Posts Tagged ‘Europe’

27 Feb 2010
1

webOS 1.4 now available for the Palm Pre and Pixi on Sprint, O2, Movistar, but not Verizon By External in Mobile Development News

webOS 1.4 now available for the Palm Pre and Pixi on Sprint, O2, Movistar, but not Verizon

by Greg Kumparak on February 26, 2010

Good news, Palm fans! If you’ve taken a break from jamming on the “Update” button, it’s time to go tap it one last time: the rollout of webOS 1.4 has just begun. The catch: it seems that it’s only for Sprint handsets right now (Update: In the US, that is – it’s also available on O2 UK, O2 Germany, O2 Ireland, and Movistar in Europe), with the Verizon Pre Plus and Pixi Plus still reporting that 1.3 is the latest release.

We knew it was coming in February thanks to Palm’s announcement at CES — and thanks to the rumor mill, we were all lead to believe it was coming a few weeks ago. All false starts and false hopes aside, it’s available now. We’re seeing reports (thanks Twitter!) that it has gone live on Sprint handsets.

Curiously absent, however, are any reports of the update hitting Verizon Pre/Pixi Pluses. With the update going out this late in the evening (a bit after 10:30 pm PST), I wouldn’t be at all surprised if there were some last-minute snags; might the Verizon update have been held at the last minute?

The biggest new feature in webOS 1.4 — at least, of those available right this second — is its new found ability to record and edit video. webOS also lays all the necessary foundation for Adobe Flash support, though that bit will come as a download from the App Catalog at a later time. There are other smaller features and bug fixes throughout — for those, check out the full change log below. (Update: Palm has just released an even bigger, more in-depth change log here)

Changelog:
Enhancements:
- Updated SMS and chat features.
− Tap and hold on an email address to send an email or add
to contacts.
− Forward SMS messages to email.
− Dial a number from chat view without opening a contact card.
− Press and hold a phone number (identified via smart text) to get
more options for calls and SMS.
- New camera support for video capture.
− Record and edit videos right on your device.
− Upload videos to YouTube® and Facebook®, or send them to friends via email or MMS.
- Expanded calendar and task functions.
− Set custom alert sounds for calendar events.
-View times with added AM/PM and Now indicators. − Dial phone numbers shown in the appointment subject.
- More email options
− Customize your email alerts by specifying a distinct ringtone or
selecting mute or vibrate.
− Tap and hold on a phone number or email address to either dial or
send an email or add to contacts.
− Once emails are sent, you’re taken back to the inbox view.
− More sort options for messages, including by date, sender,
and subject.
- Mobile Hotspot application is now preloaded on the device.
– Enhanced universal search now includes Global Address Lookup, i.e.,
corporate address book.
- The light bar in the gesture area now blinks whenever there are
pending notifications.

Improvements:
- Better MMS functions and support.
− Support for sending an MMS message when connected to Wi-Fi
now included.
− MMS messages with multiple audio and picture attachments now
allow you to open all attachments correctly.
− MMS display updated so messages no longer appear to overlap
each other.
- Faster performance in several areas of the phone and calendar applications-

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17 Feb 2010
25

Palm Pre review – better than the iPhone? By admin in Mobile Development News


Hands on review of Palm’s Pre smartphone, unveiled at CES 2009, with 8 reasons why it could be better than the Apple iphone… on paper at least! The Pre is available in the first half of the year on Sprint in the US, with a 3G version arriving in Europe later in the year.

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16 Feb 2010
0

HTC announces the Nexus One’s slightly cooler twin, the Desire By External in Mobile Development News

HTC announces the Nexus One’s slightly cooler twin, the Desire

by Greg Kumparak on February 16, 2010

What’s in a name? Would a Nexus One by any other name still be as sweet? Yep. In fact, it might just be a bit sweeter.

Though it lacks almost any indication as such, Google’s Nexus One is actually made by HTC. HTC reserved the rights to the hardware design, and today they’re making good use of that decision with the announcement of the HTC Desire. It’s essentially the Nexus One reflavored to HTC’s liking.

After the Nexus One launched, a good number of gadget geeks went clamoring to HTC in hopes that they (or Google) would release a compatible port of the custom user interface overhaul that can be found on nearly any recent HTC-made Android handset. Alas, it’s not going to happen – the Nexus One is Google’s phone, and thus will always be 100% vanilla Android, just as Google intended.

