Sunday, June 17, 2007

10 Weaknesses that Cripple Web Developers from Turning Entrepreneurs

Also check out the 7 things you should do



read more | digg story

Introduction to Abject-Oriented Programming

Abject-oriented programming is a set of practices for encouraging code reuse and making sure programmers are producing code that can be used in production for a long time.abject: utterly hopeless, miserable, humiliating, or wretched: abject poverty.



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If you know nothing about HTML, this is where you start

These tutorials are set up so you can move through them over a week's time. One tutorial per day. However, if you can go faster, do it!



read more | digg story

Youtube Mobile, now live to the public.

Previously limited to 1-2 specific mobile networks... as of today YouTube Mobile is live to the public. MMS uploads from your phone have been possible for almost a year, but now we can waste awesome amounts of time watching the tube from anywhere!



read more | digg story

Friday, June 15, 2007

16 Steps to Creating a Bulletproof Startup

Got a great idea? There's never been a better time to turn it into a great company. Here's a 16-step guide to help you do it right.



read more | digg story

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Ruby on Rails Rake Tutorial (aka. How Rake turned me into an alchoholic)

In this article we're going to discover why Rake was created, and how it can help our Rails applications. By the end you should be able to write your own tasks, using rake in no less then three steps.



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How to make Windows Mobile more like Windows

One of the biggest reasons PalmOS and Windows Mobile are designed to look the way they are is because you need to fit the most vital information on a tiny screen. Good, now that we've got that out of the way, let's take a look at some ways you can make your Windows Mobile PDA look more like a full desktop operating system



read more | digg story

The Ultimate RSS Toolbox - 120+ RSS Resources

A comprehensive list of all the RSS readers, tools, browser plugins, tips, hacks and directories available on the web.



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Sunday, June 10, 2007

Prove Your Knowledge at Windows Mobile Training Website

Do you think you have what it takes to be a true knowledge master in the world of Windows Mobile? Well now you can prove it. WindowsMobileTraining.com has a series of courses and exams that you can take for free and prove your knowledge.



read more | digg story

How to Check RSS Feeds on Your Phone

Several Web-based RSS services can help. Most of them require that you simple create an account (for free, of course), add some RSS feeds and then fire up your mobile browser. Check out my picks:

Coke promoting a MySpace for cellphones

Will it last?? Why reinvent the wheel maybe the they should have gone to MySpace and worked with them.



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New Streaming Application - Radio365

If you like streaming radio, then you may want to check this app out. It's still in Alpha testing, but can be downloaded for free here.It currently works on Windows Mobile 5/6 (PPC & SM) via your data network or WiFi. Note: an unlimited data plan is recommended for streaming any type of media. It has a 2mb footprint.



read more | digg story

Mail For Exchange 1.6 Available

The new version, Mail For Exchange 1.6 includes support for Nokia E90, adds a few new features and fixes a number of bugs.



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Google promises mobile software platform to challenge Windows

The most critical battle in the wireless world is to take the reins of the mobile internet as it evolves, and that means all the majors are trying to create a software platform that will make the web even more usable on a small device than it is on a PC, and so drive new applications and revenue streams.



read more | digg story

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Asus Eee PC 701 to take on the Foleo and NanoBook

The Asus Eee PC 701 (can you really stack three e’s together to make a name?) is a 1.9 -pound ultraportable/UMPC hybrid with a 7-inch screen and a full keyboard. It will see 512MB of RAM and a SSD drive ranging from 4-16GB. Other niceties include built-in wireless, mic and webcam



read more | digg story

A New Display Lengthens Gadget Life By Up To 50 Percent Longer

"Cell-phone and laptop batteries could last up to 50 percent longer, thanks to a new type of display technology. It could allow cell-phone, digital-camera, and laptop makers to develop power-saving displays that could dynamically adjust their backlight and color intensity based on the color and brightness of the content."



read more | digg story

Google PageRank: What Do We Know About It?

Google PageRank is probably one of the most important algorithms ever developed for the Web. Everybody is using it, but (almost) nobody really knows, how it works. Find more from here ...



read more | digg story

Everything you ever wanted to know about video codecs.

Puts the nuts and bolts of the most popular video codecs under the microscope; then pits the codecs against eachother.



read more | digg story

Friday, June 08, 2007

MIT Cracks The Code of Déjà Vu

MIT researchers report the identification of a mechanism in the brain that's tied to the experience of déjà vu, French for "seen already." The neuroscientists studied how subregions of the hippocampus--a part of the brain responsible for creating memories--contribute to our ability to differentiate between distinct places that are very similar.



read more | digg story

Thursday, June 07, 2007

HTC launches smartphone to challenge the Apple iPhone

The HTC Touch offers a new and unique way of controlling touch screen-based devices by recognising and responding to the sweep of a finger across the screen. It is intelligent enough to distinguish between finger and stylus input and then respond accordingly. It just needs to come in white.



read more | digg story

Democracy Player 0.9.6 Released!

Tons of new features. Democracy is free and open source with a beautiful interface. It downloads video RSS feeds, including torrent feeds, and plays / organizes videos all in one. It can play almost any type of video. New features include the ability to watch any local folder to see if there are new videos ready to watch.



read more | digg story

A Grant from Mozilla to Democracy Player

More on Democracy Player…it is soon to be named Miro and it is a cool desktop application that’s sort of a mashup of a video player, an RSS reader, an FTP & torrent client, and a channel guide — the experience is that video is regularly delivered to your desktop. They also make a server and have built a ton of great docs to help you



read more | digg story

Sunday, June 03, 2007

View Your Google Calendar on Your Mobile Device

Google Calendar is an excellent online application for those that want a way to create and share public calendars. Now you can view (and only view) your calendar on your mobile device if you go to google.com/calendar

link

Mobile phone rays paralyse cars

"Cellphones kept near Nissan's I-Keys -- wireless devices designed to allow drivers to enter and start their cars at the push of a button -- can erase the electronic code on the keys, rendering them unable to unlock or start the cars"

Link

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Mahalo - We're here to help

"Mahalo is the world's first human-powered search engine powered by an enthusiastic and energetic group of Guides." Jason Calacanis (of weblogs inc/engadget fame) latest venture launched today - check it out.



read more | digg story

Mahalo - We're here to help

"Mahalo is the world's first human-powered search engine powered by an enthusiastic and energetic group of Guides." Jason Calacanis (of weblogs inc/engadget fame) latest venture launched today - check it out.



read more | digg story

Palm Foleo

I posted before that palm was doing a new OS, it was for the Foleo. A new toy from palm tat offers a laptop experience to the mobile user.

