Showing posts with label Smart Phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smart Phone. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

Next iPhone To Have a Larger Screen, Thinner Profile [RUMOR]

 by 

The next generation iPhone might be thinner than iPhone 4, according to leaked case designs unearthed by 9to5Mac. Furthermore, case mold schematics leaked yesterday point to an iPhone with a larger screen as well as a bigger home button.
These rumors fall in line with many earlier rumors, which claim the next iPhone will be thinner, but they also contradict other reportswhich claim that iPhone 5 (if that’s its name) will be quite similar to the iPhone 4.
The “thin iPhone” rumors point to a curved back design for the device, which seems somewhat unlikely, given that Apple has switched from such a design to a rectangular, flat back in iPhone 4.
What do you think? Are you ready to believe the mounting evidence in favor of a thinner iPhone, or do you think the next iPhone won’t be a radical departure from iPhone 4? Share your opinions in the comments.
[via 9to5Mac]

Monday, July 11, 2011

iOS Device Users Are Buying 61% More Apps Than a Year Ago

by 



Apple device owners are buying a lot more applications than a year ago and they’re willing to pay more for them, a recent report from Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster suggests.
The average iOS device owner will download 83 apps in 2011, a 61% increase over 2010, according to the report. Furthermore, the average selling price for apps is up 14% year-over-year in 2011, after an 18% decline in 2010.
Munster estimates that the surge in the average selling price is due to increase demand for iPad apps, which are more expensive on average than iPhone apps.
The numbers are unofficial, as Apple doesn’t often release detailed data about app sales, so take them with a grain of salt. Recently, Apple announced that iOS users have downloaded 15 billion applications from the App Store, netting developers more than $2.5 billion, with Apple’s cut being more than $1 billion.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Maybe Nokia will do a Windows Phone 7 deal, after all

By Mary Jo Foley

Last week, I was bearish on claims, prayers and predictions that Nokia would end up offering some kind of Windows Phone device as part of the company’s line-up. But now, I’m thinking it’s not just possible, but probable.
I was a skeptic for a number of reasons, and not because I am a Windows Phone hater. (In fact, I would be a Windows Phone 7 owner if Verizon would make one available. So far, all we still know is Verizon plans to add at least one WP7 model to its line-up some time this year… maybe after customers stop burning up the lines to buy iPhones.)
Windows Phone 7 is still a version 1 product. Microsoft and the carriers who do offer WP7 devices still have yet to roll out the first update to the platform. WP7s don’t offer much for business users so far. Microsoft has delivered 2 million copies of the OS to carriers since October 2010, which means fewer than 2 million devices have been sold to date. To restate the obvious, Microsoft’s smartphone platform has a long way to go to catch up to Android and iOS.
Microsoft’s decision to “lock down” WP7 handset makers, requiring them to choose among three different chassis specs, also made me leery that Nokia — the No. 1 smartphone provider, with its own OS and developer tools/ecosystem — would agree to abide by Microsoft’s new rules. So even though Microsoft and Nokia had forged a partnership, bringing Silverlight, Office Mobile and Office Communicator to some Symbian phones, I was definitely thinking that Nokia would go with Android over WP7.
What changed my mind? It wasn’t Nokia CEO Stephen Elop’s “Burning Platform” memo — which sounded to me like the kind of memo more than a few Softies have penned in an attempt to motivate the troops and/or signal a sea-change. The rumors were already swirling before the Burning Platform memo leaked that Nokia was ready to add a non-Symbian/non-MeeGo phone platform to its stable of offerings.
Instead, what’s got me thinking I was wrong is a tweet from Google’s Vice President of Engineering Vic Gundrota. Gundrota’s tweet:
February 11 is the date when Elop is expected to unveil publicly Nokia’s new platform directions. I’m thinking the “turkeys” here don’t include the golden goose Google, but more likely refer to Microsoft and Nokia. If your company had just cemented a deal with the established (even though slipping) smartphone leader, would you be talking turkey?
If Nokia still does end up choosing Android, I’d think Gundrota might have some explaining (and apologizing) to do. If Nokia, instead, has decided to go with WP7, I’d be really interested to hear more on any concessions the Softies made to get the deal done. And yes, if it’s WP7 that Nokia chooses over Android, I will be eating crow turkey….
Update: A couple of folks have noted that there’s another possible interpretation of the Gundrota quote. Anssi Vanjoki, Nokia’s former Executive Vice President for Markets, said the exact same thing in 2005 about BenQ buying Siemens’ mobile handset business handset business. Hmmm. Will Google have the last laugh?

