated OS will reportedly bring with it several more hardware options than are currently available with Windows Phone, including support for multi-core processors, new form factors, and a total of four different screen resolution options. Also coming to Windows Phone 8 is support for removable microSD cards and NFC radios that’ll bring contactless payments.

On the software side of things, Microsoft is expecting there to be 100,000 apps available in the Windows Phone Marketplace by the time WP8 launches. Pocketnow believes that a Skype client will be able to integrate into the OS, but Thurrott claims that the app will be separate. Also, the camera app in Windows Phone 8 will reportedly be able to be skinned by OEMs or overlayed with third-party viewfinders.

Another major feature that’s allegedly covered in the leaked video is a tool dubbed DataSmart, which will allow users to track and reduce their cellular data usage, which will be done by prioritizing Wi-Fi connections along with server-side compression built in to Internet Explorer 10. Lastly, Windows Phone 8 will unsurprisingly feature a high-level of integration with Windows 8 on PCs. That includes an easy way for developers to port apps from Windows 8 to Windows Phone 8, a new companion syncing app that’ll replace the desktop Zune software, and SkyDrive support that’ll allow users to share their data across devices.

Overall it sounds like Microsoft’s got quite a bit planned for Windows Phone 8, but that shouldn’t come as much of a surprise considering that we’ve heard that the update’s been described as a “very different game” compared to Windows Phone 7.5 Mango. With the impending arrival of devices like the Nokia Lumia 900 and HTC Titan II as well as this massive Windows Phone 8 leak, it definitely seems like it’s a good time to be a fan of Microsoft’s mobile platform. Here’s to hoping that we get more details on Windows Phone 8 soon. What do you all make of this leaked info? Do you folks that have avoided Windows Phone so far think that you could be convinced to check Windows Phone 8 out if these details hold true?

Source:http://www.phonedog.com/2012/02/02/windows-phone-8-apollo-details-leak-including-new-hardware-options-and-nfc-support/

Five ways to get started with your new Android phone

December 26th, 2011

Did you unwrap your gifts this Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/Festivus to find that you’re the proud new owner of an Android? If so, welcome to the world of Google-powered smartphones.

Millions of others around the globe own phones running Google’s Android operating system, across dozens of devices with varying screen sizes and specs. These phones might be from one of more than a dozen hardware makers, running on just about every wireless network out there.

Given the variation, Android can be a bit fragmented, but no matter what your Android looks like, here are a few basics that can help you get started if you’re new to smartphone ownership.

1. Set up your Google Account: To use an Android phone you’ll need to have a Google Account, which means you’ll have to set up a Gmail.com email address if you don’t already have one. Your Google Account is, of course, the login identity that follows you as you use all things Google — Gmail, YouTube, Google Docs, Google Maps, Google Calendar, Blogger and anything else Google produces. This can add some convenience to your life by automatically syncing your contacts and calendars across your computer and your smartphone if you make use of Google’s services for keeping track of all that information.

2. Get yourself some apps: The major differentiator between smartphones and other cellphones, aside from the ability to send and receive email, is the mobile app. Android phones have the second largest app store, behind only Apple’s App Store for its iPhone/iPod/iPad lineup. Unlike Apple’s i-devices, Android users have the option of getting their apps from Google or from third parties. The top two places to find apps currently are Google’s official Android Market and the Amazon Appstore for Android. Both stores offer a wide selection of apps and games that have been tested and vetted before being sold, to help prevent apps filled with viruses and other malware from making it out to Android users. Amazon also allows you to test many apps, which can be helpful before downloading. Some basic apps we really like for Android: Pulse is a great news reading app if you like to read news from multiple websites and Cut the Rope is a fun game that can be a bit tougher than Angry Birds but is just as fun.

3. Social networking: Android phones are among the best choices for staying on top of your social networks. The official Twitter app is thoughtfully designed and can help you keep up with the fast-paced social network. Path is a social network that is by default private and designed for easily sharing what’s going on in your life with close friends, but you can also share to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and Foursquare from Path as well. And, of course, there is Google+. The Google+ Android app isn’t the greatest social networking experience in mobile apps, and falls far below Twitter, Path and Facebook in terms of looks and usability, but if you were lucky enough to receive the Galaxy Nexus smartphone this holiday, which runs Ice Cream Sandwich (the latest version of Android) this might not be as big of a problem. In Ice Cream Sandwich, Google has baked-on Google+, allowing for automatic photo sharing and the ability to even read emails in your Gmail inbox by circles of friends on the network.