" With its 10-inch screen and full-size keyboard, the Palm Foleo mobile companion connects wirelessly with your smartphone to help you do more on the go. Unfold it, press a button, and it's on instantly—while just one touch brings your email to the big screen.1 Use your Foleo to view attachments, type longer emails, or to get a bigger look at web pages and photos you'd normally view on your smartphone. And with up to five hours of battery life packed into such a compact design, you'll do big things wherever you go."

The top 10 presentations on scaling websites

Ten resources for making sure youur web service doesn't crumble under the strain of your millions of users.



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26 Reasons Why What You Think is Right is Wrong

A cognitive bias is something that our minds commonly do to distort our own view of reality. Here are the 26 most studied and widely accepted cognitive biases.



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A Search Engine, Better Than Google

Google is keeping a close eye on a small, suburban Melbourne start-up that claims to be developing a search engine that improves on the world leader. MyLiveSearch is fundamentally different in the way that it works. Read more...



read more | digg story

Sunday, May 27, 2007

9 Driving Secrets from Police Officers

"With feedback from officers in the field, law enforcement driving instructors have compiled numerous tips to help their students avoid becoming a statistic."



read more | digg story

How Big is AppExchange? The Salesforce.com Guessing Game

If, as Benioff claims, AppExchange is to challenge the ecosystems of IBM, Oracle, SAP, and Microsoft, it needs to show that partners are actually making money selling add-ons to the larger Salesforce. what are the total revenues??



read more | digg story

Friday, May 25, 2007

10 Tips for Mastering E-mail Overload

E-mail provides a window into your workplace status, work habits, stress levels. Has trying to keep up with your inbox got you feeling like a hamster on a wheel, running faster and getting nowhere? Here's a great guide from the people over at Fortune magazine.



read more | digg story

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Market Function of Piracy

In marketing the most effective way to introduce new products is the free sample. In 1978 Lever Brothers spent $15 million ($47.55 million in today's currency) delivering a free sample of Signal Mouthwash to two-thirds of all US households. The strategy was a success and the product remained on the market well into the 1990s.



read more | digg story

PC World's Best Products of 2007

(1) Google Apps Premier Edition, (2) Intel Core 2 Duo, (3) Nintendo Wii (4) Verizon FiOS (5) RIM Blackberry 8800 (6) Parallels Desktop (7) Pioneer Elite 1080p PRO-FHD1 (8) Infrant Technologies ReadyNAS NV (9) Apple Mac OS X (10) Adobe Premiere Elements 3... (58) Digg.com



read more | digg story

Nokia Beta Labs releases GizmoProject S60 Voip/IM mobile client

Nokia Beta Labs has released a Beta version of the Gizmo Voip and Instant messaging client for Nokia N80 Internet Edition and Nokia N95. This version supports free call’s to any Gizmo Project, Yahoo! Messenger, Google Talk, or Windows Live user.

With a WLAN connection you are able to use all the features, and IM and presence are available even when you are connected over 2G or 3G.

You will first need to install the Nokia Internet Services Support Package available on the download page before installing the Gizmo for S60 client. Also note that the client needs to be installed on the main memory.

link

Gates predicts death of the office phone

So do I with VOIP take your phone every where..



read more | digg story

HTC takes a gamble with new brand and OS strategy

Despite making gains in the enterprise and becoming a fairly robust and well recognized, if relatively minor, smartphone platform, Windows Mobile will clearly be just an element in the mobile picture, and probably a small one compared to Linux and the growing family of Java-oriented OSs like Symbian/Series 60 or Sun's new developments.



read more | digg story

Mobile TV will reach 244 million by 2011, says report

TV enabled handsets will reach a staggering 244 million devices by 2011, according to a new report.

This is almost double the number previously forecast, and was reached by a detailed look into the likely mobile TV launch dates and the uptake rate expected in 55 countries.

Accumulated global mobile TV enabled handsets

The report was published in the US by Multimedia Research Group, but was written by Rethink Research Associates in the UK. It shows the rapid increase anticipated in handsets annually, with huge leaps during 2009 especially (see graph below), when 53 million broadcast TV enabled handsets are expected to ship.

Global mobile TV enabled handset deployments per year

"There are over 80 mobile TV trials all over the world and already there are a handful of services launched. The bulk of those trials are already committed to turn into genuine services, in some cases with a nationwide footprint, in other countries in limited regions," said report author Peter White, principal analyst at Rethink.

"This forecast is not including video services which are streamed over a cellular network, because that has largely been a slow burn business, due to its low screen resolution and the careful management it needs so that it doesn't interfere with voice. Most of these new handsets will deliver QVGA quality screens, where voices and lips are synchronised, where there is no shadowing on the screen, and where the resolution is good enough to watch for 30 minutes at a time and beyond," White said.

Initiatives in Japan and South Korea have been launched for some time using technologies which are largely unfavoured in the rest of the world, but last year Italy launched two DVB-H based services and now Qualcomm's MediaFLO is aggressively going after the US market with deals that take in Verizon Wireless and AT&T as resellers.

Around 80 pilots have been carried out globally and the trickle of current services will reach a torrent of some 50 to 60 services during 2009, led by developments in China and Asia Pacific, where the report says 105 million handsets will ship. It says this will be followed by strong showings in Western Europe and the US, which will ship 73 million and 40 million mobile TV capable handsets by 2011 respectively.

