American Drivers Out-text European Motorists

American Drivers Out text European MotoristsWe all know that we should not be using our phones while we drive, and since the explosion of smartphones happened some years back, it has led to an even greater proliferation of such devices, so much so that using phones when we are behind the wheel has become so commonplace, as we check on our email, tweets and Facebook updates without fully concentrating on the road. Being in a traffic crawl is no excuse, either, as it is human lives at stake here in one moment of carelessness. According to the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more Americans use a cellphone and text when driving compared to their counterparts living across the pond.

In a survey that was held, around 33% of US drivers aged 18 to 64 admitted that they had read or sent a text message when driving within the last month, which is more than double the amount of motorists in Spain who admitted that. Portugal, however, is on par with the US. Over 66% of Americans also admitted that they talked on their handsets when driving, which is sky high compared to just one fifth of drivers in Britain.

If you’re reading this on your smartphone while driving, you know what to do!

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Automatic Driving Assistant Provides Money-Saving Tips Based On Driving Behavior, School Bus Driver Caught Texting While Driving,

This is the Modem World: Why are we still texting?

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World Why are we still texting

“Just text me…”

How many times have you told someone that? Say you’re meeting a friend somewhere: What’s the first thing you do when you get there? You text him or her to announce your arrival. Why? Because that’s how you’re trained. You don’t email, call or use some other protocol.

And you know what? You’re paying for that text even though you already have a data plan, unless you’re grandfathered into one of the better unlimited plans of the 20th century. Truth is, SMS texts are perhaps the most lucrative service that providers offer — more so than data or voice plans, and they want us to keep using the outdated technology whether we need to or not.

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Wikipedia expects to offer SMS-based access within months

Wikipedia expects to offer SMSbased access within months

Wikipedia has long been pushing for access to its communal knowledge among those who can’t afford the latest technology, going so far as to strike deals with carriers to deliver free mobile web viewing. It’s set to expand that reach to those for whom any advanced cellphone is out of the question. In part through the help of a Knight News Challenge grant and South Africa’s Praekelt Foundation, the non-profit’s Wikipedia Zero effort will offer its content through SMS and USSD messages in the next few months. Curious users will just have to send a text message to get an article in response, with no web required at all. It’s a big step forward for democratizing online information for those who may not even have access to a smartphone, although we’re curious as to how it will handle large articles; we can only imagine the volume of messages when trying to look up the known universe.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Knight Foundation, MediaWiki

Steampunk Cellphone Casemod: Gorilla Brass

We’ve seen a steampunk desk phone before, but Andrei of Steampunker steamrolls that with his awesome casemod. He replaced all of the external parts of a mobile phone with brass or copper and gave it a shiny yet grimy finish to make it look like it’s always been that way.

steampunk cellphone by steampunker andrei

Here’s what the phone looked like before Andrei got his hands on it:

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Check out the pictures below to see more of the phone’s details, including the engraving on the inside of the rear cover, which seems like it contains a lost and found message.

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Head to Steampunker to see more pictures and information on the mod. Before you click the link, know that there are a ton of images on that page and the accompanying text is in Russian. You already clicked the link didn’t you. Serves you right! Now you’re stuck waiting for a page that you can’t read to load completely.

[via English Russia]

North Korea allows tourists to rent phones or SIM cards, but doesn’t include internet

North Korea allows tourists to rent phones or SIM cards, but doesn't include internet

North Korea (which recently added Google’s Eric Schmidt to its guest book) will begin loosening its restrictions on foreign cellphones, allowing any arrivals to either pick up a rental phone or SIM card from service provider Koryolink. With a rental booth already set up in Pyongyang airport, you’ll be able to dial out to numbers abroad, foreign embassies and international hotels. However, the SIMs (priced at around $67) won’t allow you to call locals, nor will they offer any internet data — not even EDGE. Apparently, providing data to the rental SIMs in North Korea wouldn’t be a technical issue, but is dependent on whether it’s granted approval by the DPRK government.

Image credit: Wikipedia Creative Commons

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Via: The Verge

Source: AP (The Guardian), Xinhua

Samsung confirms multiple Tizen phone launches in 2013

Tizen phone photo

Talk of Samsung building a Tizen phone for non-developers has existed almost since the platform got started, but the company was silent on any definitive plans throughout 2012. It’s speaking up this year: Samsung has confirmed to Bloomberg BusinessWeek that there’s multiple “competitive” Tizen devices in the pipeline for 2013. While the firm unsurprisingly won’t say what’s involved, it’s willing to say that the lineup will grow “depending on market conditions” — in other words, it’s watching early sales like a hawk. Does this mean a Galaxy S III with Tizen? A refined version of the developer device we saw last spring? At this stage, it might not matter when just having a major smartphone maker onboard is big news for a fledgling platform.

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Source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek

Everything You Need to Master Your New Smartphone

Welcome to our annual New Smartphone Set Up Guide. Someone thought enough of you to help replace that dumb ol’ brick you’ve been lugging around these past few years. Now what? More »

ASUS PadFone 2 Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update starts arriving over the air

ASUS PadFone 2 Android 41 Jelly Bean update starts arriving over the air

Maybe it was the gadget-in-a-gadget thing, or just that fact that it was a good ‘ole “twofer.” Either way, when the PadFone 2 from ASUS landed in our hands a few weeks back, we were pretty smitten. Now, the deal just got better thanks to the arrival of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean for the “fone” part of that combo. While the proprietary skin remains the same, you can now enjoy all the new perks that 4.1 brings along. The update is being sent out over the air right now, so be sure to point your phone / tablet at the system update screen to make sure you get the goods. Now, ASUS, we just need you to roll out that keyboard add-on we wanted…

[Thanks, Quan Truong]

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T-Mobile confirms trials for GoSmart Mobile prepaid, may take it US-wide in 2013

TMobile confirms trial runs for prepaid GoSmart Mobile network, may go nationwide in 2013

Despite T-Mobile USA being very comfortable with prepaid service, it hasn’t jumped in with both feet like its potential partner MetroPCS or its arch-rival Sprint. The company has just confirmed to FierceWireless that it’s not waiting for a merger to experiment further; it’s currently trialing GoSmart Mobile, a prepaid-only network that uses data speed, not caps, as the incentive to jump to higher tiers. Paying $30 per month offers unlimited calling and texting with no internet access whatsoever, while $35 a month includes unlimited 2G data and $45 upgrades to 3G. While that’s not as good a deal for data as Virgin Mobile, it’s better for those who truly prefer unlimited voice. The carrier hasn’t said how it would balance the new service with its MetroPCS, but it has some time to sort this out when any possible nationwide launch won’t take place until 2013.

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Via: FierceWireless

Source: GoSmart Mobile

Nokia Asha 205 “Facebook phone” and $62 206 hands-on

Nokia has revealed its first “Facebook phone”, the Nokia Asha 205, along with a colorful candybar, the Nokia 206, borrowing the Lumia colors for a budget market. The new Asha 205 features a full QWERTY keyboard and a dedicated Facebook button, as well as forty free EA games, while the 206 comes in the same black, cyan, magenta, yellow, and white as Nokia’s Lumia Windows Phone 8 handsets, and offers up to 47 days of standby time. Both the Asha 205 and the 206 are available in single- or dual-SIM versions, each keeping both SIMs active simultaneously, and feature Nokia’s new Slam file-swapping system.

Unsurprisingly, given Nokia is pricing them both at $62 (SIM-free and pre-subsidy), neither phone has 3G nor any particularly complex features. There’s a 1.3-megapixel camera and Bluetooth, with the latter being used for “Slam” – that uses the strength of a Bluetooth connection to automatically select the nearest phone to you for photo, music, or other transfer. It’ll work on the Asha 205 and 206, as well as send to any other S40, Asha, or Android device (the proximity detection is the new part; regular Bluetooth is used for the transfer). However, not Windows Phone at present; Nokia says that will follow on in time.

In practice, Slam cuts down on a couple of button presses. Choose to send “via Slam” and have the two devices near each other, and it automatically identifies the other phone; there’s no passcode to punch in, just an accept-transfer dialog on the other device. When we tested it versus the regular Bluetooth transfer, the only real difference was that we needed to pick the right Bluetooth recipient from a list.

The Asha 205 comes preloaded with the Facebook app, eBuddy Chat, Twitter, email support, and access to the Nokia Store for other titles. It supports up to 37 days or standby (on the single SIM model; up to 25 on the dual SIM) and up to a 32GB microSD card. The Facebook button simply acts as a launcher to the Facebook app – it can’t be remapped to, say, Twitter, and unlike the button on HTC’s Salsa and ChaCha Android handsets, doesn’t automatically trigger a Facebook share of, say, the photo you’re currently viewing. In the hand, it’s light but a little thick, but the keyboard is easily used.

As for the 206, that’s a classic form-factor with a surprisingly effective and modern design. Gloss-finish on the front, and easily-gripped matte on the back, it feels solid despite the $62 price tag, and the buttons are clicky and tactile. Nokia is positioning it as an ideal – and distinctive – phone for emerging markets as well as those users simply looking for a basic talk and text device, particularly those who might prefer a large, clear 2.4-inch display and sizable keypad.

Both the dual-SIM variants of each phone use Nokia’s EasySwap, which keeps both of the SIM cards active at the same time. That’s handy for travel, when you might want your home SIM active for emergency calls, but a local SIM present for cheaper service; alternatively, you can set up each SIM to be active only for voice, data, SMS, or MMS, or a combination of the four, depending on what tariff you have for each line.

Both the Nokia Asha 205 and the Nokia 206 will begin shipping before the end of the year.

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Nokia Asha 205 “Facebook phone” and $62 206 hands-on is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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