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Posts Tagged ‘mobile’

Why I Turned In My iPhone and Went Android

July 11th, 2010 No comments

For such a long-time Apple believer and Mac/iPhone customer, the idea of turning my back on Steve Jobs and crew, stopping my app store and media buying preferences almost entirely and choosing a divergent path is not one taken lightly. In the two months following Google I/O, I’ve talked about my looking at Android and how I think the mobile operating system is a real challenger to the iPhone’s place on the pedestal in the world of smartphones, but I didn’t make a lot of noise about my taking the final step and switching to Android. It turns out that on the very day the iPhone 4 hit Apple Stores and AT&T Stores around the country, I was trading mine in and converting the family (including my wife) to Google’s OS. Given many of the comments I have seen around the Web comparing the two platforms, I thought I would explain my choice – especially as news articles are hitting seemingly every day that back up my hypotheses.

For me, more than the over-used phrase of “open”, the promise of true multitasking, and the platform’s integration with Google Apps, was one word – “Choice”. Choice of handsets. Choice of carriers. Choice of manufacturers. Second behind the word choice has to be “Momentum”. I can see that Android has momentum in terms of improved quality, in terms of the number of devices sold and users, and yes, applications, which are growing in quantity, soon to be followed by quality. I really do believe that if Android does not already have a market share lead over Apple yet in this discussion, they soon will. It is inevitable. The growth in the number of handsets, carriers and users will drive more developers to the platform, and the holdouts who are not there will eventually make the move. And yes, third is “Cloud” – the idea that I don’t need to be tied to my desktop computer to manage data on the phone, but instead, the phone is built to tap into data stored on the Web. Fourth is “Capability”. The Android platform, as the Droid commercials offer, simply does more. The power of the mobile hotspot cannot be understated, and the iPhone is a zero there.

Unfortunately, I am pretty sure I hadn’t previously made that decision process clear. Most, thanks to my derogatory comments against AT&T (rightly deserved, I may add), thought I switched from my AT&T-fed iPhone to my Sprint contract on the HTC EVO and new HTC Hero because of the many frequent issues with the carrier. This is not true. Yes, AT&T has been dramatically underdelivering in terms of quality and functionality, but this did not drive me away from Apple as much as the lack of choice did. Not even the announcement of an imminent offering of a Verizon iPhone could have kept me on Apple.

I have been publicly and openly thinking about moving off iPhone for more than six months. At the time of the December post, none of us knew what the iPhone 4 would look like. We didn’t know if Apple would open up to new carriers. We didn’t know what the Nexus One would offer. We didn’t know about the HTC EVO or the HTC Hero or the HTC Aria or the Droid Incredible. But the writing was on the wall that change was afoot, and we would have to be in wait and see mode. I waited, and what I saw told me that the speed at which Android has improved and the speed at which new models are developed and released is far outpacing Apple. In my personal experience of using the HTC EVO after receiving a free unit from Google I/O, the gaps in the platform were very few, and were more than outweighed by the device’s capabilities. I kept running into ways to use my EVO where my previous generation iPhone could not keep up, and even my handling of the new iPhone 4 was not enough to make me feel I had chosen wrong.

This isn’t to say that it’s impossible the iPhone 4 is the best mobile phone in the world. Maybe it is. Apple’s sense of design and integration is impeccable. They do fantastic work and I do not think they have an equal in hardware. I would never say the HTC EVO is a better hardware device than the iPhone 4, so that discussion is moot. But it is a fantastically capable, flexible device, and I had the choice – yes that word again – to get my wife a different model with a different physical appearance and a different set of capabilities, in the Hero. With Apple, my choice (if you can call it that) is to buy this year’s model or last year’s model, and black versus white (assuming white ever ships).

I also will never tell you that Android is perfect – in software or in hardware. I have seen bugs on the EVO that have impacted button sensitivity, which at times are baffling and directly impact my ability to use the device for minutes at a time. There are background app crashes, and yes, you do have to be smart about how you use apps to avoid draining the battery faster than would be optimal. But I don’t feel that any of these bugs are permanent, nor are they reason to switch back and call it a public loss. It’s certainly not as if I have been blind to iPhones traded in or sent back to the Genius Bar on the other side of the aisle. In my view, I feel that Android is today equally capable to Apple in almost all ways, is more capable in several ways, and is less capable or polished in others.

When I first discussed my thoughts on Android, I made comments saying that if I were a software developer looking to deploy a mobile app, I would look to code for Android first and iPhone and iPad second, to gain highly visible mindshare in a fast growing marketplace. In a piece in the San Jose Mercury News last week, that theory was validated by developers who said the once small pond was turning into an ocean. The article said “early bets on Android and Google are paying off.”

On Thursday, news from ComScore said Android gained market share while Apple, BlackBerry and pretty much everybody else lost share. On Saturday, Barron’s also reported on the growth, saying Android “could eat Apple’s lunch.” This momentum is real on the market share side, no doubt driven by a swath of partners pushing Android-capable devices, while Apple, a personal favorite mind you, is practically going it alone.

Earlier on Saturday, news broke that HTC was not going to “jump into the tablet market” any time soon, as the company looked for a compelling form factor and use case. We’ve seen how Apple launched the iPad and has done tremendously well by it, but the great thing about the Android ecosystem is that HTC’s saying no is not a deathknell for the platform or its customers (including me). If HTC won’t make it, then somebody else will. As we saw with the iPad, rumors of tablets stirred for years until Apple finally launched one. That’s what can happen when only one manufacturer has access to a system. Seeing HTC is not doing a tablet now caused me to shrug, not to writhe in pain. But if they had an exclusive agreement with Google, that would be another story altogether.

The momentum is clear and the option of multiple choices is clear. If I like Android and hate my new carrier, Sprint, I can switch to Verizon and get the Incredible. If I have an aneurysm and love AT&T, I can get the Aria. If I want a small screen, I can do that. If I want a physical keyboard, I can find a device that does that. But for iPhone, I simply would have to take whatever Apple offers and believe that their choices are right for me. I’ve chosen Apple many times and will again in the future, but I don’t think I should buy into a system that restricts my choices when another one is out there that enables my choices.

I switched to Android because I am extending my move away from the desktop and more to the cloud. iTunes does not deserve to be the core of my device any more, as it is simply a utility to rent films and get new apps for the iPad. I do believe the Web to be my future hub, and Google is preparing for that world, while Apple is not. Their devices do great work to get to the Web easily, but once there, I have almost always been pointed to other providers, so now, with Android, for the most part, I can just go to the source.

A bet on iPhone 4 today may be a vote for the best phone of today. But a bet on Android is a bet on the future. I am betting on an ecosystem and an application environment that encourages best of breed developers to move their product to a growing population of smartphones, and I expect to reap the benefits. I have the utmost respect for Steve Jobs, Apple and all the work Cupertino has done to make my family’s lives better, but I think the baton has been passed. I won’t be hanging around hoping they will get reinvigorated, to win on their own against a flotilla of partners on the opposing side. Our family is on the side that is going to win the next five years of mobile.

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Larry Page: Jobs is rewriting history

July 10th, 2010 No comments

According to the Google founder, Steve Jobs’

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Europe pushes for safer social networks

February 9th, 2010 No comments

The European Commission celebrated Safer Internet Day on Tuesday and while some social networking sites have improved their privacy rules, some still lag behind where the commission had hoped they would be.

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IBM launches 8-core Power7 servers

February 9th, 2010 No comments

On Monday IBM introduced its latest Power7 processor, which adds more cores and improved multithreading capabilities to boost the performance of servers requiring high up time.

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IBM launches 8-core Power7 servers

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Akibatteru #11: Tokyo Comic Market

February 9th, 2010 No comments

In this month’s Akibatteru, Hiroko visits the Tokyo Comic Market and checks out the launch of Final Fantasy XIII. Plus we have footage of X Japan filming new music videos in Los Angeles.

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Akibatteru #11: Tokyo Comic Market

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Steve Ballmer on SharePoint

October 22nd, 2009 No comments

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sits down with Network World Senior Editor John Fontana to discuss SharePoint, online services and some of his highs and lows after 10 years being the Microsoft CEO.

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Steve Ballmer on SharePoint

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Blackberry’s U2 Plans Revealed

July 2nd, 2009 No comments

Blackberry’s U2 Plans Revealed

Much has been said about Blackberry’s sponsorship of the U2 360 Tour, but very little of it has been said by either Blackberry or U2. When the tour was announced months ago, U2 manager Paul McGuinness promised “new and innovative ways to enhance the mobile music experience on the BlackBerry platform for U2 fans.” Research In Motion, creators of the Blackberry, went on a domain-buying spree that left fans with more questions than answers about what was on the horizon.