4. Check out Google Music: For many, the smartphone is also a portable music player, and if you’re not already a big iTunes or Amazon customer for music, Google’s own Google Music is worth a serious look. Google Music on a PC isn’t as easy to use as iTunes, but it does allow you to sync your purchases and music library to the cloud for streaming or easy downloads on the go. Also, Google so far has done a great job on pricing, with hundreds of songs as low as 49 cents and albums as low as $4.99.

5. Talk to friends: As suggested by my colleague Deborah Netburn in her “Five Ways to Get Started With Your New iPad” post, talking to others who own and use Android on a daily basis is a good call. This shouldn’t be too tough considering that Android is the most widely used mobile operating system worldwide.

Source:http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2011/12/new-android-phone-get-started.html

Nokia Windows Phone ads emerge

October 12th, 2011

According to images obtained by tech news site, Pocketnow, the first Nokia Windows Phone device might be just around the corner.

The device previously known as “Sea Ray” will be branded as the Nokia 800, and is set to be the first Nokia smartphone running on the Windows Phone 7 mobile OS.

The timing of the ads seems to tie in with projections that the company will release a Windows phone device before year end.

The brightly coloured adverts seem to market the device as a daily companion for a younger market, rather than a serious business device.

The ads also confirm that the device will sport a rear-facing 8 megapixel camera and an intuitive file interface.

Source:http://mybroadband.co.za/news/quick-news/35866-nokia-windows-phone-ads-emerge.html

Phone scamsters pose as IT experts

October 3rd, 2011

POLICE in rural Stirlingshire have again issued advice to locals worried about telephone fraud.
They have issued a string of alerts in recent weeks, urging locals to be on the look-out for cold call scams involving bank details, computer software and shoddy workmanship.

Stirling Council and local trading standards officials have joined repeated appeals to residents to be on their guard.
Despite this, Balfron-based PC David McNally said: “A number of residents of Killearn have recently reported receiving telephone calls from an organisation named Windows Technical Department, suggesting a link with Microsoft.

“The caller suggests that Microsoft is aware the victim has been encountering recent problems with their computer hardware and that their firm has been authorised and is able to resolve the issue.

“On a number of occasions the victims of this crime have given over enough information for the perpetrators to remotely access the victims’ home computer, often while they have been watching their monitor at home themselves.
“The caller is then said to advise that the so-called problem can be rectified by purchasing anti-virus software and will ask for bank or credit card details in order to facilitate the purchase.

“People who have given up their bank or credit card details often end up becoming victims of fraud.”

PC McNally urged householders not to be duped by the scammers’ bluster and to contact the police on 01786 456000 if they become suspicious.

Source:http://www.stirlingobserver.co.uk/stirling-news/local-news-stirling/news-stirling/2011/09/30/phone-scamsters-pose-as-it-experts-51226-29510356/

Phone pirates ‘upgrade’ to make copycat tablets

August 17th, 2011

Falling prices for real smartphones is putting such pressure on copycat cell phone makers that many are moving into China’s tablet computer market.
Apple’s iPad continues to dominate with more than 70 percent of the market, but its share in China declined 5.14 percent in the second quarter of this year, according to a report by Analysys International, a provider of information and services for China’s IT market.
Part of the drop is due to the array of legitimate competitors lined up against Apple in the booming tablet sector, including personal computer giants such as Lenovo, Asus and Acer, and global telecommunication equipment makers ZTE and Huawei.
But the southern city of Shenzhen is home to more than 1,000 tablet computer manufacturers, many of them smaller companies making copycat products commonly known in the industry as “white boxes”.
Research by consulting firm DisplaySearch shows that 1.9 million white box tablet computers were sold in China in the first quarter of this year, more than triple the figure of the previous quarter.
But increasing sales does not mean a promising market ahead for pirate companies, said Yang Qun, an analyst with Shenzhen Warring Strategy Public Relations Consultants.
“Most of the tablet computer makers in Shenzhen today were previously making copycat cell phones,” said Yang. “They have the same approach to tablet computers as how they did (to cell phones).”
“The only thing they do is to launch a price war and then everybody is stuck in the mud.”
In Huaqiangbei, an area in Shenzhen known for its many consumer electronics shops, one white box tablet computer with a seven-inch screen and Android operating system is priced at only 359 yuan ($56).
Many others are priced between 400 and 600 yuan.
But a similar Samsung tablet costs more than 2,500 yuan. And even those made by Chinese companies such as ZTE and Huawei are also priced around 2,000 yuan.
“A tablet computer costs at least 290 yuan at the factory. Adding the distribution costs, it won’t have any profit if it is priced below 400 yuan,” according to the Southern Metropolis Daily, which cited an industry insider who “has close relations with tablet computer makers”.
“The copycat products have no advantages in brand and distribution compared with branded products. And the low cost of the hardware means they do not have satisfying performance,” said Yang. “When the branded products reduce their price, the copycat products will be elbowed out of the market.”
Yang said makers of knockoff products actually have another choice – narrowing their target market and developing their own brands.
“I know one such company that integrated a cell phone’s function into a tablet computer,” he said. “It is five times more profitable than ordinary copycat products and its price is only one-fourth of a Samsung.”

Source:http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2011-08/17/content_13127846.htm

Street View grabbed phone, PC locations

July 26th, 2011

The cars were supposed to collect the locations of Wi-Fi access points, but Google also recorded the street addresses and unique identifiers of computers and other devices using those wireless networks and then made the data publicly available through Google.com until a few weeks ago.

The French data protection authority, known as the Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL) recently contacted CNET and said its investigation confirmed that Street View cars collected these unique hardware IDs. In March, CNIL’s probe resulted in a fine of 100,000 euros.

The confirmation comes as concerns about location privacy appear to be growing. Apple came under fire in April for recording logs of approximate location data on iPhones, and eventually released a fix. That controversy sparked a series of disclosures about other companies’ location privacy practices, questions and complaints from congressmen, a pair of US Senate hearings, and the now-inevitable lawsuits seeking class action status.

A previous CNET article, published 15 June and triggered by the research of security consultant Ashkan Soltani, was the first to report that Google made these unique hardware IDs — called MAC addresses — publicly available through a web interface. Google curbed the practice about a week later.

However, it was unclear at the time whether Google’s location database included the hardware IDs of only access points and wireless routers or client devices (PDF), such as computers and mobile phones, as well.

Anecdotal evidence suggested they had been swept up. Alissa Cooper, chief computer scientist at the Center for Democracy and Technology and co-chair of an Internet Engineering Task Force on geolocation, said her 2009 home address was listed in Google’s location database. Nick Doty, a lecturer at the University of California at Berkeley who co-teaches the Technology and Policy Lab, found that Google listed his former home in the Capitol Hill neighbourhood in Seattle.

“It would be helpful to have some clarity about why and how [a hardware address] got in there so people can act accordingly,” said Soltani, the security researcher.

Security researcher Ashkan Soltani says a big problem is no opt-out method.

Google declined repeated requests for comment for this article over a period of more than a week. In a statement last month, the search company said only that “we collect the publicly broadcast MAC addresses of Wi-Fi access points”, which addressed only current and not past practices.

Google does not provide any method, sometimes called an opt-out mechanism, that would allow people who don’t want their unique hardware IDs in the database to remove them. Instead of using Street View cars, Google now “crowdsources” its location database by using Android phones.

The most likely explanation of how the Wi-Fi devices were included is the simplest: just as an accident of programming led to Street View cars collecting (in relatively few cases) the contents of unencrypted wireless communications, client hardware addresses were also vacuumed up. Then they were added to Google’s geolocation database, which was publicly available without access restrictions until late June.

Wi-Fi-enabled devices, including PCs, iPhones, iPads and Android phones, transmit a unique hardware identifier to anyone within a radius of approximately 30 to 60 metres. If someone captured or already knew that unique address because they had access to the device, Google’s application programming interface, or API, revealed where that device was located, a practice that can reveal personal information including home or work addresses or even the addresses of restaurants frequented.

