Weekend Reading – November 13
Jailbreak Community Battles Apple for Control of iPhone
Wired has an interesting article from Brian Chen in its Gadget Lab detailing the history of the jailbroken (jailbreaked?) iPhone, Apple’s efforts to thwart hackers and even a link to an application that will easily jailbreak your iPhone in two minutes.
And while you’re on the Wired website reading this article, be sure to also check out Brian’s article from August this year, “6 Reasons to Jailbreak your iPhone.”
Bada, Samsung’s New Open-Source Operating System: What’s the Beef?
“Does the world really need another OS?” asks Addy Dugale at the start of this Fast Company article about a new smartphone operating system from a handset manufacturer that already produces devices running Windows Mobile, Symbian, Android and LiMo. With four smartphone OSs in their lineup, why would Samsung launch its own operating system? Perhaps the Apple iPhone’s 17 percent share of the smartphone market has something to do with it? Read Addy’s article to get all the details, and be sure to watch the Samsung Bada video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlUCPcos3o4:
For a little more detail in video format, Mobile Gazette has its own explanation of Bada http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpjxHGvnevc:
Coming to CES…
“In case your smatphone/netbook ain’t cutting it” was Engadget’s rhetorical statement last May regarding smartbooks, a new category of devices that are slightly smarter than a smartphone and slightly phonier (as in more phone) than a netbook. Some news out this week from Qualcomm and some Engadget discovered from Mobinnova are profiled in two articles that gives us a little more detail about this new device category certain to make — or at least attempt to make — a splash at next January’s Consumer Electronics Show.
In case you miss it
Verizon and AT&T have been having a war of words that seems to be escalating into a war of attorneys over Verizon’s “There’s a Map for That” advertising campaign. The Verizon campaign, which plays off Apple’s “There’s an App for That” iPhone campaign, shows two maps, a red Verizon map of the US indicating robust wireless data coverage and a blue AT&T map indicating sparse coverage. Eric Zeman at InformationWeek shares a letter that AT&T posted publicly refuting Verizon’s claims. This tit-for-tat battle between the two largest wireless carriers in the US is just ramping up and will certainly produce more fun moments as the two companies fight for new customers and ARPU in a market reaching saturation. When you choose your carrier, TheMoPRBlog wants to know: are you a red stater or a blue stater?
Sphere: Related Content
