Microsoft Announces Windows 8 App Store

A preview of Windows 8 from a public demonstartion. (Photo courtesy Ars Technica)

A blog post on MSDN by Steven Sinofsky, President of Microsoft’s Windows Division, confirms there will be a Windows 8 app store.

In the post, Sinofsky lists the teams that are working on Windows 8, and right towards the top of the alphabetical list is “App Store.”

Based on a legitimate-looking roadmap that was leaked last summer, we suspected Microsoft would eventually launch its own Windows 8 app store. One of the slides in the roadmap pointed to competitor Apple’s success for providing a “high quality, uncomplicated” product, while another outlined plans to replicate the company’s successful app store model. Apple opened the doors of its own Mac App Store in January.

“When we started building Windows 8 we had a clear sense of the direction we were heading and so we built a team structure to support that direction,” Sinofsky says in the post. He also goes into detail about how the teams divide responsibility, are made up of different roles, and how they go through the engineering process to deliver their product.


HP Kills TouchPad, Puts WebOS in Hibernation

HP announced it will no longer produce hardware running its webOS mobile operating system, discontinuing operations on future TouchPad tablets and the Pre smartphone devices.

“HP plans to announce that it will discontinue operations for webOS devices, specifically the TouchPad and webOS phones,” the company said in a statement. “HP will continue to explore options to optimize the value of webOS software going forward.”

“Our WebOS devices have not gained enough traction in the marketplace with consumers,” said HP CEO Leo Apotheker in a conference call on Thursday. “Continuing to execute our current device approach in this space is no longer in the interest of HP or its shareholders.”

In its first major push into mobile in years, HP launched its TouchPad tablet in June. The tablet runs the webOS mobile operating system. The company also launched its Veer smartphone earlier this year.

But HP’s proprietary mobile platform, acquired from Palm just over a year ago for $1.2 billion, hasn’t taken off. Major competitors Apple and Google dominate the smartphone arena with their respective iOS and Android platforms, while RIM’s BlackBerry OS and Nokia’s Symbian round out the competition. Along with Microsoft’s puny Windows Phone OS, HP trails behind all the other leading platforms in market share.

“It’s obvious that they were using the TouchPad as a make or break event for webOS devices,” said Ben Galbraith, former director of developer relations for webOS, in an interview.

The news comes in the wake of a huge announcement from Google earlier this week, when the Mountain View company announced its acquisition of hardware company Motorola Mobility Holdings for $12.5 billion. Traditionally a software-only company, Google is making its first foray into the hardware business. (The company did test the waters slightly with recent partnerships with Samsung and Acer, which both make the Chrome OS-powered Chromebook.)

The news of the Motorola acquisition set the technology world abuzz, with pundits speculating that Google would alienate its other hardware partners — HTC, Samsung, LG and Sony Ericsson. The new relationship between Google and Motorola could make Google’s partners wary that competitor Motorola may be privy to inside information on Android, cutting others out of the loop.

Tech pundits speculated that rivals HP and Microsoft could potentially capitalize on Google’s acquisition by licensing webOS and Windows Mobile OS out to these manufacturers.

“OEM’s like Samsung, HTC, and LG are looking to hedge their smartphone strategy in the wake of Google’s Motorola acqusition,” said Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps in an interview. “They’re looking at Windows, but potentially webOS is now in the mix.”

HP CEO Leo Apotheker said recently that the company had plans to license its software to third-party manufacturers.

“We’re looking at all business models, from licensing to any other possibility for webOS,” Apotheker said in a conference call on Thursday.

HP’s TouchPad tablet arrived DOA, despite an extensive TV ad campaign that features actor and comedian Russell Brand and Glee star Leah Michele (seen below). Best Buy retailers offering the tablet for sale are reportedly sitting on hundreds of thousands of unsold units, according to AllThingsD.

It’s also possible that HP could follow in Motorola’s footsteps, putting its patent portfolio on the market for a hefty sale. Google claimed multiple times that its acquisition was important for Motorola’s valuable trove of software patents, which would help protect Google from the deluge of lawsuits the company is currently facing.