The tour itself began last night in Barcelona with its high-tech “Claw” stage, the world’s first transformable LED screen, and even a live satellite hookup to the International Space Station.

Where was Blackberry? Nowhere.

But there’s finally a sign that big plans are on the way for U2 fans who own a Blackberry. Without fanfare, Research In Motion has published a Blackberry Loves U2 page on Blackberry.com that advertises what it’s calling the “U2 Mobile Album.”

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The app/tool appears to have five sections: Album (No Line On The Horizon), News, 360 Tour, Who’s Listening, and Gallery. The teaser video on Blackberry’s web site offers some hints about what they offer. It appears that fans will be able to listen to the album, watch U2 music videos, view and share photos, read news from U2.com, and even see other Blackberry users on a stadium map during U2 concerts.

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All of this seems to be hush-hush for now. There’s no announcement on the RIM press release page. The URL of the web page begins with “na,” which indicates “North America” — we couldn’t find an equivalent page on RIM’s UK web site. The screenshot above references the city of Berlin, which could be a sign they’re intending to announce this before the tour reaches Berlin on July 18. Or the announcement could be timed with the July 12 launch of RIM’s new phone, the Blackberry Tour 9630. But that’s pure speculation on our part.

In any case, it’s an interesting preview of what’s to come and a sign that Blackberry and U2 won’t be quiet about their plans much longer.
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Intel Said to Win Nokia as Customer for Mobile Chips

June 23rd, 2009 No comments

Intel Said to Win Nokia as Customer for Mobile Chips (Update2) – Bloomberg.com

June 22 (Bloomberg) — Intel Corp., the world’s largest chipmaker, will supply Nokia Oyj with processors for mobile devices, a breakthrough in its effort to enter the phone market, a person familiar with the matter said.

The deal will be announced on a conference call tomorrow, said the person, who declined to be identified because the details are confidential. Intel scheduled the call for an “important announcement” with Anand Chandrasekher, senior vice president of the company’s ultra-mobility group.

Intel, whose microprocessors run more than 80 percent of the world’s personal computers, has struggled for about a decade to get a foothold in the market for mobile-phone chips. Chandrasekher leads a group that sells a scaled-down version of Intel’s personal-computer processor. The chip, called Atom, is designed for mobile devices that access the Web and send e-mail.

“Even if they get just a piece of Nokia’s business, it’s a big deal,” said Will Strauss, a Cave Creek, Arizona-based analyst for research firm Forward Concepts. “Nokia is still the biggest cell-phone maker in the world.”

Claudine Mangano, a spokeswoman for Santa Clara, California-based Intel, declined to comment. Laurie Armstrong, a spokeswoman for Nokia in the U.S., didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment.

Otellini’s Plan

In 2006, Intel Chief Executive Officer Paul Otellini scrapped his predecessor’s $5 billion investment in chips for mobile devices, after the company was late to the market and failed to win enough customers.

Now Otellini is again pushing to get Intel’s chips into phones, a bid to lessen the company’s reliance on computers, which account for than 90 percent of sales. A total of 1.21 billion mobile phones were sold globally last year, according to ABI Research in Oyster Bay, New York.

Intel shares fell 33 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $15.68 today on the Nasdaq Stock Market. They have gained 7 percent this year. Espoo, Finland-based Nokia fell 46 cents, or 4.3 percent, to 10.29 euros.

Intel Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith said in February that the company needed to land one of the top five mobile-phone makers if it wanted to build a significant business.

Texas Instruments

Intel is challenging Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of chips used to run programs in mobile phones. San Diego- based Qualcomm Inc., meanwhile, supplies the majority of communications chips for phones. Both companies have said that Intel would struggle to break their dominance because its products use too much power.

Intel announced in February it had landed LG Electronics Inc., the world’s third-largest phone maker, as a customer. LG will use an Intel processor to make a mobile Internet device, a cross between a mobile phone and a computer.

Intel’s attempts to create a mobile business have foundered before after early announcements of interest from customers, said Jim McGregor, an analyst at Scottsdale, Arizona-based research firm In-Stat.

“They’ve been dreaming of getting a significant win at Nokia,” he said. “It’s a big announcement, they’re a key guy. The only question now is whether they will actually come out with a product.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Ian King in San Francisco at ianking@bloomberg.net

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Screenshots: Windows Phone, Windows Mobile 6.5, Windows Marketplace app store

February 16th, 2009 No comments

In something of an admission that it’s been looking at the consumer mobile market all wrong, Microsoft has announced it’s completely rebranding its mobile offerings as ‘Windows Phone’.

