MWC 2009: MySpace Unveils App for Palm Pre, Nokia S60

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MySpace on Tuesday announced a custom application for the Palm Pre and Nokia’s Symbian S60 devices. The news basically means that there will be a MySpace app for the Pre and S60 phone, as there is for almost every other mobile platform.

“We want our users to be able to access MySpace from any device,” John Faith, vice president and general manager of MySpace Mobile, said in a statement. “We are committed to building apps for platforms we feel are groundbreaking to offer our users the best possible on-the-go MySpace experience.”

The social networking site will also launch a revamped version of its mobile Web site at m.myspace.com and wap.myspace.com. User interface options have been optimized for devices with screen sizes 176 pixels wide and larger. It supports 13 languages and is localized for 29 countries.

In related news, cell phone analyst Sascha Segan discusses why the European Palm Pre multitasks better than Sprint’s on pcmag.com.

Celebrity Nerds: Anne Hathaway’s getting a Palm Pre

Celebrity Nerds confirms what you always knew, deep in your heart of hearts: that stars are nerds like us. Send in your own confirmations of this fact right here.

We knew there was a good reason for keeping that US Weekly subscription around… besides awesome celebrity news, what do we have here? Hey! That’s the Palm Pre being offered up in a swag giveaway for nominees attending IFC’s Independent Spirit Awards. The ceremony is being held on February 21st, but, as the ad says, Anne Hathaway’s Pre will be available “by July.”

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Celebrity Nerds: Anne Hathaway’s getting a Palm Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 15 Feb 2009 15:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New “Meet Pre” video demonstrates new functionality, incredible calming effect

As you’re no doubt aware, we’re real suckers for Palm’s Pre on tape, and this “Meet Pre” specimen hasn’t yet assuaged our thirst. We suppose it’s the exact type of stuff demonstrated on the video that keeps us coming back: webOS presents some new paradigms for interaction and integration, and, like the iPhone before it, will take a considerable amount of digestion to really come to terms with. Plus it’s pretty. This video demonstrates a few interesting tidbits, such as a list of folks invited to a meeting and which ones will be going — a nice integration of calendar and contacts — and the phone is shown “sending” a webpage to a friend, which involves forwarding a link and an attached .png screenshot, perfect for mobile-to-mobile communications. Here’s hoping we hear more about the phone this week at MWC… and a 3G GSM edition certainly wouldn’t be unwelcome. Video is after the break.

Continue reading New “Meet Pre” video demonstrates new functionality, incredible calming effect

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New “Meet Pre” video demonstrates new functionality, incredible calming effect originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 15 Feb 2009 10:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint Posts Tech Specs of Palm Pre

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Sprint has added a dedicated Pam Pre page to its Web site, outlining in decent detail the nitty-gritty functions of the upcoming Palm Pre. (A Palm Pre preview is here.)

The new bit? Tethering, which means that a Sprint user will be able to connect the phone to a PC to use as a modem. Palm also somewhat clarified its plan to get Outlook onto the phone via Direct Push technology, which requires Exchange Server 2003 with SP2 or Windows Exchange Server 2007 ; there’s also POP3/IMAP support for Gmail and other services.

Unfortunately, Sprint hasn’t listed a price for the Pre yet. But they have said that service plans will be similar to those for the Samsung Instinct: a $69.99-per-month plan with 450 minutes and unlimited data, an $89.99-per-month plan with 900 minutes and unlimited data, and a $99.99-per-month plan with unlimited voice and data.

Data tethering is a go on Palm Pre

There are many things the Pre can do. Tragically, swallow a microSD card whole (or otherwise) is not one of them, which is kind of unfortunate considering that only 7.4GB of the integrated 8GB will be available to the user — but it turns out that tethering, thankfully, is. Newly-published tech specs on Sprint’s site reveal that you’ll be able to use your little EV-DO Rev. A monster as a modem both over Bluetooth and USB cable — something the Pre’s arch nemesis cannot so far (at least, not in any official capacity). Whether this helps push AT&T and Apple over the edge remains to be seen, but in the meantime, we’ll be pushing close to a megabit per second upstream, thank you very much.

[Via PreCentral]

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Data tethering is a go on Palm Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Feb 2009 21:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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It’s the End of the Road for Palm OS

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Palm will drop its long-in-the-tooth mobile operating system, Palm OS, in favor of the company’s new Web OS, which will debut with its upcoming Pre phone.

Palm will focus on Web OS and Windows Mobile for all future devices, company CEO Ed Colligan told investors Wednesday.