The HTC Desire, however, is a different story. Sure, it may look almost identical to the Nexus One – and sure, it might be an almost spec-for-spec match. But the Desire is HTC’s phone, and thus, it runs Sense. Its got everything you might expect from a Sense-enabled handset, from multi-touch all around the OS to Flash in the browser.

Like the Nexus One, the Desire runs Android 2.1 on top of a palm-meltingly fast 1 Ghz CPU. Its got the same (stunning) 3.7″ AMOLED touchscreen, and the same 5 megapixel camera. The only real physical change is the jump from a standard trackball to an optical trackpad, just as we saw with the also-just-announced HTC Legend.

While HTC’s not sharing any details on when us folks in the US can get our mitts on it, Europe and Asia should see it hit by sometime in April.

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15 Feb 2010
0

Details and official pics of the HTC Desire, Legend, and HD Mini leaked By External in Mobile Development News

Details and official pics of the HTC Desire, Legend, and HD Mini leaked

by Greg Kumparak on February 15, 2010



Man! Mobile World Congress is all about the last-minute leaks this year. First, a tiny glimpse of Windows Phone leaked out just hours before it became official. Now, three brand-spankin’ new handsets from HTC have just leaked out, just one day before HTC’s press conference where we can only assume these devices were supposed to debut.

All three handsets leaked out in rapid fire over at Modaco.

The oh-so-glorious beast you see up top is the HTC Desire, previously known around the rumor mill as the HTC Bravo. Take Google’s Nexus One, stick HTC’s customized Sense user interface on it, replace the trackball with a nifty optical trackpad – and bam! You’ve got the Desire. It’ll run Android 2.1 on a big and beautiful 3.7″ AMOLED touchscreen packed on top of a 1GHZ processor, 512 MB ROM/576 MB RAM, Bluetooth 2.1, and a 5 megapixel camera with autofocus and flash. Alas, it appears that its only prepped for 3G in Europe and Asia at the moment.

We got word of this next one, the HTC Legend, at the same time we found out about the bravo – but words were all we had. Then Netherlandish carrier KPN came along and spilled the beans on this spec-for-spec sequel to the HTC Hero with a few itsy-bitsy press shots. Well, consider those press shots embiggened:

Coming in with a 600mhz CPU, 3.2″ AMOLED screen, and 512 MB RAM/384 MB ROM, it’s not quite as ridiculously spec’d out as the Desire – but it’s still a damn nice handset. Like the Desire, it’s running HTC’s Sense UI on top of Android 2.1 – but unfortunately also like the Desire, the version that has leaked out isn’t compatible with US 3G. Given that a number of US carriers picked up the Hero, however, I’d be damned surprised if it stayed that way for long.

Last but not least: the HD Touch Mini. It’s purportedly running Windows Mobile 6.5.3 — which, considering today’s announcement of its successor, Windows Phone, admittedly makes this one a bit hard to get too excited about. With that said, this’ll probably be one of the last Windows Mobile handsets with HTC’s dramatic UI overhauls on it, given Microsofts new policies that keep manufacturers from replacing Windows Phone interface elements.

Regardless of the politics, all signs indicate that this one will pack a 3.2″ HVGA screen, 5 megapixel camera – and like the rest of them, nothin’ in regards to US 3G.

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12 Feb 2010
2

Smartphone review: HTC Hero By admin in Mobile Development News

In the wonderful world of smartphones, there are some devices that really stand out. The HTC Hero has been a long-awaited smartphone for gadget enthusiasts and since July 2009 that is launched on market, smartphone fans have found numerous reasons to agree that this device was missing from the Android world.
Featuring a Qualcomm 528MHz processor and 288MB of RAM on an Android OS, the HTC Hero is an elegant and attractive device – so elegant to be even compared to the iPhone (although the Google Android OS is not used on the iPhone and therefore the HTC Hero and the iPhone are not direct competitors). However, the HTC Hero does not stand out only for its superior physical design, with its sleek and distinctive look, but mostly for featuring HTC Sense, a proprietary user interface extension that only HTC-branded phones feature. Besides, it integrates greatly with Google services, offering a descent web browsing experience and featuring numerous third party apps. The HTC Hero features also a 3. 2″ HVGA touchscreen that natively supports 480 x 320 pixels resolution, Wi-Fi connectivity, GPS, Bluetooth, and a 5. 0 megapixel camera.