To be sure, it’s not always easy to learn a target’s MAC address. It’s generally not transmitted over the internet, but anyone within Wi-Fi range can record it, and it’s easy to narrow down which MAC addresses correspond to which manufacturer. Someone, such as a suspicious spouse, who can navigate to the About screen on an iPhone can obtain it that way too.

Kim Cameron, Microsoft’s chief identity architect until earlier this year, had long suspected that Street View cars vacuumed up the hardware addresses of devices using a Wi-Fi connection. In a June 2010 essay that analysed an independent report (PDF) of Street View data collection, Cameron said he believed that Google recorded the locations and MAC addresses of far more than just fixed Wi-Fi access points.

Marc Rotenberg, head of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, DC, said he has concerns about the legality of intercepting the hardware addresses of devices using Wi-Fi connections.

“The fact that other companies such as Skyhook may have engaged in this behaviour, which seems to be Google’s best defence, doesn’t make it lawful,” Rotenberg said. “What it does suggest is that there’s more to the investigation of Street View.”

In the US, the Federal Trade Commission ended its investigation of Street View’s accidentally broad data collection last October without levying a fine.

Source:http://www.zdnet.com.au/street-view-grabbed-phone-pc-locations-339319242.htm

If Phone Giants Merge: A Rural Take

July 18th, 2011

In March AT&T announced a proposed $39 billion merger with T-Mobile, which would reduce the number of national cell phone carriers from four to three. The merger is subject to approval by the Department of Justice and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which will be considering the impact of the deal over the coming months.

Approval of the merger could have profound implications for rural residents, and the impact on rural network investment, pricing, and consumer choice should be carefully considered.

AT&T has stated that the merger will lead to network improvements, including faster deployment of next-generation wireless broadband technology, and greater rural network development. But groups such as Consumers Union and the Rural Cellular Association have questioned those claims, referencing the communication’s carrier’s past performance.

It is difficult to estimate how many rural residents would be impacted, since effects on roaming, pricing, and market competition would extend beyond subscribed customers to AT&T and T-mobile to the entire cell phone and broadband market.

Rural Network Development

Wireless connectivity is important for daily life in small cities and towns throughout America, just as it is in suburbs and cities. From checking and responding to emails to making credit card payments, rural communities use wireless and broadband technology to stay connected. Rural businesses have also reaped the rewards of affordable wireless technology. Today, a small business in Plainview, Minnesota, can have the same global reach as its largest competitor, creating a level playing field.

Yet despite the importance of access for residents and businesses in rural communities, communications companies have frequently argued that insufficient demand exists to justify investment in infrastructure and coverage, and cited insufficient profitability. Rural communities have had to fight for broadband coverage, and many areas remain inadequately served with slower Internet connections, higher prices and less developed cellular networks that drop calls and cannot handle the increasing loads of data from streaming video and other applications.

AT&T has stated in filings that the merger will help the company to expand its networks in rural and underserved communities by providing spectrum and increasing its scale and scope to levels that can support investment. Acquiring access to T-Mobile’s cell towers would quickly add more towers to the AT&T network than could be built in the next eight-years.

However, in recent testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, Rene Obermann, CEO of Deutsche Telekom, stated that T-Mobile does not have the spectrum to deploy in rural areas. He and other critics claim that the spectrum that T-Mobile controls won’t increase AT&T’s geographic reach since the companies’ networks almost entirely overlap. The issue of “spectrum crunch” or overload of the network, which AT&T insists the merger would help solve, is occurring in highly trafficked urban areas, not rural communities. (Check this link for a hefty pdf on filings on the merger with the FCC.)

Given AT&T’s track record, there is no guarantee of additional investment and development in the rural network. Past actions and performance are important to consider. Critics contend that it is not a lack of spectrum or towers that prevents rural development; they also suggest that the benefits to rural network development AT&T is promising can come without the merger for much less than the $39 billion price tag the merger will cost.

According to a Congressional Research Services report, AT&T already has a substantial amount of spectrum that it isn’t using—up to one third, according to some commentators. Tapping into that spectrum would mitigate numerous complaints of dropped calls coming from customers. A Wall Street Journal article by Martin Peers from April 29th, around the time the merger was announced, says that AT&T increased its wireless capital expenditures by only 1% in 2009 to Verizon’s 10%, despite enjoying a 60% spectrum advantage over its competitor.

One of the greatest impediments to rural investment has thus not been spectrum, but commitment by telecommunication carriers to spend the resources on rural network development. In their filing with the FCC, AT&T claims that it has not been in its interest to deploy next-generation wireless technology beyond 80% of the market, citing a cost benefit analysis. The merger, they argue, will provide incentive to increase that coverage to 97%. Critics point out that these numbers refer to the percent of population served, not the geographic areas or percent of the country that will be covered. Since populations are concentrated in urban centers, a tremendous number of rural residents would likely remain without service.

Claims regarding rural network development are worth examining in detail, as they do not hold up to scrutiny; a Cellular Market Areas (CMA) map illustrates the difference between covering 97.3% of U.S. population and covering 97.3% of the country. The map shows that almost 50% of the nation’s land area would emain unserved if AT&T made good on its pledge to deply to “97.3% of the U.S. population.” There would still be giants swatth of rural territory where the company wouldn’t provide long term evolution broadband coverage.

While AT&T argues it needs the merger to justify investment in rural communities, those opposing the deal have argued the gains promised by AT&T are misleading and uncertain and do not justify the trade off in competition and pricing that would result from handing over the market to AT&T and Verizon. AT&T seems focused on promises about next-generation broadband in communities where current services are in dire need of improvement.

Pricing, Competition, and Jobs

The merger would leave AT&T and Verizon with control of approximately 80% of wireless industry revenue. The removal of the competitive influence of T-Mobile, a company that has consistently competed on lower prices, would likely simplify pricing increases. Past mergers in the industry have not led to dramatic decreases in voice-plan prices.

With the reduction of national carriers to AT&T, Verizon, and their smaller competitor Sprint, consumers will have fewer opportunities to take their business elsewhere in the event they are unsatisfied with the service or cost. AT&T argues that these fears are unfounded, since regional wireless providers will continue to exist.

While AT&T contends that these firms provide proof of the competitive nature of the industry, firms such as Nex-Tech Wireless, Metro PCS, LEAP, Bluegrass Cellular, Cox Wireless and Iowa Wireless Services serve limited markets: they do not offer national coverage without roaming fees; further, they often operate via prepaid phones rather than contracts, and lacking the economy of scale enjoyed by the largest players, are unable to compete for certain makes and models of phones. Steven Berry, President and CEO of the Rural Cellular Association, warned in testimony before Congress that remaining “carriers will find it increasingly difficult to survive, and consumers, at the mercy of duopoly, will face price increases and reduced innovation.”

AT&T says that carriers like Cricket (green), US Cellular (aqua) and Metro PCS (purple) constitute “national carriers” and that competition would ensue after the merger. This map shows the extent of those firms’ coverage.

If the merger goes through it is unlikely the two remaining larger carriers would try to compete on price. AT&T has chosen to emphasize network improvements, speeds of service, and gains in network development that the merger will enable, rather than tout future pricing benefits. The company has indicated to stockholders that it plans to bring T-Mobile revenues per user up to match those of AT&T, suggesting that price increases may be inevitable.

The carriers with the most clout, AT&T and Verizon, already tend to set the pricing scheme for the entire industry. In 2009, for example, when Verizon increased its early termination fees for smartphones to $350, AT&T followed suit less than a year later, doubling its fee to $325. An additional price survey conducted by Consumer Reports found that prices for T-Mobile plans are consistently lower, with AT&T plans on average $50 per month, or $600 per year higher than a similar voice and data plan offered by T-Mobile.

While AT&T has stated that current T-Mobile customers will be able to keep their current pricing, this offer likely expires at the end of the contract or in the event of a device upgrade. There is some question whether T-Mobile phones and devices could actually operate on a merged network, which may necessitate that customers replace their phones right away if they want to stay with AT&T after the merger is completed.

Rural consumers may feel any potential consequences of the merger more than other customers because those who use regional carriers have historically received lower pricing on roaming services from T-Mobile when they travel to urban areas. AT&T’s charges to other carriers to allow those carriers’ customers to roam on AT&T are significantly higher than the charges levied by T-Mobile for the same roaming services, so the loss of T-Mobile may very likely result in rural consumers being forced to pay the higher rates through AT&T.

Source:http://www.dailyyonder.com/rural-outlook-phone-giants-merger/2011/07/04/3410

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