IE9 code for Windows Phone 7 complete, adds landscape address bar

Ballmer didn’t get specific when he said the Windows Phone Mango update would bring 500 new features, but we’d bet our blue screens that a handful of those additions are wrapped up in IE9. In addition to the long awaited landscape mode address bar, IE9 for Windows Phone promises to bolster performance through GPU acceleration and an improved rendering experience. The browser update boasts a litany of support features: the aforementioned GPU-accelerated browsing, full-screen video through HTML5 (though not embedded, sorry!), GPS-based geolocation, ECMAScript 5, 2D CSS3, etc. We should know a whole heap of a lot more come tomorrow morning, so be sure to follow along during our liveblog right here.

IE9 code for Windows Phone 7 complete, adds landscape address bar originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 May 2011 00:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTechradar  | Email this | Comments

T-Mobile flips on 42Mbps HSPA+ across 55 markets, launching Rocket 3.0 modem stick tomorrow

Fellow road warriors, we bring you good news: starting today, T-Mobile customers across 55 markets — including Chicago, Detroit, Honolulu, Pittsburgh, Miami, and many more — will have immediate access to a faster HSPA+ “4G” network. This means anyone with compatible devices can achieve theoretical download speeds of up to a whopping 42Mbps, as opposed to just 21Mbps from the good ol’ days. But of course, only time will tell whether this upgrade will deliver its promise — you may recall that even AT&T’s LTE demo last week delivered “realistic” download speeds of up to just 28.9Mbps, when in theory it should be capable of hitting up to 100Mbps.

Anyhow, if you want to soldier on and be a guinea pig an early adopter, then help yourself to ZTE’s Rocket 3.0 USB modem stick starting tomorrow — the entry price is $99.99 after a $50 mail in rebate, but tied to a two-year broadband plan of 2GB or higher; or you can opt for the contract-free price of $199.99. Hit the press release after the break for the full list of activated markets.

Continue reading T-Mobile flips on 42Mbps HSPA+ across 55 markets, launching Rocket 3.0 modem stick tomorrow

T-Mobile flips on 42Mbps HSPA+ across 55 markets, launching Rocket 3.0 modem stick tomorrow originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 May 2011 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

T-Mobile doubles 4G speeds in 50 markets

The additions brings the total to 55 markets where customers can enjoy theoretical download speeds of up to 42Mbps, and T-Mobile unveils its first compatible product.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Canon looks to recover quickly from quake

Canon revises its expectations for recovering from the deadly earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in March.

Research firm says iPad 2 shortfall possible

A research firm says that iPad 2 production could take a hit in the second quarter due to an explosion at a Foxconn facility–Foxconn assurances notwithstanding.

Originally posted at Nanotech – The Circuits Blog

Tipster: New Nook is ‘The Simple Touch Reader’

With Barnes & Noble set to launch a new e-reader just hours from now, a tipster has told CNET the device is a touch-screen e-ink e-reader that will retail for $139.

Sony shows off, folds up super flexible organic TFT display

E-reader manufacturers are doing their darnedest to get their devices to behave more like the old fashioned books we’ve all since abandoned, but we won’t be happy until we can roll one up and stuff it in our back pockets, paperback-style. Sony’s working hard to make that dream a reality — the company showed off some new bendable display technology behind closed doors at last week’s SID conference in LA, including a color unit and the extremely flexible black and white e-paper display seen above, which can be bent to a 5mm curvature radius. The 13.3-inch sheet has a 1,600 x 1,200 (150ppi) resolution and is powered by organic TFTs. Sony showed off and bent the thing at the show, reportedly to the cheers of the crowd in attendance. Clearly they’re all as excited as we are to make some really expensive e-paper airplanes. For more shots of the bending process, consult the source link below.

Sony shows off, folds up super flexible organic TFT display originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 22:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink E-Ink-Info  |  sourceTech-On  | Email this | Comments

Pink Zune and another “Vibrant” Color Coming Soon

This article was written on April 03, 2007 by CyberNet.

PinkZuneWhile I’m sure that nearly everybody who is reading this will not be interested in purchasing a pink Zune, read on…

First, Microsoft has confirmed that they are bringing back the pink Zune.  Last year they sold a limited 100 Pink Zunes, and few people paid a big price tag on eBay ($761.00) to get one. They’ve brought it back now and it will be going on sale sometime in May, and Amazon is already taking orders for them. Perhaps they’re trying to entice more women into purchasing a Zune?

Next, along with this pink Zune, Microsoft says that another “vibrant” color will be coming several weeks after the pink version is released. Hopefully it’ll be a color that will more appealing than pink is for most of you. Currently your color options are white, brown, and black.

Any guesses on what the new “vibrant” color will be? Do you think offering additional colors will boost their sales? Jason Reindorp who is the marketing director for the Zune says that they have a second big round of advertising that will be starting in a month because sales have naturally tapered off from the holidays.

Source: Zune-Online

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts:


Japan Mobile Marketing Round-Up 2

This is the latest in the series of blogs based on the newsletters supplied by our research partner INterRIDE Inc.

Post-Earthquake SNS Trends

In an online survey of 1,891 social media users 1.9% answered that they started using Twitter due to the March 11th earthquake. Combined with those who already were using the service the total rises to 42.1%, almost double that of Facebook and not far from mixi’s 50.8%.

