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Saturday, January 20, 2007

Cell phones replace wallets for mobile memories

Looking at photo albums is a tradition that can be traced back to the first photographs ever produced. The albums usually are thick-ringed binders with sticky plastic sheets protecting the often fading photos of family, friends and fun, and other memories.
Nowadays, albums can be found in a drastically different form.
With the number of camera phones in circulation, and the fact that many of the cell phones sold today are equipped with digital cameras, it’s no surprise that people everywhere, including local residents, are using theirs as photo album "flipbooks."
Folks in downtown Bangor recently said they use their camera phones to record memento photos of family, friends or pets, which can be instantly viewed or later shared with others.
"In the old days, we use to carry photos around in our wallets," said Richard Donaher, an Orrington resident in his 60s. "Now we have phones."
Brewer Deputy Mayor Gail Kelly, a proud grandparent, said her camera phone is used whenever she can’t find her digital camera.
"I have my granddaughter on my cell phone, my precious 2½-year-old," she said. "I probably have half a dozen. I have a [saved] picture of her when she was 4 to 6 months old.
"It’s a photo album of my life — they’re important photos," Kelly said.
Others in Bangor’s downtown area said they use their portable camera phones to keep in touch with others who live out of state, to send a joke photo and to sell items online.
"Probably 90 percent of our phones have cameras and video capability," said Tim Hughes, manager of MC Wireless, the Verizon wireless store downtown. "Most people like them because you can snap a photo anytime."
A 2004 study of camera-phone use, conducted in the United States and England by Hewlett-Packard Co., shows that some people are using their camera phones "like digital ‘flipbooks’ of favorite images, or the images one might keep in one’s wallet" and that "the majority of image-sharing took place face-to-face on the phone itself" — an opinion supported locally.
Halfway through 2006, there were about 219.4 million wireless subscribers in the United States, representing about 72 percent of the population, according to a September 2006 report on the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association’s Web site.
It’s unknown how many cell phones in circulation have digital cameras; what is known is the number is growing, said Hughes, who is in his 20s and carries around photos of his dog and girlfriend on his phone. He also has used his camera phone, which is capable of connecting to the Internet, to sell items on e-Bay.
The ability to instantly record clowning around or gentle ribbing in pictures is a big reason for having a camera phone, said Hampden resident Nick Searles, 13, and Lisbon resident Meghann Blethen, in her 20s.
"Usually, it’s something funny you see to send to friends," Blethen said. "It doesn’t replace the photo album. My friends that have children, their phones are full of photos."
Adding a face to long-distance relationships, is why sisters Hosanna Garcia of Dixmont and Raque Laplante of Bangor, both in their 20s, purchased camera phones.
"One of my sisters lives in Wisconsin — that’s how we see her," said Garcia, who has photos of her nieces, nephews and six siblings on her phone.
Mick Delargy, a 40-something Bangor resident, owns a digital camera, a camera phone and a 35 mm camera he hasn’t used in 20 years.
"I like the fact that I have it [a camera phone], but I don’t use it much because the resolution is so much lower [than a digital camera]," he said. "I do have a photo of my son [saved on the phone]."
He also has a couple of other photos of his son in his wallet.
Saving digital images on CDs is easier than ever nowadays with do-it-yourself digital photo centers at many shopping centers. That’s how Kelly and Donaher save the images they have snapped. Others download images onto their computers, and still others just erase the images when they are considered old.
Finding someone 60 or older with a camera phone in downtown Bangor took several tries before Donaher was located. Hughes said it’s his experience that "for the most part, the older generation don’t want cell phones with cameras — they just want a phone. A lot will say, ‘I already have a digital camera, why would I need that?’"
The question is easy to answer for Hughes, who said having a camera phone is "more convenient because [images are] on the phone, and I carry it with me."

