BlackBerry Outage Continues as iCloud Launches

First the PlayBook, and now a huge service outage on the eve of iOS 5. Can nothing go right for RIM? Photo Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Oh, RIM! It looked like things couldn’t get any worse, and then your messaging services go down for days. And right before the iPhone launch, too.

BlackBerry owners will already know about it, but for the rest of you, BBM (BlackBerry Messaging) went down hard on Monday morning, and is still staggering along two days later. Outages have occurred in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and spread to India, Brazil, Chile and Argentina.

The problem was caused by a switch failing in Slough, England. This was followed by the backup failing, too. BlackBerry’s UK service update says that “the messaging and browsing delays that some of you are still experiencing were caused by a core switch failure within RIM’s infrastructure. Although the system is designed to failover to a back-up switch, the failover did not function as previously tested.”

That was yesterday. Today, things are still not working right, and Blackberry’s latest update doesn’t look like they’ll get better anytime soon. “The resolution of this service issue is our Number One priority right now and we are working night and day to restore all BlackBerry services to normal levels” is about as specific as things get. David Chow, friend of Gadget Lab over in England, reports that BBM, e-mail and browsing are all down, but Twitter works over Wi-Fi.

The one thing that BlackBerry still has over other phones is BBM, the service that lets users send SMS-like messages to each other, for free. Without that, there seems no point in buying a BlackBerry instead of an Android handset or an iPhone. Worse still, today is the launch day Apple’s iOS 5, which includes the Messages app. This lets users send free messages between iOS 5 devices, and goes head-to-head with BBM.

Nobody is going to abandon their BlackBerry right away, but Messages could be the carrot, and this too-long outage the stick that together send users over to Apple next time a contract is up.

BlackBerry Service Update [BlackBerry UK]

See Also:


Sprint Will Sell iPhone 4S Unlocked, Verizon Will Unlock If You Ask

Sprint will sell iPhones with the SIM slot unlocked, and Verizon will unlock it for you after 60 days

If you’re planning on traveling outside the U.S with your shiny new iPhone 4S, you should probably buy it from Sprint or Verizon. Both carriers have decided to unlock the micro SIM slot so any card can be popped in and used.

Sprint will sell its iPhones unlocked, whereas Verizon will unlock the handset after 60 days if you call up and ask nicely, according to Jason Snell of Macworld. Out of the box, both carriers supply the iPhone 4S with a roaming SIM which will allow use on GSM networks abroad. While this is handy, and you will receive incoming calls to your regular number, it’s usually way cheaper to pick up a pre-pay sim while abroad (pro tip: if you visit the UK, buy a pre-pay iPad SIM from Argos. It’s £10, or $15, comes loaded with 1GB and lasts for up to a month).

When at home, both Sprint and Verizon iPhones will use their CDMA radios.

AT&T, the one carrier which uses the SIM-powered GSM network, will not be selling the iPhone 4S unlocked. No surprises there, right? Nevertheless, AT&T might just change its mind if it loses significant sales thanks to its closed policy. Then again, as the iPhone is now most definitely a mass-market phone, few people will probably even care.

How international is the iPhone 4S ‘world phone? [MacWorld]

See Also:


Some German iPhone 4S Pre-Orders Delivered Early

Some lucky customers who pre-ordered the iPhone 4S in Germany got their delivery a bit early. Image: MacRumors

A few lucky customers who pre-ordered Apple’s iPhone 4S in Germany got their delivery today — three full days early. And according to benchmarks that are beginning to pop up online, the phone looks to be wicked fast.

Readers sent in images of the new Apple device, its packaging and screenshots of Siri to German blog Macerkopf.de. Legitimate-looking benchmarks have also started appearing online, with the 4S clocking in at 68 percent faster than its predecessor, the iPhone 4. Tests also confirmed that the iPhone 4S’ graphics processor is seven times faster than the 4’s.

The new iPhone scored a 677 on Geekbench’s benchmarking test, almost double the 370 that the iPhone 4 scored, and not too far under the iPad 2’s score of 751. The iPhone 4S and iPad 2 share the same A5 dual-core chip, but the 4S’ likely runs at 800 MHz, as opposed to the iPad 2’s 1 GHz processor speed.

The iPhone 4S has already hit record pre-order numbers of over one million units. Its specs are comparable to those of other major smartphones on the market, like the Samsung Galaxy S II, such as a dual-core processor, 8-megapixel camera and a pixel-packed display (Retina Display in this case, like the iPhone 4). The handset, which was unveiled at a media event last week, will be available on the three largest U.S. carriers — AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. The 4S will run on AT&T’s HSPA+ network and also comes with GSM and CDMA antennas, making it a world phone.

The iPhone 4S will hit stores on Friday, Oct. 14. Pre-orders will also be delivered that day. It’s priced at $200, $300 and $400 on contract for 16-, 32- and 64-GB models. Pre-orders began last Friday, so if you missed out, you’re going to have to spend your morning waiting in line at your favorite Apple retailer this Friday. But don’t worry; that just means you have the opportunity to make some new iPhone-loving friends.

via MacRumors


Buy from Amazon via Text Message

This article was written on April 02, 2008 by CyberNet.

Each year, communicating through text messages continues to grow and has now turned into an extremely popular communication medium. Millions upon millions of text messages are sent every single month and carriers only anticipate that the number of messages sent by their subscribers will continue to grow. Amazon knows this and obviously sees a tremendous value in it because they have just launched a new service called Amazon TextBuyIt.

TextBuyIt is a brand new service that will give shoppers the opportunity to find and purchase products sold on Amazon via a text message on their mobile phones. Here’s how it works. Say a customer is looking to buy an MP3 player. They would text the name of the product, a description, a UPC if they have it, or an ISBN number to Amazon. If Amazon carries it, they will return matching results via text to the customer, two at a time. If one of the two options is something they want to buy, they text back either a 1 or a 2, or ask for more results by texting M. If the customer made a purchase, they will enter in their email address that’s associated with their Amazon account and a shipping code, and then they’ll receive an automated call that will guide them through the checkout process.

textbuyit

It’s a very simple process and once everything is done and a purchase has been made, shoppers get a confirmation email and a text message.  Given the number of people who obsessively text message, this could be dangerous, especially for shopaholics because the purchasing process can be done in a matter of a few minutes.  For those who really get into it and use TextBuyIt as a regular shopping method, there are other commands that they could use. For example, you could text 2D after you’ve seen matching products and you’d get more details about the 2nd item that you saw.

Of course there’s good and bad to a service like this. The first good thing that came to mind was that this could be an awesome way to comparison shop. If you’re at the store and you see something you’d like to buy, you can use TextBuyIt to see if Amazon has it cheaper and save yourself some money. You’re not required to buy anything after texting a search, which is nice. The bad is that any item that is a “Deal of the Day” or a “Gold Box Discount” will not be discounted if bought through text messaging.

I never thought we’d see the day where you’d shop via a text message, but the day is here and other retailers are likely to follow if Amazon is successful with this new method.

Source: AP

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts:


Video Shows Siri Works Great In Real Life

Siri, Apple’s “one more thing” at last week’s iPhone 4S launch, looks like some kind of magic from the future. But then, demoes of speech control on the Mac also looked pretty good (yes, you can control your Mac with your voice — kinda). Up on stage, with just the right commands, Siri was bound to make a great demo. But how will it do in the real world?

To see, check out this hands-on video from the folks at UK-based mag Stuff.

I’m sure the outtakes have been, ahem, taken out, but what remains is impressive. Not only does it look accurate, but it also looks useful. I can totally see myself mumbling drunkenly to Siri to please, please wake me up in the morning, or sending a quick message to somebody.

Other hands-on reviews around the web also point to another way to activate Siri. Instead of touching the button on screen, you can just hold the phone up to your ear. This way you’ll look like you’re talking to somebody, instead of dorking out with your little iHal.