The same survey also asked users which SNS they found helpful following the catastrophe, and 63.9% said Twitter, against Facebook’s 34.7% and mixi’s low 26%. As Asiajin blogger Akky Akimoto wrote in a recent Japan Times column:

As mobile phone networks went down after the quake, people turned elsewhere to contact each other, and Japanese TV and newspapers suggested that social media, which by then basically meant Twitter, was a good alternative when disaster cut off other communication channels.

Figures show that the number of tweets on March 11th was 1.8 times higher than usual, and continued to be 20% higher than average in the weeks following the disaster.

japan-earthquake-twitter-sns

Of course most people still got their information immediately after the quake from TV, not least because internet was not available at many places such as refugee shelters. However, the survey also revealed that television is still the most trusted medium overall and SNS and blogs are the least, even though their usage is very high among people in their teens and twenties.

These results are not surprising but it’s good to have some confirmation of how users were searching for information in the wake of the disaster. Though much in the media has been made of the population’s stoicism, attitudes will be affected, not only as regards social media but also in terms of general consumer behavior, as we researched in our new in-depth video report on “Japan’s new normal”.

Japan carriers unlock SIMs

It got sidelined understandably following the March 11th earthquake and tsunami, but a minor mobile revolution occurred when on the same day NTT DoCoMo officially announced it would allow SIM unlocking on its new phones, for a small fee.

For the first time in Japan we see the possibility of a separation between the phone and the payment plan. Despite leading in so much of its mobile technology Japan has arguably lagged in its services (or at least, their flexibility) compared to the rest of the world. It wasn’t just the carriers’ fault since the manufacturers were also reluctant to take the leap, worrying about the additional customer service costs it would incur.

Of course we still seem to be some time away from Softbank unlocking their iPhones and iPads, though ironically government pressure on the carriers to deactivate SIM locking was likely motivated by the arrival of the iPhone. In 2008 overall mobile phone unit shipments dropped by 18.7%; clearly something had to be done to stimulate growth again. The introduction of a wave of foreign and domestically manufactured smartphones is one step but this new development will likely be positive for sales too.

INterRIDE speculates that the influence on mobile marketing and advertising could be big, but at first we will have to see what kinds of users opt to unlock their phones and go free.

g-point

BitCash and mobage

In an interesting example of a tie-up between an e-money tool and online platform, gaming portal mobage was offering users the chance to exchange their BitCash for the site’s own points. BitCash is a “web money” that if purchased at Seven Eleven, could then be changed into “moba-coin”, mobage’s internal points, and 10,000 further users received 200 coins by lottery.

Quite a lot of this point-exchange goes on in Japan and it’s a great example of how services work together to offer loyalty deals to the widest possible number of consumers. Portals like G-Point or ChobiRichi allow people with points from Yahoo! or Rakuten to switch them to others either more specific (ANA miles) or general (T-Point, Edy, Suica etc.).

BitCash is used for online gaming, betting on the horses (one of the few cases of legal gambling in Japan), paying for digital music, or e-commerce.

KDDI opens book store

The shop in question is of course a digital one and ties into KDDI’s other entertainment services. Lismo Book Store is hoping to rival foreign e-book and digital publishing providers, and is specifically for KDDI au’s Android smartphone (much like the Lismo music services are for au users).

KDDI first started offering e-book services last December for its bible Leaf SP02 model but in April expanded it for the Android IS03, also adding SNS-style functionality such as user reviews. In the kind of analog touch that I personally love your downloaded texts are displayed on a “bookshelf” interface. Currently Lismo Book Store has around 30,000 titles for users, to increase to around 100,000 through 2011.

Japanese publishing is famously highly diverse. Whenever local bestseller rankings are compared with America or Europe, the proportion of fiction is quite a bit lower, with a much broader range of hits, including manga, self-help books, idol photo books and so on. It will be interesting to see if the digital book stores mimic this trend and if it affects the established keitai shosetsu (mobile phone novel) phenomenon, which accounted for around half of bestsellers at its peak in 2007.

fulife-iphone-app

Green-Fingerer Tweets

Finally, we all know that local users love anything cute.

Hakuhodo has got together with researchers from Keio University’s media design faculty to create fulife, a Twitter iPhone app that lets you grow flowers with your tweets. When you write messages you can plant seeds and rain then falls, making your garden come to life. This “flower communication” tool also allows you to pick your sproutings and send them as presents to your Twitter chums.

Twitter has seen success in Japan (even not taking into account its role in post-3.11 communication) but Hakuhodo is worried about its longevity, it seems, so this app is part of the Sustainble User Generated Media Project: How can we ensure that people continue using the platforms and contribute, especially in the Japanese market where typically users are highly reluctant to get personal?

Presumably making a cute environment that gets cuter the more you tweet is one solution. Revealing the target is supposed to be anyone from ages 5 and up to adult — quite a range!

You can do a quick search for who is using this app by looking at the Twitter tag #fulife.

i-Buddie Oak Trail tablet makes cameo at MeeGo Conference 2011

Well what do we have here? We were loitering around the Intel booth here at the MeeGo Conference in San Francisco when we spotted this lonely little device resting unsupervised in the back, so we decided to give it a whirl and snap some pictures. It turns out it’s a circa 10-inch tablet made by i-Buddie and built on Intel’s recent Oak Trail architecture. Of course it’s running MeeGo, but sadly we were unable to connect to the Internet — something to do with missing WiFi drivers, according to the Intel rep who eventually caught up with us to snatch the tablet from our eager paws. We missed the opportunity to make a video, but take a look at our hands-on gallery below.

i-Buddie Oak Trail tablet makes cameo at MeeGo Conference 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 21:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments