Ericsson squeezes out 56Mbps from HSPA+

And here we were envious of the 21Mbps HSPA+ service currently offered by Telstra in Australia. Now we hear that Ericsson will be demonstrating its 56Mbps HSPA multi-carrier MIMO technology at CTIA (using a router, not handset) later this week with scheduled deployment set for 2010. By the end of 2009, Ericsson claims that it will support 42Mbps commercial deployments. All this assumes that carriers hold steady with HSPA and don’t jump straight to LTE or WiMax… ok, LTE.

Filed under:

Ericsson squeezes out 56Mbps from HSPA+ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 06:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Microsoft announces Windows Marketplace partners, tweaked policies, designer WinMo 6.5 themes

Details are starting to come into focus on some of the finer points of Windows Mobile 6.5’s launch later this year after February’s announcement at MWC, and if you had to boil the news down to just two words, they’d be “pretty” and “support.” As “pretty” goes, it’s been announced that Microsoft has partnered up with Design Museum London and the Council of Fashion Designers of America to offer designer themes for 6.5-based devices — colors, wallpaper, and the like — with the first designs coming from fashion dude Isaac Mizrahi. If that’s not good enough for ya, the company will be releasing a Theme Generator later this year that’ll let you customize colors of UI elements on your device, pair it up with wallpaper culled from your own photo collection, and send the batch straight to your phone.

Over to the “support” front, over 25 companies will be announcing their full support for the Windows Marketplace at CTIA this week, including EA Mobile, Facebook (pictured), Gameloft, MySpace, Namco, Pandora, and Sling Media. To help improve the Marketplace’s public image, Microsoft is tweaking some policies, too: developers will now be able to issue unlimited updates to their apps free of charge, and users will have up to 24 hours to “return” apps they don’t like (very cool). Notably, Facebook’s new app will be available in April, offering direct video uploads straight to your wall if you’re into that sort of thing (you know who you are).

Finally, Microsoft’s issued a clarification regarding upgrades from 6.1 to 6.5: devices that are already out in the marketplace with a minimum of 128MB of RAM and a 400MHz processor or better are theoretically capable of being upgraded — it’s all up to licensees to decide whether they want to go to the trouble of offering the upgrades to their customers. Let’s hope, shall we?

Filed under: ,

Microsoft announces Windows Marketplace partners, tweaked policies, designer WinMo 6.5 themes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Skype Coming to iPhone Tuesday, BlackBerry in May

Landing a day earlier than predicted, Skype’s official iPhone client will show its green ‘n’ white face in the App Store tomorrow. The other conspicuously neglected market, BlackBerry owners, can expect a client by May.

The iPhone client feature set is more or less what we’ve come to expect from Skype mobile apps: free Skype-to-Skype calls, SkypeOut support, pretty interface integration (they went with the iPhone aesthetic over the Skype desktop aesthetic, thankfully) and instant messaging to other users. You can even snap a profile picture from within the app. The app will also support 2G iPod Touches with external mics.

But! For those of you who held onto the vain hope that an official client might be able to somehow skirt the universal App Store ban on voice over IP over 3G (VoIPo3G?), forget it—you won’t be able to Skype unless you’re connected to a wireless network, and text messaging has been entirely excluded. You can’t even top up your SkypeOut account or purchase other services like voicemail, which, by the way, can’t be accessed from the app.

Not to poop on Skype’s party, but this announcement leaves me with questions—specifically, why should I download this? Third party apps like Fring picked up Skype’s slack a long time ago, and lump in multiprotocol IMing, something which gives them a distinct advantage over this official client on the one-app-at-a-time-please iPhone. Skype told CNET that their app will have better voice quality (and probably lower latency), but aside from that was unable to offer many significant advantages over other apps. [CNET and NYTImages from CNET]

LG’s GD900 with (multi-touch?) transparent keypad gets S-Class UI

The recent glut of telephony news can mean only one thing: CTIA Wireless 2009 is getting ready to kick off in Vegas baby, Las Vegas. In the runup we have LG upping the hype on its 13.4mm-thick GD900 handset first outed in Barcelona at February’s MWC show. This time, however, the 7.2Mbps HSDPA slider with world’s first transparent glass (not plastic as originally assumed) keypad will be functional, running LG’s new S-Class UI on the 3-inch display. We know that the GD900 features vibrational haptic feedback and that the transparent keypad seems to double as a touch-sensitive mouse pad (like that on your laptop) when surfing the internet or navigating the UI — it also seems to support gestures like writing “M” to launch the MP3 music player and multi-touch such as pinch to zoom on photographs. The GD900 will launch in Europe and Asia sometime in May. No US release announced so we’ll have to make the most of our time with it this week in order to clear up all the mysteries presented by the Korean press release. One more pic showing an apparent finger-swipe rotating the UI after the break.

[Via Akihabara News and Engadget Korea]

Continue reading LG’s GD900 with (multi-touch?) transparent keypad gets S-Class UI

LG’s GD900 with (multi-touch?) transparent keypad gets S-Class UI originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Mar 2009 04:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

RIM to fire up mobile TV service for BlackBerry devices?

RIM’s pleading the fifth at the moment, but the timing here sure makes this rumor one we’d love to believe. With BlackBerry App World launching on April 1st and CTIA opening up in a matter of days, it seems the perfect time for RIM to introduce its very own television service for BlackBerry devices. NewTeeVee has it from “multiple [undisclosed] sources” that RIM will announce a “full-episode television service” for BB users; the interesting part, however, is that it will supposedly download content via WiFi, leaving open the possibility for this to be carrier-agnostic. Granted, mobile TV initiatives have been far from successful thus far, but who knows if the CrackBerry crowd is the one sect willing to watch full episodes of The Cosby Show on a diminutive, low-res screen?

[Via mocoNews]

Filed under:

RIM to fire up mobile TV service for BlackBerry devices? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Mar 2009 16:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Skype for iPhone coming soon?

We’re still filing this away in the rumor folder for now, but we’ll be honest — this is totally believable. GigaOM has it on authority that a bona fide Skype for iPhone client will be launched as early as next week, and with CTIA kicking off on April 1st, we’d say the timing is just about ideal. Of course, we’ve already seen a variety of alternatives for bringing Skype and other VoIP apps to Apple’s darling, but by and large, they’ve been supremely unimpressive. There’s no word on pricing (we’re crossing our fingers for free) or any other tasty tidbits, but you can bet we’ll be keeping an ear to the ground for more.

Filed under:

Skype for iPhone coming soon? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Mar 2009 14:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

BlackBerry App World to launch April 1, says BusinessWeek

Mark your calendars, BlackBerry fans: BusinessWeek says RIM’s going to launch the BlackBerry App World April 1 at CTIA. What’s more, the company is apparently planning on going after Apple by courting developers with higher profit margins and the relative sophistication of the average corporate BlackBerry user, which explains that minimum $2.99 paid app price we saw a few weeks ago. An interesting move to position the new service, but we’ll see if it takes hold with users — anyone ready to blow their budget on ‘berry software?

[Via Boy Genius Report]

Filed under:

BlackBerry App World to launch April 1, says BusinessWeek originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Mar 2009 13:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Al Gore Reverses Ban on Media Coverage of his CTIA Keynote

Al_gore_0323_2
After initially banning media coverage of his keynote speech at the upcoming CTIA Wireless conference in Las Vegas next month, former Vice-President Al Gore is doing a flip-flop.

Gore’s staffers issued a statement Monday saying his keynote address will now be open to all and there will be no restrictions around its coverage "due to the high degree of interest."

Gore
is scheduled to address attendees on April 3 at 9:30 a.m. PST at the Las Vegas Convention Center. During the hour-long
session, he will discuss the relationships between technology, the economy and
the environment, say his staffers in a statement. But previously attendees with media badges would not have been allowed to write about it.

It’s not the first time that the former Veep has tried to keep his oft-repeated speech about global warming and related environment damage secret. At the RSA conference last year, Gore did not allow media to cover his keynote session. But a few did eventually.

And as many bloggers pointed out, it is likely that this year some attendees would have ended up tweeting or blogging about the keynote, considering that CTIA is where the latest and the best mobile technology makes its debut.

Photo: (dfarber/Flickr)

Zer01 is the new, contract-less MVNO that will bring VOIP to the mobile masses

Zer01 is the new, contract-less MVNO that will bring VOIP to the mobile masses

2008 marked the end for many a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO), most going under in a flood of bankruptcies or getting consumed but their parent networks. It sure seems like no company in its right mind would want to wade back into that graveyard, but Zer01 is thinking differently, pledging to launch a new network within a network next month at CTIA 2009. Its services will be provided by AT&T, but it’ll undercut the competition with a combination of a $69.95 monthly unlimited voice and data plan and a complete lack of contracts, as well as unlimited international calling (to 40 countries) for just an extra $10. What’s the catch? The company will rely on a VOIP application for routing of all calls, and right now that app only works on Windows Mobile. That’ll be a roadblock for many, and given AT&T’s somewhat limited (and generally flaky) 3G data coverage we’re a little concerned about call quality, but just the same can’t wait to see how this one turns out.

[Via Unwired View]

Filed under:

Zer01 is the new, contract-less MVNO that will bring VOIP to the mobile masses originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Mar 2009 07:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

National Safety Council calls for nationwide ban on cellphone use while driving

There’s already been a number of states that have passed some form of ban on cellphone use while driving, but the National Safety Council seems to think that there’s still far too many folks out there talking or texting behind the wheel, and it’s now calling for an all out nationwide ban on the practice. What’s more, the group also says that laws that allow for handsfree cellphone use are “giving people a placebo, in effect,” and that they don’t, in fact, make calling while driving any safer. The group also seems to be taking particular aim at businesses, saying that calling while driving can increase costs and even open up employers to liability. As you might have guessed, however, the cellphone industry, and the CTIA specifically, disagree with that assessment quite a bit, and instead say that they believe that “safe, sensible and limited use of a cell phone when you’re behind the wheel is possible,” and that if someone is “driving irresponsibly because of cell phone use, they should be cited for that. And under current law, they can be.”

Filed under:

National Safety Council calls for nationwide ban on cellphone use while driving originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 13:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments