ATT Internet Tethering Comes to iPhone OS4 Beta
Posted in: att, iPhone, Phones, rumors, Today's ChiliAt last, it seems that AT&T will allow you to share your iPhone’s internet data connection with other devices. The screen captures you see above come from the newly released iPhone OS 4 beta 4, and show the option to enable internet tethering. This would allow you to share your connection to either your computer (over USB) or an iPad or other mobile device (via Bluetooth).
Huge, right? Especially as AT&T promised us the option to tether would be available by the end of last year. But not so fast. We’ve been here before, over a year ago in fact. When iPhone OS 3 was in its beta stages, developers found that they could switch on tethering and use it. When the final version was released to the public, it was gone.
All iPhones have the software for tethering built in. It is then up to the individual carriers if they will support it. AT&T doesn’t, yet, but pretty much anywhere else in the world you can share your data as you like. While the screen-grabs above are almost certainly legitimate, having a feature flash up in a beta release is not the same as having it actually launch to the public. I’m skeptical.
Apple Releases iPhone OS 4 Beta 4 and SDK to Developers [MacRumors]
See Also:
Along with questionable App Store rejections, Apple occasionally makes peculiar approvals. Take for example the app Mirror, which is nothing short of a black screen with a frame. Flipping your iPhone screen off would make a better reflection for checking out your mug.
It’s a joke, get it? Nonetheless, a large number of people fooled into purchasing the app don’t find it very funny.
“No good,” writes customer “Benhoolio.” “Not even a mirror. Total waste of a dollar. Don’t get it. What is the point of looking in to a black screen with a border around it?”
“Can they really just lie to people like that??” writes user MelanieFD. “It’s BULL!!”
About 2,400 additional negative reviews for the app express similar sentiments. Joke or not, this app is not a strong testament for Apple’s push for quality in the App Store — a reason Steve Jobs said he was requiring iPhone and iPad apps to be made with Apple-approved programming languages, effectively banning Adobe Flash code from the platform.
Still, we find it hilarious, and we wouldn’t want Apple banning humor from the App Store. (Satire already seems blacklisted, after all.) The reviews are merely a reflection of how impulsive people are with buying iPhone apps. Mirror costs just a buck (and you shouldn’t buy it). If only people would lighten up.
Download Link [iTunes]
See Also:
- Apple App Store Bans Pulitzer-Winning Satirist for Satire …
- Apple Removes Porn Apps From App Store
- With More Than Enough Apps, Apple Pushes for Quality
- Steve Jobs Debates Developers Over Apple’s New App Policy
- For the iPhone’s App Store, Quantity Really Does Matter
- Apple’s App Store Hits Six Digits; How Many Apps Do You Need …
Android 2.1 Operating System Gains Steam
Posted in: Android, operating system, Phones, Today's ChiliFragmentation caused by the different versions of the Android operating system — a cause of concern among developers — is on the decline. The Android OS is coalescing around three major flavors: Android 1.5, aka Cupcake; Android 1.6, or Donut; and Android 2.1, nicknamed Eclair.
Among those, Android 2.1 has the maximum share. About 37.2 percent of Android phones today have the Android 2.1 operating system, up from 27.3 percent in April.
Android 1.5 comes next with about 34.1 percent of Android phones sporting it, followed by Android 1.6 at 28 percent.
The data comes from Android Developers, the official Android developers’ community website, and is based on OS data reported by devices accessing the Android Market during a 2-week period ending May 17.
In the 16 months since the first Android phone hit the market, Google has made four major upgrades to the operating system. But smartphone makers unable to keep up with that pace have continued to introduce new cellphones with older versions of the OS, leading to consumer confusion about what capabilities various Android phones have. But in the past four months, many handset makers, including Motorola and HTC, have been steadily updating the OSes on their older phones. In most cases, they’re upgrading to the latest version, Android 2.1.
Still, in the rapidly changing Android world it is not enough. At its developer conference later this week, Google is likely to release the next update to Android called Android 2.2 or FroYo.
FroYo will support an updated Android Market, Flash Player 10.1, and tethering.
It will be interesting to see what this chart looks like in three months.
See Also:
- Android’s Rapid Growth Has Some Developers Worried
- Android Fragmentation Declines, But Older Versions Still Rule
- Android Comes of Age at Google Developer Conference
- New Phones Still Sold With Old Versions of Android
Chart data: Android Developers
Kindle for Android ‘Coming Soon’
Posted in: Android, e-books, kindle, Phones, Today's ChiliKindle continues its mission to let you read your Amazon-bought e-books anywhere. Amazon has announced the forthcoming Kindle for Android, and it is almost exactly the same as other software-only implementations, like those on the iPhone or Blackberry.
Almost. The big difference here is that you can buy books from within the application (this also works on Blackberry). On the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad, you are redirected to the Kindle web site as soon as you choose to buy a new book. On Android phones, you can browse and purchase books from within the Kindle app. This is likely because Amazon doesn’t want to give Apple 30% of each and every transaction, the usual cut taken for in-app transactions.
The Kindle for Android app is “coming soon” and will run on any Android device (v1.6 or newer) that has an SD card installed.
Kindle for Android [Amazon via ★]
See Also:
- Kindle
- Amazon Shows Off Kindle for iPad
- First Look: Kindle for Mac
- Tablet Wars: Amazon Adds Apps to Kindle
- Amazon Brings Kindle to iPhone
- Slack-Off in Meetings With Kindle for Blackberry
- Kindle for PC Ships, Hints at Future Color Kindle
Giz Explains: Why Using Your Phone In Another Country Costs So Damn Much [Giz Explains]
Posted in: cdma, cellphones, feature, Phones, Today's Chili, top, Travel The worst part of any vacation is coming home. Not just because your fleeting glimpse of freedom is finished, but because you’ve got to pay the absurd phone bill you racked up while you were gone. Ugh. Why? More »
Android Comes of Age at Google Developer Conference
Posted in: Android, apps, developer, Google, Phones, Today's ChiliIn 2008, when Google organized its first developers’ conference, it gave attendees the first phones to run Android, its open source mobile operating system.
Now three years later, Android is one of the fastest-growing mobile platforms. Even though Google recently announced plans to close the web store for its Nexus One phone, Android itself is still going strong. In the first quarter of the year, a gaggle of Android-based phones grabbed 28 percent of the smartphone market in the United States, trailing Research In Motion’s BlackBerry devices (36 percent) and ahead of Apple’s iPhone OS (21 percent), according to research firm The NPD Group.
It’s a stunning growth curve for an independent platform that seemed to emerge out of nowhere. And it has turned Google’s developer event into one of the hottest tickets in town with developers begging for passes to it on Craigslist and eBay. An Android developer told Wired.com that his company paid $1,600 for a $100 ticket to the conference — with an agreement that any swag handed out will be given to the ticket seller.
“The biggest difference with this conference compared to earlier ones is the sheer amount of interest in the platform,” says Harry Tormey, software engineer at Snaptic, which makes a note-taking app for both Android phones and the iPhone. “It will be interesting to get a feel for where things are going in the mobile space.”
At the Google I/O event May 18 and 19 in San Francisco, Google will likely focus attention on its Chrome browser and operating system, which will run on everything from netbooks to set-top TV boxes. But Android will be a key part of the picture.
Significantly, Google and Intel are expected to unveil an Android-based “Smart TV” platform.
Android developers say they are looking to hear from Google about how to make Android apps better, make money off the platform and deal with the problem of fragmentation with many versions of the OS available on phones currently.
“Android has been so successful so fast and they are iterating quickly,” says Gregg Fiddes, vice-president of sales and business development for Quickoffice, which makes mobile-productivity software. “When you are dealing with custom SDKs that makes it a big challenge.”
Fiddes says his company will be looking for direction from Google on how to cast a wide net with an Android app so it can support a range of devices.
“It’s a tough balancing act,” he says. “OEMs want to differentiate but Google wants to standardize it, so we are hoping Google will offer some clues on how to strike a balance.”
Developers also say they hope to get a closer look at the latest version of Android 2.2, aka “Froyo,” which is expected to have features such as tethering (so you can use your phone as a wireless modem) and the ability to turn your phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot.
Turning on the cool factor for apps
The growth of the Android platform highlights the gap between Android apps and iPhone apps, say developers. The 38,000 or so apps available in the Android market may seem small compared to the more than 200,000 available in the Apple app store.
The quantity argument aside, Android apps have a problem, say Tormey.
“One of the big weaknesses of the Android platform versus the iPhone is that the apps don’t look as sexy as the iPhone ones,” says Tormey.
That’s because multimedia capabilities on the Android platform are not sophisticated as the iPhone, he says. For instance, support for OpenAL, a 3-D audio API, is available on the iPhone but not on Android. OpenAL is popular among game developers who use it for sound positioning in a program.
It’s also easier to get started as an iPhone developer.
“If you want to make a simple app its much easier to do so on the iPhone than Android,” says Tormey. “The documentation on Android is not as good as with the iPhone, which offers a lot more examples to developers.”
Tormey hopes at its developer conference, Google will offer sessions on the multimedia capabilities of the phone and how Android developers can bring the “wow” factor to their creations.
“The UI interactions can be complex and I hope Google will show clever ways to make the Android interface simple,” agrees Zhao Lu, senior software engineer at Orange Labs, who will be attending the event for the first time. Lu is working on a voice application for the Android platform that lets users add status updates and location to their voice greetings. “On the iPhone, the user interface is really elegant and beautiful. Android is catching up, but, in general, there’s a way to go.”
Developers also say they are looking to hear more about the partnership between Adobe and Google. Adobe is expected to show Flash Player 10.1 running on Android phones. And with the ongoing spat between Adobe and Apple, the presence of Flash might turn out to be the most juicy part of the show.
Google I/O takes place Wednesday, May 19 and Thursday, May 20 at Moscone West in San Francisco. Watch for coverage on Webmonkey, here on Gadget Lab and across Wired.com.
See Also:
- Android 2.2 ‘Froyo’ Features USB, Wi-Fi Tethering
- Android Devices Crave Google’s Attention
- Android Fragmentation Declines, But Older Versions Still Rule …
- DIYers Hack Windows Mobile Phones to Run Android
- Adobe Demonstrates Flash on Android Tablet
Photo: (laihiu/Flickr)
Data Overtakes Voice in Cellphone Use
Posted in: Phones, Today's ChiliThe new cellphone killer app is data. Spring Nextel boss Dan Hesse says that voice-use has dropped to less than half of cellphone network traffic.
According to the CTIA, the number text message sent last year was up 50% on the year before. Add to that email, the multitasking nature of SMS and instant-messaging, and the other non-voice-based communications available on our phones today and its easy to see why people prefer to keep their mouths shut.
People see voice as intrusive and as a waste of time, says an article in the New York Times, saving it for a last resort. Think about how annoying it seems to fax people instead of emailing them and you get the idea.
Cellphones aren’t even designed for calling anymore: gone are the days of seeing a grandmother on the bus reading numbers from a piece of paper and dialing them in on a number-pad. If a phone has a keyboard today, it’s likely QWERTY, and bashing out numbers on a numerical keyboard isn’t fun.
This is no surprise to me. My communication priorities break down something like this: First, email, then IM, Twitter, text message and finally, if I am desperate or someone catches me out, I will actually talk to them. I never answer the landline at home because it is never a call for me.
This tumbling of voice on the cellphone networks is why the telcos are pushing so hard on selling data plans. More and more devices will be always-on, just like the Kindles, iPads and smart-phones of today. And just like in the distant beginnings of the cellphone market, the prices are starting high but are sure to drop. We can see a day, sooner than we might all think, when phones will not carry voice traffic at all. The few remaining person-to-person conversations will be piped over VoIP.
Cellphones Now Used More for Data Than for Calls [NYT]
Photo: Moriza/Flickr
Apple Rejects Wi-Fi Sync App for iPhone
Posted in: apps, iPhone, Phones, Today's ChiliApp Store rejections appear as often as panhandlers around Union Square, but the refusal to let Greg Hughes’ Wi-Fi Sync app into the store deserves a special mention. Hughes’ application works in tandem with a helper app on your Mac and enable iTunes and your iPhone or iPad Touch to sync wirelessly over your local network.
Why is this notable? First, because it is insanely useful, and something that the iPhone should just do already. Second, because Apple admitted that the application doesn’t break any rules. The app is completely legit. An Apple representative told Greg over the phone that “the app doesn’t technically break the rules [but] it does encroach upon the boundaries of what they can and cannot allow on their store.”
UPDATE 5/14/2010: An Apple spokesperson contacted Wired to say that the app was rejected for technical reasons, including reading and writing data outside the app’s container, and security issues.
This is the very heart of the App Store approval problems. Rules are fair enough, however dumb or restrictive they might be, as long as they are made explicit and everyone knows how to play the game. But these arbitrary decisions are the equivalent of Apple playing a game of soccer and then declaring that scoring with your head is now illegal because it means you’re winning, and it’s Apple’s ball. And Apple is going home now, so there.
There is good news. If you’re willing to jailbreak your iPhone, you can buy the app for $10. Suck it, Apple.
Wi-Fi Sync for iPhone: now available on Cydia! [Get Wi-Fi Sync]
Wi-Fi Sync app rejected by Apple, headed to Cydia for $9.99 [Engadget]
See Also:
- 5 Things Apple Must Do to Look Less Evil
- Google’s ‘Don’t Be Evil’ Mantra Is ‘Bullshit,’ Adobe Is Lazy …
HTC EVO 4G $200, on Sale June 4
Posted in: 4G, Phones, Today's Chili, WiMAXSprint’s first 4G smartphone, the EVO 4G, will go on sale June 4 for $200 after a mail-in rebate. (The full price is $450, but if you grab one from Best Buy, you’ll get the discount applied when you buy.)
The Android-powered WiMAX phone runs on the speedy 1-GHz Snapdragon processor, has a front facing 1.3-megapixel camera for video conferencing, an 8-MP cam for shooting photos and videos and a huge 4.3-inch touchscreen. It also requires a special, mandatory data plan. Sign up and you’ll have to pay an extra $10 per month for the 4G access, but this gives you true unlimited data instead of the 5GB limit on regular 3G plans.
Another of the EVO’s best features, the ability to use it to share the WiMAX connection with up to eight other devices by Wi-Fi, will also cost extra. $30 per-month extra, in fact. It will be interesting to see what happens to this plan if and when the EVO is updated from Android 2.1 to 2.2, which has native tethering built in to the OS.
EVO product page [Sprint]
Sprint’s WiMax Plans Have No Data Cap [Phonescoop]
Sprint selling HTC EVO 4G on June 4 for $199 [Engadget]
Contract details [Sprint]
See Also:
- Sprint, HTC Unveil First 4G Android Phone
- Blazing-Fast 4G MiFi Could Replace Your Home Connection
- Sprint Overdrive 3G/4G Mobile Hotspot by Sierra Wireless
- 3G Too Slow? Sprint Will Offer 4G Phones This Year
- Sprint Hacks Together 4G iPad, Kinda