In particular, the 3. 2″ touchscreen of the HTC Hero is stunning. Similarly like the iPhone 3GS, the HTC Hero has a shiny and impressive screen that rarely gets dirty thanks to its smudge-resistant material. Images are colorful and bright, although text reading is not always sharp and scrolling down long pages may be quite blurring.

HTC Hero’s virtual keyboard is definitely better than using a numeric pad phone, but for users who had been using a QWERTY keyboard, on screen keyboard may be slow to type to, or even uncomfortable. For instance, the Hero’s lack of keys might be a deterring factor for some consumers, particularly for those who have been using an iPhone OS.

The 5-megapixel camera is pretty spectacular. Most smartphones feature 3-megapixel built-in cameras, so featuring a 5-megapixel camera is a real surprise, particularly when it does a real good job. Although the image quality could be even better and colors could be quite brighter, the device has really quickly evolved into a great competitor. Featuring photo slideshow and zooming, users can enjoy great display in their photos.

Overall, the HTC Hero is the best Android smartphone on the market today because it features HTC Sense, an architecture that allows users to personalize their content and use their smartphone as they wish. Among its direct competitors, the HTC Hero is faster and better equipped with the native support of Exchange that makes it appropriate for small businesses and consequently a good potential substitute for Windows Mobile devices.

There are two versions of the HTC Hero. The GSM version was released in Europe featuring a squarer shape and high-flying chin. The CDMA version is much curvier and is offered in the U. S.
The retail price of the HTC Hero ranges between $179. 99 and $599. 99.

Christina Pomoni has acquired her MBA Finance from the American College of Greece. Her advanced familiarity with financial statement analysis, capital budgeting and market research has been acquired through her professional career at high-esteemed organizations.

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11 Feb 2010
0

Garmin-Asus announces Android-powered nuvifone A50 By External in Mobile Development News

Garmin-Asus announces Android-powered nuvifone A50

by Greg Kumparak on February 11, 2010

After building their own operating system for the Garmin nuvifone G60 caused the handset to take roughly a decade (in smart phone years, that is) to come out, it’s no surprise that Garmin-Asus is steering clear of that route. They announced back in June of last year that they’d be bring Android into the mix, and this latest handset reflects that.

The handset you see up top is Garmin’s first foray into Android, which they’ve lovingly dubbed the “nuvifone A50″.

They’re not saying which version of Android comes tucked in side (though Engadget has been tipped that it’s running 1.6, which seems perfectly likely), but here’s what we do know so far:

  • Screen: 3.5 inch, Half VGA (480×320) capacitive touch screen
  • Internal Storage: 4GB flash
  • Camera: 3 megapixels with autofocus
  • Hardware Features: microSD slot, accelerometer, compass, car mount and car charger included
  • Software Features: Exchange support, Garmin navigation

There’s no word yet on pricing nor US availability, but look for it in Europe sometime in the next four months.

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09 Feb 2010
1

It’s time to kill off the Dotcom Hero CEO (And it’s about time!) By External in Mobile Development News

It’s time to kill off the Dotcom Hero CEO

by Mike Butcher on February 9, 2010

As I sit here listening to Ben Cohen’s radio documentary about how he nearly became a teenage dotcom millionaire, I’m reminded of how tedious us journalists all found him back in the late 90s. We don’t now of course – now that’s he’s grown up and actually turned out to be a pretty good tech reporter for Channel 4 News, and quite an OK guy, I’d quite happily have a pint with him.

But the story of how he became a teenage dotcom (paper-only) millionaire and finally fell to earth has something to tell us about the nature of startups and Europe and why we must finally kill off the myth of the Dotcom Hero CEO. In 2010 there is no more room for dumbass Internet heroes. From now on we must focus on products, teams and businesses. Sure there will always be “the story” about a startup, or how it started with one person’s idea. But as soon as that becomes their focus that are quite simply dead. Ideas are two-a-penny, it’s execution that counts, and you can’t execute anything totally on your own.

A decade ago, in 2000, however, it was all rather different. As a teenager, no-doubt starryed-eyed from all the sudden attention around anyone doing anything online, Cohen basically sold a lot of tat to journalists about how he’d created a search engine to rival Yahoo (Google was in nappies). He’d press release about the slightest things (the press release was always written by him in the third person) and the whole thing seemed to be slightly made up. But the fact that he was a teenager was of course a gift to the media and his network of Jewish focused sites like JewishNet, which were not a great deal more than bulletin boards, came across as quite savvy plays, at least to Internet outsiders.

In addition we were living in a completely bizarre time. In the late 90s and early 2000s, few journalists really knew what the web was about. As fast as I could teach journalists under me (I was editing New Media Age magazine at the time) they’d be hired to a newspaper, PR company or startup.

At 15 years old, after founding JewishNet.co.uk in his bedroom and later the CyberBritain search engine, said then to be worth £5m, Cohen was a story too good to be true. Of course, buoyed by this apparent “success” he went on to create a simple clone of CyberBritain called Hunt4porn.co.uk, an adult search engine. His view was, why not? People want porn on the Internet, let’s help them find it. It didn’t lead directly to his disappearance from the industry, but let’s face it, suddenly his “PR story” stopped dead in its tracks.

I Was a Teenage DotCom Millionaire by benjamincohen

Ten years after lastminute.com’s flotation, when the British internet bubble burst, Benjamin has gone on to find out what drove him to spending his teenage years trying to become a dotcom wunderkid.

He’s done a personal, introspective documentary for Radio 4 about where he went wrong and how he could have done things differently.

For instance, when the company merged with the London Jewish News on the AIM market, Cohen was, for a day, the youngest ever director of a publicly-quoted company.

He goes back to his old office where his company was worth a notional £20m. It’s now a storeroom.

He also, unfortunately, gilded the lilly, later admitting CyberBritain had played “on the misunderstanding of impressions.” Hey, he was a teenager afterall. And probably ten people in London knew was a page impression was anyway.

The proprietor of London Jewish News says on Cohen’s documentary today that he was probably “too early” in purchasing Cohen’s sites. “Everyone was doing deals with these Internet whizz kids and we thought it was the right thing to do.”

Ironically, as a Channel 4 journalist, Cohen recently interviewed Mark Zuckerberg, and says (in his inevitable press release about the show) that “he was now the older journalist interviewing a 24 year old whizzkid who has revolutionized the way many use the internet.”

Well, yes. Zuckerberg is a pretty smart guy but he also focused on his product and built a great team around him. He also kept going with the business to make it better. He didn’t exit at the first sign of a payoff.

But we must remember this incredibly important point. Zuckerbuerg was also in Silicon Valley, surrounded by other entrepreneurs, tech people and mentors. Cohen had none of that in the UK of 1998-2001 and effectively had to make the decisions about his business in a vacumm.

As Brent Hoberman of MyDeco and LastMinute.com says on the documentary “starting to believe your own hype is dangerous.” Just relying on press release and hype is not enough he says. “You need good people around you and people to bounce off.” Teams, remember?

Luckily, Cohen is now a changed man. He got out of the business, went to university, grew up and became a human being. He’s a good journalist and a great deal more humble than the tedious teenage dotcommer he once was.

It’s my belief that had he been surrounded by mentors and put the focus on the team and the product he may well have been the Zuckerberg for the UK. He had the panache, and he’s smart. He knew about business and tech. But he was dazzled by the bright lights of publicity and lost sight of the product and the business.

So let’s finally lay to rest this Tech Hero CEO. Let’s kill him or her off. Because just being a hero is not a business and it’s not where tech companies should be any more.

Long after the fact, Cohen knows that now. Do you?

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05 Feb 2010
1

(Samsung) Bada Bing, Bada Boom! By admin in Mobile Development News


A couple months ago Samsung unveiled its new smartphone platform Bada.” Bada means ocean in Korean – but in Brooklyn, its the beginning of a common phrase – ‘Bada Bing, Bada Boom’ – meaning something will happen effortlessly and predictably. Watch the video! Participants: SH Shin, President & CEO, Samsung Electronics Europe Dr. Ho Soo Lee, Executive Vice President, Samsung Electronics Thomas Richter, Director of Portfolio Management, Samsung Telecommunication Europe Kevin Thau, Head of Mobile, Twitter

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27 Jan 2010
26

Google’s ‘Nexus One’ the New iPhone? By admin in Misc.


IDC Senior Research Analyst Ramon Llamas on Google’s new “Nexus One” phone.

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21 Jan 2010
0

Motoroi: Motorola to release another Android phone in March (video) By External in Mobile Development News

Motoroi: Motorola to release another Android phone in March (video)

by Serkan Toto on January 19, 2010

motoroi

Motorola held a press conference in Seoul yesterday to announce a partnership with SK Telecom, a major Korean telecommunications company. The occasion: SK Telecom will be the first company to distribute an Android phone in that country, the so-called Motorola Motoroi.

It’s not a rebranded Droid, but a completely new phone (in Europe, the Droid was named “Milestone” but remained largely unchanged technically). SK Telecom customers will be able to lay their hands on the Motoroi in early February.

motoroi_2

But Motorola Korea and SK Telekom representatives are quoted as saying that Motorola is ready to roll out the Motoroi in the US in March, too. And apparently it will be available in a number of other countries as well.

Here are the main specs:

  • 3.7-inch WVGA 16:9 touch screen (480 x 854 resolution)
  • 8 MP camera with Xenon flash
  • HD video recording (720p)
  • HDMI interface
  • TV tuner (T-DMB)
  • 8GB internal memory (microSD card support up to 32GB)
  • Android 2.0 OS

In Korea, the Motoroi will be sold for $800. Pricing and other details for the US and other territories haven’t been officially announced yet.

motoroi_3

Here’s a Motoroi video pulled from the phone’s Korean website. The clip is in Korean but enough to get a good first impression of the basic functions.

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10 Jan 2010
3

The Palm Pre Is Making Waves By admin in Mobile Development News

When you think about mobile phones of yesteryear, perhaps you will recall basic units that can only send messages or make calls. But with the ever growing needs of tech consumers today, mobile phones needed to evolve into smart phones, those which are faster, more powerful, and laden with tons of added features. When smart phones and PDAs are under consideration, the first name that comes to mind is Palm, Inc.

Palm was founded by Jeff Hawkins as Palm Computing, Inc. in Sunnyvale, California in 1992. The initial product release of this small company was a consumer personal digital assistant (PDA) called the Zoomer. Later on, various models emerged, and the company was acquired by larger manufacturers. At the present, Palm, Inc. has made a reputation for coming up with the coolest and smartest gadgets to support anyone’s mobile needs. As of 2009, Palm is proud to debut its newest brainchild, the Palm Pre, among the newest releases guaranteed to give the iPhone a run for its money.

Here are some specs for the Palm Pre: It has a slider form factor, wherein the 3.1 inch touch screen reveals a full QWERTY keypad. The Palm Pre weighs in at a mere 4.6 ounces, and is a little more than half an inch thick. Within this small package are tons of connectivity options, including Bluetooth, USB, WiFi, and CDMA. Palmweb OS is the operating system for this smart phone, whose apps are Linux based. The 3 mega pixel digital camera with LED flash allows for tons of photos to store in its large 8 GB hard drive.

With the help of Palm Synergy, the Palm Pre makes organizing schedules simple and convenient. You can merge together your Google, Facebook, and even your PDA calendars for easy access. For techies who like multitasking on their PDA phones, they can surely open up several apps or windows on the Palm Pre, and navigate through them with ease. With its universal search option, finding what you need from Wikipedia, Google, your phone book, or your hard drive is a breeze, too. Other perks with the Palm Pre include GPS and a multimedia player which can support several formats for audio and video.

When will the tech fanatics finally get a taste of the Palm Pre? In the United States, Sprint Nextel has gained the exclusive rights to distribute this powerful and innovative smart phone. By June of 2009, American mobile phone fans will be able to purchase their own Palm Pre units. In addition to the acclaim it has been gathering among fans and critics, the Pre actually won several awards at the recent Consumer Electronics Show held in Las Vegas in January 2009.

What about the United Kingdom and the rest of Europe? Fortunately for those in the UK, Vodafone has been undergoing negotiations with Palm regarding the exclusive distribution of the smart phone for Brits and for Spain and Germany as well. Softpedia reports that Vodafone may soon be the only network in the UK to provide subscribers with the Palm Pre within the first three months of its release.

The author of this article is Benedict Hunter. You can find more about the Palm Pre from the Mighty Gadget Blog. Mighty Gadget is a technology blog run by Dolphin Promotions.

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09 Jan 2010
3

Top 5 IT forecasts for 2010 By admin in Misc.

As 2009 draws to a close and a new decade dawns, consumers and IT markets predict various new challenges for the next year and also expect something good for market conditions. Various analysts predict that IT sector will pull out the global economy from recession. It is assumed that the US, EU and emerging economies would gain momentum and have a positive growth in 2010.

Here, the feature discusses few predictions for the upcoming year.

Recovery in global economy

It is assumed that the next year will see growth in global IT spending, job creation and hiring. The research firm, IDC forecasted 3.2% growth in IT spending, which will equal the 2008 levels to $1.5 trillion and emerging markets will have half of the projected growth. RBI and finance ministry has predicted a 7-7.5% growth in GDP for next year.

Social networking grows up

The year 2010 will see a robust growth in social media and its inclusion in various corporate sectors. It will require IT specialists who can engage audiences in their organization’s messages, products and services. Further, it is predicted that companies will more actively encourage employees to use Facebook, Twitter and MySpace.

Apple Tablet PC/eReader

People across the world are waiting for the much anticipated Tablet PC from Apple. According to the latest report, Apple will launch its Tablet PC in late January at a venue in San Francisco. It is reported that the device may resemble a large iPod Touch with a 10-inch diagonal screen, lacks a keyboard, packs USB, FireWire ports and runs Mac OS X along with a variety of multimedia goodies. The source says the device’s video quality “is better than the average movie experience.” However, consumers also expect a higher premium from the device, which is supposed to be named as “iSlate.”

Google to expand beyond search

In the recent market share for November, Google remained the dominant leader with 65.6% share, but now, the company has moved from its search fort and is trying in various fields like apps, programming language, mobile phones, operating systems, cloud apps, etc.
Now, the search engine is planning to launch its Google Phone or Nexus One, Android based netbook, Chrome operating system in 2010. With such new launches, the company will target Apple in mobile segment, Microsoft’s monopoly in operating systems and other PC vendors.

Oracle-Sun Microsystems deal

Various market analysts predict that the European regulators will provide their nod for Oracle’s $7.4 billion acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2010. For this, Oracle has provided a series of concessions to relieve antitrust concerns. It is reported that Oracle will preserve the viability of MySQL, which is a relational database management system with more than 6 million installations. Also, it will not file any intellectual property claims and extend MySQL’s existing commercial licenses for upto five years.

But, the co-creator of the MySQL database currently owned by Sun Microsystems has started a campaign against the proposed deal because the merger would hit consumers and small businesses and the prices of license and support would increase.

Content Writer

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30 Dec 2009
8

ZTE Bluebelt II and Silverbelt By admin in Mobile Development News


ZTE plans to work with European operators to customise its smartphone offerings. It’s teamed up with Portugal’s TMN for two Windows Mobile 6.5 handsets and there may be an Android or two in the pipe as well. Leila Makki reports from Lisbon. Participants: Miguel Neves, Sales Director, ZTE Portugal Pedro Chaves Ferreira, Mobility OEM Lead, Microsoft Pedro Gaspar, Director Terminal Equipment Developer, TMN

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29 Dec 2009
27

The Apple Tablet: Will It Be Called iSlate, iGuide, Or Something Else? By admin in Internet Development

After discovering that Apple had registered iSlate.com in late 2006 (we dug a little deeper and found trademarks had been filed for ‘ISLATE’ in both the United States and Europe by a company that was most likely a dummy corporation set up by Apple), MacRumors has now discovered another possible name for the upcoming Apple tablet.

MacRumors bases its report on the filing for a US trademark for ‘IGUIDE’ by another Delaware-registered company called iGuide Media LLC, which can be linked to Cupertino by means of signatures on the documents coming from Apple’s Senior Trademark Specialist, Regina Porter.

Let’s dig a little deeper, once again.

Domain names

There’s no indication that Apple owns any domain name that contains the term ‘iguide’. The identity if iguide.com is shielded from public WHOIS records, but not by Mark Monitor, the brand protection firm Apple usually works with. The domain name iguide.net belongs to a company called iGuide Media, a marketing and design firm started by Jon Warren back in 1997 and led by a Brian Noon from 2002 to 2006, when the company was sold.

I checked a couple of other TLDs (.ca, .fr, and more) and found no indication that Apple owns any of those.

Trademarks

Two trademarks were filed for ‘IGUIDE’ by iGuide Media LLC (through a James Johnston) in the United States: a principal and a service mark, both on 18 December 2007. The description of goods and services given to iGuide Media is very similar to the one given to Slate Computing, the supposed shell company set up by Apple used to register the trademark for ‘ISLATE’, although it leans a bit more to a focus on software and services than hardware.

On the exact same day, iGuide Media LLC filed for a trademark in Europe as well: search OHIM for ‘iguide’ and you find a trademark filing that has all the Apple marks on it: the legal representative is ‘EDWARDS ANGELL PALMER & DODGE UK LLP’ (the same as for ‘ISLATE’ and ‘MACBOOK’, among others), and the priority country is Trinidad & Tobago, the same as when Apple filed for the ‘iphone’ trademark in Europe.

Noteworthy: the status history suggests that the community trademark application was registered (not filed) in February 2009, and that the full examination of the CTM application has been completed very recently, on the 18th of December 2009 to be exact.

Final thoughts

If I were betting man, I’d still be putting my money on the name iSlate for the tablet, Magic Slate for a possible peripheral, and iGuide for a service linked to the hardware device(s).

Here’s why:

- Apple doesn’t seem to own, directly nor indirectly, any ‘iguide’ domain names

- The ‘ISLATE’ and ‘MAGIC SLATE’ US trademarks were not filed for separately as a service trademark, unlike ‘IGUIDE’

- The ‘ISLATE’ US trademark was filed earlier than ‘IGUIDE’, by a different shell corporation (and the same as ‘MAGIC SLATE’)

- NYTimes editor Bill Keller’s mention of an ‘Apple slate’ device in a past speech

- According to Trademarkia, the ‘ISLATE’ trademark application was extended a second time last September, to show use in commerce

- The slightly different description for ‘goods and services’ for both Slate Computing and iGuide Media

Or, of course, we’re all wrong, and none of these names will ever be actually used by Apple. I would deem that unlikely, but we can’t know for sure.

Besides, has Apple announced that it’ll be selling a tablet computer yet?

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

View full post on TechCrunch

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26 Dec 2009
13

This Week On TechCrunch: Zuckerberg eaten by zebras, Al Qaeda invests in Twitter, Spotify profitable and more By admin in Internet Development

xmasThe only good thing about the deadline for this week’s TechCrunch round-up falling on Christmas Day is the absolute certain fact that you won’t be reading the results. After all, with the holiday season in full swing, no one in their right mind will be reading TechCrunch. I certainly won’t.

Safe in that knowledge, I can pretty much claim anything I like. That this week’s top story was Mark Zuckerberg being eaten by zebras, for example, or Al Qaeda investing in Twitter. Hell, I could probably claim that Spotify is profitable and it would still pass entirely without remark. Who would know? Just me and Google’s spider.

But I’m a professional – which is why I only missed my Christmas Day deadline by 24 hours – and as such I take seriously my responsibility to bring you this week’s top stories, regardless of whether you care or not. Hell, I’ve even come up with a festive theme in a vain attempt to keep you reading. Even though I know you’re not.

Here we go then…

On the first day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you….

One billion dollar exits

Sarah rounded off her South American research trip by profiling Wences Casares and examining the difference between billion dollar exits and what it means to feel “success”.

On the second day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Two out of every ten companies suffering from “stealth disease”

Vivek tells stealth start-ups: Get Over Yourselves: Nobody Cares About Your Secrets.

On the third day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Three years of Crunchies

The first tickets to the third annual Crunchies sold out very quickly, but there’s still plenty of time to vote for the winners across 18 categories before voting closes on January 6th.

On the fourth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Four screenings of Avatar

Or at least that’s how many Arrington has attended since the movie launched this week and he described it as ‘The iPhone Of Movies’.

On the fifth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Five hundred and fifty million dollars

Over half a billion dollars; the price that Yelp turned down when they walked away from selling to Google.

On the sixth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Six-ty thousand nooks will be shipped by Barnes & Noble this year

…despite issues with shipping pre-orders.

On the seventh day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Seven million more dollars raised by ChaCha

….despite issues with their entire business being a joke.

On the eighth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Eight million dollars raised by Livemocha

…in a round led by August Capital to allow the online language-learning community to build new partnership deals and work on product development.

On the ninth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Nine ‘rock-star’ names associated with WePay’s new group payments services

Levchin, McClure, Conway, Y Combinator…

On the tenth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Ten IPO Candidates for 2010

….and, from Europe, ten disappointing tech stories of 2009.

On the eleventh day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Eleven billion valuation for Facebook

Up from the company’s $10billion valuation earlier this year.

And finally. On the twelfth day of Christmas, TechCrunch gave to you…

Twelve (at least) religions that I’ve certainly offended by suggesting that the entire world stops for Christmas. I look forward to the comments. Not that I’ll be reading them – after all, it’s Christmas!

Have a good week!

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

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