The Palm operating system has had a checkered past. The operating system was first developed under the Palm Computing umbrella in the mind-1990s. But when Palm Computing became a subsidiary of 3Com after an acquisition, Palm started to license the Palm OS through a subsidiary then called Palm Source. In 2005, Palm Source was acquired by Access and a year later Palm gained perpetual rights to the OS.

Over the years, Palm OS became stale, while Palm repeatedly tried — and failed — to release a second-generation OS that would enable multitasking, support richer multimedia applications and yet preserve compatibility with the tens of thousands of Palm applications already out there. Meanwhile, Palm’s phone increasingly came to rely on Microsoft’s Windows Mobile. Now with Web OS, Palm hopes to revive some of its magic.

"We created a new platform from the ground up," Colligan said during the launch of the Pre at the Consumer Electronics Show last month. "It is going to redefine the center of your
access point to the Internet."

WebOS will include features such as Palm Synergy that brings different
information from calendars, contacts and instant messaging applications
into a single screen. That means if the same contact is listed in
Outlook, Google and Facebook accounts, it links them together into one listing, making it easy for users to chat or email with a single click.

Web OS is also easy to develop applications for, says Palm and will come with global search that searches not just the data on the phone but also the internet from a single point.

The Pre is expected to launched on Sprint’s network exclusively in the first half of the year. Sprint’s hold on the Pre could last longer than a few months. Palm is counting on the success of the Pre to draw in other carriers and hopes to consider other U.S. carriers for the phone in 2010, said Colligan.

Also see:
Palm Unveils The Pre
Six Reasons Why the Palm Pre is Special

[via Pre Central]

Palm Pre landing mid-March?

Pandora's CTO talks about Pre, webOS development, gaming, and small children

There’s no shortage of disparate and sketchy launch date predictions for the Pre, but here’s one with a little bit of meat to it. Boy Genius Report has a purported End Of Life list for Sprint, which lists the projected deaths of various phones, along with the planned replacement, with a bit of overlap in timing to keep things moving along smoothly. The Pre shows up as “target in-stock 3/15,” replacing the Palm 755p, which is slated to fizzle out in late May. Similarly, the Palm Treo Pro is slotted for February 15th, replacing the 800w, which lines up with the phone’s known launch date. Naturally, we can’t vouch for the origination of this list or its accuracy, but it sounds reasonably legit, and it’s the best thing we’ve got on a Pre launch date up until now — and quite a bit more encouraging than the prospect of waiting until the summer.

Update: Boy Genius Report has updated its post, and says that while the March 15th launch is possible, they “wouldn’t bet on it,” and see a May or early June launch as more likely.

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Palm Pre landing mid-March? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Feb 2009 10:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Hints at Video Conferencing for Future iPhones

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Apple’s recently approved iPhone patent reveals the company’s plans to introduce video conferencing to future generations of the popular handset.

InformationWeek spotted a few sections and images in the patent that make references to a "video conferencing application" as well as a "digital video camera application."

Apple devotes a paragraph to explaining how video conferencing would work: Long story short — a lens that can be rotated backward or forward, coupled with the touchscreen as a viewfinder.

In some embodiments, an optical sensor is located on the back of the device, opposite the touch screen display on the front of the device, so that the touch screen display may be used as a viewfinder for either still and/or video image acquisition. In some embodiments, an optical sensor is located on the front of the device so that the user’s image may be obtained for videoconferencing while the user views the other video conference participants on the touch screen display. In some embodiments, the position of the optical sensor can be changed by the user (e.g., by rotating the lens and the sensor in the device housing) so that a single optical sensor may be used along with the touch screen display for both video conferencing and still and/or video image acquisition.

In late January, the U.S. Patent Office approved Apple’s 358-page patent for its iPhone interface after more than two years of review.

Some believe the patent gives Apple the ammunition to do legal battle with Palm, if necessary. The Palm Pre smartphone, unveiled at Consumer Electronics Show in early January, appears to feature a touchscreen interface closely mimicking the iPhone’s.

Since the iPhone’s launch, the lack of video capabilities on the handset has been a major complaint among customers. Tero Kuittinen, a Global Crown Capital analyst, said the iPhone must adopt a higher quality camera with video capabilities if it wishes to remain competitive with rivals Research In Motion,
Samsung, HTC and LG.

Apple doesn’t indicate when video features will appear on the iPhone. We would guess the company won’t roll this out until the iPhone 3G’s battery life is dramatically improved.