According to the report, service revenues from the global mobile TV market will exceed $24bn annually by 2011, with Western Europe likely to lead in revenue terms at over $10bn, followed by the USA and Canada at $7.7bn, and China and the Far East lagging at $5bn, despite higher usage levels

Millions of Chinese Hit by Symantec Foul-Up

Symantec virus signature disabled critical system files in Chinese PCs, crippling Windows XP for millions of users.



read more | digg story

Monday, May 21, 2007

How To Add Music To Your Ipod Without Itunes

a review of 3 programs that give you more functionality then Itunes.



read more

Microsoft PopFly

Microsoft takes aim at Yahoo! pipes and other mashup tools



read more

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Top Ten Sources of Interruptions

In no particular order, here are the top ten interruptions we see most often with our clients that are affecting their productivity. - lifehack



read more

50 Ways to Increase Your Productivity

Nice list with from the good hack site.



read more

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

What I Learned

If it’s any help to other entrepreneurs

  1. Make no assumptions when it comes to roles and responsibilities. “Someone’s gotta call quittin’ time.”
  2. Communication between partners is mandatory. And you cannot communicate with someone who is not communicating with you.
  3. Decisions aren’t decisions if you have to keep making them. Set on the course and stick to it. If you keep talking about things that have already been decided, nothing will ever get done.
  4. When someone says one thing, but acts in a contradictory way, you have a choice between believing their words or believing their deeds. Believe their deeds.
  5. Never let anyone tell you what you want. When someone says, “You don’t want that,” what they really mean is, “I don’t want you to have that.”
  6. Don’t stay where you’re not wanted, respected, or happy. Even if it’s your company.

Shaping the Future

Charles Stross talks about his personal predictions when it comes to the next 20 years of Technology, What it will bring us, limitations and expectations.

read more

Shortcuts for Special Gmail Labels

In Gmail every built-in view (e.g.: inbox, trash, read mail) is actually a label. So if you want to view all the unread messages from the inbox, you could search for: label:inbox label:unread.You can combine these built-in labels with your labels and create interesting queries. But these queries can become long and hard to write. Fortunately, you can replace label with l and everything with still work fine. The previous query will become: l:inbox l:unread.If you still think the query is too long, Gmail has shortcuts for the special labels.
^b chats
^f sent mail
^i inbox
^k trash
^r draft
^s spam
^t starred messages
^u unread mail
That means our query could become: l:^i l:^u. What about all the unread messages that aren't in the inbox? Search for: -l:^i l:^u.



read more

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Fidgt - Unify your social networks here

Your Social Networking address book .. bring all your friends and media to one place ..

read more

Comparing 5 Ways to Tag Videos

There's so many videos flying around online these days and both thesheer number and impact of those videos are only going to increasewith time. Video tagging tools let you archive and share favorites,subscribe to video tag feeds in iTunes or display tagged videos on awebpage using SplashCast..

read more

Friday, May 11, 2007

Bored Mathematician Discovers An Unusual Numerical Pattern While Doodling

The Ulam spiral is a simple method of graphing the prime numbers that reveals a pattern which has never been fully explained. It was discovered by the mathematician Stanisław Ulam in 1963, while doodling on scratch paper at a scientific meeting. Ulam, bored that day, wrote down a regular grid of numbers...

read more

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Learn to Ruby: 74 Quality RoR Resources and Tutorials

As is the case with any language, learning Ruby on Rails from scratch can be quite a pain. Here is a compiled a list of the best Rails resources the Web has to offer, covering installation (both manual and automatic, plus web hosts), tutorials (beginner and advanced topics), books, blogs, forums, cheat sheets, code snippets and API documents.

read more

Ultimate Web 2.0 Layer Styles - Free Download

Photoshop Layer Styles are the easiest way to speed up the design process. Here is a set of 100+ Photoshop Layer Styles created in .ASL ( Photoshop Layer Style ) format.

read more

DIY Electric Bicycle

Learn step by step exactly how to make your own electric bike. Although it isn't that stylish, it will will save you thousands in gas money!



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IPv6 firewalling knows no middle ground

The need to have several computers share a single IP address means that today's home routers perform some basic firewalling. Applications have learned to overcome the problems this creates over time. With IPv6, all these problems-and their fixes-will disappear, but they come back with a vengeance when people need to setup IPv6 firewalls


Link

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Absolutely HUGE List of Color Related Sites!

Someone put together a list of just about every color related resource (worth mentioning) in the known universe. Designers rejoice!



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10 Simple Ways to Speed Up Windows XP

Do it now... You need the speed.



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Ubuntu Mobile and Embedded Edition announced

Ubuntu Mobile and Embedded Edition is aimed at "small, handheld, graphical tablets which are Internet-enabled", and will be developed together with Intel.



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Top 5 *free* content management systems

The top five free content management systems. Which one do you use?



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Top 5 javascript frameworks

Click the link

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100+ Ubuntu Tutorials and Growing Fast!

How to do practically anything with it. As a popular section, you can expect this number of lessons to continue to grow every day.



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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Microformats: What They Are and How To Use Them

One of the new terms on the horizon is Microformats - formats, which make it possible to create meta-content which can be not only read, but also understood by machines. This post is supposed to give you an idea, what Microformats actually mean. Use them to enrich your content and make it more visible and understandable for search engines.



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Top 12 Geek Watches

I am sure I have owned a few of these..



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Saturday, May 05, 2007

PhoneTunes - Series60

PhoneTunes provides an Apple iTunes interface for a Smartphone, allowing you to control your music collection from the comfort of your phone.

link

Hutchison Australia Shareholders Approve A$2.85 Billion Raising

http://www.cellular-news.com/story/23551.php

"Hutchison Australia, which competes with Telstra and Singapore Telecommunications's Optus unit, will use proceeds to pay down debt related to its third-generation mobile phone network to around A$1.1 billion.

The group, which reported a 2006 net loss of A$759.4 million, expects the lower debt position to slash A$250 million a year off its interest bill"

with only "one million" customers that is $2,850 per customer.. they do not even get that much in ARPU

Friday, April 27, 2007

HP ‘Always Connected’ Concepts





The HP Mobile Innovations Tour is a showcase of concepts around the future of mobile communications. The world’s current mobile environment continues to grow more complex. Today’s notebooks, mobile phones, PDAs and digital cameras all continue to add more features, more options and more wireless technologies.

The industrial design behind these concepts strives for extraordinary simplicity, elegance and ease of use that result in an “insanely simple” customer experience.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

RIM Announces New BlackBerry Application Suite for Windows Mobile-based Devices

"Research In Motion (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM; TSX: RIM) today announced plans to expand its support for Windows Mobile®-based devices with a new software application suite that will enable devices from third-party manufacturers to benefit from the popular BlackBerry® software applications and services"

The old you can't beat the then join them trick. When will Nokia follow?

Link

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Nokia widgets??

Nokia plans to bring web 2.0 to the mobile sooner than web 2.0 is created. With Nokia press release bellow "Entire Netvibes Ecosystem's 85,000+ Feeds Available on Mobile Phones via WidSets"
Will confuse most end users out there, basicly I run a RSS reader on my phone unlike most people I know I use RSS on my phone. Not only has Nokia tried to push out this new medium to the people arround me, but they are going against the trend with a walled garden approach.
Yes Nokia I applaud you for releasing more software but this is a case of too soon and the wrong way, there will be alot of criticism towards Nokia over this one.

Link

Intel plans to deliver $500 mobile Internet devices

Working with manufactures Asustek, BenQ, Compal Electronics, High Tech Computer, Quanta
Computer, and Elektrobit to form the Mobile Internet Device Innovation Alliance (MIDIA). They are planning to make a low power device for less than US$500. With WiMax and Adobe's Apollo multimedia platform for offline Internet apps, and will be capable of running either Vista or Linux.

This is the next generation of PC which will replace the phone and PC that we have today.

Link

Nokia Beta Labs

Nokia has quietly open the doors to its Nokia Beta Labs.

Nokia Beta Labs is a site for early testing of Nokia applications that are not yet in wide distribution.

The current set of applications on Nokia Beta Labs include a few applications previously covered on e-series.org: Mobile Codes, Wellness Diary, Sports Tracker and Widsets.

Head over to the Nokia Beta Labs - try out some application.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

American subscribers will prefer WiMAX

The analytical company In-Stat carried out a survey, which revealed that American subscribers prefer WiMAX services to cellular data or Wi-Fi. The survey was conducted with over 1200 respondents earlier this year. The analysts say that WiMAX’s ability to support services with notebook cards and USB-devices will become a reality this year. The combination of mobile and fixed capabilities will help WiMAX providers to differentiate broadband services from what is currently available.

Besides In-Stat reveled the following:

  • Over 50% of respondents would change their current broadband provider for one that offers wireless with a home broadband service.
  • Respondents' interest in cellular data transfer dropped when they learn the pricing.
  • Top attributes used in choosing a wireless broadband provider, when not factoring in price, were availability and reliability.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Top 100 Australian Blogs

What I am not on the list ;)

Link

BlackBerry Down

The long-term ramifications of the outage could prove troubling for the maker of the popular smartphone..

By midmorning Eastern Time today most BlackBerry users in the Western Hemisphere found that the push e-mail service had recovered from the outage that began last night. The longer-term ramifications of the massive shutdown for the maker of the popular smartphone, however, could be broader and more troubling.

The facility that serves as a hub for RIM's North American traffic, routing messages between the roughly 8 million BlackBerry devices now in use and the various sources of email, from private corporate servers to web-based accounts like Yahoo and AOL.


Yahoo News

Itnews

Free Task Manager and Registry Editor for Windows Mobile 5.0 devices

DotFred, a developer at Buzznet has developed a free all in one task manager, registry editor and network utility for Windows Mobile 5.0 devices.

New tools added:
-Ping utility
-IP config
-Net Stats
-Registry Editor
-cut/copy/paste included
-reg file extension associated
-find returns all occurences
-import reg files
-export to reg files

New features added:
- Terminate process under CPU usage
- Terminate thread under Process/Details
- Allows a service to be started manually (so not started after a soft reset)
- Allows to disable/enable a notification

Qantas in-flight SMS and Email trial

The carrier first flagged plans to conduct the trial in August. Telstra, Panasonic Avionics and AeroMobile will be part of the exercise.

Qantas said passengers wanting to send or receive an SMS will need international roaming activated, and a GSM mobile phone. To send or receive e-mail messages, a GPRS-enabled device would do.

"We have asked our business travellers about the concept, [and] the overwhelming majority felt the service was a good idea, particularly e-mail access. This evaluation is the first step towards building a product which will support our customers' business and communication needs into the future," Lesley Grant, Qantas group general manager (Customer Product and Services), said in a statement

link

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

How to Have a Business Conversation

In the course of climbing the corporate ladder, or of just managing the little corner of the world you occupy, you have to communicate with people. It's not always easy, but you have to do it.

Some of this communication amounts to simple conversation, and it's been dawning on me for a long time now that a great many young people don't know how to have one. In fact, a great many older people don't know how to have a conversation, either.

link

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Intel to launch Linux-powered mobile

Intel is developing its own take on the mini-tablet, with a new ultra-mobile PC platform to be announced at this week’s Intel Developer Forum in Beijing. The big surprise? It’s based on Linux.

Link to Zdnet

Friday, April 13, 2007

China Mobile Subscribers Surpass Total US Population

China Mobile, the world's largest mobile operator, recently announced that its subscriber base grew to 301 million. The per capita income of the Chinese subscribers is US$1700, no where near the US$44,000 in the United States." Though Chinese subscribers rely on pre-paid phone cards and pay around 80% less than Americans for mobile phone service, their typical investment of $10 per month represents 7% (or more) of their monthly salary. Many Chinese spend a greater percentage of monthly income on pre-paid phone cards than Americans spend on food. This says a lot about the perceived importance of telecommunications in that society.

This is one reason I think that the current ICT market is just a tip of the iceberg as the China market will dictate pricing to the rest of the world in the years to come.

Nokia Announces Open C SDK Plug-In Availability for S60 Devices

Available for download at www.forum.nokia.com/openc , the Open C SDK Plug-In announced today allows deployment of Open C projects on existing S60 3rd Edition devices, millions of which have already been shipped into the global marketplace. By end-2006, Nokia alone had cumulatively shipped nearly 85 million S60 devices and of the 49 different S60 device models currently in the marketplace, 20 are built on the latest S60 3rd Edition platform.
"By making the Open C SDK Plug-In available, Nokia is helping to greatly broaden the potential pool of developers who will be essential in creating compelling applications for the next generation of smartphone devices," said Lee Epting, vice president, Forum Nokia, Nokia's global developer program. "Because Open C libraries are built on open-source projects, developers who need to design and implement large application bases to run on several operating systems, will now find it easier to write portable code for Symbian OS based devices. The increase in developer productivity from Open C will drive exciting new opportunities for S60 application development."
Open C makes it possible for developers to implement business logic and other core components of an application without having to learn Symbian's proprietary C++ variant. In addition, Open C delivers to developers significant portions of three open source projects - OpenSSL, GNOME, and LIBZ - providing the S60 developer community access to middleware functionality that is shared by many important open source projects, including Apache and Firefox.

Palm developing own OS - again



Palm is to build its own handheld operating system, combining a Linux foundation with the regular Palm OS look and feel. Work is clearly progressing: devices equipped with the new OS are due later this year, the company's CEO, Ed Colligan, said this week.

If all this sounds familiar, it's because it's the approach PalmSource, the Palm OS development company later acquired by Japan's Access, adopted earlier this decade. It decided to base future incarnations of the Palm OS - versions 6.0 and onward - on a Linux core surmounted by the famliar Palm user interface.


Link

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Where RSS is going.. Forward

Because of RSS ubiquity it is now a very attractive delivery medium for all kinds of content. However because the basic format is simple and primitive, there is no way to encode semantics without building an extension.

Link

Samsung UpStage

You see a phone that just says buy me, this is one.
Slim, Dual-Faced Form
  • The UpStage is the first product that's both a dedicated music player and a dedicated phone. And at only .37" slim, it's bound to pick up a ton of dedicated fans.
    Music (and Everything Else) Player
  • You can load up the UpStage with music from your PC or downloads from the Sprint Music StoreSM - then listen to it all through the stereo speaker or a stereo Bluetooth headset. Then there's a big, beautiful, 262,000-color display so you can watch music videos or Sprint TVSM. Just hit "play."
    1.3 Megapixel Camera
  • The same beautiful display that lets you enjoy music videos can also display your photos. The UpStage has a sweet 1.3 megapixel camera and camcorder so you'll never miss a photo op again.
    Stereo Bluetooth® Wireless Technology
  • Connecting to Bluetooth-enabled headsets, handsfree car systems and compatible printers sounds good, doesn't it? Well, connecting to your music with a stereo Bluetooth headset sounds even better.







  • Link

    Saturday, March 31, 2007

    Sprite offer DM with mobile wipe

    Currently under beta testing, Sprite Mobile Swipe works on any Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocket PC or Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone, and once installed, hides away in the background until activated by the device's owner.

    The software cannot be uninstalled without a user selected password. If the device is ever lost, simply send a SMS from a previously specified “partner” phone and you can have the device locked. You can also go one step further, and send a “wipe” text message that will erase the entire contents of the phone, including everything on the memory card.

    If, on the other hand, your phone is stolen, and the thief changes the SIM card, you will automatically get a SMS on the designated partner phone so the user will know the new number. You can also find out the recent call activity to help track your phone down.

    Link

    HTC Shift.. nice laptop or phone

    It's been a long time in coming, but after HTC's long, gradual feature buildup all the way from the very first Pocket PC phone in 2002, they're finally putting the "computer" in High Tech Computer by making the jump to ultraportable PC-maker. That's right, HTC's first foray into the UMPC market, the Shift (codename Shangri-La), is officially announced today. We don't yet have hard details on release date or price, but we do know it should be available in Q3 (we'd estimate for under $2,000). As for features, we know not to expect anything out of the ordinary (except lots of 3G), although the form factor is pretty notable: not too many UMPCs have a sliding keyboard, and none that we can recall have a tilting display in this orientation. Some specs:

    * VIA CPU (the one we tried had a 1.2GHz chip)
    * Vista business (yes, it was running Aero)
    * 7-inch sliding, tiling wide-touchscreen
    * 30GB drive
    * Tri-band UMTS / HSDPA, quad-band GSM / GPRS / EDGE
    * WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0
    * Biometric reader, front-facing camera

    Watch your TV from anywhere

    MY-IPTV Anywhere Mobile(TM) includes Honestech's original MY-IPTV Anywhere PC server and player software and new mobile player software for mobile and handheld devices. It also includes MY-IPBOX, an external USB 2.0TV tuner device. MY-IPTV Anywhere server software has to be set up on their home computer to host content via Internet Protocol (IP) to their mobile phone or Wi-Fi enabled mobile devices and any computer via a peer-to-peer connection. The product allows users to watch and control their TV from anywhere, and includes features such as channel surfing & changing, a personal video recorder, and scheduled recording from any computer. MY-IPTV Anywhere supports the latest H.264/MPEG-4 video compression technology standard for mobile phone,handheld devices, and any computer, from anywhere in the world. Now, with MY-IPTV Anywhere Mobile and a broadband internet connection, users can transmit their favorite programming from their home based broadcast network, from anywhere in the world as long as they have their enabled mobile device.

    X-series with Orb

    This week I purchased the Dopod 810 from 3 and signed up for X-series, one word WOW. Thank you 3 for giving us what we want, thats right mobile data and something useful like Orb. So easy to use and spot on as to what is needed. So watch this space.

    Oh as for Orb fantastic you setup the cient on your PC at home point it to which ever folders you want to share and login from any where, on your it will steam the media so you don't need to wait for it to download. You can get all types of data from your home network where ever you have internet conection, with X-seires that means everywhere.

    MS finaly gets it. Deepfish

    Thats right it is all about browsing. Nokia fixed it in the s60v3, for WM5 some of us use opera. The only problem is you can not down load it. Read about it in the ink bellow.

    Link

    Wednesday, March 21, 2007

    Tuesday, March 20, 2007

    Mobile or is it a Laptop

    Your mobile phone can be a personal computer in the near future. And that is not going to be a big surprise. Just take a look at the features that mobile phones have now and compare these mobile phones to the versions of yesteryears. You would see just how fast things are developing.

    At present, many mobile phone manufacturers are already into that challenge. If you know about the HTC mobile phone from Advantage, it looks like a small laptop but you can fold it up and use it as a phone. And at Cebit T-Mobile from Germany showed off its Ameo which is a mobile phone with a screen measuring 13 centimeters and comes with a drive with 8 gigabytes. The time has come that mobile phones have turned into PCs, I do not mind it at all.



    Saturday, March 17, 2007

    WM to support USB host


    Seiko Epson Corp. (Epson) is developing sample Windows CE 6.0 drivers for its S1R72V family of high-speed USB2.0-compatible controller chips. The first such driver, for the S1R72V17 controller chip, is now available, the company says.The S1R72V17 is a low-power USB2.0 interface controller that implements both host and device functions. The device supports USB2.0 data transfer rates of "HS" (480 Mbps), "FS" (12 Mbps), and "LS" (1.5 Mbps), for both host and device function operation, according to Epson.This sample driver is unique in that it can be connected to a mouse, keyboard, hub, and to storage equipment in order to effortlessly set up a development environment on a CEPC device, eliminating the need to establish a specialized development platform environment. By launching this new sample driver for Windows(R) Embedded CE 6.0, Epson has further expanded its lineup of sample drivers for USB controller LSI products in an effort to support customers in their development activities.

    Key features of the driver, as listed by Epson, include:
    1) USB2.0 host functions
    • Supports HS (480 Mbps), FS (12 Mbps), and LS (1.5 Mbps) transfer rates
    • Supports control, bulk, and interrupt transfer
    • Compatible with CEPC PCI bus
    • Compatible with test mode
    • Supports multichannel
    • Supports mass storage class
    • Supports hubs (compatible with multistage connection)
    • Supports HID
    • Supports CDC

    2) USB2.0 device functions

    • Supports HS (480 Mbps), FS (12 Mbps), and LS (1.5 Mbps) transfer rates
    • Supports control, bulk, interrupt, and isochronous transfer
    • Supports Endpoint 0 in addition to five general Endpoints (for bulk/interrupt/isochronous transfer)
    • Compatible with CEPC PCI bus
    • Compatible with test mode
    • Supports serial class (ActiveSync can be used)
    • Supports mass storage class

    TiVo Launches Remote Scheduling With Verizon Wireless

    TiVo and Verizon Wireless today announced the availability of TiVo Mobile scheduling, a downloadable application available only through Verizon Wireless.TiVo Mobile scheduling allows subscribers to purchase the mobile service through select Verizon Wireless handsets and schedule recordings on their TiVo Series2 or Series3 TiVo boxes.
    TiVo and Verizon Wireless bring consumers the convenience of scheduling television recordings while away from the living room. Whether you are away from home or discussing TV at the water cooler, all that is needed is a select Verizon Wireless Get It Now-enabled handset to schedule recordings on your TiVo box.
    TiVo Mobile scheduling uses the award-winning TiVo interface to give subscribers the ability to easily search for and browse through listings to find shows that they want to record. Subscribers to the TiVo Mobile scheduling service will also have access to premium entertainment content that is updated daily, including a customizable channel lineup, the most popular and most recorded shows and a current list of recommendations from TiVo.

    Nokia steps closer to to WIMAX network in the USA

    Since the announcement in January, things look to be moving fast as they have announced that "Sprint Nextel has awarded it the four Texas markets of Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio and Austin for the initial build-out of Sprint Nextel's mobile WiMAX network."

    "Nokia will deploy WiMAX infrastructure, including the Nokia Flexi WiMAX Base Station, at sites throughout the four Texas markets, enabling Sprint Nextel to deliver wireless Internet broadband access to consumers, businesses and governments. Service is expected to commence in the Texas markets during the first half of 2008. Sprint Nextel's mobile WiMAX network intends to cover 100 million people nationwide by the end of 2008."

    Link

    Saturday, March 10, 2007

    gSyncit for Microsoft Outlook

    gSyncit works by updating your Microsoft Outlook calendar with your Google calendar entries and then updating your Google calendar with your Microsoft Outlook entries. All appointments that occurred in the past 365 days and those that will occur in the next 365 days will be synchronized

    Link

    Wednesday, March 07, 2007

    Windows Mobile 6 SDK Now Available for Download

    "The Windows Mobile 6 SDKs add documentation, sample code, header and library files, emulator images and tools to Visual Studio that let you build applications for Windows Mobile 6. With Windows Mobile 6, we are revising our SKU taxonomy and naming to better align our brand and products with the realities of today’s mobile device marketplace. The historical form-factor based distinction between Windows Mobile powered Smartphone and Windows Mobile powered Pocket PC Phone Edition is blurring dramatically. We want our taxonomies and terminology to evolve to better reflect the evolution of the mobile device industry."

    link

    Google released a Google Maps client for Windows Mobile

    Google released a Google Maps client for Windows Mobile that installs from a CAB file that can be downloaded and installed directly from Google (no need to sync with a PC). It is also a native application. No Java Midlet needed. This means it is fast and looks good on a Windows Mobile device. I tested it and the satellite image view looks nice and clear on its screen and the menu looks like most other native applications.

    You can download it directly to your device from: http://google.com/gmm/

    The application can also show a traditional looking street map, locations of businesses, real-time traffic for certain cities, and driving directions. I’m very impressed by what I’ve seen. I hope we see more native Windows Mobile apps from Google in the future.

    Wednesday, February 28, 2007

    E-mail best practices

    These days, e-mail is used by just about everyone. Unfortunately, a lot of users out there don't use it right, flirting with security risks, consuming excessive bandwidth, and practicing lousy etiquette. Here are some basic e-mail usage guidelines to help your users handle their e-mail responsibly and to safeguard your organisation.

    1. Prevent virus outbreaks and spam
    Viruses are often spread through e-mail. You can greatly reduce the spread of e-mail viruses by using antivirus software, using only e-mail services that offer automatic antivirus protection (such as AOL, Google, Hotmail, and Yahoo), opening e-mail only from trusted sources, opening only attachments you're expecting, and scanning attached files with antivirus software before opening them.

    Spam is loosely defined as unsolicited bulk e-mail and loosely correlates to the junk mail that turns up in your home mailbox. But spam represents more than unwanted clutter. It clogs e-mail accounts -- and networks and servers -- while trying to sell products, spread jokes, or propagate Internet hoaxes.

    Reduce the amount of spam you receive by being cautious where you post your e-mail address. Avoid publishing your e-mail address on Web sites or submitting it to every site or organisation that requests it.

    Never forward chain messages, which often reveal coworkers' and colleagues' e-mail addresses to other parties. Use caution when accepting e-mail offers or agreeing to accept mailings from vendors; subscribe only to Web sites and newsletters you really need and consider creating a generic Hotmail or Yahoo e-mail account for these subscriptions.

    Don't open unsolicited e-mail. If you accidentally open spam, don't click links offering to unsubscribe or remove you from the mailing list unless the sender is a trusted vendor.

    2. Avoid phishing attacks
    Phishing scams are designed to steal consumers' personal information. They often use doctored and fraudulent e-mail messages to trick recipients into divulging private information, such as credit card numbers, account usernames, passwords, and even tax file information.

    Online banking and e-commerce are generally safe, but you should always be careful about divulging personal and corporate information over the Internet. Phishing messages often boast real logos and appear to have come from the actual organisation, but those messages are frequently nothing more than copyright infringements and faked addresses. If you suspect a message possesses any credibility, you are much safer calling the company directly -- preferably at a telephone number printed on a paper statement or invoice -- and talking to an authorised representative.

    3. Manage your Inbox
    Sort messages by priority, subject, date, sender, and other options to help find important e-mail that requires your attention. Proper e-mail etiquette dictates that you respond to all e-mail in a timely fashion. Generally speaking, you should respond to all professional e-mail within a business day, even if it's just to say you've received the message and will look into the matter. Occasionally, you may receive an e-mail thread that contains responses from several people; always read the entire thread before responding.

    4. Compose professional messages
    It's easy to convey the impression that you're unprofessional or careless if you don't follow some basic principles of good business writing. Make sure you follow proper grammar and sentence structure when composing and responding to messages and use a spell checker. Don't type in all capital letters -- it creates the effect of shouting. Break your message into paragraphs for logic and readability.

    Before clicking the Send button, give it a final once-over. Reread the entire e-mail, checking it for grammatical errors, punctuation mistakes, and typos. You'll be amazed at what you catch. Also make sure your tone is appropriate for the message.

    5. Write effective subject lines
    Writing subject lines can be tricky, but you should always include one. The goal is to summarise the message without being too wordy or too vague. Long subjects tend to be skimmed or ignored, and they don't always fully display in e-mail viewers. For best readability, use sentence case for subject lines rather than all caps:

    Agenda for meeting on 3/29/07

    Not

    AGENDA FOR MEETING ON 3/29/07

    6. Properly use CC and BCC
    The carbon copy (CC) and blind carbon copy (BCC) features found in most e-mail clients allow you to send copies of an e-mail to others you need to keep informed but who aren't necessarily the primary recipients.

    When copying others, be certain the e-mail message pertains to them. If you use e-mail address lists, verify that all of the members of the list should receive the e-mail, too, and remove those who don't need to be included. And use the BCC feature sparingly. If sensitive topics require BCCing others, it may be best to take the matter offline and discuss it in person.

    7. Obey etiquette rules when forwarding messages
    Before you forward an e-mail, make sure that all recipients need to receive the message. In addition, be careful when forwarding sensitive or confidential information. Never forward proprietary information to external audiences or to unauthorised recipients. Before clicking the Send button, review whether a message's contents are appropriate for each listed recipient.

    8. Don't be a party to a flame war
    Flame wars are heated e-mail exchanges that are more emotional than reasoned, and they have no place in professional communications. If you receive a flame or suddenly find yourself in a flame war, take a little time before responding, if you respond at all. Think about the situation and reply rationally not emotionally.

    You may also decide not to reply but to deal with the issue in person. Often, flame wars are started because of a simple misunderstanding. An ill-phrased comment (or even a well phrased one) can be misconstrued by a recipient, who then fires off a salvo in response. Instead of replying, go talk to the person and discuss the message. If talking with the person doesn't end the problem, involve a manager for assistance in resolving the issue offline.

    9. Protect e-mail addresses
    Don't divulge your coworkers' e-mail addresses to vendors, friends, or others outside the organisation. Verify that recipients listed in the To and CC fields should be receiving messages and that you won't be revealing others' e-mail addresses in the process. Don't post your or coworkers' e-mail addresses on Internet forums or bulletin boards, on Usenet groups, in chat rooms, or in other public areas.