From now on, Windows Phone will be the umbrella term for all things Windows Mobile, including the brand-new WinMo operating system, Windows Mobile 6.5, which was unveiled at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona today.
Windows Mobile 6.5

Windows Mobile 6.5 has a completely overhauled user interface, featuring a large honeycomb-style grid of icons. IE Mobile 6 was also announced, and in line with the more consumer-oriented focus of Windows Phone, promises a more user-friendly Web browsing experience.
Windows Mobile Marketplace

Adobe Flash is built in as standard, but the other big win for the new Windows Phone platform is Microsoft’s application store, officially named Windows Mobile Marketplace. Like the app store on Apple’s iPhone, the Windows Mobile Marketplace offers users a single destination to download mobile applications from Microsoft and third-party developers, such as Facebook, directly to the handset.
honeycomb
The Marketplace is pegged to go live in the fourth quarter of 2009, proving for sure that Microsoft is nothing if not late to the mobile marketplace — Apple and Google have had app stores since 2008. But better late than never.
My Phone

Microsoft’s other major announcement was its My Phone service. My Phone is essentially a mobile backup solution, not dissimilar to Apple’s MobileMe. It’ll allow a complete backup of personal data such as contacts, messages and MP3s, over 3G networks or Wi-Fi, to Microsoft’s backup facility. Lost your phone? Just get a new one, log in, and your data’s pulled right back down to the new handset.

What’s more, My Phone will be free, supported by advertising — but not on the phone. Your backed-up files will be accessible on your PC, and ads will be displayed as you browse these on your computer. But if you only use your phone, you won’t see ads.

At the time of our briefing, total storage for My Phone wasn’t set in stone. Internally, Microsoft has been testing the service with 200MB, but it’s almost certain it will be in the region of 25GB when it launches later this year.

We expect to see much more of Windows Phone and Windows Mobile 6.5 as this year’s Mobile World Congress progresses, but until then have a peek at some hot-off-the-press official screenshots of Windows Mobile 6.5’s revamped user interface over the next few pages.

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Microsoft set to unveil MobileMe competitor next month

January 21st, 2009 No comments

Microsoft set to unveil MobileMe competitor next month

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Microsoft set to unveil MobileMe competitor next month

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MIT students build mobile applications in 13 weeks

December 13th, 2008 No comments

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MIT professor Hal Abelson started today’s final presentation for the school’s “Building Mobile Applications” class by saying, “A course like this couldn’t have existed ten years ago… maybe not even a year ago. Courses like this right now are unique, but in two years they’ll be completely ordinary.”

What’s extraordinary is that on top of a full college course-load at one of the most challenging schools in the country, these groups of students built fully working mobile applications for Windows Mobile, Android, and Symbian devices while mentors from the likes of Google, Nokia, Bank of America, and Microsoft oversaw their progress.

Here are the ten applications that were presented today. Some of them might remain as small-scale projects, while others are full-blown, robust applications that have already undergone serious development and are poised to enter the marketplace.

Marauder (Windows Mobile)

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Marauder measures crowd density by detecting nearby Bluetooth-enabled phones. So say you’re looking for a restaurant nearby — the idea is that you’ll be able to see how crowded it is before you go. For this to work, at least one person’s phone in the restaurant has to have Marauder installed on it. That phone will see how many other phones are around it by checking for Bluetooth signals, and that data will be uploaded to Marauder’s servers. Locations on a map (see above) will be color coded based on density. It’s a cool idea that seems to need to be fleshed out a bit more.

For example, there’s no way to measure density based on a building’s occupancy rate. Currently, 20-30 detected devices returns a “crowded” rating whether or not you’re at a sporting event or inside a tiny club. The program also has potential civil and business uses for things like public transportation and housing data. All in all, a unique spin on location-based services.

Ballyhoo! (Symbian)

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Ballyhoo! is a relatively straightforward mobile coupon redemption tool. You search for deals in your immediate vicinity and you’re presented with mobile coupons that can be redeemed at point-of-sale terminals that are equipped to handle near field communication (NFC) – think of those Mastercard PayPass terminals where you just tap your card on the device instead of swiping it.

In order to get merchants on board with this flavor of coupon-giving, shoppers’ usage data can be anonymously given to stores for marketing and research purposes.