Apple Planning Video-Call iPhone [InformationWeek]

Switched On: With Pre, Palm breaks from the Storm

Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

In a recent interview with Elevation Partners’ Roger McNamee, the Palm investor explained that Palm knew it had to step up its game after RIM launched the BlackBerry Pearl, which he described as “the first real consumer electronics product in the smartphone category.” The Pearl launch served as the coming out party for the BlackBerry brand among consumers as RIM began stepping up its advertising, and the product’s narrower hardware design was a noticeable break with the staid stylings of previous BlackBerry devices.

Indeed, back in November of 2006 as Palm rolled out the somewhat consumer-focused Treo 680, I wrote a Switched On column noting that the Pearl broke with the evolutionary path that RIM had been on and served as an example for the kind of hardware shift Palm needed to make.

Palm finally answered the Pearl with the Centro, a compact, inexpensive, and successful smartphone that has apparently served as the final resting place of the original Palm OS architecture. However, between the release of those two devices, the entry and subsequent SDK of Apple’s iPhone proved a far more significant turning point in the evolution of consumer smartphones. The iPhone’s resonance and popularity have provoked responses from many competitors, but there is a particular contrast in the flagship CDMA touchscreen handsets released by RIM and Palm — the other two smartphone developers that grow their own operating systems — since then.

Continue reading Switched On: With Pre, Palm breaks from the Storm

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Switched On: With Pre, Palm breaks from the Storm originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dissecting Apple’s “Multitouch” Patent: Can It Stop Palm?

The iPhone’s multitouch patents are the equivalent of a cold war nuclear arsenal—dormant for now, but Palm’s Pre is looking for a fight. Here’s why we think Apple’s multitouch monopoly won’t last.

To help guide us through, machete in hand, what is one of the more confusing jungles of U.S. law, we talked to R. Polk Wagner, a professor of patents law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He specializes in patents and intellectual property as it relates to technology, and teaches hundreds of Penn Law students every year how to decipher the Enigma-level encrypted language of patent filings. We couldn’t have done it without him.

As others have thoroughly and eloquently explained this week, it’s impossible to identify a single patent that has a lock on the iPhone’s multitouch magic as we know it. That patent probably does not exist. But here’s the key—patent wars are intrinsically cold wars. They entail both sides jacking up their arsenals (reams of legalese replacing megaton warheads) with as many patents as possible, with hopes of scaring their adversaries out of even attempting to try something. These cold wars, thankfully, rarely turn hot, but under our legal system, lack of courtroom action means there’s almost no way to determine whose armada of patents actually cover what.

The meat of every patent is a list of claims, and it is the claims and only the claims that spell out exactly what can get you sued and what can’t. Unfortunately for us, but very fortunately for the thousands of patent lawyers hoping to feed their families, claims are written in a language not comprehensible to normal humans. The goal is to be both incredibly vague and legally specific at the same time

“Patent claims are an attempt to use words to describe things and ideas, an imperfect way of operating. In an ideal world we’d have patent claims that look like a title record you get for your house [your property starts exactly 200 feet from this road walking in exactly this direction, etc]. But it is incredibly difficult to predict exactly what a patent will or won’t cover,” Prof. Wagner says.

But the old patent-law adage Prof. Wagner likes to use in class is true—”the claims are the name of the game”—and it is their vagueness in this instance that would make it easy for Palm, if their lawyers and engineers know how to talk to each other, to design itself out of a hole and bring true multitouch to the Pre.

The patent we’re referring to is #7,479,949, awarded on January 20 of this year. It has a list of 20 claims but as Prof. Wagner showed us, out of the 20, 17 are “dependent,” which means they drill down more specifically into features of the invention/interface/device described in their parent claim. In our quick Patent Law 101 with Professor Wagner, we learned that to legally infringe upon a patent, you need to violate an entire independent claim, which means, if you rip off one of its dependents, you’re OK, you just can’t rip off all of them all together.

As Engadget’s legal eagle, Nilay Patel, sagely identified in his piece, considerable chunks of this patent deal with not multitouch as a whole, but one very specific use case: the iPhone’s ability to lock itself into a one-dimensional scroll (vertical or horizontal) on, say, a webpage. It’s based upon the first movement of your finger: move it straight up and down, and you’ll only be able to scroll vertically. But just as it’s hard enough to divine exactly what’s going on in patents to begin with, Professor Wagner—a man with considerably more experience than I do at doing doing exactly that—says it’s tough to assume that an entire patent can be distilled down to a single behavior. Here’s the legalese for the scrolling behavior in claim #1, which is an independent claim with 9 sub-claims:

…A vertical screen scrolling heuristic for determining that the one or more finger contacts correspond to a one-dimensional vertical screen scrolling command rather than a two-dimensional screen translation command based on an angle of initial movement of a finger contact with respect to the touch screen display

But there’s more to it. Claim # 1 is a pretty beefy paragraph, with three more important specific behaviors listed within, each of which must be ripped off to infringe on that claim. The first one sounds like the ability to know the difference between a one-dimensional scroll and a two-dimensional scroll, which unlocks both vertical and horizontal scrolling:

…A two-dimensional screen translation heuristic for determining that the one or more finger contacts correspond to the two-dimensional screen translation command rather than the one-dimensional vertical screen scrolling command based on the angle of initial movement of the finger contact with respect to the touch screen display

And the third and most interesting one, which tacks on the seemingly unrelated behavior of side-scrolling through a list of things, like Cover Flow albums:

…And a next item heuristic for determining that the one or more finger contacts correspond to a command to transition from displaying a respective item in a set of items to displaying a next item in the set of items.

What’s interesting is that the only other phones on the market technically capable of multitouch—RIM’s BlackBerry Storm and T-Mobile’s Google Android G1—have web browsers that scroll in exactly the same manner described in the patent. But, if they don’t also feature a Cover Flow-like interface for side scrolling (the G1’s photo gallery uses next/prev buttons, for instance), they’re legally safe from infringing on this particular claim. Even more interesting is that the Storm’s photo gallery app does indeed use a Coverflow-like swipe to navigate through photos, so from where we’re sitting, they could be in trouble. But as you can see, it gets that specific.

So, patent mumbo-jumbo aside, here are the keys:

1. What Apple can and most certainly is doing is patenting all of the special ways it makes multitouch magical—like the Cover Flow scrolling lists, or using two fingers to rotate an image by pivoting one around the other (which doesn’t appear to be singled out in the patent in question here). Still, it’s hard to assume that Apple has a patent lock on the concept of multitouch as a whole—multitouch has been around in theory for too long and it’s probably too general of an idea for Apple to claim an absolute lock. Exhibit A here is Microsoft’s Surface table, which is currently on sale and has plenty of iPhone-like multitouch zoom and scrolling features built right in. But Apple may just be steering clear of Microsoft, the one behemoth that can match Apple’s legal might.

2. Regardless of legal defensibility, Apple’s multitouch cold war is working against everyone but Microsoft. Google didn’t even tempt the Cupertino warheads (I mean lawyers) with multitouch on Android, and HP gets visibly nervous even when we simply ask whether their TouchSmart PCs will support multitouch some day. Keep in mind, though, that unofficial multitouch applications exist for both Android and HP’s TouchSmarts.

As Prof. Wagner points out, Apple is great at protecting their innovations. Look at the click wheel—it’s without a doubt the most elegant way to navigate an MP3 player’s interface, and no one has been able to mimic it exactly. Others have clickable buttons, and touch-sensitive controllers, some of which are shaped like wheels, but Apple has been able to protect the specifics of the clickwheel—all of these elements combined—that make it special.

3. Palm, however, could be the perfect North Korea in our little war metaphor—crazed enough by desperation to be the first to just go for it. Also, they’ve been making phone software far longer than Apple, and insinuate that they have some patent warheads of their own to train on Cupertino.

4. The truth of the matter remains, that Individual patents (and, even more so, individual claims inside of individual patents) are easy to design around if you’re careful (and have good patent lawyers working with your engineers), since all it takes is one deviation from one of a patent’s claims specifics to put you in the clear. But this recent filing, clearly, is not Apple’s only multitouch-related patent. Many more exist, and many more are surely pending. That’s where Palm’s patent lawyers come in. As long as Palm (or anyone else) can walk the tightrope with Petit-worthy grace, implementing multitouch features without infringing on the exact specifics of any one Apple patent claim, they’ll be OK.

But beyond that, Palm may actually use the chance to take multitouch to places we’ve never seen before. “Designing around patents requires innovation,” said Prof. Wagner, “and a lot of times, the end result turns out better than the what was being imitated.” All of this, of course, is completely up in the air for Palm. We were reminded many times that what we saw at CES was far from a production model, and a lot could change about the specifics of the Pre’s multitouch when the finished product makes itself known.

From the looks of things, Apple is the Gipper, the Ronald Reagan of tech. When they don’t fight, they often find a way to win (or look like they have won). And when they do fight, it takes an equally massive superpower to give them any competition.

We’re rooting for Palm though, and Google and RIM too. More multitouch cellphones = more competition = happier consumers. Détente, people, détente!