WSJ corroborates the mini-iPhone, says Apple may make MobileMe free

The Wall Street Journal has weighed in on rumors of Apple’s smaller iPhone, and citing “people familiar with the matter” the publication says that the rumors are likely true. One such familiar person reportedly saw a device half the size of the iPhone 4, bearing the codename “N97,” and said that the handset will be only about half the size of the original, and at only around half the price too. Amazingly, those anonymous sources continued to divulge information, expressing the idea that Apple could finally make its MobileMe cloud service suite free, and that it just might be the platform from which Apple could finally launch a streaming music platform and lessen the need for all those gigabytes of flash storage in your pocket. We’ll let you know if or when any of that happens, okay?

WSJ corroborates the mini-iPhone, says Apple may make MobileMe free originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 Feb 2011 14:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T adding $35 3GB plan, cutting 5GB plan to $50 for LaptopConnect devices

We’re still mourning the untimely death of unlimited data, but the good news is that carriers are still playing with plan pricing to figure out what the market will bear — and in at least some cases, it’s for the cheaper. AT&T’s on the verge of revising its 5GB LaptopConnect plan (the type of plan you use on USB modems and MiFis) down from $60 to $50 per month with overage now $10 per 1GB rather than $0.05 per MB previously — $50 per GB. Additionally, the old 200MB plan for $35 is being replaced with a “promotional” 3GB plan at the same price (also with $10 per 1GB overage), though no expiration date has been put in place just yet. The changes dovetail conveniently with the recent tethering / mobile hotspot boost to 4GB, and might even suggest a boost in AT&T’s confidence over its network as it starts upgrading to HSPA+ nationwide.

[Thanks, Amg]

AT&T adding $35 3GB plan, cutting 5GB plan to $50 for LaptopConnect devices originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 Feb 2011 12:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung preparing a 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab 2 with Honeycomb for this Sunday?

Samsung’s MWC 2011 presentation is this Sunday, at 6PM Central European Time (midday for those on the American east coast). We already know it will feature a dual-core evolution to the Galaxy S smartphone and we know for a fact there’ll be at least one new tablet on show. Pocket-lint is today filling in some details about said Tab successor by identifying it as a 10.1-inch Android 3.0 device. That means Samsung is stepping right up to Motorola, whose Xoom still looks likely to be the first Honeycomb tablet to ship, and saying it can do better. It might just be able to do it, too, as the new and unnamed Tab is said to be physically smaller than Apple’s iPad in spite of having a slightly larger display. Somewhat less believable is the mention of a dual-core Qualcomm processor as the thing to power Samsung’s new tablet — can you really see Samsung undermining the future success of its Orion / Exynos chip by using a competitor’s hardware? Then again, weirder things have happened.

Samsung preparing a 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab 2 with Honeycomb for this Sunday? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 10:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bloomberg: RIM working to let BlackBerry PlayBook run Android apps, but Dalvik’s not the way

We’d heard sweet, sweet rumors that RIM would include a Java virtual machine in the BlackBerry PlayBook and even bring Android apps on board — and lo and behold, Bloomberg‘s corroborating those claims with no fewer than three anonymous sources. Where the new rumor diverges is that the Dalvik virtual machine used in Google’s OS reportedly won’t be part of the formula; RIM considered it, these sources say, but decided it didn’t want to get involved in the Oracle / Google legal fracas. Apparently, the company’s working on this secret project in-house and targeting a possible release in the second half of the year. We have to say, the ready availability of roughly 200,000 Android programs could be quite the shot in the arm if WebWorks and AIR don’t produce killer apps right away.

Bloomberg: RIM working to let BlackBerry PlayBook run Android apps, but Dalvik’s not the way originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 01:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC prepping VoLTE-enabled smartphone for MetroPCS

Hot on the heels of Verizon’s completion of a test call using voice over LTE on its LG Revolution, the word on the street is that MetroPCS is hooking up with none other than HTC for its own VoLTE-capable phone — though it’s not MetroPCS making the announcement: instead, the GSM Association’s technology director broke the news, which was followed by a swift “no comment” from the carrier itself. As PCMag points out, there’s a sense of urgency for MetroPCS to deploy VoLTE in short order because it’s using AWS bandwidth for its LTE services — the same bandwidth it uses for CDMA — whereas Verizon has LTE deployed down by its lonesome in the newish 700MHz space, which means MetroPCS could open up 4G bandwidth by migrating away from CDMA voice as quickly as possible. No word on when we might see this mysterious HTC device surface just yet.

