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The Mobile World Congress Series is supported by Snapdragon by Qualcomm. Inside your smartphone beats the heart of a dragon.
Barcelona’s greatest annual tech event, Mobile World Congress, opened today under a couple of clouds. There was the raincloud above the conference, held in the shadow of the National Palace, where attendees scurried from hall to hall toting umbrellas along with their mobiles.
And there was the figurative cloud of Friday’s Microsoft-Nokia deal, which many attendees felt sucked a lot of oxygen out of the event. Few observers seemed truly enthusiastic about a deal to put Windows 7 on a new breed of future phones from smartphone laggard Nokia. Even Steve Ballmer seemed subdued when introducing his new partner, Stephen Elsop, to Ballmer’s keynote crowd. Ballmer kept an odd distance at the other end of the stage and looked down pensively while the Nokia CEO spoke.
Despite the clouds, the Congress soldiered on — with demos, video walls full of content and carefully-orchestrated stunts. Samsung gamely plugged its second Android Tablet, the Galaxy Tab 10.1, which we found underwhelming, along with a large-screen smartphone, the Galaxy S Wifi 5.0, pictured above. LG had a booth full of glasses-free 3D phones that regularly ran out of a charge while playing battery-killing 3D games. (The company also offered a tablet that does require glasses for its 3D; we’ll bring you a closer look tomorrow.)
Meanwhile, a team of “fashion police” were found issuing “citations” for attendees who carried more than one mobile device. It turned out to be a stunt for Good Technology, which apparently plans to outlaw the need to carry both a work phone and a home phone. For those seeking more intellectual stimulation, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo offered an interesting look at how all this technology can be used to clear storm clouds of a different kind: dictatorship.
Series Supported by Snapdragon by Qualcomm
The Mobile World Congress Series is supported by Snapdragon by Qualcomm. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chipset platform is redefining mobility by offering an optimal combination of mobile processing performance, powerful multimedia, wireless connectivity and power efficiency. The Snapdragon family of chipsets is designed to power a new generation of advanced smartphones, tablets, and other smart devices.
Barcelona’s greatest annual tech event, Mobile World Congress, opened today under a couple of clouds. There was the raincloud above the conference, held in the shadow of the National Palace, where attendees scurried from hall to hall toting umbrellas along with their mobiles.
And there was the figurative cloud of Friday’s Microsoft-Nokia deal, which many attendees felt sucked a lot of oxygen out of the event. Few observers seemed truly enthusiastic about a deal to put Windows 7 on a new breed of future phones from smartphone laggard Nokia. Even Steve Ballmer seemed subdued when introducing his new partner, Stephen Elsop, to Ballmer’s keynote crowd. Ballmer kept an odd distance at the other end of the stage and looked down pensively while the Nokia CEO spoke.
Despite the clouds, the Congress soldiered on — with demos, video walls full of content and carefully-orchestrated stunts. Samsung gamely plugged its second Android Tablet, the Galaxy Tab 10.1, which we found underwhelming, along with a large-screen smartphone, the Galaxy S Wifi 5.0, pictured above. LG had a booth full of glasses-free 3D phones that regularly ran out of a charge while playing battery-killing 3D games. (The company also offered a tablet that does require glasses for its 3D; we’ll bring you a closer look tomorrow.)
Series Supported by Snapdragon by Qualcomm
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