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

It Takes Two Touchscreens: Sprint Launches Kyocera Echo

by Chris Taylor 


If your smartphone has one touchscreen too few, rejoice. Today Sprint launched the Kyocera Echo, a groundbreaking phone composed of two touchscreens.
The phone features two 3.5-inch LCD displays connected by an innovative hinge; the screens fold up in the manner of a netbook. The two screens can be used to run separate apps, or combined to run in “tablet mode” with both screens acting as a single display. The screens work in both portrait and landscape mode. Like the iPhone, the Echo employs an onscreen keyboard. Unlike the iPhone, it can be angled so that it looks like a mini-laptop, with the keys flat and the screen tilted.
The Echo’s operating system: Android 2.2, also known as Froyo. Its price: $200 with a two-year contract, available sometime this spring. Other features include a 5-megapixel camera with HD video recording and a charger that doubles as a battery pack.
The two-screen combination allows for some novel features. For example, you can watch one YouTube video in the first screen while queueing up a second video in the other display. You can run Twitter and Facebook simultaneously. You can check your e-mail while composing a text message. (Habitual multitaskers, your phone has arrived.)
However, Sprint said only a small number of apps would be able to play nicely with each other in this fashion at first. (The company calls such dueling apps “simultasking.”)
Clearly, developers are just beginning to explore the opportunities involved with two touchscreens. Sprint demonstrated a version of the Sims game that featured the controls on the bottom screen and the game on the top — kind of like the PlayStation Phone. The Echo’s most innovative apps are likely ahead of it, but we expect great things from this unusual device.
The Echo was launched amid much hoopla at a New York event featuring magician David Blaine doing tricks in a giant underwater tank. The connection? “Extreme multitasking can be magical,” explained Sprint CEO Dan Hesse. Given the much-cited Hewlett Packard study that showed office-based multitasking temporary reduces your IQ by 10 points — five points more than smoking marijuana — we’re not so sure.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Microsoft needs to jump start Windows Phone 7; Here are five suggestions

By Larry Dignan
Microsoft has reportedly sold 2 million Windows Phone 7 licenses, but the actual sell-through—consumers who actually purchase these smartphones—remains a mystery. Now NPD Group puts Windows Phone 7 market share at 2 percent of the smartphone market in the fourth quarter.
Clearly, Windows Phone 7 didn’t light up sales dramatically. AT&T gave Windows Phone 7 a passing mention on its earnings conference call, but highlighted Research in Motion sales as strong. NPD reports that Windows Phone 7 devices debuted with 2 percent market share tied with Palm’s WebOS. Microsoft’s Windows Mobile market share fell 3 points to 4 percent. If you assume that Windows Phone 7 eclipses Windows Mobile, Microsoft will wind up with about 6 percent smartphone share in the next few quarters.
There are a few caveats with the Windows Phone 7 data that keep me—not to mention Microsoft honchos in Redmond—from hitting the panic button. First, the mobile OS landed in the middle of the fourth quarter. NPD’s Ross Rubin noted that Windows Phone 7 landed in the middle of an Apple iOS-Android war. Simply put, Microsoft needs to build on its launch, add features and get partners to develop better hardware designs.
Microsoft officials have said Windows Phone 7 is a marathon not a sprint. But no matter how much Microsoft spins it, the company couldn’t garner more share despite buy-one-get-one promotions at AT&T and T-Mobile. Microsoft needs some dramatic moves if it’s going to stand out in a smartphone dominated by Android (53 percent of the smartphone market) and Apple and RIM (19 percent share each per NPD). NPD’s bottom line: “Windows Phone 7 also entered the market with lower share than either Android or webOS at their debuts.”
Nevertheless, ZDNet is beginning to wonder if Microsoft will be able to goose Windows Phone 7 adoption. Ed Bott asks whether Windows Phone 7 will get its grand opening and Matthew Miller wonders whether the OS will garner much usage.
So what can Microsoft do to give Windows Phone 7 more juice? Here are five suggestions:
Call Nokia and buy some market share. Nokia CEO Stephen Elop hinted last week that the phone maker is going to look into other operating systems. Most observers took those hints to mean that Nokia will go with Android devices in the U.S. The odds are good that Nokia will look at Android. Microsoft has to get into the mix at Nokia. In fact, Microsoft should pay heavily to get Nokia to use its operating system overseas. Nokia needs diversification and Microsoft needs distribution. Microsoft will have to pay to play.
Get better hardware. Let’s face it—Microsoft partners aren’t inspiring a lot of gadget lust with the Windows Phone 7 hardware designs. The software giant needs to dangle more carrots to get cutting edge designs. Windows Phone 7 is a fine operating system, but hardware is a big part of the smartphone buying decision.
Launch a Windows Phone 7 tablet already. Microsoft has built an app ecosystem fairly quickly and many of those Xbox games would look good on a larger screen. Add it up and Windows Phone 7 has the interface, Office hooks and characteristics to work well on a tablet. Instead, Microsoft keeps pitching Windows 7 tablets.

Give Windows Phone 7 away.
It’s hard to compete with Android, which is free. Microsoft should just give Windows Phone 7 to carriers to level the playing field. If Microsoft really wants to be bold it should open source Windows Phone 7. Hell may freeze over if Windows Phone 7 went open source, but it’s hard to think of a bolder move for Microsoft.
Focus on feature phones. How many smartphone operating systems do we need? Microsoft could grab more share by focusing on feature phones—the largest part of the phone market. This focus on feature phones could also be ramped in emerging markets such as India, Brazil and China.
Will Windows Phone 7 conquer the smartphone world? Probably not. But with a few breaks Microsoft could get some respectable share, say 10 percent or so.