Nissan’s Android app lets you charge your Leaf from afar, puts the ‘ease’ in EV

If you happen to be both a Nissan Leaf owner and an Android user, you’re in luck today, because the automaker has just released an official app that could make your life a little easier. With Nissan’s tool, you’ll be able to monitor your electric vehicle’s battery life and estimated driving range directly from your smartphone, which you can also use to remotely charge your Leaf, or start its air conditioning. It may not be the most groundbreaking app ever, but it definitely offers some welcomed convenience to Nissan’s growing base of EV drivers. Yesterday, the company confirmed to Autoblog Green that Leaf sales “crossed the 10,000 mark a couple weeks ago.” Exact figures are hard to come by, due to Japan’s summer holiday, but Nissan says it’s 100 percent certain that the milestone was crossed. Next up: world domination.

Nissan’s Android app lets you charge your Leaf from afar, puts the ‘ease’ in EV originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 09:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Eco Pod waterproof case keeps your device dry while you’re riding dolphins

When we’re out on the water, we’re constantly longing to take our phones and mp3 players for a swim with us… aren’t you? Now we can enjoy a little “I’m on a Boat” when we’re actually on a boat — thanks to Grace Digital Audio’s Eco Pod — without worrying about our handheld’s survival. The company announced today that its latest sand, shock and waterproof enclosure is now available — and it even comes with a set of waterproof earbuds. While the added protection will set you back $50, the ability to bump Katy Perry while exploring a coral reef is, indeed, priceless. Scope out the full PR after the break for all the specifics, and get your white water rafting playlists ready.

Continue reading Eco Pod waterproof case keeps your device dry while you’re riding dolphins

Eco Pod waterproof case keeps your device dry while you’re riding dolphins originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 05:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OTA TouchWiz update comes to Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 right on schedule

We were there when a select few got their Galaxy Tab 10.1’s loaded up with TouchWiz for the very first time, and we gave you a rundown of what to expect from the newly skinned slate. Now the day has finally arrived for all the other owners to get the new software, and Samsung’s delivered the OTA update as promised. We grabbed the update ourselves on an untouched Tab, and found that it’s a 188MB download — so be prepared to hurry up and wait a while for your new media-enhanced, widget-happy tablet experience. Once you’re done doing the download dance, do let us know how the new UX is treating you in the comments.

[Thanks, Michael]

OTA TouchWiz update comes to Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 right on schedule originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 01:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple now the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer, Samsung checks in at number two

IDC

We make our own truth. That’s how IDC can come up with roughly the same numbers as fellow research firm Canalys and crown Apple the king, when its rival called Android top dog — it’s all about how you slice it. See, where as Canalys bundled all Android handset makers together, IDC has broken them up, which leads to a rather interesting twist — the largest smartphone maker in the world is now Apple. Cupertino’s growth of 141.7-percent in shipments year over year was enough to push it past Nokia (which slipped to number three) and Samsung (which climbed two spots to take the silver medal), while RIM and HTC rounded out the top five. That being said, no one is running away with the lead here, and Sammy’s continued stratospheric rise should keep Apple on guard. Check out the full report after the break.

Continue reading Apple now the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer, Samsung checks in at number two

Apple now the world’s largest smartphone manufacturer, Samsung checks in at number two originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Aug 2011 18:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Survey: Tech Lovers Choose Cellphones Over Sex

iPhone owners were the most willing to give up all sorts of luxuries to hold on to their device. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

A large number of cellphone owners would rather give up sex than their handsets, according to a survey.

Given the choice between a week without sex, or a week without a cellphone, 33 percent would remain celibate, according to app developer TeleNav’s survey of 514 mobile phone owners.

The numbers for the survey’s “would you rather” game get more embarrassing, especially for smartphone owners.

Unlike their Android- and Blackberry-toting counterparts, 40 percent of iPhone owners would sooner go a week without their toothbrush than relinquish their phone, and are more likely than owners of other phones to forego exercise, time with their significant other, and even shoes as long as they can hold on to their iPhone.

Those hordes of of bad-breathed, corpulent, barefoot singles wouldn’t be alone for long – 83 percent percent of iPhone owners think other iSheep make the best romantic partners. The same went for 70 percent of Android customers who prefer their own type.

Makes sense: smartphone users collectively are three times more likely than non-smartphoners to judge people by the phone they carried, and 66 percent share the bed with their phone.

When iPhone-to-iPhone and Android-to-Android relationships go south, don’t count on a phone call or a face-to-face: 18 percent of smartphone customers had ended relationships by voicemail, text, e-mail, tweet, or Facebook update.

Even non-smartphone owners are attached. Thirty three percent would, for a week, rather give up sex than their phone – 70 percent of that minority were women. For another week’s time, just over half of all users would give up caffeine, 63 percent would forego chocolate, and 70 percent would give up alcohol.


Designer Tablet Sports Trendy Looks, Last Year’s Software

The new tablet from Pierre Cardin is made for fashionistas, though it lacks the latest and greatest tech specs. Photo: Courtesy Pierre Cardin

Apple’s minimalist aesthetic and modern design philosophy make the iPad’s sleek look tough to beat. One French fashion label is up for the challenge, with a new tablet that you can’t get off the rack.

Haute couture designer Pierre Cardin now offers an Android tablet device of its own, the first designer tablet to be sold in the United Kingdom.

Like RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook, the PC-7006 is a 7-inch device, smaller than the iPad and most other current Android tablet offerings. It’s running on a decent processor with ample power — Samsung’s 1-GHz Cortex A-8 — though backed by only 512 MB of RAM. The tablet comes in a Wi-Fi-only version, though if you want 3G, you’ll have to purchase a separate attachable dongle for reception.

Four gigs of onboard storage allow modest space for app installation, with an accompanying microSD slot expandable up to 16 GB. And of course, the tablet comes with a 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera for glamour shots. Appropriate, considering only the vainest of the vain will buy it.

Over the past two years, designer labels have tried to cash in on the flood of tablets entering the market. The typical approach is to offer a high-fashion iPad case, à la Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Coach. Others, like Stuart Hughes, opted for a pimped-out version of the iPad, encrusting Apple’s tablet in diamonds, bone and 24-carat gold. Pierre Cardin’s offering is somewhat more original, as it’s an actual device produced and owned by the label itself.

While the device may be fashion-forward, it’s sporting last year’s specs. The PC-7006 runs Android version 2.2 (Froyo), not 3.0 (Honeycomb), the tablet-optimized version of Android. Just like Samsung’s first Galaxy Tab, the designer tablet essentially runs a scaled-up version release originally made for phones, but on a 7-inch tablet’s dimensions.

The PC-7006 is all beauty, no brains. Photo: Courtesy Pierre Cardin

The PC-7006 does come with a fancy leather case, so however dated its insides are, at least it’ll look good.

The tablet is available on the Pierre Cardin website for 275 pounds or about $450. Though if you’re a true fashionista, you aren’t paying attention to price tags.


Study: Android Is Least Open of Open Source Mobile Platforms

A recent study found that out of eight open source mobile platforms, Android ranks at the bottom in terms of openness. Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

By Ryan Paul, Ars Technica

Market research firm VisionMobile has published a report that evaluates the openness of eight major open source software projects. The study — which was partly funded by the European Union — focuses largely on open governance, inclusiveness, transparency, and ease of access to source code. To quantify relative openness, the researchers established criteria and a numerical rating system with points.

The projects that VisionMobile analyzed include Android, Eclipse, the Linux kernel, MeeGo, Firefox, Qt, Symbian (based on the governance model of the Symbian Foundation prior to the the platform’s transition back to a closed model), and WebKit. They ranked these projects in an “open governance index” based on the percentage of points that they received. Google’s Android mobile operating system ranked the lowest, with only 23 percent. The Eclipse integrated development environment ranked the highest, with 84 percent. Android was the only project in the study that scored less than 58 percent.

Android’s low ranking in the index came as no surprise to us. As we have written on several occasions in the past, Google’s mobile platform falls far below the standard of openness that the search giant promised when Android initially launched. The VisionMobile report identifies some of the key problems with Android’s governance model, including Google’s “unilateral Android project decision-making processes” and “closed contributions process model.”

“Visibility to the roadmap is limited, as there is no Android roadmap publicly available. In fact, development of the Android private branch and the roadmap is controlled by Google, with little input from external parties or the Open Handset Alliance members,” the report says. “When launched, the Open Handset Alliance served the purpose of a public industry endorsement for Android. Today, however, the OHA serves little purpose besides a stamp of approval for OHA members; there is no formal legal entity, no communication processes for members nor frequent member meetings.”

The lack of transparency in the Android compliance program is also identified as one of the weak areas in Android governance. The report says that “Google tightly controls the Android platform and its derivatives” by using its unilateral control over the full Android compliance criteria, which are “undocumented and somewhat capricious.”

Although the actual Android compatibility definition is public, the specific parameters of the compliance testing are a closely guarded secret. Skyhook is currently pursuing litigation against Google for allegedly doctoring the compatibility testing parameters for anticompetitive purposes.

The report quotes an internal Google e-mail (made public as a result of the ongoing Skyhook litigation) in which Google’s Android compatibility chief Dan Morrill described the company’s compliance testing practices as “using compatibility as a club to make [OEMs] do things we want.”

Browser openness

Android was, of course, just one of the eight projects discussed in the report. The study’s scores for Firefox and WebKit are also intriguing. WebKit had a slightly higher score (68 percent) than Firefox (65 percent).

The main areas where Mozilla lost points related to the lack of public data about project contributors, the size of the developer base, and the number of commits from community members. Mozilla’s impressive new contributor metrics dashboard, which was announced in April but is currently undergoing a security audit prior to public launch, will likely address those shortcomings.

Eclipse was identified as the most open project in the study. In particular, VisionMobile lauds Eclipse’s Project Dash and general commitment to transparency. The organization’s vendor neutrality and well-defined governance structure are highlighted as positive governance attributes.

A look at the criteria

The full score tables and numerical criteria are included in the report. A close look at the scoring turned up some interesting discoveries. The criteria is a bit subjective in places, but generally looks good. There were, however, a few aspects that might be debatable.

Oddly, VisionMobile’s criteria assigns a one point bonus for mandatory copyright assignment, a practice that is not generally regarded as a hallmark of good open governance (for some good background on the issues with copyright assignment, see the commentary by Dave Neary and Michael Meeks).

The VisionMobile report itself acknowledges that none of the projects included in the study require copyright assignment and that copyright assignment is probably unnecessary. (It’s more common for contributor agreements to stipulate a perpetual copyright license rather than outright assignment.)

Another aspect of the criteria that might be controversial is the scoring for licenses. The study awards a higher score for using a permissive license than using a copyleft license. Although permissive licenses increase the flexibility of downstream code use, they aren’t necessarily conducive to more open governance.

Money matters

The report contends that greater openness generally leads to greater success among open source software projects. At the same time, it acknowledges that Android’s popularity contradicts that conclusion. The Android “paradox” is discussed at length in the report; it suggests that “Google’s financial muscle” and engineering resources, rather than openness, have driven Android’s success.

The full text of the VisionMobile report is available under a Creative Commons license and can be downloaded from the firm’s website.


Lenovo IdeaPad K1 review

Let’s do a roll call, shall we? Who doesn’t have a Honeycomb tablet to shill in the states? Acer, ASUS, Motorola, Samsung, Sony, and Toshiba all have something to their names, with Dell possibly bringing its China-only Dell Streak 10 Pro here too. Until now, Lenovo was one glaring exception. The company already had a head start selling the LePad tablet in China, but it was only last month that it announced not one, but two Honeycomb slates for the US market: the IdeaPad K1 for mainstream consumers, and the ThinkPad Tablet for business users (and a fair share of geeks, too). Now, we could easily roll our eyes at how saturated the market for Android tablets is becoming, but Lenovo isn’t just any old OEM. The brand has won such an avid following that we bet the company could have essentially slapped its name on a plain-Jane black slab and waited for loyal fans to line up.

In fact, though, you’re in for a bit more than name recognition. The K1 goes after mainstream consumers with a winsome design, sure, but also a software package designed to make Honeycomb easier to use, and to help ensure that flummoxed, low-tech users don’t have to spend too much time downloading apps out of the box. What’s more, it ships with Android 3.1 and has a two-cell battery that promises up to ten hours of battery life. Oh, and the 32GB model rings in $499, undercutting the 32GB iPad 2 and Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 by $100. But is that enough for it to stand out? Let’s see.

Continue reading Lenovo IdeaPad K1 review

Lenovo IdeaPad K1 review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Aug 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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7-inch Sharp Galapagos A01SH tablet sees formal introduction, hitting the US ‘this year’

How much is that tablet in the window? The one with the 7-inch screen and Android 3.2? Hard to say, but it might be the Sharp Galapagos A01SH you’re looking at. The slate, announced in earnest today, should fit comfortably betwixt the 5.5- and 10.8-inch variants of the lineup that are also expected to arrive sometime before the end of the year. The A01SH is accompanied by an NVIDIA Tegra 2 1GHz dual-core CPU with 1GB of RAM, a WSVGA display with 1,024 x 600 resolution, 8GB of internal memory alongside microSD support, 5MP / 2MP cameras along the back and front, and 7.5 hours of battery life. At a thickness of 12.9mm, it’s not as thin as the Galaxy Tab 10.1, but it’s no Toshiba Thrive, either. The tablet should reach stores in Japan by the end of the month, but the only timeframe given for a US release is before the ball drops in Times Square — perfect timing for anyone who wants to ring in 2012 snuggled up to a new gadget.

7-inch Sharp Galapagos A01SH tablet sees formal introduction, hitting the US ‘this year’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Aug 2011 08:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Japan , PhoneArena  |  sourceeAccess (translated)  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft makes Google look silly with two tweets

With just two tweets Microsoft has managed to make Google look very silly and stopped anyone feeling sorry for the search company over losing out in recent patent bidding wars. We all know that Android is doing very well on smartphones and tablets with over 550,000 devices being activated on a daily basis. This isn’t […]