HTC prepping VoLTE-enabled smartphone for MetroPCS originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 18:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Could the Next iPhone Really Be A Third Smaller Than iPhone 4? [Unconfirmed]

According to Bloomberg, the next iPhone may be two-thirds the size of the already (very) petite iPhone 4. That’s crazy small. But will it happen? More »

Bloomberg: Apple working on ‘cheaper, smaller’ and dual-mode iPhones, trying to kill SIMs along the way

Bloomberg is citing — you guessed it — “people who have been briefed on the plans” as saying that Apple is hard at work on taking the iPhone downmarket with a new model that’s roughly one-third smaller than the existing iPhone 4, possibly with the intent on delivering it midyear using mostly carryover components from the iPhone 4 to keep pricing down. Thing is, Bloomberg says that Apple is looking at launching the “cheaper” model at $200 off contract, which would be the same as the 16GB iPhone 4 on contract currently. Let’s not understate the fact that $200 off contract is dirt cheap by modern smartphone standards, which means Apple would have to be using every scrap of its enormous economies of scale to pull that off. In all likelihood, in fact, it’d have to abandon the 3.5-inch Retina Display — it might be too big for a “smaller” model anyhow. The pub goes on to say that the device could’ve been delayed or scrapped altogether since its source saw the device last year, but it’s something to keep an eye on; after all, Apple’s probably leaving money on the table right now by failing to go after the midrange with a current-generation handset, so this could be its golden opportunity.

Moving on, they’re also saying Apple’s working on a dual-mode iPhone that’d work on both CDMA and GSM — not a surprise at all, really (if anything, it was a little surprising to us that Apple didn’t kill off the existing GSM iPhone 4 and replace all SKUs with CDMA / GSM ones when it announced the Verizon model). There’s no mention of whether this model would have any manner of 4G support, but CDMA, GSM, and LTE in a single phone — with at least five bands, if not more — would be pretty wild indeed.

Finally, Bloomberg says (and our own sources have corroborated) that Apple’s working on a so-called “Universal SIM” technology that would eliminate physical SIMs altogether and make using the iPhone on different networks a simple matter of provisioning, not unlike American CDMA networks today. Of course, this rumor’s been through the mill before — and has already been killed off — so it’s hard to say whether this is something Apple is actively working on or has been shelved. The device independence afforded by the SIM has been one of the chief advantages of GSM networks around the world over the past twenty years, and we’d hate to see Apple succeed in killing that off in favor of some sort of locked-up iTunes nonsense, but let’s be honest: if anyone could pull off that kind of coup, it’d be Cupertino. More on all these rumors as we hear it.

Bloomberg: Apple working on ‘cheaper, smaller’ and dual-mode iPhones, trying to kill SIMs along the way originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 7’s copy and paste update now coming in March?

If you don’t have a Windows Phone 7 device, you may have assumed that first major update with copy and paste support had been released to end users by now — and we wouldn’t necessarily blame you. If you do have a Windows Phone 7 device, however, you know how very untrue that is… and the latest rumors suggest that you won’t be on track to get it this month. To be fair, Microsoft never promised that we’d see the update on handsets in February in any official capacity, but rumors at one time had suggested it’d happen; of course, they also suggested January, so you see how that goes. Anyhow, both Neowin and ZDNet‘s Mary Jo Foley are liking March 8 as a possibility, citing the difficulties in getting carriers and manufacturers on board for a coordinated launch of a firmware update that they’re all accustomed to having more control over. Since early last year, Microsoft had said it’d be controlling platform updates pretty tightly — certainly more tightly than in the disjoint Android world — and we can imagine that takes a little bit of adaptation for the likes of LG and Samsung. Anyhow, here’s hoping everyone’s up to date on the 8th, eh?

Windows Phone 7’s copy and paste update now coming in March? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 12:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC to debut Android phone with dedicated Facebook button that doubles as Winklevii irritant

Do you know how much time is lost having to jump out of an application to click on the Facebook icon (or widget) on your home screen? That 0.4 seconds, when done hundreds of times each and every day (assuming you ever leave the Facebook screen in the first place) can really add up — precious time you could spend updating your status and liking your girlfriend’s brother’s Business Cat wall post. INQ figured it out, and HTC may have found a way to restore those precious seconds, as well. According to The Financial Times, the company plans to introduce an Android device with a dedicated Facebook button (note: not a “Facebook phone”). We wouldn’t expect anything crazy out of the clicker, however, as the dream crushers known currently as “people familiar with the device” say its purpose is to take you to the Facebook front page — if you want something more. HTC is expected to introduce it this month, and if we were betting folk, we’d say that meant Mobile World Congress next week.

HTC to debut Android phone with dedicated Facebook button that doubles as Winklevii irritant originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 12:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bloomberg: Nokia definitely in talks with Microsoft, partnership likely (update: WSJ, too)

Nokia will jump from the burning platform this Friday, but whither will it dive? Towards Microsoft and Windows Phone 7, as continually rumored, or towards Google and Android? Two turkeys told us the latter isn’t likely, and Bloomberg‘s anonymous sources seem to agree, saying that Nokia is indeed in the final stages of talks with Microsoft, and is “close to announcing a software partnership.” These spooks also say that Google was also in the running, but is no longer favored for the job, and as such we’re very likely to see Windows Phone 7 running on Nokia devices soon. We’re sure you’ll have some very strong opinions about that — we had a few ourselves — but please keep it clean in comments below!

Update: The Wall Street Journal just published a report of its own, by and large saying pretty much the same thing as BW. “If an agreement can be reached in time… Elop likely would announce the deal Friday.” The report also said an executive shakeup might be in the works, with “several senior members of the executive board expected to leave.” Show of hands, who all’s excited for Friday’s announcement?

Bloomberg: Nokia definitely in talks with Microsoft, partnership likely (update: WSJ, too) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 22:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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