Nielsen: Android accounts for 39 percent of smartphones in the US, Apple is the top device maker

Nielsen’s just released a study confirming what some other studies have already concluded — that Android devices account for the single largest swath of smartphone users in the US, with 39 percent OS share as of the second quarter. That compares with 28 percent for iOS, although Apple still reigns as the country’s top-selling device maker. Simply put, that’s a reflection of the fact that Apple is the only outfit churning out iOS devices, whereas a bevy of companies led by HTC, Motorola, and Samsung have helped make Android the dominant OS in the states. And let’s not forget about RIM, another hardware / software shop, which still commands a 20 percent chunk of the market. Rounding out the list, Windows Phone and Windows Mobile account for nine percent, largely thanks to sales of HTC handsets, while webOS and Symbian each eked out two percent. At this point we don’t doubt that Android is the most ubiquitous mobile operating system this side of the Atlantic, although it’s worth noting that Nielsen based its results on a sample of roughly 20,000 people — all of whom are postpaid subscribers.

Nielsen: Android accounts for 39 percent of smartphones in the US, Apple is the top device maker originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jul 2011 09:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNielsen  | Email this | Comments

Ion Piano Apprentice plays nice with your iPad, lights up your life

Ion Piano Apprentice plays nice with your iPad, lights up your life

It’s not enough anymore to simply cram a single-octave keyboard into the bottom of a Nintendo DS, effective piano instruction requires at least twice as many keys — and an iPad. The Ion Piano Apprentice (when coupled with a compatible iDevice and companion app) offers aspiring Tchaikovskys octave-selectable free play, lessons on reading sheet music, and even a view of award-winning piano instructor Scott Houston’s handsome hands. If those mitts are too distracting for you, just follow along with the light-up keys, you’ll be fine. This mini keyboard / iPad dock will land this fall to the tune of $100 — — it’s either that, a real instructor, or a pair of haptic robot gloves. Your choice, really. Hit the PR after the break for a peek at Mr. Houston’s official nickname, if you’re into that sort of thing.

Continue reading Ion Piano Apprentice plays nice with your iPad, lights up your life

Ion Piano Apprentice plays nice with your iPad, lights up your life originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jul 2011 17:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink OhGizmo  |  sourceIon  | Email this | Comments

BookBook Case Makes Your iPhone Look Like a Tiny Tome

Twelvesouth bookbookiphone

The BookBook case makes your iPhone look like a tacky fake leather-bound book

TwelveSouth has shrunken its BookBook MacBook case down to the size of an iPhone 4. It has also added a few pockets into which you can slot a couple of credit cards and your ID, along with a place for a few banknotes.

Unfortunately, the tackiness of the leather-bound book design has grown as its size has shrunk.

The BookBook is beautifully made. The leather is thick but not too heavy, the iPhone (or iPod Touch, if you must) fits snugly and the stitching is top notch. And when opened out as a wallet, it really looks classy and understated.

But when you close it and look at the spine, it’s as if you have walked into a particularly tacky furniture store, one which has cardboard boxes on the shelves in the shape of classic books. The spine is a strip of distressed and embossed leather which doesn’t so much look old as it looks cheap, and the gold lettering and Roman numerals (XII, of course) just make things worse.

Which is a great shame, as the idea of combining your phone and a wallet is a good one, and in this case very well executed. Even the transparent plastic sleeve for your ID has a lozenge-shaped cutout to let you easily slide it out with your thumb.

On the other hand, you might be the kind of person who loves to pretend his high-tech gadgets are olde-worlde artifacts, in which case you should go and buy this straight away. When you’re home you can leave it on top of the fake oak (MDF) cabinet that hides your HDTV.

The BookBook for iPhone 4 is available now for $60.

BookBook for iPhone [TwelveSouth. Thanks, Andrew!]

See Also:


BookBook iPhone 4 case doubles as wallet, attempts to fool miniature luddites

So, you’ve finally accepted the reality that smartphones aren’t a passing fad, but you’re no less concerned that the special tech-hater in your life might get hip that you’ve abandoned reading books for flinging unhappy fowl. You’re further concerned that you won’t have space in your skinny jeans for both a wallet and an iPhone. Well, it sounds like Twelve South’s BookBook iPhone 4 case has you and your ridiculous smartphone-conversion anxiety covered. The little leather-bound sleeve not only masks your iPhone in what looks like a miniature Bible binding, but also acts as host to your wallet’s contents. If you’re looking to fool folks into thinking you’re really reading a tiny tome titled BookBook, the case can be yours for $60 at the source link. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading BookBook iPhone 4 case doubles as wallet, attempts to fool miniature luddites

BookBook iPhone 4 case doubles as wallet, attempts to fool miniature luddites originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jul 2011 04:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTwelve South  | Email this | Comments

Keepin’ it real fake: the iPhone 4 has a fan in China (video)

Keepin' it real fake: the iPhone 4 has a fan in China

With competition like the Samsung Galaxy S II showing us just how thin a phone can be, the iPhone 4 isn’t quite looking as svelte as it once did. How’s an Apple-loving gadget fiend supposed to stay faithful in a time like this? Why, by holding their handset next to something much, much thicker. Enter the “iPhone 4,” which actually isn’t a phone, rather a powered fan that serves to keep you cool, not connected. As you can see after the break, the Home button won’t kick you out of an app, instead kicking that ducted air-mover into high gear, and while you won’t find it in your local Apple Store, stumble across one of these plastic bricks in Shenzhen and it’ll only cost you $10 or so to take it home. Small price to keep your handset feeling good about itself — until September, anyway.

