Archive for April, 2010
10 reasons to get excited about the Nokia N8
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
Move over Apple, Nokia isn’t ready to give up its market share leading position just yet. After two failed flagship smartphone attempts — the N97 and N900 — Nokia has cued up the drool-worthy N8 for third quarter release. I’m suddenly excited about a Nokia handset again, and you should be, too. The N8 might also be the Nokia handset to crack the US market.
Nokia is leaning on its strengths in hardware innovation, while improving software and services. The handset manufacturer has long excelled at hardware, whereas Apple does much better with software. For example, Nokia shipped cell phones with great cameras years before Apple sold one iPhone. But Nokia has struggled to extend steller photo and video capabilities into the capacitive touchscreen era.
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No, Microsoft did not say Android steps on its IP
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
A spokesperson for Microsoft’s legal department confirmed to Betanews this afternoon that a precise legal interpretation of the company’s patent agreement announced late yesterday with phone maker HTC is accurate, but interpretations of that announcement that imply Microsoft will charge royalties to HTC for its use of the Android operating system, are inaccurate.
“This agreement covers HTC’s use of Microsoft technology that may appear in Android,” the spokesperson told Betanews, affirming a specific interpretation of the language that we sought clarification on. As the announcement reads, “Microsoft Corp. and HTC Corp. have signed a patent agreement that provides broad coverage under Microsoft’s patent portfolio for HTC’s mobile phones running the Android mobile platform. Under the terms of the agreement, Microsoft will receive royalties from HTC.” (emphasis ours)
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Hello? Facebook login! Hello? Where are my piggies?
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
In an astonishing statistic released this morning, Web analytics service Experian Hitwise reported that of all the Web searches performed in the United States on the top three search engines Google, Yahoo, and Bing during the first four weeks of March, about two percent on average are for the word facebook. For Yahoo and Bing, Another one percent is for facebook.com, and just less than one percent is for facebook login.
Coupled with statistics for the same month from analytics service comScore, Experian’s findings suggest that, from March 1 through March 27, searches for a way to get to Facebook other than through typing the address or clicking on a bookmark, accounted for as many as 175.84 million Google searches in the US, over 78.9 million Yahoo searches, and over 80 million Bing searches.
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HP buying Palm is like Ke$ha marrying John McCain
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
Exactly, what do they have in common? HP-Palm is a merger of necessity. HP needs to jumpstart (for the umpteenth time) its mobile strategy and Palm needs to be bought by anybody or perhaps die. Hey, there is anybody and then there’s anybody else would be better. In a parallel universe the situation is different. HP is doing what I said Microsoft should: Buy Palm, and what a steal HP is getting for $1.2 billion.
Perhaps I’m missing something about things in common. While I was writing this post, Walter Lounsbery tweeted to me: “HP and Palm both share that has-been entrepreneurial spirit.” Ouch! Get the Neosporin! And a Band-Aid! Alex Scoble poured salt on the wound. In a response to me at FriendFeed: “They both sell mobile devices…just no one knows that HP sells mobile devices.” Whoa, put away that baseball bat, Alex!
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HP execs: Fate of Palm’s R&D team, iPaq, Pre, and Pixi still undecided
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
If financial analysts had concerns about Hewlett-Packard’s ability to resurrect Palm’s flailing fortunes, those concerns may have actually deepened following HP’s announcement call with analysts Wednesday afternoon.
During the call, which lasted under 20 minutes, Executive Vice President Todd Bradley told analysts that he expects HP’s track record for building out communications infrastructure with eight of the world’s ten largest telecom carriers will earn HP points when making its case for carrying Palm products.
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Actual Analysis: HP buys Palm, and the earth does move
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
HP’s just-announced $1.2 billion offer to buy Palm is as close as this industry gets to a lifejacket. Despite the fact that the deal won’t suddenly vault Palm back to the top of the mobile market it practically created, HP’s ultimate goals for its latest acquisition extend well beyond the near-term.
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Google’s good news: Microsoft cannibalizes Yahoo search share
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
Microsoft sure is gaining search share fast. Too bad it’s cannibalizing Yahoo rather than gaining on Google.
Today, Nielsen released March 2010 US search share numbers, and, whoa, are they good news-bad news for Microsoft. The good news: Microsoft search share is 12.2 percent. The bad news: Microsoft closed the gap on Yahoo to within 1.2 percent. Yahoo’s search share is 13.4 percent.
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A gentle hands-on with Mozilla’s first browser for Android
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
Android apps crash. There’s no other way to say it. If you spend a lot of time installing and testing new apps on Android devices, you know it.
So when Mozilla officially rolled out its first public version of the Fennec mobile browser for Android with various warnings that it is a very early “pre-alpha,” with experimental features that could require hard resets, I thought I knew what I was in for.
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HP to acquire Palm for $1.2 billion
by on Apr.29, 2010, under Betanews
Perhaps the headline here should be, “HTC doesn’t acquire Palm.” In any event, our question from last week, “What if nobody wants Palm?” has just been rendered moot: Hewlett-Packard has just announced it has agreed to acquire the assets of Palm Inc. for $5.70 per share, or approximately $1.2 billion.
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UK-based hosting company Memset buys URL shortener Is.gd
by on Apr.27, 2010, under TechCrunch
Cloud hosting company Memset this morning announced that it has agreed to acquire URL shortening service Is.gd. Memset in a statement says it has thus secured the URL shortener’s future, and added that it plans to maintain it as a non-advertising-supported, free Internet service indefinitely.
The acquisition and Memset’s stated intents represent good news for Is.gd users, who (should) have been rightly worried about the service’s ability to compete with the likes of Bit.ly and major Internet players who’ve introduced their own short URLs (Amazon, Twitter, Google, Microsoft, etc.).
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