Netgear CEO Talks Smack Talks Apple

patrick lo phone.jpg

If you don’t have anything nice to say, good news, you may be a prime candidate to run a tech company. Tech CEOs have never been ones to pull punches when it comes to discussing how competitors are run. In fact, they seem to thrive on issuing such outspoken critcism–and yes, we certainly thrive on reporting it.

Netgear CEO Patrick Lo had all kinds of less than flattering things to say about the way Apple is run, and how the company will stumble once Steve Jobs takes his exit, “which is probably not far away.”

The iPhone, Lo told The Sydney Morning Herald, will ultimately fail, due to Apple’s restrictions on the device, comparing it to VHS vs. Betamax and, closer to home, Mac vs. PC. “Ultimately a closed system just can’t go that far,” said Lo. “If they continue to close it and let Android continue to creep up then it’s pretty difficult as I see it.”

Lo attributed Jobs’s policy to his “ego,” stating, “Steve Jobs wants to suffocate the distribution so even though he doesn’t own the content he could basically demand a ransom.”

As for Microsoft’s ability to compete in the mobile space? The picture is even less rosy, “”Microsoft is over. Game over, from my point of view.”

Lo sees Android overtaking the iPhone globally–something that, according to mobile analyst group Canalys, already happened in the fourth quarter of last year.

Intel briefly shows off Medfield-based smartphone

Intel promised way back in 2009 that we’d be seeing Medfield-based smartphones in 2011, and it looks like those have now gotten one step closer to reality. While there’s unfortunately few details to be had, that’s apparently a Medfield-based smartphone of some sort in the hand of Intel’s Anand Chandrasekher above, who apparently showed off the phone (possibly a prototype) ever so briefly at the company’s sales and marketing conference last week. Could it be a sign of things to come at MWC next month? Maybe, maybe not, but we’ll be there to find out.

Intel briefly shows off Medfield-based smartphone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 11:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint launches rough, tough Motorola Brute i686

Sprint announces the immediate availability of the rugged Motorola Brute i686 with Direct Connect service.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Google Honors The Request To Remove Miro Logo

This article was written on April 21, 2006 by CyberNet.

Google Honors The Request To Remove Miro Logo

To honor the anniversary of Joan Miro, a Spanish surrealist, Google had altered their logo to what you see in the image on the side. Joan Miro was born in 1893 and passed away in 1983. Joan Miro’s family had contacted Google and requested that the logo be removed because of underlying copyrights that were violated. Google complied with the request and promptly removed the logo from their page.

Google stated that they did not believe that they violated any copyright laws but they decided to follow the family’s wishes anyways. In my opinion the family is crazy because there are millions of people (like me) who have never heard of Joan Miro and could have actually learned something by simply clicking on their logo. It is an honor to be selected for a customized Google Logo and is not something that people should complain about in my opinion.

News Source: Mercury News

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Android Now World’s Most Popular Mobile OS

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It’s hard to fathom now, but there was a time when Google’s open mobile operating system seemed destined to fail. Android was really slow out of the gate. Few users and fewer handset manufacturers were adopting it, and after several months, the OS seemed dead in the water.

Now look at where we are. Mobile analyst group Canalys is reporting today that, in the fourth quarter of last year, Android became the top smartphone platform. Shipments for the OS hit 32.9 million in the quarter, beating out 31.0 million worldwide shipments for the Symbian platform.

Apple and RIM were in a distant third and fourth, respectively, at 16.2 and 14.6 million shipments repectively. Microsoft, meanwhile, rounded out the top five at 3.1 million handsets shipped globally.

Despite Symbian’s slipping marketshare, Nokia is still the top smartphone vendor, with 28 percent of the total market.

iPad loses significant share to Android tablets

The iPad’s market share declined significantly between the third and fourth quarters. At the same time, Android picked up share.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

Android tops global smartphone ranks

Overtaking Symbian for the No. 1 spot among smartphone platforms worldwide, Android-based phones reached 32.9 million shipments for the fourth quarter of 2010, according to a new report from Canalys.

Originally posted at News – Wireless

Intel finds Sandy Bridge chipset design flaw, shipments stopped and recalls beginning

Intel finds Sandy Bridge chipset design flaw, shipments stopped and recalls beginning

A problem requiring a “silicon fix” is bad news in the chipset business, and sadly that’s what Intel is announcing. Its new Intel 6 Series chipset, Cougar Point, has been found to have a flaw, something to do with the SATA controller. Intel is indicating that the ports can “degrade over time,” leading to poor i/o performance down the road. All shipments have been stopped and a fix has been implemented for new deliveries, but it sounds like recalls will be starting soon for those with this ticking time bomb silicon within. It isn’t a critical problem right now, though, so if you own a Sandy Bridge Core i5 or Core i7 system keep computing with confidence while looking for a recall notice, but it is bad news for Intel’s bottom line: the company is advising a $300 million hit to revenue.

Update: Jimmy sent us a chat log with an Intel customer service representative indicating that this recall only affects “some desktop boards based on Intel P67 chipset,” that the H67 chipset boards appear to not be affected, but that the company doesn’t have a comprehensive list yet. We’ve certainly seen cases where CSRs don’t have all the info in this sort of situation, but still we’d advise waiting a bit before tearing your new mobo out and bringing it back to the store.

[Thanks, Matt]

Continue reading Intel finds Sandy Bridge chipset design flaw, shipments stopped and recalls beginning

Intel finds Sandy Bridge chipset design flaw, shipments stopped and recalls beginning originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fax Machines, Ham Radio Leading Egyptian Protest

fax machine.jpg

What’s a country to do when its government has instituted one of the largest Internet blackouts in history? Simple: turn to older technologies. Protesters in Egypt are adopting a number of outdated pieces of tech, from dial-up modems to ham radio to fax machines.

The modems are actually being provided by a number of activist groups like We Re-Build and Telecomix, getting people online to voice complaints via sites like Twitter (the proper hastags, incidentally, are #egypt and #jan25). As the BBC points out, a number of ISPs in countries like the US, France, Spain, and Sweden are waiving fees and setting up the means for making calls to Egypt to help circumvent the informational blackout.

Anonymous, the hacktivist group that gained a good deal of prominence in recent months, thanks to its role in the Wikileaks fight, has been faxing information from the whistleblowing site to Egyptian schools.

The aforementioned We Re-Build is relaying information from ham radio via phone and Morse code.

iPad Comes to India

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The iPad has arrived in India, and the reaction is, well, mixed. A number of India-based gadget sites are excitedly reporting the long-awaited event, which finally arrived nine months after the device first officially hit the market in the US. Others are rightfully pointing out that everyone in the country who wanted an iPad has already picked one up via the “graymarket.”

And then there’s the fact that Samsung’s Galaxy Tab–Apple’s chief competitor for the consumer tablet market at present–has already launched in that country. Actually, the arrival of Apple’s iPad (which is priced 20-percent higher than its US counterpart) has actually driven down the Galaxy Tab’s price tag.

According to the majority of Indian news sources, the iPad’s arrival in the country was met with little to no fanfare from Apple itself. Theories range from the company attempting to stave off a riot, to the realization that, as mentioned above, everyone who wants the thing already owns the thing.

I’m leaning a little more heavily to the latter. After all, Indian tech sites, like the rest of the world, are reporting on the rumors surrounding the device’s follow up. The question, then, is whether India will have to wait another nine months for the sequel.