Via BDN

LG rival to hit shelves before iPhone

South Korea's LG Electronics Co on Thursday launched a new mobile phone incorporating a buttonless touch-screen that resembles the much-hyped Apple Inc iPhone -- and will be in stores next month.
LG's Prada Phone is being produced in partnership with the Italian fashion brand. It is set to go on sale in late February for 600 euros (US$780) at mobile phone dealers and Prada stores in Britain, France, Germany and Italy. It comes to Asia in March.
The no-button interface with the entire phone face covered by a touch-sensitive screen resembles the Apple iPhone, announced by the US company earlier this month to much fanfare as an innovation that could shake up the industry.
Apple's iPhone is set for US release in June, and will cost US$599 for the high-end model with 8 gigabytes of internal memory -- the same as the LG model.
Other markets will see the iPhone later this year and next year.
The LG phone has a wide-screen display and can play most popular digital music and video formats, and has a 2-megapixel camera like the iPhone. Its memory can be expanded with cards.
The iPhone allows Internet use also through regular wireless Wi-Fi networks, and has a full-featured Web browser.
The LG phone is 12mm thick, just 0.4mm more than the iPhone.
Meanwhile, Apple will have plenty of room to eventually reduce the retail price of its upcoming iPhone, according to preliminary gross margin estimates by a market research company.
The iPhone will yield gross margins of more than 50 percent at the current set of retail prices, iSuppli Corp said in an analysis of presumed component and manufacturing costs.
The 4-gigabyte version of the iPhone, with a retail price of US$499,will cost Apple US$245.83 to make, iSuppli estimated.
The 8-gigabyte version, which is priced at US$599, will cost Apple US$280.83.
"With a 50 percent gross margin, Apple is setting itself up for aggressive price declines going forward," said Jagdish Rebello, a director and principal analyst with research firm iSuppli.
Since Apple will face stiff competition in the cell phone market, the company may need to cut into its margins to reduce pricing in the future, he said.
An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment.
The Apple iPhone will be available starting in June exclusively through AT&T's Cingular Wireless. Apple has said it hopes to sell 10 million units next year, or about 1 percent of the market.
That goal "seems attainable," Rebello said.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Cell Phones and Cancer

For nearly as long as cell phones have been in existence, there has been a debate as to whether or not they cause cancer. In January of last year, we reported on studies showing that “heavy” cell phone use can cause cellular level damage. But by April, the FDA was saying that such studies were probably incorrect. Additional studies continue to be performed, primarily in Sweden and Denmark, but as recently as last month, it looked like the debate was heading in favor of finding no link between cell phone use and cancer. Still, that isn’t stopping many people from fearing the worst. The San Francisco Chronicle reported today on the potential cell-level damage of cell phone use and the implications this has for widespread use of iPhones, cell phone tower placement and even city-wide WiFi.

Via BBR

Why does the iPhone get so much hype when more capable devices are already available?

The hottest topic of last week was obviously the Apple iPhone. At first I was quite excited about the device and, as always, Apple does a good job of hyping up a product. However, after reading more on the iPhone details, including David Pogue's Ultimate iPhone FAQ part 1 and part 2 we can see that the iPhone really is not designed for the business user even though the pricing is up in the enterprise range. It may be designed for the consumer, but even then there are existing devices that consumers should take a look at too before succumbing to the Apple hype. We thought it would be a good idea to post some facts on a few other high end devices priced over US$450 that compete well with the iPhone and actually work much better for the business user. So let's take a quick look at the Apple iPhone, Nokia N95, and Cingular 8525 (HTC Hermes variant).
Apple iPhone: Most of us gadget fans were initially hit by the shock-and-awe of the Jobs keynote announcing the Apple iPhone, but after the dust settled out and we started diving into the specs, price, and functionality we saw that Apple does a good job of putting a new face on existing technology and functionality. Granted, there is some cool new stuff like the multi-touch display panel, but Apple also made some apparent trade-offs that many users may not be willing to compromise on. According to information released by Apple, the iPhone will not sync to Outlook or allow you to sync with other 3rd party PIM applications, will not allow you to view or edit Office documents, may not work as a modem for a MacBook or laptop, only responds to skin touch with no fingernail or stylus response, can only be used with Cingular (maybe for as long as 2 years), has a closed Mac OS X variant operating system, has no removable battery, has no memory expansion slot, has no GPS, and currently has no voice dialing capability. I think the 8GB is a bit too limiting as well since videos you purchase from iTunes can take over 1GB of memory themselves and many people have music collections much larger than this. While the device looks beautiful in photos and images, if they want it to be a phone first it needs to have physical keys. Microsoft has had touch screen phones for several years and while they are powerful and functional for people that want a phone first the touch screen just doesn't cut it. If Apple wants the iPhone to be a multimedia device then it really needs more memory and a removable battery would be nice as well.



Nokia N95: The N95 release is imminent and the device has been shown at various trade shows since October. I have had opportunities to play with the device for a total of about 20 minutes at the Nokia Open Studio event and CES. The Nokia N95 sports 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, dual mode sliding display, bright 2.6 inch QVGA display, WiFi, Bluetooth (including A2DP), HSDPA radio, integrated GPS radio, FM radio, microSD card slot, 150MB internal memory, TV-out functionality, and 3.5mm audio jack. The N95 runs Symbian 9.2 with S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 and there are is a huge collection of 3rd party and integrated applications that allow you to sync with Exchange and a number of other server clients, create, view, and edit Office documents, sync to Calendar, Contacts, and more via USB to a PC or Mac, and much more. The browser in the S60 3rd Edition is actually based on Apple's own Safari open source technology and blows every other mobile web browser out of the water with its visual history, integrated RSS aggregator, and full website support that doesn't strip out or limit your viewable content while making navigation and viewing a pleasure. The dual slider on the N95 reveals either multimedia buttons or a phone keypad so you can quickly transform the device from a phone to a media player. The Nokia N95 is much more powerful than the Apple iPhone and could be made even better with 4GB or 8GB of flash memory like the Nokia N91 devices.

Read more at Zdnet

Cisco Sues Apple Over Use of iPhone Name

The Apple iPhone was unveiled earlier this week after 30 months and millions of dollars in top-secret development. But the sleek new iPod-phone combination could wind up costing the company a lot more. Cisco today announced that it has filed a lawsuit to forbid Apple from using the name "iPhone." It obtained the iPhone trademark in 2000 after the acquisition of Infogear, which previously owned the mark and sold iPhone products for several years.
Infogear's original filing for the trademark dates to March 20, 1996. Linksys, a division of Cisco, has held the trademark to brand a line of its own Internet-enabled phones that began shipping last spring and officially launched three weeks ago.
Cisco said Apple approached the company several years ago seeking to use the name, and the two have been negotiating ever since to hammer out a licensing agreement. But Cisco said the talks broke down just hours before Apple's chief executive, Steve Jobs, took to the stage Tuesday at the annual Macworld Conference and Expo to introduce the multimedia device.
With its lawsuit, Cisco is seeking injunctive relief to prevent Apple from copying Cisco's iPhone trademark.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

The new Apple iPhone

Capping literally years of speculation on perhaps the most intensely followed unconfirmed product in Apple's history -- and that's saying a lot -- the iPhone has been announced today. Yeah, we said it: "iPhone," the name the entire free world had all but unanimously christened it from the time it'd been nothing more than a twinkle in Stevie J's eye (comments, Cisco?). Sweet, glorious specs of the 11.6 millimeter device (that's frickin' thin, by the way) include a 3.5-inch 480 x 320 touchscreen display with multi-touch support and a proximity sensor to turn off the screen when it's close to your face, 2 megapixel cam, 4GB or 8 GB of storage, Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR and A2DP, WiFi that automatically engages when in range, and quad-band GSM radio with EDGE. Perhaps most amazingly, though, it somehow runs OS X with support for Widgets, Google Maps, and Safari, and iTunes (of course) with CoverFlow out of the gate. A partnership with Yahoo will allow all iPhone customers to hook up with free push IMAP email. Apple quotes 5 hours of battery life for talk or video, with a full 16 hours in music mode -- no word on standby time yet. In a twisted way, this is one rumor mill we're almost sad to see grind to a halt; after all, when is the next time we're going to have an opportunity to run this picture? The 4GB iPhone will go out the door in the US as a Cingular exclusive for $499 on a two-year contract, 8GB for $599. Ships Stateside in June, Europe in fourth quarter, Asia in 2008.

Full details for the new IPhone can be found at Apple

Monday, January 8, 2007

Yahoo Introduces Mobile Service Software

After falling behind Google in Internet search and advertising, Yahoo is trying to remain No. 1 in the battle to deliver information and online services to mobile phones.
Yahoo’s latest weapon is software that will let users find information like weather, news, stock quotes and sports scores more quickly on their cellphones. The software, called Go for Mobile 2.0, was unveiled Monday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, just as Google announced a partnership to put its own mobile software on Samsung cellphones.
Internet services on mobile phones remain a tiny market today, especially in the United States. But industry analysts and Internet companies believe they will eventually outgrow the market for computer-based Internet services as the capabilities of cellphones and the bandwidth of wireless networks improve rapidly.
“We view the mobile Internet today as entering an era where the PC-based Internet was in ’96 or ’97,” said Steve Boom, Yahoo’s senior vice president for broadband and mobile. “It is just on the cusp of taking off.”
For Yahoo, securing a leading position in that market is especially important. The company has struggled over the last year, as Google solidified its lead in search and leaped ahead in online video by acquiring YouTube. Yahoo has also been criticized as lacking initiative and being slow to capitalize on Internet trends like social networking, now dominated by MySpace and Facebook.

Read more at NyTimes

Everyone Predicts Apple Phone To Hit Tomorrow

Both the Wall Street Journal and New York Times, two publications not known for speculation, have published information about what they believe to be the rumored phone from Apple. Based on patents and various reports, the Times believes the phone could be much more than a simple device with music playback, possibly adding a touch screen, advanced computer-like functionality and new casing materials. The Wall Street Journal adds that Cingular will be the service provider for the phone. Both publications mention tomorrow's Macworld keynote as a likely platform to launch the device but are sure to state that the phone could be announced separately, some time later.

Via Phonescoop

Nokia announced the hot new Nokia N76

CES 2007 -- Nokia has made good on its promise to get slimmer with its introduction of the Nokia N76. The full featured N-Series device comes in at 13.7mm thick which is significantly thinner than its other devices (the N93 is 28.2mm thick for example, over twice the size). The styling doesn't stop at size though, the N76 features a mirror finish on the outside and is constructed out of premium materials like magnesium.
Features of the Nokia N76 include:
Quad-band GSM + WCDMA 2100 2.4" QVGA display with 16 million colors S60 3rd Edition software Music player supporting Windows DRM along with almost everything else (MP3/WAV/MIDI/M4A/AAC/eAAC+/WMA) 2 megapixel camera with flash Standard 3.5mm headphone jack microSD card slot Bluetooth 2.0 Nokia expects to begin shipping the N76 later in the first quarter. It will ship in two color combinations to start, red and black. More photos of the device (including both colors) are available below.

The next generation of mobile surfing - the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet

Today at the CES conference in Las Vegas, Nokia introduced its next generation widescreen Nokia Nseries multimedia computer, the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet. The sleek Nokia N800 combines a truly personal Internet experience with easy wireless connections, high resolution display and support for a wide variety of Internet applications.



The Nokia N800 is built to be constantly in use. Internet calling, instant messaging and email keep you in touch with friends and family. With stereo audio, media support and new ergonomic design the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet is a portable Internet entertainment device; you will enjoy streamed or downloaded content free away from fixed location.
Building on the success of the Nokia 770 Internet Tablet, the Nokia N800 introduces faster performance, full screen finger qwerty keyboard, easier continuous connections through Wi-Fi or via Bluetooth phone, integrated web camera as well as a new elegant design. Nokia also announced a development cooperation with Skype on Internet Telephony that will allow Skype users to make Internet calls from their Nokia N800.
Like its predecessor, the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet is based on Nokia's desktop Linux based Operating System. The Maemo development platform was launched in 2005 to provide Open Source developers with the tools and opportunities to create innovative applications for use on Nokia's Internet Tablets. Users of the Nokia N800 will be able to benefit from a wide range of third party applications.
The Nokia N800 is commercially available immediatelly in the United States and in selected markets in Europe at estimated retail price of 399 EUR/USD (excluding local taxes).
Via Slashphone

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Motorola KRZR K1m (White) Phone

Released for Verizon Wireless, the Motorola KRZR K1m (White) gives a colorful twist to the original K1m, surpassesing the RAZR's standard for slimness, with more than a centimeter shaved off its width. Showcasing a multi-dimensional, metallic gloss finish for visual depth, the KRZR K1m exhibits subtle elegance through white, polished chrome and hardened glass. The solid piece of glass on the front of the phone - a technological first for a large volume mobile - results in a high-gloss luster balancing the velvet-like soft touch finish on the back. Offering an integrated music players and expandable memory up to 1 GB, the KRZR K1m's beats to a slightly different drum boasting touch-sensitive music controls, advanced EV-DO data services and location-based services capabilities...


Read the full review at Mobiledia

Samsung SGH-T629

On the heels of Samsung's recent efforts to trim its handhelds, T-Mobile sliders have continued to decrease in thickness while makes strides in functionality. Offering the latest in ultra-thin slider handsets, Samsung loaded the thin, but still meaty, SGH-T629 with comparably high-level technology options, including Bluetooth, camera with zoom and expandable external memory. Similar in design to the popular D807, the 3.3 oz T629 is also equipped to access the company's high-speed EDGE network, making downloading online media easier and quicker. The quad-band GSM phone makes for easy travel as long as users unlock it ahead of time. A built-in unit converter (including currency) adds to travelers' comfort.
Stocked with useful options like voice recognition, voice playback and fairly clear game soundtracks, the phone's manufacturers remained clear-minded that not all users would want these new advantages and have graciously allowed them to turn each off separately.

Read the full review at Mobiledia

Cingular Makes First Wireless Video Share Call

ATLANTA, Jan. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- As thousands of people stroll through the aisles of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas next week, those stopping by the AT&T booth (9817) will get a glimpse of what to expect from their wireless company in the near future - that is, if their wireless company is Cingular! (Media and analysts attending the Digital Experience event at Caesar's Palace on Sunday, January 7 between 7:00 -10:00 p.m. PST can get a sneak preview).
Cingular will be the first wireless carrier in the United States to demonstrate a service that allows wireless phone users to easily make a "live" video share call. The service allows users to send a live video stream to a recipient during a standard voice call. Beginning with a normal phone call, customers can hit one button to add a live video stream, allowing the called party to see what the caller is seeing while they're talking. The service also allows customers to switch the direction of the video stream during the same phone call.
"In the case of this technology demonstration, seeing is believing," said Kris Rinne, senior vice president of architecture and planning for AT&T. "Consumers can get a real feel for what 3G wireless can do and what to expect in the future."

Read the full story at Mediaroom.com

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