But most impressive is that Siri can handle different accents, something that the iOS Dragon apps fail miserably at. We’ll have to see how it copes with other British accents though. In the U.S, English accents are fairly homogenous. In the British Isles, though, you run from Scottish to Irish to Geordie to Black Country to (shudder) Welsh. Some natives have trouble understanding these accents, so I don’t have much hope for a computer.

I do like the posh-accented Butler voice used in the British English version of Siri, though.

Still, we’ll find out soon enough when folks start to receive their handsets this Friday and start commanding Siri to do all sorts of crazy things. Me? I’ll do what I always have done whenever possible, just like I still do when I get a new dictionary. I’ll start with the swear words.

Apple iPhone 4S Siri demo [Stuff TV/YouTube]

See Also:


Samsung Stratosphere Targets Professionals With 4G and a Hardware Keyboard

Being on Verizon’s 4G LTE network and having a smartphone with a QWERTY keyboard have been mutually exclusive features until now. Today, the carrier revealed the Samsung Stratosphere, a 4G smartphone with a slide-out keyboard.

The Stratosphere targets the business professional crowd, the folks who used to use (or still use) BlackBerries, but are looking to make the transition to Android or iOS.

The Stratosphere features a 4-inch Super AMOLED display with a 5-row QWERTY keyboard underneath. It runs Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) on a 1 GHz Hummingbird processor. For the biz folk, the smartphone supports some B2B services like Microsoft Exchange Active Sync as well as VPN, mobile device management and encryption.

Until now, if you wanted a phone with 4G and a hardware keyboard, you’d have to turn to another carrier like T-Mobile, which offers options like the Sidekick 4G or the MyTouch 4G Slide — not quite right if you’ve got enterprise on the mind. RIM will also be releasing five new smartphones this year, though, including the BlackBerry Torch 9810 series.

As far as Android goes, the operating system has had a stellar year so far. The OS dominates the smartphone market, and devices like the Samsung Galaxy S II are hitting record sales numbers.

The Stratosphere includes a 1.3-megapixel front facing camera, 5-megapixel rear facing camera and hot spotting for up to eight Wi-Fi enabled devices.

The Samsung Stratosphere will be available October 13th for $150 with a two-year contract.

Image: Verizon


Critics Be Damned! iPhone 4S Pre-Order Success Validates Apple Strategy

Phil Schiller introduces the iPhone 4S' voice-controlled assistant, Siri. Image: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com

If initial sales figures for the iPhone 4S are any indication, Apple could issue a resounding “I told you so” to critics who initially panned the phone’s new features and unchanged physical appearance as disappointing. Perhaps even more telling: Solid sales of older iPhone models continue to prove Apple’s dominance in the smartphone space.

The iPhone 4S sold over one million pre-order units in its first 24 hours of availability, trouncing previous record pre-order sales of 600,000 units for Apple’s iPhone 4. Early iPhone 4S purchasers are likely a mix of 3G and 3GS owners who qualify for an upgrade, those who just want Apple’s latest and greatest, and those unable to previously get access to the iPhone on their network, says Forrester analyst Charles Golvin.

“It reinforces [Apple’s] belief in their strategy, building the products that they think make the most sense,” Golvin says.

The sales figures challenge a number of recent negative headlines that read like Apple had failed before the smartphone even launched. Business Insider wrote, “Is Apple’s decision to release just an iPhone 4S, not an iPhone 5, a huge disappointment, or just a regular sized disappointment? Depends on who you are, but either way it’s a disappointment.” The Daily Beast titled an article “Apple’s iPhone Letdown” and wrote, “In short: there is no new iPhone.” And even Apple darling The Wall Street Journal reported widespread disappointment and titled its story “Apple Underwhelms with iPhone 4S.”

And the lukewarm 4S sentiment wasn’t just expressed in headlines. @redmusk tweeted me, “Very disappointed for not seeing major change in #iphone.”  Gadget Lab commenter Adam Johns said, “It looks the EXACT same as a 4…this is not an upgrade, this is lame.”

The iPhone 4S shares its form factor with the iPhone 4, but features some dramatically revamped innards. These include an 8-megapixel camera with a faster shutter speed and backside-illuminated sensor, a voice-activated digital assistant called Siri that could revolutionize the way we interact with mobile devices, and a hot new A5 processor that provides up to 7x faster graphics processing. A video leak shows that the Safari browser is about twice as fast on the iPhone 4S than on the iPhone 4.

“There are so many new features in the 4S, it might as well have been called the iPhone 5,” Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg says. And although the 4S designation makes the new phone sound like it’s a minor upgrade from the iPhone 4, it’s not, Gartenberg says: ”I wouldn’t call it an incremental upgrade, I’d say it was an evolutionary update with revolutionary features.”

One of the most revolutionary new features is Siri, a natural language voice-control tool. You can ask Siri questions, and “she” will pull data from websites, your calendar, or Wolfram Alpha, a dynamic search engine that uses linguistic analysis or advanced computations to provide information. For example, if you say, “Define mitosis,” she’ll provide the definition from Wolfram Alpha. If you say, “Find me a great Greek restaurant in Palo Alto,” Siri responds with “I’ve found 14 Greek restaurants, five of them are in Palo Alto. I’ve sorted them by rating.” You can also use Siri to find out information about your daily schedule, dictate emails and text messages. Siri will translate your dictation to text, and then dispatch your communiques. All in plain English. Or German and French.

“Apple’s new Siri Assistant is a powerful harbinger of the future use of mobile devices,” Golvin said in a statement.

Norman Winarsky, co-founder and board member of Siri prior to its purchase by Apple in 2010, thinks that Siri is a paradigm-shifting innovation. “This is a first. This is real technology, with real artificial intelligence. It’s a do engine, not a search engine,” he says.

This is just the beginning of the era of virtual personal assistants, Winarsky says. Imagine calling an airline to make a reservation. Instead of suffering through a series of menus — misdialing or having a bot misinterpret your commands — you could call the airline, voice your exact request, and be quickly transferred to the right representative. Or you might even bypass the representative altogether. For example, saying something like, “I would like to make a reservation for the cheapest flight before noon on Oct. 14″ would automatically present you with relevant options.

With regard to the iPhone 4S’s improved camera hardware, photo expert and pro-retoucher Joe Gerardi told Gizmodo, “This is not just a bigger megapixel camera upgrade. The lens improvements combined with back-side illuminated chip with a dedicated image processing chip, all powered by the A5 processor really make this an impressive camera.”

And Ryan Block of Gdgt expressed the significance of the iPhone 4S’s world phone functionality very nicely: “The GSM/CDMA worldphone functionality of the 4S is genuinely impressive … Antenna design is one of the most difficult engineering challenges in the handset industry, and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a dual-mode worldphone engineered with as much (apparent) finesse as the 4S.”

With the introduction of the iPhone 4S, Apple now has a full product portfolio, from the shiny new iPhone 4S to the budget-friendly free 3GS. And despite their “old age” (well, in smartphone years), the iPhone 4 and 3GS continue to dominate carrier sales charts. For June through August of this year, the iPhone 4 and the iPhone 3GS were the number one and number two selling smartphones, respectively, on AT&T, while the iPhone 4 was the top seller on Verizon (which does not carry the 3GS).

Given their reduced prices, the iPhone 4 and 3GS will likely continue to deliver solid sales numbers, despite the fact that they’ve been eclipsed by the 4S.

“I believe that Apple’s iPhone sales will continue to grow significantly, and not just due to the 4S, but because now there’s an iPhone for anyone, no matter what they can afford to spend,” said Golvin via email. Sixty percent of cellphone owners still use feature phones, so providing a cost-effective, entry-level option for consumers puts Apple in a strong position to gain wider adoption.

Indeed, Apple has its ducks in a row, and seems poised to realize killer market-share figures over the next few months as consumers gobble up its handsets. The ball is in the Apple critics’ court.


iPhone 4S Sells One Million in 24 Hours

Apple sold one million iPhone 4S’s in one day. Not bad for such a disappointing failure

The iPhone 4S, roundly dismissed as a disappointment by many tech pundits and writers, has shifted one million units in just a day. It looks like the pundits have no idea what real people want.

The first hint of demand came when Apple’s entire site crashed after the iPhone 4S announcement event last Tuesday. Then when Apple, along with its cellphone carrier partners, opened their virtual doors for pre-orders before the weekend, the payment servers were brought to their knees under high demand.

Apple says that this is the fastest-selling first day for any Apple product, ever, beating the previous record holder, the iPhone 4, which sold 600,000 units on its first day.

The iPhone 4 went on to blow past that number, selling 1.7 million units in the first weekend of actual sales (not just pre-orders). Who knows how many will be sold when the iPhone 4S ships this Friday?

It seems that actual, paying customers are a little more insightful than whining, jaded tech writers. Whilst these professionals sat complaining about the lack of a “5″ in the new iPhone’s name, and the fact that Apple had decided to keep the great-looking industrial design of the iPhone 4, the general public saw the great new camera, a Star Trek-like talking assistant and a much faster computer, and then took out their wallets.

iPhone 4S Pre-Orders Top One Million in First 24 Hours [Apple]

See Also:


Ad-Supported MySpace Mobile Launches

This article was written on September 24, 2007 by CyberNet.

myspacemobile MySpace is looking to cater to mobile phone users with their new ad-supported mobile version of the social network which launched today at mobile.myspace.com.  It’ll be free for users and will work on all U.S. carriers.  MySpace has become such a phenomenon and ranks as one of the most visited sites globally, it makes sense for News Corp. to develop a mobile version. Besides providing a mobile experience for their users, another main goal that News Corp is trying to accomplish with this move is to attract advertising for mobile web sites.

As mentioned, the mobile version of MySpace will be ad-supported.  Ads will include banner ads as well as sponsorships, for now anyway’s.  In the future though, local advertising will be implemented using GPS data sent by the phones. They’ll also use targeted advertising based upon the information a user has on their page and in their blogs.

Those using a mobile phone to access MySpace will be able to do the following:

  • Send and receive messages
  • Receive friend requests
  • Add friends
  • Comment on photos
  • Post bulletins
  • Search for friends
  • Update blogs

Assuming MySpace mobile goes over well, News Corp. intends on adding mobile versions of other sites like Fox Sports and Photobucket. A mobile version of Photobucket would be awesome because users would be able to upload photos right from their camera phones which means less hassle!

In the future , I think we’ll see more and more sites developing a mobile version as the quality of a mobile Internet experience increases and people are more inclined to use it.

Source: StarNewsOnline.com

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts:


Sprint Confirms Unlimited Data Plans for New iPhone 4S Owners

The iPhone 4S pricing scheme is announced at Apple’s 2011 iPhone event. Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com

Like it or not, unlimited smartphone data plans are quickly becoming a thing of the past. But if you’re jonesing for the new iPhone 4S and need uncapped, unlimited bandwidth, there’s still one carrier left that will deliver.

Sprint spokeswoman Michelle Leff Mermelstein confirmed to AllThingsD that the carrier would offer unlimited data plans for new iPhone 4S users when the phone debuts on its network this October. The plans start at $70 per month.

Now that the iPhone will be available on three out of the four biggest U.S. carriers, Sprint’s cheaper unlimited plans will help give it an edge over pricier, data capped-plans from competitors AT&T and Verizon. Sprint reportedly agreed to purchase 30.5 million iPhones from Apple over the next four years in order to secure the phone on its network, which equates to a $20 billion purchase in today’s dollars. Rumors that Sprint would begin carrying the iPhone came earlier this year, and were finally confirmed at the iPhone 4S media event on Tuesday.

The $70 plan will give you unlimited data and mobile-to-mobile calling with 450 voice minutes. For both unlimited calling and unlimited data, the plan is $99 a month. A $10 smartphone charge is also tacked onto Sprint’s plans.

The iPhone 4S costs $200, $300 or $400, for 16, 32 and 64 GB storage options, with the purchase of a two year contract.