Archive for February, 2011

Here come the Facebook phones

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Not to be outdone by HP, HTC launched 5 new phones today and one tablet. The tablet is a 7inch Android device a-la Galaxy Tab with one party trick – it comes with a special stylus that works on its capacitive screen. Should be cool for those who want to write on their tablets. It is called the HTC Flyer.

Among the 5 phones there are two that are interesting. The ChaCha and the Salsa each have a Facebook button on the front. These are the first of the so-called Facebook phones that Mark Zuckerberg has been talking about. The royal blue button is context aware with a pulsating light surrounding it any time there is an opportunity to share whatever you are doing on the phone through Facebook. For example, take a picture, press the Facebook and the picture is uploaded. The Facebook junkies are going to like these phones.

While the Salsa looks similar to the usual Android formfactor the ChaCha has a Blackberry formfactor with a dedicated keyboard.

HP launches lots of new Palm devices, and drops a WebOS bombshell

HP is clearly meaning business with WebOS and Palm. A few days ago they launched the TouchPad, Palm Pre3 and Palm Veer, all running WebOS! The TouchPad is HP’s iPad competitor, the Pre 3 is the follow-up to the Pre and Pre 2, and the Veer is a tiny version of the Pre 3. Check the pictures below. Initial impressions are good. WebOS looks great on the tablet and the phones.

To top it off HP simultaneously announced they are going to ship all of their PCs with WebOS pre-installed! Instead of Windows! Bad news for Microsoft, as HP is one of the largest pc manufacturers in the world and has been a Windows faithful for many years. But good news for WebOS, as more devices means more incentive for developers to build apps for WebOS. To make development for the various WebOS devices easy, HP also announced a new developer toolkit which will enable development of WebOS apps that are screen resolution agnostic, i.e. the same app will work on WebOS phones, tablets and PCs. Way to go HP.

Nokia E7 ‘arriving in stores in select markets this week’

The long-awaited E7 is arguably the best looking Nokia ever. And the keyboard is apparently excellent according to those who have used it. The screen is a tilting 4 inch AMOLED with ClearBlack. Having used the 4 inch Samsung Galaxy S I can tell you that the bigger screen size is worth it. Unfortunately this gorgeous piece of hardware will no doubt be let down by the software inside. When the E7 was first announced I was dead set on getting one, but in the meantime I have had a N8 and a C7 and the clunky Symbian interface and sub-standard and out-of-date Symbian apps on these phones have changed my mind. I think you will like the E7 only if you have never owned an iPhone or Android phone.

Anyway, the full text of the press release appears below the picture, courtesy of Engadget. I doubt that South Africa is included in the ‘select markets’, but the Nokia faithful will hope nevertheless.

The press release contains no mention of Lotus Notes Traveler, so stay away if you are a corporate Notes user.

The press release from Nokia:

All-in-one business smartphone, the Nokia E7, arrives in stores

Espoo, Finland – The highly anticipated Nokia E7 will begin arriving in stores in select markets this week, with broader availability building up quickly in several markets.

With its tilting 4 inch ClearBlack display, full qwerty keyboard and a fast access to a wide variety of apps directly on the homescreen, the Nokia E7 is the key to having a successful day in or out of the office. Importantly, the device supports business applications from leading enterprise technology partners including Microsoft and IBM.

Key features of the Nokia E7
- Easy access to private and business email
- Create, edit and share office documents and view PDF files with Adobe Reader
- Fast, secure intranet access with the built-in VPN
- High-resolution photos and HD video with the 8 megapixel camera and dual LED flash
- HDMI connectivity to project files, videos and images onto large screens
- 16 gigabytes of on-board flash memory
- USB-On-The-Go, enabling easy file sharing by connecting a USB stick to the smartphone

For business users, Nokia E7 provides direct, secure and real-time access to email, calendar, contacts, tasks and the corporate directory through Microsoft Exchange servers, as well as Office Communicator Mobile, developed by Microsoft for Nokia smartphones, which brings presence and corporate instant messaging.

Additionally, a wide range of entertainment and social services available on the Nokia E7 make it the perfect off-duty companion, and the Ovi Store offers a wealth of apps such as Bloomberg, Angry Birds and Sports Tracker.

The new arrival offers drive or walk navigation in 80 countries. The latest commercial version of Ovi Maps, available immediately via Ovi Store or Ovi Suite, adds visibility to subways, trams and trains, real-time traffic, safety alerts, visibility to parking and petrol stations, speed limit warnings, and improved search and location sharing capabilities.

Watch out for those fickle Verizon phone locks

So anyway my new Motorola Droid Pro arrived just over a week ago. My initial impressions were a mixed bag. I liked the relatively low weight, when compared with my HTC G2/Desire Z, and liked not having to flip the phone into landscape mode in order to type on the keyboard, but wasn’t impressed by the screen, which apart from being as small as the screen on the Palm Pre, was not as bright and clear as I expected. The keys were also surprisingly difficult to type on. They are small and have ridges that are unlike other keypads I have experienced. Guess this will get better as I get used to the phone.

I wasn’t surprised when the phone prompted me for a code to unlock it. My supplier, CA-Cellular, warned me that the phone was locked to Verizon, and that they will email me the unlock code. When the code arrived a day later, I was however surprised when entering it failed to unlock the phone. A few email exchanges later I received another code from my supplier, which also didn’t work. I then bought my own unlock codes through Swiftunlocks, but knew I had a problem when these guys sent me the same two codes I had received from my supplier previously. With the aid of Google I soon discovered that the anal suits at Verizon have implemented a sophisticated locking mechanism that changes the lock codes continuously over the air. So apparently the only way to get the code is to phone Verizon and ask pretty please. Except they won’t give it to you if you are not a Verizon customer, which of course I am not, living in South Africa. So I had to send my phone back to my supplier, and am now waiting to see if they succeed in unlocking it. It has been more than a week, so am getting worried…

Don’t know about you, but I think these restrictive business practices are really irritating, out of sync with customer sentiments, and am convinced that they don’t result in the outcomes the providers are seeking. Why lock the phone to your network? If the customer wants to buy a contract from a particular network he will. And a willing customer is the best kind. You know why I don’t have an iPhone 4? Because once I have replaced my normal sim with a micro sim, it makes it that much harder to use another phone again. Apple clearly went the micro sim route as a way to lock in their customers. This kind of strategy can work in the short term, and possibly even for a long time, but at some point it will back fire. Look at Egypt. Mubarak’s customers have had enough of being locked into a single party dictatorship, even if it has been benevolent to a degree. They want freedom of choice of their service provide aka government. Take note Verizon, and Apple. Upshot of all this is that I am still using my HTC G2, and am still happy with it. I know I have called it boring in a previous post, but it is a good phone. Excellent keyboard, fast processor, Android 2.2. Everything works well on it, except that it loses cellphone signal from time to time in places where other phones don’t.

Android now the world’s best selling smartphone OS

According to research firm Canalys, over 33m smartphones running Android were shipped in Q4 2010. This marks the first quarter that Android devices has outsold Nokia’s Symbian phones. What makes this even more remarkable is that a year earlier, in Q4 2009, only 4.7m Android phones were sold. At that point Nokia had 44% of the smartphone market. This has now dropped to an estimated 30.6% compared to 32.9% for Android.

 

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