Android G1 can do it the Iphone multiTouch way

Now here’s an interesting turn up right on the day I pitted Android against Mobile Mac OS X: it turns out the former can do multi-touch…

According to blog site RyeBrye, hidden code (most likely first for testing then buried for Apple patent infringement reasons) is stored deep inside Android and can be dug out and - with some coding nous - enabled! Of course it takes two to tango and intriguingly, the competent-if-old-school T-Mobile G1 also apparently has a hidden trick or two with a Synaptics dual touch capable screen.


As RyeBrye explains: “By uncommenting a bunch of lines in the synaptics touchscreen driver, and recompiling my kernel and replacing my boot.img - I was able to enable the debug logging of the touch input that tracks 2 fingers.”

A code print out and debugging output have been published on the site including command information for ‘One finger held constant, the other finger swirled around’,'2 Fingers flicking left, then right’, ‘2 fingers rotating counter-clockwise’, ‘2 fingers (separate hands) - one finger moving up, while the other moves down’, ‘2 fingers - one held constant and varying pressure - another finger tapping at various points on the screen and also varying pressure’.

Of course - whether this all falls down or not (and his update shows signs there will be numerous snags along the way) - the key point is existing handsets and mobile phone software already out there is capable of emulating multi-touch but chooses not to. If patents are the issue then something needs to be worked out fast because right now this is one of the key elements in holding back rival touchscreen handsets…

Source:
RybeBrye Blog Posting

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10X speed promise in USB3.0 interface

The USB3.0 group of promoters has unvield new Spec for next generation of USB devices , which is said to 10x Speed USB or Super Speed USB’s.This Spec also specifies that USB 3.0 will be backward compatible and works in USB 2.0 but at lesser speed.

The USB 3.0 also specifies that it will consume less power compared to Firmwire but will transfer more power to attached devices from the PC.While comparing Transfer rate the USB3.0 will transfer 1GB in 3.3 seconds where as USB 2.0 is transferring at 33 seconds.

Every major manufacturer will support USB 3.0 but consumer will have USB 3.0 hands on only in the 2010.

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New laptops in 2009 to have LED backlights

Dell’s recent move to switch to more power-friendly LED-backlit displays is apparently one that is of great interest to all notebook manufacturers. According to some estimates, upwards of 40% of new laptops manufactured next year will end up having a LED backlight as opposed to a lamp.

In fact, the estimates are that LED backlighting will account for up to 15% of newly manufactured laptops in the last quarter of this year. Why the sudden change from what was formerly a lamp-dominated market? Is Dell’s recent announcement influencing other vendors or are they just taking part of a greater shift towards more energy-efficient machines? A jump from less than 10% this year to nearly 40% next year indicates more than just circumstance.

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MySpace App for Blackberry

MySpace, the world’s premier social network, and Research In Motion, a global leader in wireless innovation, today announced they are joining forces to develop an integrated MySpace Mobile experience customized for BlackBerry smartphones. The new MySpace for BlackBerry smartphones application is fully optimized to deliver rich content and data to users on the go.

Go to : www.myspace.com/blackberry

Through this partnership MySpace is further committing to mobile as a central element of the MySpace global business strategy. Today’s news follows the launch of MySpace’s redesigned mobile website, http://m.myspace.com , which now receives more than two million daily unique mobile visits. Around the world MySpace has more than 27 live carrier deals in 20 countries all bringing social networking to consumers wherever and whenever they want.

MySpace for BlackBerry smartphones integrates MySpace’s main social networking components with the BlackBerry platform to provide instant, push-based messaging to BlackBerry and MySpace users. The application will be available in all BlackBerry markets globally. RIM Co-CEO Jim Balsillie will highlight the MySpace and RIM relationship during his keynote speech at CTIA today.

The new MySpace for BlackBerry smartphones application is expected to be available globally from October 2008 .

As part of this collaboration, RIM is also creating a BlackBerry(R) community page on MySpace for users to access the latest BlackBerry smartphone news, content, videos, games, ringtones, skins and other unique and engaging features.