    Here are a couple of simple ways to help keep others' e-mail addresses private. First, use the BCC feature when you need to hide their e-mail addresses from external audiences. Second, delete their addresses from messages you forward. It takes only a few moments and will reduce the chances of coworkers' e-mail addresses proliferating in the wild.

    10. Be smart about handling attachments
    E-mail attachments consume inordinate amounts of e-mail server space and network bandwidth and are often the culprits behind virus outbreaks -- but they're often the easiest way to transfer files. Just be sure to follow these guidelines when e-mailing attachments:

    • Don't attach large files to an e-mail; anything over one or two megabytes shouldn't be sent via e-mail.
    • Limit the number of files you attach to a message to five or fewer.
    • Save attachments to your hard drive and then delete the e-mail message containing the attachment.
    • Don't open unexpected attachments or those sent by unknown parties.
    • Always scan files with an antivirus program before opening an attachment. Never click an attachment without first confirming that it's virus-free.
    • Don't annoy recipients by forwarding attachments they can't access. If an attachment requires a new or less-common application, say so in your message.

    11. Don't include sensitive or potentially embarrassing information
    Don't make the mistake of thinking your e-mails are private. They're not. Think of them as postcards. You should never include any information in an e-mail that you wouldn't want published on the front page of your local newspaper. In other words, never send confidential, proprietary, sensitive, personal, or classified information through e-mail. You should also refrain from making inflammatory, emotionally charged comments in e-mail.

    12. Know when to use e-mail (and when not to)
    Businesses provide e-mail for professional, business-related use, not for jokes, gossip, or chain e-mails. Also remember that you shouldn't send an e-mail to do a conversation's work. Complicated subjects are often difficult to explain face to face, much less in an e-mail. Instead of firing off a complicated explanation via e-mail, set up a short meeting to address the issue in person.

    E-mail is also a poor stand-in for conversation when conducting critical, difficult, and/or unpleasant discussions, such as issues related to human resources matters. Touchy communications are best handled in person.

    Friday, February 23, 2007

    Steps to create better meeting

    Given our love for meetings, we need to make them more effective. Having recently “enjoyed” several truly pointless meetings, I know there’s a better way.
    1. Make sure the meeting has a clear purpose. If I could scream this, I would: “What is the purpose of this meeting?” If you can’t define the purpose clearly, or you’re obfuscating it in order to get me into the meeting then shame on you.
    2. Avoid suspense. There’s no place in meetings for suspense. Whether you’re delivering bad news or good news - just get to the point. You can explain all the circumstances of your news after the fact, but don’t keep people sitting around waiting.
    3. Document what’s going on. The best thing about a meeting is not remembering what was talked about 5 minutes after it was finished. I suppose to avoid pointless meetings I could say, “be remarkable and memorable” but barring that, pick one person as secretary and have them distribute their notes later on.
    4. Avoid distractions. Every meeting has at least one guy that’s distracted by something. He’s looking at his computer screen, staring out the window, signaling to people walking by the conference room, or picking his nose. Boot his butt out of there, he’s Mr. Pointless Meeting.
    5. Have an agenda. This won’t work for impromptu meetings, but an agenda is a very good way to keep people on track. Distribute it beforehand. Don’t ask for everyone’s approval. If you do, and don’t get it, you’ll have a harder time following the agenda. Agendas are an opt-out effort; if someone doesn’t put in suggestions or request changes (or respond in any way) they’ve - by default - accepted the agenda.
    6. Avoid regular meetings if there’s no agenda. Following point #4, if you’re having a regular, weekly meeting but there’s no agenda, why have the meeting? If you say “habit” then poke yourself in the eye. Meetings aren’t meant to satisfy your need for organization and habitual, mindless behaviors; they’re there to solve problems.
    7. Schedule something critical right after. If you have the sense that a meeting may be pointless schedule something important right after. Tell the attendees as soon as you get in there, so you’ve got an escape route setup. You could always fake it, or even have someone call you during the meeting to get out, but it’s much more effective if you legitimately have to move on. It’ll help you keep others focused, moving through the agenda and accomplishing something.


    Wireless doorbell rings you in

    After testing the technology in its home Dutch market, wireless startup Waleli now plans to sell its GSM Doorbell internationally, beginning in northern Europe, the company said Tuesday.

    The wireless doorbell allows apartment dwellers, home owners, and small businesses to answer their doorbell, talk to visitors, and even open the door remotely with their GSM phones.

    The GSM Doorbell consists of four parts: an intercom, an electronic lock, a GSM-enabled doorbell, and a SIM (subscriber identification module) for the GSM device.

    When someone presses the doorbell device, it rings your handset, allowing you to communicate with visitors and, by entering a pincode, to grant them access to your home, all without having to leave your location.

    The technology can be useful when dealing with delivery people, door-to-door solicitors, and many others who need or want to stop by. And you don't have to worry about locking yourself out of the house or apartment again because the machine will recognize your mobile's number and unlock the door for you

    Link

    Wednesday, February 21, 2007

    Google VP: Mobile phones the future of the Internet

    The future growth of the Internet lies in the hands of mobile phone users, not computers, according to Google Vice President Vinton Cerf. Speaking in Bangalore, India this morning, Cerf said to reporters that while the Internet population has exploded from 50 million to 1.1 billion since 1997, it still only reaches a sixth of the world's population.

    The only way to reach the remaining 5.5 billion people on the planet will be to make it more affordable to access the Internet, according to Cerf. Internet access via mobile phone has been slowly gaining momentum in developed countries—over 50 percent of those surveyed toward the end of 2005 had used at least one data service on their phones. However, such mobile access could be the key to quickly getting large populations in developing countries online due of the marginal cost of a mobile phone compared to a computer.


    Link

    Friday, February 16, 2007

    Explore the world with free maps on your mobile

    A nice software offering from Nokia, the charging model will be in conjunction with operators, they will charge a subscription for turn-by-turn directions.

    Link