“They made the first official mass-consumer smartphone. I’m sure they hold some very valuable patents,” said Galbraith.

In the wake of this week’s news, all eyes are now on key mobile players Microsoft, Nokia and RIM — the three major companies trailing clear mobile industry leaders Apple and Google — to see which OS will take on iOS and Android.

“There’s absolutely room for three operating systems out there,” said Rotman Epps. “The question was whether there was room for a fourth or a fifth. HP just answered that question.”


iPad App Lets You Finger-Paint With Video

Coffee

My ever-present coffee pot, rendered in beautiful pixels

Inspired by Robert Rauschenberg’s “Combines,” Composite is an iPad app that lets you collage together bits of real life as if you were painting them onto the screen. The app pulls a feed from the iPad’s rear-facing video camera, and you brush your fingers on the screen to fix the images in place. Think of scrubbing your fingers over a steamed-up window so you can see through and you’ll get the idea.

If you still don’t get the idea, then here’s a very long video of the app in action:

Neat, huh? You can combine many different elements together onto a single image, and you can tweak alpha, blur and so on as you go. It’s a very modern take on painting, and one which is likely to produce some great results in the right hands. Itching to get started? Go grab it now. While the designers’ Web site is still under construction, the app is available now, for $2. A bargain.

Composite product page [iTunes via Cult of Mac]

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Pricey New BlackBerry Has Way Too Many Caveats

With its hefty price tag and software quickly approaching its sell-by date, the upcoming Bold 9900 from RIM isn’t bold, it’s brash.

RIM announced the Bold 9900’s pending release Wednesday morning, and it’s one of five new smartphones RIM will debut before year’s end. On paper, the Bold 9900 looks like a strong smartphone contender. It runs the new BlackBerry 7 operating system, RIM’s latest software update to the mobile platform.

It’s also a hybrid device, so those who don’t want to lose a QWERTY keyboard to a new touchscreen can have both. And it runs on T-Mobile’s 4G network, which has decent enough data upload and download speeds.

But then you see the price tag, and it starts to fall apart.

The Bold costs a whopping $350 off the shelf, and that’s after a two-year service contract with T-Mobile. Even industry-leading Apple and Google aren’t charging that much for handsets. The priciest iPhone with 32 gigs of storage costs $300 with a Verizon contract, while most Android phones we’ve seen on contract will run you $200 to $250, max.

Fortunately, there is a $50 mail-in rebate for the Bold 9900. Just don’t forget to fill it out.

The Bold 9900 comes at a time when Canada’s Research in Motion has taken a beating. The PlayBook tablet flopped like a carp on a dock, which led Verizon to question whether to offer a 4G version. Sprint offers a Wi-Fi version of the PlayBook but decided last week to cut its losses and scrap a 4G version.

The Bold carries more caveats than its price. RIM is developing a new smartphone operating system powered by QNX, the operating system in the PlayBook. While the phone-based version of QNX isn’t ready for prime time, RIM honcho Mike Lazaridis says we’ll see phones running QNX next year. Trouble is, it won’t roll back to older BlackBerry devices, so if you buy a Bold 9900, Torch 9810 or anything else RIM released this year, you’re out of luck when the new OS arrives.

RIM needs to push out a winning product, and soon. So far, the Bold, Torch and three other devices RIM promises this year leave us yawning — and we’re not alone. With a dwindling market share, an ongoing soap opera of internal corporate struggles, and two major competitors making major mobile moves (Google-Motorola Mobile marriage, anyone?), all eyes are now on RIM to see what — if anything — the company has up its sleeve.

The BlackBerry Bold 9900 launches on T-Mobile’s HSPA+ network Aug. 31.


TableDrum App Uses Everyday Objects as Drum Triggers

Have you ever been stuck on a train/plane/bus or in a restaurant/classroom/meeting with a finger drummer? Finger drummers are those fidgety idiots who can’t help but tap-tappity-tap away at anything that will make an annoying noise: tabletops, the arms of seats, tupperware lunch boxes, anything. The louder and more obnoxious the better, it seems.

I don’t know whether this new iPhone app — TableDrum — will actually make things better or worse, but if you use it away from other people, it can certainly be fun. The app uses the iPhone’s mic to detect your annoying tappings and then triggers a sample of a proper drum. Thus the table can become a tomtom, a coffee pot can trigger a snare and a saucer can be a cymbal.

Before writing this piece I paired up the sound of my keyboard to trigger the high-hat. It’s pretty cool.

You assign a sound by long pressing the drum you want, and then tapping the real world object a few times. The app is surprisingly good at picking up the right sound, and also controls output volume based on how loud your taps are. Thus a light touch on my coffee pot gives a soft cymbal sound, whereas a good whack with the side of my thumb gives me a loud crash.

The app costs $4 (currently on sale for $1), and you get one drum kit. Further kits can be bought via in-app purchase.

Will you make great music with this app? Nope. Will idiot finger drummers be able to add yet another arrow to their arsenal of annoyances? Hell yes.

TableDrum product page [TableDrum via Oh Gizmo!]

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Popular Android Mod Creator Jumps to Samsung

The creator of one of the most popular Android software mod programs is now an employee of one of the largest Android smartphone manufacturers in the world.

Samsung Mobile has recruited Steve Kondik, creator of the highly popular CyanogenMod software, to work as a software engineer for the company.

“I will be working on making Android more awesome,” Kondik wrote to tech blog AndroidandMe.

A Samsung spokesman confirmed Kondik’s new employee status, but could not provide further details on the modder’s position or duties.

Kondik refused a request for further comment. According to a screenshot of Kondik’s Facebook page, however, his CyanogenMod software side project won’t be a part of his new gig at Samsung.

For phone geeks, one of the biggest draws to Google’s platform is Android’s customizability. As Android emerged as the true competitor to Apple’s iPhone over the past two years, the platform’s “openness” became one of Google’s main selling points. Unlike iOS, Android is available under an open-source software license, which means anyone who wishes to see the code behind the software can do so.

Kondik’s CyanogenMod software was a perfect fit for Android. Essentially, CyanogenMod replaces the stock Android software with a custom build, allowing for adjustments to your phone that you wouldn’t be able to make otherwise. From custom wallpaper to wireless tethering to even CPU overclocking, CyanogenMod became the official program for phone hackers since it was first released in 2009.

While Kondik says CyanogenMod and Samsung won’t have anything to do with one another, it’s easy to think his background in user interface tweaking and phone customization will influence Samsung’s software design. Especially after the company sent Kondik and a number of other CyanogenMod hackers free Galaxy S2 handsets well before the wide release of the phone.

And Samsung has proved willing to experiment with its own Android software interface. The company’s TouchWiz UI is also a custom version of Android, markedly different than the stock versions that come on other phones. In hiring Kondik, the company may go further with tricking out its own flavor of Google’s mobile platform.


OS X Lion Thumb Drives Now Available For $70

Lion thumb

Finally, people without the internet can update to OS X Lion

If you have a Mac, are nerdy enough to want to actually update its operating system and yet somehow don’t have any access to the internet, then you can now buy OS X Lion on a thumb drive.

The latest Lion-based MacBook Airs ship without any form of recovery media at all, although they will let you connect to the internet and download Lion even if your hard drive is hosed. You can also download the free Lion Recovery Disk Assistant and make your own bootable repair drive. Neither of these will actually let you install Lion without Internet access, though, unlike this new thumb drive.

It’ll cost you $70, but then you probably don’t even know that the same software can be downloaded for just $30 and burned to one of the thumb drives you already own, because you don’t have an Internet connection. Which also means that you’re not reading this post. Which means I can say whatever I want to you and you won’t even know. Moron.

OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive [Apple]

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Google Steps Up to Defend Android Developers From Patent Lawsuit

Google has intervened in an ongoing intellectual property dispute between smartphone application developers and a patent-holding firm, Wired.com has learned, marking the Mountain View company’s first public move to defend Android coders from a patent troll lawsuit that’s cast a pall on the community.

The company says it filed a request with the United States Patent and Trademark office Friday for reexamination of two patents asserted by East Texas-based patent firm Lodsys. Google’s request calls for the USPTO to assess whether or not the patents’ claims are valid.

“We’ve asked the US Patent Office to reexamine two Lodsys patents that we believe should never have been issued,” Google senior vice president and general counsel Kent Walker told Wired.com in a statement. “Developers play a critical part in the Android ecosystem and Google will continue to support them.”

Lodsys is currently suing 11 smartphone app developers for allegedly infringing the two patents, U.S. 7,222,078 and 7,620,565. Lodsys claims its patents cover the use of in-app payments technology, which allows users to carry out transactions within the context of an app itself. Countless app developers use in-app payments technology in their applications.

Lodsys CEO Mark Small did not respond to an e-mail, and the company did not immediately respond to a telephone inquiry from Wired.com on Friday evening, after Google filed its request.

If Google’s request for reexamination is granted, it could end up saving the developers and development studios — many of whom are composed of a handful of staffers — from large litigation fees.

“Reexaminations are often times a tool used to stay ongoing litigation,” said Julie Samuels, staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a non-profit digital rights advocacy group. “It’s much, much cheaper than federal litigation, which on average costs between two and five million dollars.”

Since Lodsys first began targeting application developers months ago, the patent saga has been long and messy. The firm originally dispatched a series of cease and desist letters to iOS and Android app developers in May. The letters threatened legal action within a 21 day period if developers did not negotiate to pay Lodsys a licensing fee for the use of the technology. The company is now suing 11 defendants, ranging from small app development studios to major game companies like Atari, Square Enix and Electronic Arts.

Dan Abelow, the former owner of the patents who sold them in 2004, told Wired.com he was unable to comment on the matter.

Lodsys’ actions are what many intellectual property experts refer to as “patent trolling” — the practice of using patents for little else outside of suing other companies for damages or coaxing them into licensing agreements.

Both Google and Apple have licenses for Lodsys’ patents, so Lodsys has been going after third-party developers instead. But the potential impact on Apple and Google is clear enough. Whether or not Lodsys wins its lawsuit, the threat of potential litigation for iOS and Android developers may cause them to think twice before creating apps for the two mobile platforms.

“In this case, the strategic interest of Apple and Google is to make app developers happy, or at least comfortable,” said Florian Mueller, an intellectual property analyst who has covered the lawsuit exhaustively in his blog. (Defendants Rovio and Illusion Labs declined comment.)

But despite the fact that two Android developers were named as defendants — Rovio, the Finnish development studio behind Angry Birds, and Illusion Labs, a Swedish company that produces the game Labyrinth — Google has remained conspicuously quiet on the issue until now, rankling many in the development community.

Apple, in contrast, has attempted to insert itself into the Lodsys lawsuit on behalf of developers. On Monday, Apple filed a brief claiming it has the right to intervene in the case because Apple provides the in-app billing technology to its developers and retains its own license for the patents in question. Therefore, Apple argues, its license extends to coders who use Apple’s technologies as well.

Google’s request for reexamination is the company’s first major public action backing up its developer community. If a reexamination is granted, the patents in question could be amended to the extent that they won’t affect developers.

“It’s rare that an entire patent is invalidated through the USPTO,” said Samuels. “More likely is that the claim of the patent will be narrowed.”

Google confirmed they filed this request “inter partes,” which essentially means Google will be involved in the precedings throughout the entire process.

“Inter partes requests are usually more thorough,” said Samuels. Ninety-five percent of “inter partes” reexamination requests filed since 1999 have been granted by the USPTO.

Of course, even if the USPTO grants the reexamination request, there’s no guarantee that the court will grant a stay.