“MySpace and RIM are at the forefront of the mobile social networking evolution,” said Chris DeWolfe, chief executive officer of MySpace. “Our partnership enables millions of BlackBerry smartphone users to leverage MySpace on the go and access content, friend networks, and status and mood updates anywhere at any time.”

“BlackBerry smartphone users have unsurprisingly been quick to understand and lead mobile trends and we are seeing many of our customers strongly embrace mobile social networking as an integral part of their communications and day-to-day lives,” said Jim Balsillie, Co-CEO at Research In Motion. “MySpace was one of the first social networking sites to get it right and we are thrilled to join forces to continue evolving and enhancing the mobile social networking experience for our mutual user base.”

Mobile social networking is on the rise, with analysts forecasting over 800 million people worldwide accessing social networks through their mobile phones by 2012, up from 82 million in 2007, according to eMarketer. With social networking becoming a large part of the mobile consumer experience, RIM and MySpace are poised to provide consumers easier and deeper engagement with the services they love.

Mobile Application

By empowering MySpace and BlackBerry smartphone users with real-time access to their global network, MySpace and RIM are responding to users demanding a mobile experience that matches their busy lifestyle. In addition, the enhanced version of MySpace Mobile for BlackBerry smartphones is tailored to the rapidly growing number of mobile multimedia users.

Application Features

The MySpace for BlackBerry smartphones application is designed with a rich and robust feature set, including:

- A full messaging interface, including comments, bulletins and messaging

- Real time status and mood updates.

- Find, add, and respond to friend requests

- Camera integration and optimized photo management allowing users to snap, sort and upload pictures anytime and anywhere.

- View and comment on friends’ albums and photos

- Notification of new MySpace events (message and friend requests.)

BlackBerry(R) Hub

The BlackBerry(R) hub is a community page on My Space that will deliver a unique experience rich in content for BlackBerry smartphone users.

BlackBerry(R) Hub Features

- Sign up to be notified when the MySpace application becomes available

- Product demo of the new BlackBerry(R) Pearl(TM) Flip 8220 smartphone, including a tutorial for using the MySpace for BlackBerry smartphones application

- BlackBerry smartphone cheats - snack-sized videos that are easy to pass around or a text/visual guide that users can send to each other. Users will be able to add their own tips in video/text format.

- Marketplace - showcasing games, ringtones etc.

- Exclusive wallpapers featuring the MySpace and BlackBerry brands

- Product demo of the mobile application

- Section dedicated to top BlackBerry smartphone applications

- BlackBerry smartphone profile skins for MySpace

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MapQuest 4 Beta Launch for Mobile

The launches keep coming this week at MapQuest! We’re adding to our announcements with the launch of MapQuest 4 Mobile Beta.

We’re excited to show off our new free mobile product that offers maps, directions, local business search and more for BlackBerry devices. One quick look at the interface and you’ll see how intuitive it is — you’ll go from a new user to a pro in a single use. Try out the scrolling carousel across the top and you’ll see how easy it is to use.

Those that have tried this new mobile app out immediately found it engaging and very practical. Not only does it get you where you need to go with street and hybrid (aerial imagery with street names) map views, we have handy features such as live traffic conditions and MapQuest’s database of over 16 million points of interest to search from.

One of the really cool features is the GPS Find Me feature. Your GPS chip helps locate you and you can quickly get directions from your current location and track your progress as you get to your destination.

MapQuest 4 Mobile is currently available for download for the BlackBerry 8830 on Sprint, and the 8310, 8800, and 8820 models for AT&T. Many more devices will be supported in the coming months.

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BlackBerry Gets it Google Mobile App

I just got word from Google that today they’ve released a new version of the Mobile Apps for the Blackberry. You can download it by going to m.google.com on your Blackberry. Here’s what you’ll get with the new version:

Google_blackberry

* Fast Google search - enter queries without waiting for a browser to load
* Search history - easily access and amend your previous queries
* Google Suggest - complete queries with less typing
* Easy access to Google products for your phone - click once to download and install our applications for BlackBerry, and get immediate access to our web-based services
* Google Apps support - get direct links to your Google Apps Calendar and Documents/Spreadsheets (select Menu, Options, Use Google Apps Domain: yes, and then enter your domain name)
* Update alerts - learn about new versions of downloadable Google mobile applications and upgrade with just one click

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How it is started : Google

On a day in late August, 1998, two Stanford Phd. students managed to make $100,000 with a few mouse clicks by showing their new search technology to Cisco co-founder Andy von Bechtolsheim. The seasoned Silicon Valley executive was so taken with what he saw that he dashed to his Porsche, pulled his check book from the glove compartment and wrote check number 4642 in the name of a company that did not yet exist: Google, Inc.

The two students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, officially founded their start-up on September 7, 1998. Ten years later, the little search engine that could has become one of the most prominent players on the Internet, dominating its industry like few other companies anywhere. In the U.S., according to comScore, Google enjoys a search market share of over 60 percent – three times as much as its closest competitor, Yahoo. In some countries, like Portugal, Finland and Spain, Google servers handle more than 9 search queries out of 10. Financial success has been equally impressive, with annual sales skyrocketing from a mere $1.5 billion in 2003 to $16.6 billion last year.

As Google is celebrating its tenth birthday, now a company of almost 20,000 people, branching out into ever more services to become a part of every aspect of our digital lives, Ubergizmo is looking back at one of the first interviews the founders ever gave. Back in January of 1999, Ubergizmo contributor Karsten Lemm, a correspondent for the German newsmagazine Stern, knocked on the door of an apartment house in Menlo Park to interview Brin and Page for an article about Silicon Valley and its start-up culture. Next to the doorbell, a sign caught his eyes. In handwritten letters it said, “Google World Headquarters”. Inside, a handful of twenty-somethings were working on their PCs – mostly in the kitchen. The garage, Silicon Valley’s perennial symbol of entrepreneurship, was overflowing with mountain bikes, knick-knack, and empty computer boxes.

In-between low-level programming, schmoozing their investors, and taking out the garbage, the Google founders took some time out to talk about providing a service to the world, making money with helpful advertising, and wanting to be on par with Yahoo and Amazon. What follows are edited excerpts of their conversation with Karsten, who stopped smiling about the grandiose sign by the doorbell years ago.

Caption: Larry Page’s first business card, printed on an inkjet printer. Note the exclamation mark after the name — a sign of a Yahoo! wannabe that was quickly dropped when Google made its own mark. The address was for their first office — they were about to move in when I met them, and the lease ran for 8 months. The idea was that by then the company would have grown so much that Google needed a new office. Worked exactly as planned, of course…
How did Google start?

Larry: Basically I started doing my Phd. research on the link structure of the Web, about 3 1/2 years ago. And then I got other people interested; Sergey started working on this soon after. Sergey: I was at the time working on data mining.
Larry: We’re both Phd. students at Stanford, computer science. We’re taking a leave-of-absence. It just seemed like this was a really good opportunity. Craig [Silverstein, Google employee no. 1] and I have very little left to do, but the world doesn’t wait.
Was it difficult to find funding?

Sergey: Basically, we talked to our advisers and other faculty whom we knew. And they just pointed us to other people. Pretty soon, we had investors, we had a lawyer, we had everything that we needed. We got more money than expected. We worked on a business plan for a little bit, but we were basically never even asked for it. Recently we got an e-mail from one of our investors saying, “Oh, do you guys have a business plan? I don’t think I ever saw one.”
Larry: To be fair: We told these guys what we wanted to do and they asked us good questions and they know enough to know what we’re doing.
Sergey: This is based on three years of research. We have a running prototype.
Larry: And we’ve had a lot of contact with the people in the industry. It’s not like we were random students walking in saying, “Hey, we would like some money!”
Sergey: Everybody who we talked to wanted to invest. No exceptions. Now, we get probably 5 to 10 e-mails every day [from potential investors]. We collect their names. We’ll have to decide [at some point] what we want to do. It’s not necessarily that sensible to have hundreds of smaller investors rather than a few big ones.
Aren’t you rather late to the game?

