People of Lava invites Android developers to version 2.0 of its app market for TVs

While Google continues to work on an official Android Market for TVs, Sweden’s own People of Lava has announced the second version of the app store for its Scandinavia Android TV. With version 2.0 People of Lava is focusing on attracting developers to create apps specifically for the Android 1.5-powered TVs in order to fill its own app marketplace. Like Google, it has opened up a developer site stuffed with information for anyone interested in developing apps for the TVs, which are currently hand built in 42-, 47- and 55-inch sizes with prices starting at €2500 ($3,564). We wish them well, but with that high price developers may have as much trouble finding a wider audience as current Google TV partners have so far.

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People of Lava invites Android developers to version 2.0 of its app market for TVs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 18:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Arduino, magnet wire, and Android combine to create poor man’s NFC (video)

Poor Man's NFC

Jealous of your Nexus S-owning friends and their fancy NFC chips after yesterday’s Google Wallet announcement? Well tech tinkerer Joe Desbonnet has whipped up what he dubs “poor man’s NFC” using an Arduino, some magnet wire, and any compass-equipped Android smartphone (which is almost all of them). By placing a coil of wire on the phone and connecting it to the DIYer’s favorite microcontroller, Desbonnet was able to send data, albeit very slowly, to his HTC Desire running a special app to decode the signals. Granted, you’re probably not going to see American Eagle mod their point of sale systems to talk to your phone’s magnetometer, but it’s still a neat trick. In fact, we’d break out our Arduino right now to give it a try, but our secret lair is strangely devoid of enameled copper wire. Check out the source link for instructions, and don’t miss the video after the break.

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Arduino, magnet wire, and Android combine to create poor man’s NFC (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 18:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab: Human Outside, Android Inside

If you’re not a nerd, you shouldn’t buy an Android tablet. Not yet. This one is just like those, except it’s first the one to at least feel like a tablet for real people. More »

This Week’s Best Apps

In this week’s app roundup: leafs, identified; music, voice recognized; Jackass, documented; keyboards, personalized; BBC News, Androidified; Amazon free apps, notified; food, stylized; and much, much more. More »

Engadget Investigates: Samsung Nexus S 4G WiMAX performance issues

In Engadget Investigates, we explore major issues, working with tech manufacturers and service providers to improve your experience with the gadgets we’ve all come to depend on. If you’d like us to look into an issue, please send us a tip, including “Investigate” in the subject line.

Samsung’s highly-anticipated Nexus S 4G joined the WiMAX family this month, pairing Google’s popular Nexus handset with Sprint’s 4G network. But with the honeymoon over, customers have noticed that the Gingerbread device isn’t living up to Sprint’s former flagship mates, such as the Epic 4G, with last year’s model besting the new guy on both speed and network reception tests. Customers also noticed issues with battery life, though so far we’ve found it to be consistent with other WiMAX smartphones. We took both out for a stroll around New York City, and on a quick weekend getaway to Miami Beach, and we’re sorry to report that we’ve confirmed your fears about performance. Sprint and Google have confirmed that they’re looking into the performance issues, and we hope they can patch things up with some over-the-air update therapy, but in the meantime, jump past the break to see what we found.

Continue reading Engadget Investigates: Samsung Nexus S 4G WiMAX performance issues

Engadget Investigates: Samsung Nexus S 4G WiMAX performance issues originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Maps 5.5 for Android cops more Latitude, tweaks Places and transit pages

Last month we asked for a “funny pages” display in Google’s next release of Maps that shows a thick dotted line depicting where we’ve traveled, but it appears the folks at El Goog had a different agenda in mind for version 5.5. This time around, we see a few redesigns as well as some streamlined Latitude features. First, check-ins and ratings have now been added to the Places page, giving you one extra point of access; you also now have the option of changing your home or work address within your Latitude Location History, in case you ever move or just like to roam from place to place. Last but not least, Google Maps 5.5 for Android also offers reorganized transit station pages that now list off upcoming departures, transit lines serving that particular station, and links to other stops nearby. Though not a substantial upgrade from previous versions, it’s still impressive that Google pushed it out less than a month after 5.4. The new update is available as a free download in the Android Market.

Google Maps 5.5 for Android cops more Latitude, tweaks Places and transit pages originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 16:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Smartphone Makers Bow to Demands for More Openness

Google’s Nexus S is one of a number of phones to come with an unlocked bootloader, giving users more access to modifying their phones. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

For many Android enthusiasts, “openness” is almost an 11th commandment. So when manufacturers began restricting full access to Android smartphones a couple years ago, many saw it as a cardinal sin.

Good news for you smartphone modders: Some manufacturers are beginning to see the light.

“Today, I’m confirming we will no longer be locking the bootloaders on our devices,” wrote HTC CEO Peter Chou in a Facebook post on Thursday evening. “There has been overwhelmingly [sic] customer feedback that people want access to open bootloaders on HTC phones.”

Essentially, the bootloader is like the backstage area where preparation for a show goes down. When you first turn on a phone, the bootloader is the program that loads the operating system software into a phone’s memory and then launches the OS. If your bootloader is unlocked, you can gain “root access” to your phone, which allows for full administrative privileges. That means more control over what’s on your device.

For many Android phone owners, “openness” is a major draw to the platform. Google’s open-source operating system software is published publicly for all to peruse. The Android Market doesn’t require a vetting process for app submissions like Apple’s App Store does. And being able to modify an Android device via unlocking the bootloader has been very attractive to phone geeks.

HTC has long been seen as a relatively modder-friendly phone manufacturer. Although many of their phones have had locked bootloaders, workarounds were easy enough for software developers to spot in order to gain superuser access to their phones.

That changed recently, however, when modders discovered that two new Android phones — the HTC Sensation and Evo 3D — would come with software that prohibited bypassing locked bootloaders.

“The system was locked but exploitable before,” Android enthusiast Irwin Proud told Wired.com in an interview. “Suddenly they required signature checks,” or digital verification of software that allows it to load. An Android activist, Proud has organized online campaigns to fight against locked-down phone releases.

After hearing this, the modding community wasn’t happy. Users launched WakeUpHTC.com, a web site which gave upset modders all of HTC’s contact info, encouraging them to bombard the company with requests for a change in its bootloader policy. On Thursday, the company relented.

However, HTC wouldn’t tell Wired.com which of its upcoming phones would be unlocked upon release.

Following in Motorola’s Footsteps

The HTC bootloader saga played out much as it did with another Android manufacturer: Motorola.

“When the [Motorola] Droid X was first released,” says Proud, “people were disappointed to hear that there was a software and hardware component that blocked them from flashing custom kernels,” which means modifying the layer of software between the hardware and the operating system.

After users complained about Motorola’s policy via YouTube, a Motorola employee retorted with a not-so-PR-friendly response: “If you want to do custom roms [i.e. modification software], then buy elsewhere, we’ll continue with our strategy that is working thanks.”

The Motorola employee’s comment was picked up by multiple Android blogs, inciting developer outrage. Motorola later apologized for the comment.

But after finding out his newly-purchased Motorola’s Atrix came with a locked bootloader, Irwin Proud decided an apology wasn’t enough. He started an online petition at Groubal.com, urging Motorola to change its bootloader policy. The petition garnered closed to 10,000 signatures.

In April, the company finally caved. “Motorola will enable an unlockable/relockable bootloader, currently found on Motorola Xoom, in future software releases where carrier and operator partners will allow it,” Motorola said in a statement provided to Wired.com. “It is our intention to include the unlockable/relockable bootloader in software releases starting in late 2011.”

The More Things Change…

Motorola and HTC aren’t the only two companies to start warming up to modders.

Sony Ericsson’s 2011 Xperia line releases — the Play, the Arc, the Pro and the Neo — all come with unlockable bootloaders. The company even launched a web site with detailed directions on how to unlock its phones.

LG’s recent G2X also comes with an easily unlocked bootloader, as does its U.K. counterpart, the Optimus 2X.

But not everyone is convinced we’re undergoing a sea change in bootloader policies. Koushik Dutta, the creator of the very popular ClockworkMod, a program which lets you install custom modification software on your phone, remains wary.

“I am highly skeptical as to whether HTC actually has the influence to enforce such a broad unlock policy,” Dutta told Wired.com in an interview. “They don’t control what ships on their phones, carriers do.”

And the carriers have the biggest incentive to prohibit unlocked phones. When users root their devices, they always run the risk of “bricking” their phone, essentially rendering them useless. This often results in requests for returns and replacement devices, a headache for carriers to deal with.

Even more than this, it’s about controlling carrier’s revenue sources. Installing a custom modification like CyanogenMod gives a user the ability to tether other devices to their phone, a service that carriers want to block unless you’re paying them a monthly fee. Further, Google pays carriers a cut of the app sales made on the Android Market, which gives carriers incentive to restrict which apps are allowed on phones. Until recently, AT&T didn’t allow its users to “sideload” apps onto its phones that came from sources other than the official Android Market.

“That’s why the Motorola unlock announcement came with a caveat,” reminds Dutta. “We will unlock all our phones on carriers that allow us to do so.”

Ultimately, modders don’t care who is responsible for unlocking the phones or why — they just want their phones unlocked.

Rhane Thomas, an Android user, summed it up quite nicely on HTC’s Facebook page “What I want is a highly capable and flexible operating system.”


ASUS ‘PadFone’ to be the final name of the phone-docking tablet?

PadFone. Well, as silly as it sounds, the name sure speaks for itself. Unearthed by our friends over at Pocketnow, this USPTO trademark document was filed by ASUS merely four days ago. Such timing suggests that this could very well be the final name of the company’s eccentric “pad or phone” combo, which is to be unveiled at Computex next week. As expected, no specifics are detailed in this application, but it does mention “electronic pens for computer touch screens” — possibly hinting that the PadFone will be compatible with N-Trig’s DuoSense or similar stylus technology.

Alas, that’s all we have for now until ASUS lifts the curtain on Monday, but let us point you to Notebook Italia’s brilliant mock-up to quench your thirst for the time being — we, too, suspect that the phone would slide onto the back of its companion tablet, hence the bump. That said, do bear in mind that this phone is already proven to be not as tacky looking, but is likely closer to a full-fledged Android handset. Anyhow, check out the artist’s impressions after the break.

Update: Oh hey, remember Windows SideShow? Good times.

Continue reading ASUS ‘PadFone’ to be the final name of the phone-docking tablet?

ASUS ‘PadFone’ to be the final name of the phone-docking tablet? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 13:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blockbuster won’t stream to rooted Android devices

Last week, one of the additions to the Android Market that Google announced during Google I/O was movie rentals for Android devices. They also noted that they wouldn’t rent to rooted Android phones. It looks like Blockbuster has taken a page from Google’s playbook: if you’re using the new version of the Blockbuster Android app […]

HTC Sensation review

A hotly anticipated smartphone with a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, a “Super” 4.3-inch screen, and a manufacturer-skinned version of Android 2.3 — we must be talking about the Samsung Galaxy S II, right? Not on this occasion, squire. Today we’re taking a gander at HTC’s Sensation, a handset that’s just begun shipping in Europe under a short-term Vodafone exclusive and which should be making its way to T-Mobile in the USA early next month. By beating its stablemate the EVO 3D and Moto’s Droid X2 to the market, the Sensation becomes the world’s first 4.3-inch smartphone with qHD resolution, while also serving as the debut phone for HTC’s Watch movie streaming service and Sense 3.0 UI customizations. That leaves us with an abundance of newness to review, so what are we waiting for?

Continue reading HTC Sensation review

HTC Sensation review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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