Category: Mobile (Page 13 of 65)

Microsoft dumping piles of money on Windows Phone 7

Windows Phone 7Just how much money does it take to elbow your way in between Apple and Google in the mobile market? Remember, you’ve also got to beat back RIM while you’re at it, and hope none of those three develop anything you didn’t expect. Got a number? Is it in the billions? That’s what Microsoft may be betting to make Windows Phone 7 work.

According to TechCrunch, Microsoft could spend into the billions on development and marketing for the new mobile platform. It’s a huge figure, made to look even larger by the estimated expense of marketing the Droid series of Android phones.

The $100 million Goldberg estimates that Verizon, Motorola and Google collectively spent on marketing helped turn the Droid line of phones into a serious stable of competitors against the iPhone. (Compare that to Google’s fizzled Nexus One launch, where the search giant pinched pennies on marketing.)

To spend 10 times that amount could be either a great idea or the world’s worst gamble. Microsoft has completely scorched consumer bridges with its previous mobile offerings, none of which will transition to the new system very smoothly. Even with a billion dollars behind it, Windows Phone 7 could be too late.

App shows you which loved ones to avoid in the zombie apocalypse

Zombie app.The world has become zombie obsessed, and for good reason. When the shit hits the fan – and it will, haters – you better be prepared to shotgun your way through bloody masses of undead ghouls. That’s where Max Brook’s Zombie Survival Guide comes in, as does this app, courtesy of Random House.

The iPhone app allows you to snap pictures of your friends and then turn them into the zombies they’re sure to become after they’ve been bitten. It’s a great novelty app, especially as far as book tie-ins go. The app also includes support to add the image to Facebook once your friends have been modified.

Sorry Saudis, no Blackberry for you

Blackberry texting.Despite protestations from its citizens and dire warnings from RIM, Saudi Arabia held fast to its stance that RIM should shut off Blackberry data services in the country today. The handset manufacturer complied around 4AM this morning.

Approximately 700,000 Saudis use (well, formerly used) Blackberry services on a day-to-day basis. The big stink around the situation is that RIM was unwilling to host a data center in Saudi Arabia, instead sending data out to its Canadian servers. Other countries take issue with it as well. Over the coming months, the UAE will definitely be shutting down services and India and Lebanon have talked about doing the same.

If RIM didn’t comply, the company would have been fined $1.3 million.

nPower PEG is available for purchase

nPower PEGWe’ve written about the nPower PEG (that’s “Personal Energy Generator”) a lot over the past year or so leading up to its release. Well, the day has finally come that you can order the PEG and make it your very own.

The PEG comes with the standard kinetic charging stick and your adapter of choice. The device runs $149.99, which seems a little steep considering it’s meant for use with multiple devices but only comes with an adapter for one. Still, it’s a nifty little charger, especially if you do a lot of walking throughout the day, and the company is from Cleveland. Who doesn’t want to support The Cleve, am I right?

Check out the full range of options at the nPower PEG official website.

Facing The Future with Technology, Computers and Cell Phone Plans

The “future.” That mysterious place once written about in fantastic science fiction novels and portrayed in films like “2001: A Space Odyssey,” is here. Amazingly, much of the predictions made by prescient science fiction authors like Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke and Aldous Huxley have come to pass. No, we don’t fly around above traffic with personal jetpacks, and so far none of us has a Jetson’s-style personal wardrobe-changing machine at home, but an amazing number of the events predicted in decades past have become commonplace. We rely on computer technology and instant communications more and more.

Years ago ideas of the future were discussed in hushed tones, as people whispered things like, ”Someday, each of us will have our own computer in our house! It will think for us and do our bidding!!” It all seemed quite mind-blowing and strange. Now that day has arrived. How has technology changed us?

Personal computers became a force in the marketplace about three decades ago. The first computers were large and cumbersome, but with rapidly developing technology, computers quickly became smaller, faster and much more efficient. They shrank in size but increased in capability.

At the same time, cell phone technology was rapidly developing. Back in the 80s (the dawn of time), the first cell phones were clumsy and expensive, but as cell phones and cell phone plans became generally affordable, phones morphed into the super efficient little communication tools used today.

The Internet came along. Things sped up. Computers turned into phones and phones turned into computers. The Internet linked computers to phones and connected us even more.

Today “the office” is almost a concept. It’s the computer you have in your pocket that you walk around with everywhere. In a sense, the personal computer is now our workplace, our identity and even an extension of our brain. The futurists, apparently, were on to something.

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