Live Blog: Motorolas Android Announcements

mobilize_1.JPG


It’s been a long time since Motorola made a big splash in the mobile space, but that may  change on Thursday when Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha holds court during GigaOm’s Mobilize 09 conference.

The company that brought us the once massively popular Razr phone is about to jump into the Google Android fray with one (possibly two) Android-based phones. If there’s WiFi or a strong broadband cellular signal available, we’ll be live-blogging from the announcement event, expected to kick off on Sept 10 at 10:25 A.M. PST.

UPDATE: OK, we have connectivity! Mark Hachman and Lance Ulanoff will be sending updates and photos, respectively, after the jump.

iPhone NFL Kickoff: Does Madden 10 play nice without buttons?

(Credit: Scott Stein/CNET)

The real NFL season is about to kick off, and EA has seized the opportunity to finally slide in the release of its much-anticipated port of Madden to the iPhone/iPod Touch format. It represents the meeting of the mobile entertainment industry’s unstoppable force, Apple’s black slab of wonder, with the gaming industry’s immovable object. Available at $7.99 through the kickoff of the Steelers-Titans game tonight and $9.99 afterward, is it worth your hard-earned tailgate dollars? We played it last week here at the CNET offices and played it a lot more on our own iPhone last night, and here’s our verdict.

It took EA a few weeks longer to get its iPhone act together than Gameloft did with NFL 2010. Did it pay off? Well, in some ways, yes. The player models and 3D stadiums seem better rendered than Madden’s NFL-licensed and similarly-named App Store rival, NFL 2010 by Gameloft, but with a significant drawback: the framerate on our 3GS playthrough was significantly choppier than NFL 2010. A future update will hopefully fix this, but in the meantime it doesn’t affect gameplay enough to be a game-killer. The presentation and commentary are impressive, nearing console level but hovering nearer to PSP and DS versions of Madden.

The biggest fear among those who play any type of hardcore game is whether losing a physical control pad affects gameplay in any significant way. The answer is simple: yes, it does. I’ve played games on my iPhone for more than a year, and it rarely avoids feeling like a compromise: lose a control pad, but gain a simplified interface and an extremely compact form in a smartphone. As to whether it’s worth it, ask yourself if you’d rather tote around a PSP or a Nintendo DS in your pocket in addition to your phone, or just carry an iPhone and lose a few controls, and you’ll have your answer.

The solution EA has given is the same many developers have, including Gameloft: add a virtual stick in the lower left corner, and a series of context-sensitive buttons in the lower right. The problem with the virtual stick is that, like other titles, it can be lost in the shuffle on heavy-focus moments of game play. There’s no tactile feedback, so it must be looked after, unlike a real analog pad. When playing Madden, that means a lot of the accuracy is lost. But the good news is that this game wasn’t really designed for finesse play. We’ll explain.

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Motorola’s First Android Phone Takes Aim at Social Networks

cliq-front-open-tmo

SAN FRANCISCO — Motorola today introduced the Cliq, the company’s first phone based on the Android mobile operating system. The device will have a custom interface called Moto Blur that will bring together e-mail messages, text messages, Facebook and Twitter feeds, and photos into a single interface.


The phone has a touch screen and a physical slide-out keyboard, a 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi, 3G connectivity, the ability to shoot video at 24 frames per second, a standard headphone jack and GPS capability. The phone will be available on T-Mobile’s network in the fourth quarter. Motorola officials did not disclose the price for the phone and would not let any attendees at the Mobilize conference, where they announced the phone, examine it closely.

“This is the first phone with social skills,” said Cole Brodman, chief technology officer at T-Mobile. “Cliq and Moto Blur is the start of the next chapter of Android and shows significance of the platform.”

The phone will also be available internationally under the name Moto Dext.

Motorola also plans to introduce another phone in the next few weeks, in time for holiday season sales.

Motorola needs a hit. Financial problems over the last two years have forced the company to slash its workforce. The company has said it will focus on creating Android-based handsets but this is the first glimpse of what the company has been working on.

The Cliq also helps establish momentum for the Google-designed Android operating system. Last October HTC and T-Mobile released the first phone based on the new OS. Since then HTC has announced three more phones that run Android OS. Other handset makers such as Sony and Samsung are also reportedly working on Android phones.

The new Motorola phone’s biggest asset will be its custom-designed user interface, Moto Blur.

“The Blur makes text, e-mail, Facebook, Twitter feeds and photos from sources like MySpace, Gmail, Yahoo and corporate e-mail appear in a single stream and sync them together with no different logins,” says Sanjay Jha, co-CEO of Motorola. “This means you can focus on what people have said instead of how and where they said it. ”

The Blur also backs up user contacts, log-in information, home-screen customizations, e-mail and social network messages on Motorola’s Blur servers. If you lose your phone, Motorola says you’ll be able to locate it through their online portal using the integrated GPS, and you can even wipe its data remotely. Both features are similar to what Apple offers iPhone users through the Mobile Me service.

Motorola is not the only handset maker that’s seeking to piggyback on the popularity of social networking sites among consumers. While Apple may have kicked off the mobile apps trend, the iPhone puts different services into different buckets and fails to offer its users a smooth and easy way to access all information. For instance, the iPhone makes it difficult for users to get their Facebook and Twitter feed in a single screen.

Apple’s rivals see that lack of integrated social media features as the iPhone’s Achilles heel. And they are trying to fight back by integrating information and add social context for their customers.

Earlier this year, U.K.-based INQ released a phone designed around Facebook. Palm has also designed the user interface in its recently introduced Pre phone around integrated contacts, messaging and Facebook feeds.

But the Moto Blur and Cliq goes one step further. “The phone is really cool,” says  Sean Galligan, vice-president, business development at Flurry, a mobile analytics company that has partnered with Motorola.

“We have seen apps and other handsets take on content aggregation and deliver personalization to users but the Blur offers a level of deep integration that is not available in other devices,” says Galligan.

Motorola is also counting on the success of the Android apps marketplace to attract customers.

“By the year end we will have a really good idea of what the consumer thinks. The Android apps are there and growing and social aggregation is clearly the new trend in mobile phones,” says Galligan. “But the true test will be when the consumer decides whether to buy these devices or not. ”

Photo: Moto Cliq/Motorola


Live from Motorola’s Android announcement at Mobilize 09

We’re at GigaOM’s Mobilize conference today, where Motorola and CEO Sanjay Jha has come to reveal (or so we hope, anyway) its first volley of Android hardware — hardware that could very well make or break the company. Follow the break for all the action live and in full color!

Continue reading Live from Motorola’s Android announcement at Mobilize 09

Filed under: ,

Live from Motorola’s Android announcement at Mobilize 09 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Motorola CLIQ runs Android, headed to T-Mobile

Motorola just announced its first Android handset, the CLIQ, which is headed to T-Mobile by the fourth quarter, or in time for the holidays. As you’d expect, it runs the new MOTOBLUR Android skin, and Moto’s calling it “the first phone with social skills” to highlight the social networking integration. It’ll come in two colors, Winter White and Titanium, and have a 3.1-inch 320 x 480 screen, 3G, WiFi, and a five megapixel camera that’ll also shoots 24fps video. Internationally, the CLIQ will be known as the DEXT, and it’ll be on Orange, Telefonica, and America Movil. It will also be far less ugly than we all expected from those Morisson leaks.

Gallery: Motorola CLIQ

Filed under:

Motorola CLIQ runs Android, headed to T-Mobile originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Motorola introduces the MOTOBLUR Android skin

As expected, Motorola just introduced its Android strategy at the Mobilize conference, and it’s based around a skin called Blur — or MOTOBLUR if you’re feeling cute. It’s built around social networking, and it features live widgets that integrate Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, MySpace, Yahoo, Last.fm and more. Like Palm’s Synergy, Blur aggregates all your contacts into a single address book, but it shows you recent status updates along with photos when contacts call you — very slick. There’s also remote wipe and GPS tracking like MobileMe.

Filed under:

Motorola introduces the MOTOBLUR Android skin originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

LG debuts N2R1 NAS with built-in DVD burner, up to 2TB of storage

It may be a pretty crowded field to compete and stand out in, but it looks like LG is intent on angling for a bigger share of the NAS market nonetheless, and it’s now taken advantage of CEDIA to debut its new N2R1 model. While this one doesn’t pack a Blu-ray recorder like LG’s earlier model, it does still include a somewhat uncommon built-in DVD burner to complement the two standard hard drives (for up to 2TB of storage). Otherwise, you can expect the usual Ethernet and WiFi connectivity (just 802.11g, unfortunately), DLNA support, and all the basic security measures you’d expect — not to mention a stylish white enclosure. Look for this one to hit retailers sometime this Fall with a list price of $299 for the 1TB version or $399 for the 2TB model.

Filed under: ,

LG debuts N2R1 NAS with built-in DVD burner, up to 2TB of storage originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Polaris cell phone bot predicts your behavior

(Credit: Flower Robotics)

Japanese design firm Flower Robotics has unveiled a new concept robot cell phone that moves around on two wheels and learns from user behavior.

Flower teamed up with telecom KDDI and its Iida line of products to create the device, dubbed Polaris. In the Japanese video below …

LG LH-series wireless HDTVs now available Stateside

Seems like slim wireless HDTVs are the CEDIA special, and LG’s joining in the fun by announcing official US availability of the wireless LH-series, first launched at CES. No surprises here apart from price, they’re exactly as they were when they popped into the FCC: the high-end $4,799 55-inch 55LHX has a local-dimming LED backlight, an 80,000:1 contrast ratio with 240Hz motion ruining enhancement and is less than an inch thick, while the LH85 line offers both $2,399 47-inch and $3,199 55-inch models. Check out our demo from CES for some hands-on with the ASW1000 Media Box, which is where the wireless HD action goes down.

Filed under: ,

LG LH-series wireless HDTVs now available Stateside originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 13:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Pioneer Project ET Hands On: The Ultimate Networked Media Box

We’re still wrapping our heads around Pioneer’s Project ET. It’s sort of every piece of media squeezed into one set-top box—with masterful execution.

Project ET, also known as Project ETAP, is due sometime next year for an undisclosed price. The system is essentially a Linux-based networked computer with a 1TB hard drive and Blu-ray player.

OK, so what? Here’s a full list of what it can actually do:

• Play Blu-ray movies
Managed Copy (backup) Blu-ray movies
• Connect to video services like Netflix (though definitely not Hulu)
• Stream stuff like MovieTrailers.com with a polished, non-web interface
• Link you to buying related movies/products through an unobtrusive interface
• Support Windows Media Center (possibly through DLNA)
• Be controlled through Android phones, the Nokia N810 (demoed perfectly), and the iPod touch (limited demo through the web)
• Load 128 USB connected drives (which it encrypts in some cases)
• Rip music in FLAC and PCM
• Automatically include the album art and lyrics
• Stream LastFM, Rhapsody and support Rhapsody downloads
• Integrate third party home automation devices
• Update Twitter
• And do everything listed above through a SlingBox-like, web-mirrored interface

All of this sounds great, but if the UI is either slow or ugly, none of the features matter. Luckily, the interface is easy to navigate, tastefully designed, and oh yeah, fast. In fact, Blu-ray JAVA loads 6x faster on the ET than the PS3.

None of these features are set in stone. Pioneer explained that, depending on public response, they could pull the hard drive completely or ditch Blu-ray. In fact, Project ET may not be a standalone product but a platform for future Pioneer products. They just want to create an internet-connected media network to trump everything that’s come before. And…well, they’re certainly in contention.

We’d just like to see DVR and CableCard support. Because then it would pretty much do everything.

Pioneer Project ET Hands On from Gizmodo on Vimeo.