Update: Jasper wrote in with a link of where you can buy one for yourself, if you’re still suffering from a heat wave.

[Thanks, Chris]

Continue reading Keepin’ it real fake: the iPhone 4 has a fan in China (video)

Keepin’ it real fake: the iPhone 4 has a fan in China (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 20:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceM.I.C. Gadget  | Email this | Comments

Kingston Wi-Drive for iOS hits stores today, lets you create your own portable music server for $130


Services like Spotify, which had an anything but subtle launch last week, help solve the evergreen issue of limited local storage by streaming millions of tracks to your devices. But streaming services require cell reception to operate (unless you’ve elected to store music locally), and often carry monthly fees. We’ve spent a fair amount of time testing Kingston’s Wi-Drive, which lets you access music, videos, and other files from a handful of devices simultaneously over WiFi — assuming you’ve loaded that content to the portable media server’s 16GB ($130) or 32GB ($175) of built-in storage. The device worked well during our review process earlier this month, and now you can pick up one of your own at sites like Amazon and Newegg, or at Fry’s and J&R US retail outlets. The server is likely to be a better fit for families than individuals simply looking to boost their iOS device storage, due to both price and capacity limitations, but if you need to stream media to several devices at once during your next road trip, for example, then the Wi-Drive may be worth the investment.

Kingston Wi-Drive for iOS hits stores today, lets you create your own portable music server for $130 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 16:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceKingston  | Email this | Comments

Digital Tattoo Gets Under Your Skin to Monitor Blood

Bioengineering doctoral student Kate Balaconis shines the iPhone reader against her tattooless arm.

Maybe tattoos aren’t just for Harley riders or rebellious teens after all. In a few years, diabetics might get inked up with digital tats that communicate with an iPhone to monitor their blood.

Instead of the dye used for tribal arm bands and Chinese characters, these tattoos will contain nanosensors that read the wearer’s blood levels of sodium, glucose and even alcohol with the help of an iPhone 4 camera.

Dr. Heather Clark, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences at Northeastern University, is leading the research on the subdermal sensors. She said she was reminded of the benefits of real-time, wearable health monitoring when she entered a marathon in Vermont: If they become mass-produced and affordable for the consumer market, wireless devices worn on the body could tell you exactly what medication you need whenever you need it.

“I had no idea how much to drink, or when,” said Clark, reflecting on her marathon run. “Or if I should have Gatorade instead.”

Clark’s technology could spell out the eventual demise of the painful finger pricks required for blood tests — assuming users have an iPhone, which Northeastern bioengineering grad student Matt Dubach has customized to read light from the tiny sensors to collect and output data.

Here’s how it works: A 100-nanometer-wide set of sensors go under the skin, like tattoo ink — as for the size, “You can spot it if you’re looking for it,” Clark says. The sensors are encased in an oily agent to ensure the whole contraption stays together.

Within the implant, certain nanoparticles will bind exclusively to specific blood contents, like sodium or glucose. Thanks to an additive that makes the particles charge neutral, the presence of a target triggers an ion release, which manifests as a florescence change. The process is detailed in an article published in the journal Integrative Biology.

Dubach designed the iPhone 4 attachment to use the phone’s camera to read the color shift and translate the results into quantifiable data. A plastic ring surrounding the lens blocks out ambient light while a battery-powered blue LED contrasts with the sensors. The software uses the iPhone camera’s built-in RGB filters to process the light reflected off the sensors.

Why blue? Initial trials with lights that projected other colors were hindered by Apple’s built-in optical filter, but blue light uses the iPhone’s built-in RGB setup to process the data accurately. That blue light, powered by a 9-volt battery attached to the phone, works with the sensors’ red-shifted florescence because red shines well through skin.

As of now, the data collected with the iPhone still requires processing through a secondary machine, but Duboch says using the iPhone to do all the work is not far off, and that an app is likely on the way.

Clark hopes to see the work of an entire clinical analyzer done by nanoparticles interacting with smartphones, which would mean a major step forward for personalized medicine. Diabetics and athletes alike could adapt and measure their own statistics without dependence on big, pricey, exclusive medical equipment.

The testing is still in early stages, and hasn’t been tried on humans yet. Research on mice, who have comparatively thinner skin than humans, has shown promising results.

Readings of blood concentrations show up like this, with different colors indicating different sodium concentrations. Photo Courtesy of Matt Dubach.

When Apple’s next iPhone comes out, the project will benefit, said Dubach, citing rumors that the iPhone 5 will include a more powerful camera sensor.

“I’m holding out for the iPhone 5,” Dubach said. “More megapixels gives you more for the average,” meaning the higher-resolution camera provides more data for analysis. Even bioengineers are waiting for Steve Jobs’ next move.

The technology is still years off, but Clark and Dubach’s developments are bringing medicine closer to a time when diagnostics are minimally invasive. Real-time feedback through subdermal circuits and smartphone cameras means you could know exactly when to slug that water.

Researchers tested the iPhone attachment on this plate reader, which determines the nanosensors' response to the reader. Photo courtesy of Matt Dubach


Aviiq Charging Station Is As Portable As the Gadgets it Powers

PCS1

Simple can sometimes be best. At least that’s how Aviiq will probably pitch its $80 USB hub. In a case

Aviiq’s Portable Charging Station is little more than a powered USB hub in a pouch, but that simplicity is also its strength. Look at it this way: when you leave for a trip, you don’t have to remember any chargers. You just grab this little powered USB hub. In its own pouch.

The design makes it a little handier than I might have suggested. Once unzipped and splayed out flat, you’ll see the charging unit with four USB sockets, along with several layered pockets through which you can route cables. Thus, it is always tidy. Just hook up your phone, iPad (it’ll put out the 10 watts required by Apple’s tablet) and any other USB-charged device and plug the other end into an outlet.

There is also a USB port which can be hooked up to a computer, letting you sync your gadgets as they feed.

Like anything else from Aviiq, the Portable Charging Station is expensive — in this case $80. That’s a lot for a powered USB hub in pouch, but if it means you never forget a charger or cable, it could be worth it.

Available now.

Portable Charging Station [Aviiq. Thanks, Pedro!]

See Also:


MIDI Mobilizer II stores your musical stylings, plays nice with CoreMIDI apps

Much music making progress has been made since we first saw Line 6’s MIDI Mobilizer — namely, Apple put MIDI APIs in iOS and iPads started slinging super funky synthesized songs on the regular. In order to embrace the Cupertino-curated CoreMIDI standard, Line 6 has unveiled the MIDI Mobilizer II dongle. It looks like the original and uses the same MIDI Memo Recorder app to store and dispense your sonic musings, but this $70 piece of kit only works with the 3rd and 4th gen iPod touch, the iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4, and the iPad and iPad 2. Most importantly, the MIDI Mobilizer is compatible with GarageBand and all the latest CoreMIDI apps the kids are crazy about. Still not sold on the device’s ability to help you make a dope digital ditty? Peep the PR and video after the break to learn more.

Continue reading MIDI Mobilizer II stores your musical stylings, plays nice with CoreMIDI apps

MIDI Mobilizer II stores your musical stylings, plays nice with CoreMIDI apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 07:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLine 6  | Email this | Comments

Sprint is Crawling in the Mobile Phone Race

This article was written on January 18, 2008 by CyberNet.

iPhone Mickey Mouse In the race of who can attract the most subscribers and keep them onboard in the mobile phone world, Sprint is crawling! Their subscribers are leaving by the thousands, and because of that, their employees are forced to leave in the thousands as well. In a News Release dated January 18th, Sprint says that in the fourth quarter alone, they experienced a loss of 683,000  post-paid subscribers (meaning those with monthly service plans and contracts) and 202,000 pre-paid users. In all, they saw 885,000 subscribers walk out the door and head to other services.

What happens when such a large number of people leave? Well, the obvious. They don’t need as many employees to deal with customer’s needs, and they don’t need as many retail stores.  Sprint is expected to kick 4,000 employees to the curb and close 8 percent (or 125) of their retail locations, and 4,000 third-party distribution points. All of these changes should be complete by the end of the first half of the year.  By doing this, they’re hoping to reduce their labor costs by $700-$800 million by the end of the year.

So who and what is to blame for this decrease? Well, first of all, Sprint themselves are partially to blame.  Remember all of those contracts they canceled because the users were calling too much? I think the iPhone is partially to blame too. People who wanted the iPhone bad enough were willing to cancel their contracts with other service providers like Sprint to head over to AT&T. With the popularity of the iPhone, I think every mobile provider has had a difficult time.

It was just two weeks ago that Ryan and I ended up calling Sprint to cancel our service.  We’ve both been Sprint customers for years, but after multiple customer service issues, we decided not to renew our contract when it ran out at the beginning of January and head over to AT&T. One such issue was being charged per KB for Internet usage when we were supposed to have had an Internet plan. By the time we realized it, we had racked up over $100 in Internet usage. Calling customer service was useless– they said they couldn’t do anything about it! It took calling and asking to speak with the CEO before we could actually get connected with someone who was able to fix the issue.

Ryan made the phone call to cancel two week ago and it was clear that they were willing to do just about anything to keep us as subscribers. Here’s what they offered (all of which, we declined):

  • Three months of service for free if we stayed with them (this would be tempting for a lot of people, but they were also banking on the fact that we’d forget to call back and cancel) 
  • We declined the first offer- so they said we could give the phones to friends to use the three free months
  • A plan to use direct connect only
  • Keep the phone number active for $5 per month in case we wanted to come back

Definitely not a good start to the year for Sprint!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts: