Posts Tagged ‘android’

Weekend Reading – November 20

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Google Aims To Remake Computers

Quentin Hardy at Forbes details Google’s plans for the Chrome OS and an “ultra-cheap” portable computer in time for Christmas next year. Google is definitely a company with its head in the Cloud. With a host of Internet-based applications, Google is banking that users can do most of their computing online. Years after Sun’s John Gage first said “the network is the computer,” could Google be on the verge of making that vision a reality? Read Quentin’s article to find out.

King of the Cloud

Marc BenioffSpeaking of cloud computing, Steve Hamm at BusinessWeek reviews Saleforce.com CEO Marc Benioff’s (with Carlye Adler and Josey-Bass) new book, “King of the Cloud”. Based on Hamm’s review, this book looks like a great Christmas present for anyone in technology (hint hint).

By the way, The Economist had a very interesting debate about whether cloud computing is ready for primetime. In this debate, Benioff squared off against Microsoft Business Division chief, Stephen Elop. I already told you how the book review turns out; I won’t spoil the debate. If you want to know the outcome, you’ll just have to read it yourself.

Sending Shockwaves Across the Indian Telecom Industry

Many mobile markets around the world are or are approaching saturation. Some markets count their penetration rate above 100 percent. But at more than 400 million mobile subscribers, India is a hot growth market in a country of 1.14 billion people. As India’s telecom providers build networks and innovate services, a recent move by one of India’s GSM providers, Tata Teleservices (TTSL) is sending shockwaves across the country’s telecom industry. In India Today, a major business publication in India, Kushan Mitra explains the impact of the company’s new per-second pricing plan. TTSL’s per-second pricing plan is the only plan it offers, costing subscribers 1 paise (the Indian equivalent of a penny) per second. To put that in perspective, US carriers charge roughly 360 percent more than TTSL (excluding unlimited calling plans). AT&T’s 1350 minute personal plan runs $79.99 per month. At today’s exchange rate, 1350 minutes would cost $17.40 using TTSL’s 1 paise per minute pricing.

In a second article, Mitra explains how Tata executive Anil Sardana, newly appointed to run TTSL, not only fixed a broken company, but has become a transformative figure in the Indian telecom industry.

In case you miss it

On the other hand, as the US mobile market approaches saturation, a different market dynamic in the competition for mobile subscribers is taking hold. Last week ZDnet blogger Jason Perlow had an excellent post explaining the machinations of the US smartphone market and its ecosystem of carriers, handset manufacturers and smartphone operating systems.

John S

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Weekend Reading – November 13

Friday, November 13th, 2009

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?

John S

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Weekend Reading – November 6

Friday, November 6th, 2009

The $10 Phone Bill

Forbes November 16The cover story of current edition of Forbes magazine, written by Scott Woolley, is entitled “The $10 Phone Bill.” Such a scenario was discussed in the halls of the most recent CTIA, and Forbes teases “AT&T and Verizon’s worst nightmare is starting to happen.”

This in depth article about today’s North America wireless phone industry presents an insightful look at the challenges the major telcos face, the evolution of the industry to 4G and the acceptance of VoIP calls from mobile phones, and the opportunities for emerging players.

Just as interesting as the main article, a call-out article also by Woolley presents a Moore’s Law inspired analysis of Hi-Def Phone Calls. My favorite sentence: “Eventually the U.S. will catch up to Moldova, as the cost of better-sounding voice call becomes too cheap to ignore.”

iDidn’t, but you might have

In case the special effects laiden and action packed commercial of Stealth Bombers firing objects at unsuspecting farmers, school children, fishermen, hikers and motorists escaped your view, Verizon launched Droid, its first Android phone. This a much anticipated smartphone launch for Verizon, which has been losing market share to AT&T since that carrier’s debut of the iPhone in 2007. I am still curious why Verizon chose Air Force bombers firing pods into the US heartland as the visual for its launch of a smartphone. See for yourself, this commercial has erie Big Brother imagery.

By the way, on Twitter. Silicon Florist editor Rick Turoczy called to our attention that given all the hype about Droid coming to Verizon, who the owner of the website Droid.com turns out to be.

In case you miss it

On Friday last week it was reported that the board of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) unanimously adopted a new policy that will allow domain names in non-Latin based alphabets. This move clears the way for website addresses to be written in Arabic, Chinese, Hebrew, Hindy, Japanese and other languages.

And the winner is…

Guess who Fortune magazine named CEO of the Decade?

John S

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