Memento (Android)

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Super cool. Memento automatically organizes the photos you take with your phone into albums based on the location where the photos were taken. You can choose to make certain groups of photos public and instantly upload them to popular photo-sharing sites while keeping photos taken in another location private. You can view and share your photos by selecting them from within an organized list or pull up a map to look at collections visually (see above). The program looks really straightforward and easy – it’s for people who take a lot of photos but hate organizing them.

Mem2D (Windows Mobile)

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Mem2D aims to solve the problem of archiving information you might see on a flyer that you want to remember for later. Events are created using a simple web-based interface and when marketing materials for a particular event get printed up, there’s a unique barcode that’s added as a graphic. People who want to remember the information on, say, the flyer you posted in the student union building would simply use the Mem2D application on their mobile phones to take a photo of the barcode.

At that point, all of the pertinent information – time, place, date, the event’s website, etc. – would be saved to a user’s account on the Mem2D website for later. Event info can be shared with friends via e-mail or SMS, and there’s calendar integration and support for mapping and directions as well.

Mem2D [Mem2d.com]

MobileTrader (Symbian S60)

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Think of MobileTrader as an on-the-go marketplace for connecting buyers and sellers who are within a mile and a half of each other. You create a listing as a buyer or a seller and when there’s a match made, each person gets an instant message and can coordinate a spot to meet up and make an exchange. It sounds a little creepy for real-world use but it could find a nice niche in microcosmic systems like college campuses.

In order to prevent spam, sellers aren’t able to contact buyers directly. And everything’s anonymous until a deal is made, at which point the details are recorded – the item sold, the price, etc. – creating a contractual record of sorts. There are future plans for integration with online services like Paypal as well.

Moca (Android)

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Moca is a mobile medical diagnostics program for developing nations. It allows medical field workers to go out to remote locations and provide instant data back to doctors in the bigger cities to diagnose. Using an Android phone, a field worker could take photos or videos, record sound (like coughing, etc.), and ask a series of questions to a patient that a doctor would normally ask. The results get uploaded to a server in real-time and a doctor hundreds of miles away can prescribe treatments.

The system leverages the OpenMRS (medical record system) platform to keep records and Moca, itself, is open-source. There’s a pilot program that’ll be set up in the Philippines this summer to test out the idea’s effectiveness. Impressive stuff, indeed.

Moca [MocaMobile.org]

Eclectyk (Symbian)

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Eclectyk uses near-field communication (NFC) to replace the myriad of cards in your wallet with a simple cell phone application. It can be used for credit cards, ID cards, and it can even be used to unlock NFC-enabled doors. The program also has a sharing feature for tickets, so whoever in your group of friends shows up for a popular movie first can buy tickets and shoot them into everyone else’s phones.

Security consists of three layers: PIN numbers, hardware-based encryption, and even a remote wipe feature that can destroy everything if your phone’s lost or stolen. The system was developed under the advisement of Nokia and Bank of America.

UberCal (Windows Mobile)

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Ubercal is a simple solution to an apparently complex problem. It synchronizes your mobile Outlook calendar and Google Calendar together. You can use Google Calendar’s handy “Quick Add” feature to create an appointment and there’s a template system that allows you to set up commonly-occurring events without filling out all of Outlook’s fifteen or so form fields each time. Slick.

CashTrack (Android)

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CashTrack is an Android application that’s used for splitting bills. It consists of the app itself and a web interface. You can automatically split bills equally between people in your address book and keep a tally of who owes whom what. You can also manually finesse percentages of a certain bill so that you don’t end up paying for the seven beers your buddy ordered at dinner when all you ordered was water.

TrainMe (Android)

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“Pocket Fitness Trainer” tool, TrainMe, is an Android that contains images and videos of certain exercise moves for people new to working out. It’ll create customized workout plans for you based on how many days per week you want to work out and how much weight you want to lose and the intensity of your workouts will dynamically adjust to you as well. For instance, you’ll do a set of push-ups and then tell the program if it was too easy, just right, or too hard.

The program also includes a food diary and there’s a website that allows you to upload your statistics, workouts, and various other data. You can even browse other users’ workout routines and clone the ones you like for next time at the gym.

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VMware to Bring Virtualization to Mobile Phones

November 12th, 2008 No comments

Faster Time to Market, Better Security, Isolated Work and Personal Usage Are Among Benefits Virtualization to Enable for Mobile Phones

PALO ALTO, Calif., November 10, 2008 – VMware, Inc. (NYSE: VMW), the global leader in virtualization solutions from the desktop to the datacenter, today announced plans to bring virtualization and its many proven benefits to mobile phones through the new VMware Mobile Virtualization Platform (MVP). Built on innovative technology acquired from Trango Virtual Processors in October 2008, VMware MVP will help handset vendors reduce development time and get mobile phones with value-added services to market faster. In addition, end users will benefit by being able to run multiple profiles – for example, one for personal use and one for work use – on the same phone.

“VMware is excited to extend the benefits of virtualization, which we pioneered for x86 hardware, to the mobile phone market,” said Paul Maritz, president and chief executive officer of VMware. “By abstracting the applications and data from the hardware itself, we expect that virtualization will not only enable handset vendors to accelerate time to market but can also pave the way for innovative applications and services for phone users. We look forward to working closely with our partners to bring new mobile solutions to market faster.”

“Gartner sees virtualization in the mobile space as a very promising and potentially a fast emerging market,” said Monica Basso, research vice president, at Gartner.  “We predict that by 2012, more than 50% of new smart phones shipped will be virtualized (1).  Virtualization can enable enterprises and consumers to easily manage and secure their phones and it can also help handset vendors reduce bills of materials and shorten development cycles to allow for faster releases.”

What is VMware MVP?
VMware MVP is a thin layer of software that will be embedded on a mobile phone that decouples the applications and data from the underlying hardware. It will be optimized to run efficiently on low-power-consuming and memory-constrained mobile phones. The MVP is planned to enable handset vendors to bring phones to market faster and make them easier to manage.

Benefits to Handset Manufacturers

  • Accelerated time to market:
    Today, handset vendors spend significant time and effort getting new phones to market due to the use of multiple chipsets, operating systems and device drivers across their product families. The same software stack does not work across all the phones and, therefore, must be ported separately for each platform. This process is slow and expensive and ultimately slows time to market. VMware MVP will virtualize the hardware, enabling handset vendors to develop a software stack with an operating system and a set of applications that is not tied to the underlying hardware. This will enable the vendors to deploy the same software stack on a wide variety of phones without worrying about the underlying hardware differences. At the same time, by isolating the device drivers from the operating system, handset vendors can further reduce porting costs because they can now use the same drivers irrespective of the operating system deployed on the phone.
  • Easy Migration to Rich Operating Systems:
    Increasingly, handset vendors and carriers are looking to migrate from proprietary operating systems to rich, open operating systems to enable their customers to access the widest selection of applications. With this transition to open operating systems, protection of trusted services such as digital rights management, authentication, billing, etc. is becoming an increasing concern. VMware MVP will allow vendors to isolate these important trusted services from the open operating system and run them in isolated and tamper-proof virtual machines so that even if the open environment is compromised, the trusted services are not impacted.

Benefits to Businesses and End Users

  • Multiple Profiles:
    Companies are under increasing pressure from employees to support employee-owned mobile devices. Choice, however, brings with it complexity in managing a wide variety of devices in terms of both cost and security. It also brings increased risk in securing and managing employee-owned devices, especially if they contain confidential information. VMware MVP will allow IT organizations to deploy a corporate phone personality that can run alongside the employee’s personal phone on the same physical device.
  • Persona on the Go:
    Smart phones are quickly becoming a combination of a PC and a wallet rolled into one package. A person’s phone persona – an individuals’ collection of applications, pictures, videos, music, emails, bank info, credit card information, PIM, etc. – is becoming much richer and more valuable. Consequently, the ability to protect and migrate personas will become an important purchasing decision. VMware MVP will save the persona as a set of files so that all the applications and data on the phone can be managed as a collection of files. People can then easily move their persona to a new device making the upgrade to a new phone virtually painless.

Visit www.vmware.com/mobile for additional information about VMware Mobile Virtualization Platform

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Bill Gates last public speech

June 4th, 2008 No comments

Bill Gates delivered his last scheduled speech as a full time Microsoft employee at the company’s TechEd Developers conference this week in Orlando.

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Bill Gates last public speech

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MSI launches Wind mini-laptop

June 4th, 2008 No comments

MSI has officially unveiled its new Wind mini-laptop that’s based on the Intel Atom processor.

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MSI launches Wind mini-laptop

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Mini-laptops take Computex show by storm

June 4th, 2008 No comments

Computex, one of the world’s largest IT hardware shows, officially opened on Tuesday. An estimated 150,000 attendees and exhibitors will stream through the doors of the show between now and the weekend to see the latest computer technology on display

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