“Courts have inconsistent track records of granting stays of litigation,” Samuels said. Especially in the eastern district of Texas — home to a federal court that is often favorable to patent litigation plaintiffs — where the lawsuit was filed. Eastern district courts grant motions to stay litigation pending reexamination around 20 percent of the time, according to a 2009 study conducted by Matthew Smith, senior counsel at Foley and Lardner LLP.

That could complicate things for the developer defendants, and potentially continue to cost them money for ongoing litigation expenses.

Still, Google’s request marks an entirely different strategy than Apple’s, and could potentially pay off for all parties involved.

Except, of course, for Lodsys.


Pics of New Android Operating System Leak into the Wild

Google first teased Ice Cream Sandwich at its developer conference in May. (Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com)

Images surfaced late Thursday afternoon that purport to show an unreleased new version of the Android operating system, codenamed Ice Cream Sandwich. The leaks first surfaced on Android enthusiast sites Android Police and RootzWiki.

From what we’re seeing, the images aren’t a radical departure from the most current release of Android for phones, version 2.3.4, code-named Gingerbread. What we’re seeing are minor tweaks — blue accents in the user interface, a redesigned version of the notification bar and Google’s “Shopper” app — but nothing that suggests a major overhaul.

Sources for AndroidPolice and RootzWiki, however, suggest there’s more to come that the pictures don’t show. According to sources for both sites, the newest version of Android will include a “panorama mode” for the phone’s camera, a new app launcher and application drawer and additions to Google’s “Shopper” app that allow NFC-enabled devices to use touch-enabled features.

A purported image from an unreleased version of Android, Ice Cream Sandwich

Since Android was first released in 2008, Google’s mobile development team has ramped up the software release cycle. Currently, Google releases a new version of Android approximately every six months. It makes sense, then, for recent builds of Ice Cream Sandwich to surface in August, considering Android version 3.0 (Honeycomb) first debuted in February.

Google first teased the new version of Android at its developer conference — Google I/O — in May.

With every new Android version release, Google typically pairs up with a specific hardware manufacturer, strapping the new software to a brand new product. Google launched Gingerbread on Samsung’s Nexus S in December, while teaming with Motorola to launch Honeycomb on the Xoom tablet in February.

Though the leaked pictures show a Nexus S running the purported new version of Ice Cream Sandwich, a source tells both Android Police and RootzWiki that the first device to receive the new build will be the Nexus Prime, a rumored smartphone yet to be acknowledged by Google.

More of the leaked screenshots can be found at the Android Police and RootzWiki websites.


Elements 2 For iPad. Markdown Gets Prettier

Elements2

Elements 2 adds a mess of options to the already great Markdown editor

You may remember Elements from last August, a time when new Dropbox-enabled text editors were popping up like mushrooms after a fall rain. Elements, from Second Gear software, distinguished itself by including a handy, popover scratchpad for taking notes, and with its Markdown-powered text editor. Now, Elements has been updated to version 2.

The new Elements, a universal app for iPad and iPhone, has a much-polished UI, but the main difference is getting things out of the app. It still syncs with an “Elements” folder in your Dropbox, but now there is a huge list of export options.

First, you can export you files as HTML or PDF to any Dropbox folder, not just the default “Elements” folder. You can also export to iTunes file sharing, to Evernote, to Facebook and to Tumblr.

The word, line and character counts remain, as does TextExpander Touch support and full-text search. There have been a few cosmetic tweaks, too. The icon is new, the whole app looks sleeker and more modern (there’s even a new default font — Museo Sans), and the Markdown preview has been cleaned up.

Markdown, if you’re not familiar with it, is a human-readable way to write HTML. You surround your words with symbols instead of ugly tags and when you run the text through the Markdown converter, these tags are added for you. Thus *bold* becomes <strong>bold</strong> (in HTML) and shows up in the final document as bold. (You don’t want to see the mess of code I had to write to make all those examples look right in the browser). It makes writing formatted text in a plain text editor very easy indeed.

And of course, you can always use Elements to write plain text, too.

Elements 2 is a free update for owners of v1.x, and costs a very reasonable $5 for new buyers.

Elements – Dropbox And Markdown Powered Text Editor [iTunes]

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