Larry: It’s possible to do a much better job on search, and it’s the main application that people use on the Internet. So there’s a big opportunity, because if you do a better job really matters to people.
People make decisions based on information they find on the Web. So companies that are in-between people and their information are in a very powerful position. There’s clearly space there for other players.
Sergey: Our experience has been that users are very sensitive to the quality of the search responsiveness. When we make minor changes to our system that we think nobody will notice, there’s a very clear response in our traffic. Users may not even realize but subconsciously they end up using your search engine because it works better for them. Users end up going where the search is best.
As we watched our traffic grow time and time again to beyond capacity we’re really not concerned about [being late to the game].
Larry: There’s also lots of big companies that might want to buy a search engine. It’s not an easy technology to develop, and we’ve done a pretty good job. We think we have the best search.
Where do you see yourselves in, say, five years from now?

Sergey: That’s a long way down the sea. There are a lot of benefits for us, aside from potential financial success. The experience, for example. If we want to start another company at some point, that would be fairly easy because we have all the contacts in the industry. Also, it’s been very exciting. I really enjoyed being a Phd. at Stanford, but at Google, we do lots of really different things involved in setting up a company. We take care of very many things you don’t get to see if you’re just purely focused on creating technology.
There’s one more important thing, and that’s to bring what we’ve done to the world. That’s very exciting, too, of course. And we think this does have a potential to really change things forever.
Larry: That’s one of my personal goals. Search engines play a really important role in people’s lives, determining what information they get to look at. You really want to trust the people that are doing that for you.
For both of us, that’s been a strong reason why we started the company, is to say: We think we can do a better job doing this, and that’s an important thing to do for the world.
Do you ever consider the risks?

Larry: Silicon Valley is a little bit different. There’s not so much risk to us. If you fail in starting your company, you’re actually more fundable. You may have failed for some reason not involving yourself at all, just [due to] some random factors.
Sergey: The main risk is really our time. We’re working much, much harder than we would in a normal job. It’s not a 40 hour a week job.
We’ve been trying to cut down. When we started we’d be working upwards of 12 hours a day, six days a week. But be have been trying to cut down, because we think this isn’t necessarily most productive. We try hard to take at least one of the weekend days off, and at times both or at least portions of both.
Larry: Web companies especially are like 24 hour businesses. You just have to keep things running. When something breaks it needs to be fixed right away. So there are demands, I think, even beyond normal start-ups. Sergey: Anyway, we’re trying to push it down below 60 hours.
What’s the main part of your work?

Sergey: There are more main parts than we care to have. We try to offload as much as we can to our employees [but] we still do a lot of lower-level programming.
Then, we spend a lot of time talking to people in other companies and to VCs, any kind of strategic contact. And we need to do some kind of high-level strategic planning for the company.
The other thing we do, by the way, is, taking out the garbage, bringing food for people, making sure we have the phone lines, ordering computers, taking care of the “everything else” category.
Starting Monday, we’ll have 6 full-time employees. This week we have 5, last week we had 4. I think it’s going to keep growing at that pace for a while.
At some point, the goal is the IPO …?

Larry: Of course, yeah.
Sergey: There are several possible places where we can take Google. One is to get bought out. After that, we’d still continue to work on it. The other possibility is the IPO. I think it would be much more exciting for us to make Google stand on its own. But both are possibilities.
Do your investors talk about a day when they expect to earn their money back?

Sergey: Not really. I mean, they talk about schedules to IPO. That’s when they can cash out. But in terms of actually becoming a profitable company and eventually paying dividends or something like that – people don’t bother talking about that, that’s very far down the line.
It certainly doesn’t make sense to try to become profitable tomorrow and stay small, rather than keep spending the money and capture ten times as much market share.
Larry: Clearly, if you’re providing a service to the whole world, you have to have a fairly big company.
Do you generate any revenue at the moment?

