The Engadget Interview: Ralph de la Vega, CEO of AT&T Mobility

We had an opportunity to sit down with AT&T’s Ralph de la Vega last week — one of the most influential individuals in the wireless world today — at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona for a nice little chat covering all the topics that have been burning in our minds the last few months: Android, the Pre, LTE, and more. Read on!

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The Engadget Interview: Ralph de la Vega, CEO of AT&T Mobility originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Feb 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG shows off solar phone, battery cover at MWC

Proving (as usual) that it’s not too big for a little tit-for-tat with its crosstown rival, LG showed its own concept solar phone at MWC this week to match up with Samsung’s Blue Earth. The prototype LG handset doesn’t have a name — takes a whole team of high-priced consultants to christen a product like that, we’d wager — but we do know that the slider can eke 3 minutes’ worth of life out of a 10-minute charge in natural light. The thing looks like it was thrown together in a week, but hey, as long as it works, we know LG can take care of the design side of things by the time production rolls around.

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LG shows off solar phone, battery cover at MWC originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 Feb 2009 11:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bye bye Barcelona and Mobile World Congress 2009

Another MWC is done and we’re on one hand happy we were there to cover it for y’all, sad to see it gone, but relieved we can start eating normally and sleeping again. So what did we see? Well, so many things that made us laugh, smile, and scratch our heads that we can barely remember them all. Notable things from Barcelona this year include Sony Ericssons’ first 12 megapixel camera phone, Windows Mobile 6.5’s launch, Palm Pre for the GSM market, A smile pile of Android unveilings — including Vodafone’s HTC Magic launch — INQ’s INQ1, Sonar, and a really creepy mannequin that never failed to freak every single one of us out as we walked by her. If you’re finding the list of links overwhelming, check our daily podcasts from the show and hear all about it instead of reading all about it. Check the links below for a quick rundown of some highlights.

Read – Sonar hopes to power social featurephones, we get a demo
Read – Texas Instruments and Wind River do up Android right
Read – HTC Magic is official, bringing Android to Vodafone sans keyboard
Read – HTC Magic first eyes-on!
Read – Nokia N86 hands-on with video!
Read – Samsung OmniaHD hands-on
Read – First hands-on with the HTC Touch Diamond2 (with video!)
Read – First hands-on with the HTC Touch Pro2 (with video!)
Read – Nokia E55 hands-on
Read – Windows Mobile 6.5 walkthrough with Engadget (now with video!)
Read – INQ¹ wins “Best Mobile Handset or Device” at MWC, golf claps
Read – Stantum’s mind-blowing multitouch interface on video!
Read – Amosu hands-on: pink, pricey, and plenty of diamonds
Read – Toshiba TG01 hands-on and video walkthrough
Read – modu hands-on with the set, jackets, and some far out visions

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Bye bye Barcelona and Mobile World Congress 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 22:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ARM’s stash of netbook oddities and a Windows Mobile 6.5 MID

We’re not sure what sort of shenanigans ARM gets up to, but it managed to amass itself quite the interesting collection of netbooks for its MWC booth. Information was scant, but they were showing that Freescale i.MX-based Pegatron netbook and nettop we saw at CES, an ultrawide 11.1-inch Snapdragon-based netbook from Wistron, a Snapdragon-based convertible tablet netbook from Inventec Alaska, and a totally odd “tech demo” of a Qualcomm-based Wistron MID semi-running a sketch version of Windows Mobile 6.5. Most all of the systems were in some level of prototype form, and seemed unbearably slow at running whatever prototype flavor of Linux they happened to have, while the MID didn’t really seem to operate at all, at least to our touch. Still, it’s clear that Snapdragon and Freescale i.MX are allowing for some pretty wild and thin form factors while still rocking decent battery life.

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ARM’s stash of netbook oddities and a Windows Mobile 6.5 MID originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 14:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG affirms that 12 megapixel cameraphone is in the works

Here at MWC, the only cellphone maker to actually come forward with proof of a 12 megapixel phone was Sony Ericsson. Still, you know that everyone else is apt to follow suit as quickly as possible, and it seems that LG will be one of the first. In fact, said company “absolutely” has a 12 megapixeler in the works. That’s according to Jeremy Newing, LG Mobile’s head of marketing in the UK, who also proclaimed that the KS360 would be LG’s first Android phone. In his words: “We’ll very much be releasing a 12MP cameraphone. However, it’s important that people realize when taking 12MP images, they’ll be using huge amounts of data, and it will be more difficult to do things like send such files.” Honestly, we’re a bit tired of the megapixel race — get an optical zoom onto a slim cellphone, and then we’ll talk.

[Thanks, Jimb]

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LG affirms that 12 megapixel cameraphone is in the works originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 09:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Haier shows off mysterious “NetBooks,” Android phones

Haier’s offerings are always an adventure, and this year at MWC they didn’t disappoint. They were showing off an interesting assortment of MIDs, confusingly dubbed “NetBooks,” including a mini-laptop of sorts (left) that falls somewhere in the middle. Unfortunately, we’re totally short on specs, release dates or other sorts of relevant informations, so what you see is pretty much what you get. On a similar note, Haier had two Android-based devices at the show, dubbed the G1 and the G2, along with a BlackBerry 8900 look-alike we didn’t see, and another phone that even the PR person wasn’t sure what it was. These two “Googlephones” (their word) were sadly out of battery when we went for a demo, but one of them bore more than a passing resemblance to the BlackBerry Storm, though it happens to be lighter, smaller and runs a new OS… maybe RIM can call up Haier for some pointers.

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Haier shows off mysterious “NetBooks,” Android phones originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Feb 2009 15:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sonar hopes to power social featurephones, we get a demo

As with any trade show, flashy, high-end products have a tendency to steal the lion’s share of the spotlight at MWC — but the fact is, featurephones still outsell traditional smartphones by an order of magnitude. Companies like INQ are betting the farm on the belief that today’s ultra-connected generation of Twitter, Myspace, and Facebook users are ultimately going to pick fashionable, cheap, easy-to-use handsets over the complexity of an iPhone, G1, or Omnia. There’s something to be said for that — most people don’t know the model of their own phone, after all, and have no interest in learning how to download and install an app, let alone learn an entire mobile operating system. Plus, for the youngest members of this profitable group, there’s a lot of price sensitivity — smartphones are typically out of reach.

If startup Sonar has its way, that’s where its new platform comes in. The idea was to fundamentally rethink the way average consumers — you know, the ones who are plugged into three, four, or fourteen social networks and don’t know a G1 from a P1i — use a phone to communicate, and they’re ready to show off their efforts for the first time here at MWC. We had an opportunity to sit down with Sonar’s founders this week for a tour of the system, and we’re pretty stoked about what we saw. Read on.

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Sonar hopes to power social featurephones, we get a demo originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Feb 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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INQ¹ wins “Best Mobile Handset or Device” at MWC, golf claps

INQ’s social networking monster took away top honors at MWC with a win for best mobile device or handset at the show. Taking a gander at the competition, it is the who’s who of high end stuff including the T-Mobile G1, BlackBerry Storm, LG KS360, and Nokia’s E-71. So why, you ask, could the admittedly middle tier set win out against what seems like some pretty serious — well, Storm aside — competition? INQ won because of how they’ve enabled Facebook deep integration, focus on your contacts as living, breathing, and ever-changing entities, great pricing, and a compelling user interface. We’d set a meeting to catch up with INQ at MWC hoping to see how things are moving along post-launch and talk about the future. Down the road was the bit we were most interested in, and lucky for us, INQ was willing to share some secrets. Let’s just say with QWERTY confidence, the future looks absolutely stunning, both in form and potential. Congrats INQ, way to win an award. Gallery of the newly-crowned INQ¹ after the break.

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INQ¹ wins “Best Mobile Handset or Device” at MWC, golf claps originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Stantum’s mind-blowing multitouch interface on video!

We just got a look at some amazing touchscreen interaction, running on a humble resistive touchscreen with some OMAP hardware backing it up. Stantum’s technology is a software-based refinement to resistive touchscreens that allows for accuracy beyond the pixel density of the display, a complete lack of touchscreen “jitters” and some fairly incredible input methods. Termed “TouchPark,” the multitouch framework provides gesture recognition, cursor management and physics processing for phone builders to stick on top of the phone OS (Symbian, Windows Mobile and Android are currently supported), and works with hardware such as Texas Instruments Zoom, Freescale i.MX and ST Nomadic. The PMatrix multitouch firmware allows for unlimited inputs, detection of any contacting object (a finger, a stylus or even a paintbrush) and pressure sensitivity. We played with the demo unit for a bit and were frankly blown away, it’s far and away the best touch experience we’ve ever seen or felt, and the multitouch functionality is just gravy on top. Stantum is targeting resistive touchscreens because they’re still considerably cheaper to build than capacitive ones, and from our perspective there seems to be zero tradeoff — for sensitivity and accuracy this destroys everything else we’ve seen on the market, capacitive or not. Sadly, there’s no word on when this will make it into real, shipping handsets, but we’ll certainly be tracking its progress obsessively. Video is after the break.

Continue reading Stantum’s mind-blowing multitouch interface on video!

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Stantum’s mind-blowing multitouch interface on video! originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Feb 2009 10:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mobile World Congress 09: The Good, The Bad, the Ugly and the Boring

Despite the new HTC Magic, the Sony Ericsson Idou, and Windows Mobile 6.5—which still is not Windows Mobile 7—the Mobile World Congress was a bag of lame. Some blame the economic crisis. I don’t.

I blame the state of the technology. The lack of real innovation and news. Touch was finally everywhere—two years after the JesusPhone and one year after Research In Motion officials said touch screens were going nowhere—but so what? Been there, done that, got the bloody’ t-shirt. Seriously, you know something stinks when you see the BlackBerry people racing to plaster their booth with this:

Yeas, it’s one of those phony industry awards. The Storm named as the “Best Mobile Technology Breakthrough”. “Press and be impressed”, it claims. The BlackBerry Storm is considered a “breakthrough” by “the industry”. The not quite a perfect storm, as Matt put it, with its bugs and half-baked SurePress technology.

I rest my case.

And so did everyone else on the floor. You can see people wandering the aisles, looking for something exciting, new, but everyone in the floor was kind of blah and smleh about everything. Just a mass of androids pushing around the floors, searching for nothing.

Here’s some of the best—and worst—of what I found.

Android G2 Hands On: Close to Perfection

Why Do the Android Phones Have Chins?

Windows Mobile 6.5 Hands On: The New Interface Rocks

Coolest Cellphone Interface Ever Is Also Absolutely Useless

Bluetooth Over Wi-Fi Zoomtastic Speed Shocks Our Pants Off

How Not To Make a Touchscreen Phone

Samsung Omnia HD Hands On Video: Amazing Screen, Still Bad Response

Nokia N97 Hands On Video of Nokia’s First N-Series Touch Phone

Nokia E75 Hands On Video: Shiny Slick Boredom

Sony Ericsson Idou’s Interface: Hotter than Butter Down Beyoncé’s Pants

Garmin Nuviphone G60 GPS Smartphone Video Hands-On

Garmin Nuviphone M20 Smartphone (Aborted) Video Hands-On