Sergey: You caught us at an interesting time. Right now, we’re thinking about generating some revenue. We have a number of ways to doing that. One thing is we can put up some advertising. The key there is to put up advertising that will be really useful to our users and not slow down our site. That way we won’t push people away from our site, but we’ll still take in some revenue. Another way would be co-branding. Provide the back-end search engine to other sites.
How do you see Google develop? At some point, do you see yourselves on par with AltaVista, Excite, all these other established search engines?

Sergey: I would say no. We want to be on par with Yahoo, or Amazon, AOL. AltaVista, Excite and [the others] are by no means viewed as the winners.
There’s no question, we want to be number one in market share in terms of search. And I think we can do that in not so long. Past that, it’s really hard to predict.
There’s really no reason to set our sights low. If you do things right you can make a big jump over everybody else.

From the same author: V-Moda Vibe Duo Review

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After Apple and Google its Microsoft Planning App Store

Following Google’s announcement, Microsoft is now also looking to launch an App Store. This brainwave clearly originates from Apple’s success in the mobile games and applications market.

Marketing mobile games and applications has always been a problem for the Windows Mobile platform. There are thousands of applications and mobile games available, but on general hardly any operator offers a decent portfolio. The lack of a good portfolio means that consumers have to start searching for portals like Handango, which they often never heard off. Launching an App Store that is easy to find will certainly break open the market toward consumers.

Though this news is based on speculation, the indicators are clear. Microsoft is actively looking for employees to fill and maintain a mobile portal called Skymarket, a v1 marketplace for Windows Mobile. The service is expected to go live with the release of Windows Mobile 7.

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Samsung to Open Symbian App Store

It seems to be App Store week at the blog. Previously, Google and Microsoft already gave knowledge of their plans to launch; now Samsung joins the party.

Samsung will reveal it’s Symbian Smartphone show next month at the Symbian Smartphone show. The portal for developers went live a couple of weeks ago and a closed Beta of the store went public on Monday.

With the launch of this shop, Samsung clearly commits itself to Symbian’s S60 platform. To support developers, the company has made available several SDK’s on the development portal, which include usage of the Innov8 optical joystick feature that is available on several devices.

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Usb 3.0 is ten times Faster than USB 2.0

Majority of modern gadgets connect to the computer via USB cable. For nearly 13 years this port has been standard for all external devices. When USB was introduced in 1995, it became clear that this port would replace all those big and bulky connectors that were used in the past. Data exchange speed was growing with every generation: from 12 Mbps in USB 1.1 to 480 Mbps in USB 2.0. Nevertheless, as time goes by, bigger and bigger speeds are needed. Therefore, after 8 years of reigning, USB 2.0 must be replaced with something more modern and powerful, and this new successor will be USB 3.0, which is already developed and soon will be widely supported by hardware developers. What advantages it brings? Let us see.

USB 2.0 was named Hi-Speed, and it surely is quite fast. USB 3.0, however, truly deserves its title Superspeed, because it strongly overlaps the speed of its predecessor! New USB 3.0 devices will exchange data with speed up to 4.8 Gbps, which is ten times bigger than USB 2.0. Another big advantage of new USB port is its ability to receive and send data simultaneously, which is a no-go for previous USB generations. New USB 3.0 will keep the downward compatibility with all previous USB versions, so do not worry if your device will not support USB 3.0 - it will work with it anyways, at supported speed.

New generation of USB connectors opens a wide field of possible adaptation. Speed up to 4.8 Gbps will be enough for HD video and audio signal broadcast, with such speed there will be no more “bottleneck” effect, when USB 2.0 speed is limiting the performance of external devices, such as portable HDDs or external optical drives. The cable will be a bit thicker though, but this cannot be really considered as disadvantage. In any case, small increase in thickness is reasonable for such big increase of speed. There are images of new USB 3.0 connectors, including redesigned miniUSB and USB 3.0 type B.

Gadget-reviews

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Gadgets

Upto 32GB storage in MOTOROKR EM35

The New MOTOROKR EM35 was launched by Motorola as reported by Engadget Mobile. This phone is designed with both music and talk in mind.

Full Story | December 4th, 2008

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