Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Android on your iPhone | TechCentral

[By Craig Wilson]

There’s less and less separating mobile handsets from one another when it comes to the hardware that powers them. So, what happens when users can decide for themselves what operating system software they want to run on their phones?

Just looking at the latest smartphone offerings from Motorola, Samsung, HTC and other device manufacturers, high-end phone hardware is looking increasingly similar: dual-core processors, 1GB of RAM and screens with at least 900 pixels on the long side are now standard smartphone qualities, regardless of brand.

Despite minor differences in screen resolution, dozens of phones from different manufacturers all run Android pretty much out the box. What separates them is a user interface overlay of some sort — Samsung’s TouchWiz, HTC’s Sense or Motorola’s Motoblur.

And that’s really the point: as devices look more and more like one another, there’s less emphasis on hardware differentiators and more on the little tweaks and user interface alterations made by manufacturers.
And then there’s the iPhone. Unlike Android, Apple’s iOS software doesn’t even pretend to be “open”. But that hasn’t stopped people from finding ways around this. The iPhone can be “jailbroken” and then the possible alterations are only limited by the user’s imagination and abilities.

Apple tried to argue that “jailbreaking” a device violated end user agreements. But US courts disagreed, saying that once you as a consumer have bought a device, it’s yours to do with as you wish.

So what if you love iOS but can’t afford an iPhone, or you can but you’d love the LED-flash and higher resolution camera a competitor’s device has to offer? Just as some people run Windows on Apple Macs, and vice versa, it’s surely only a matter of time before you choose your device, and then your operating system, rather than the other way around.

Of course, manufacturers hate the idea. They spend fortunes on user interface design and operating system development, in part so that they can try and be the first to offer something a competitor doesn’t. Where devices are becoming more homogeneous, software is a great place to differentiate.

But the disapproval of manufacturers isn’t going to stop resourceful consumers from figuring out how to make their devices operate exactly as they’d like them to, even if that means replacing the software that powers them.

Android users are already well known for overhauling the software shipped with their devices through a process called “rooting” — not to be confused with the Australian use of the same term which means something decidedly less technical. By rooting an Android device, users can make big or minor alterations, from choosing to store applications on an SD card rather than the device’s internal memory to installing a heavily customised operating system.

Steven Ambrose, MD of SA consulting firm Strategy Worx and a serial device dabbler, says that as hardware gets more and more generic, it’s possible consumers will start installing different operating systems on their phones, much like they’d choose to install Linux on a PC instead of Windows.

“A perfect example is the HTC HD7,” Ambrose tells me. “That phone has been released running Windows Mobile 6.5, Windows MobilePhone 7 and Android. The devices have had slightly different names, but all run the same hardware.”


He says with the forthcoming iOS 5 from Apple no longer requiring a desktop or laptop to set up, this may be the final step required to move the ideas of the Hackintosh to the world of mobile devices. The Hackintosh community creates hacks that allow users to install Apple’s Mac OS X on non-Apple hardware.

Though the majority of consumers are quite happy to use their devices as the manufacturers intended, there are a growing number of power users who want to eke the most out of the hardware and make it conform to their expectations rather than the other way around.

iOS users might ask why anyone would want Android on an iPhone, and Android users might ask the same of iOS users, but consumers have different demands.

Recently, a woman approached me in a coffee shop and asked me to help her connect to the Internet. She put her MacBook Pro in front of me and my jaw dropped when I saw it was running Windows 7. I asked her why she’d ditched Mac OS X and she said it was because her company used software that didn’t run on the Apple operating system.

Like it or not, we’re still bound by the whims of those who make the smartphones we use and, despite the enormous capabilities inherent in their devices, we remain constrained by the artificial walls created by manufacturers. Those walls may be about to come tumbling down.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Social, mobile and the cloud are the future of collaboration | memeburn


Companies are looking for easier and more cost-effective ways to collaborate within their organisations. The death of Google Wave left room for more innovative ways of collaborating. The future of collaboration seems to lie in the convergence of mobile, social and the cloud.

“By 2014, all smartphones will transparently synchronise local data with at least one cloud service. By 2014, most organisations will deliver mobile applications to workers through private application stores”, says vice president of Gartner Research Monica Basso.

The Gartner Symposium/ITxpo Africa 2011 kicked off in Cape Town on Tuesday 23 August with a heavy focus on cloud computing. Analysts are convinced that “our future lies in the cloud” and that mobile technology seems to be best way to get there.

Basso’s presentation focused on collaboration via mobile devices with cloud capabilities and how they will drive innovation in the workplace. Her argument was heavily leveraged on the convergence of social media and emerging mobile technologies.

Basso sums up mobility’s move to using the cloud for consumer services including social network communities, microblogs, app stores and cloud synchronisation and file sharing.

“By 2014, social networking will replace email as the primary vehicle for interpersonal communications for 20 percent of business users”, she adds.

This takeover of email by social networks is important because, according to Basso, there is a new paradigm of collaboration in business. Social networks which were originally consumer oriented, for instance, are now being adopted by organisations.

This convergence of mobility and cloud in various consumer spaces leads to synchronisation of data:
“Cloud synchronisation enables mobile devices to synchronise local information and applications with a web-based, in-the-cloud service automatically and transparently. Information spans contacts, calendars, email and text messages, as well as pictures, videos, music, documents and other media. Service offerings include data backup, federation of social networking information into a single application, and so forth.”

Basso suggests that organisations integrate mircoblogging platforms such as Twitter, SocialCast and Yammer into corporate collaboration environments such as Microsoft SharePoint. She believes that such integration encourages employees to share ideas with each other as well as source ideas.

This type of mobile collaboration relies heavily on social tools that enables users to create one-to-one or one-to-many associations within or across timelines and is cost-effective.

“Convergence is developing on the device, bringing simplicity of use to people and letting them focus on messaging content only. Different messaging and social capabilities are converging into a single client application — integrating a variety of cloud services from multiple providers”, says Basso.

Basso also warns that organisations are losing control of data with consumer mobile cloud. She stresses the importance for businesses to be alert and provide more secure alternatives. Security is recurring theme in the cloud. Daryl Plummer, another Garnter analyst, says that 70 percent of companies with more than 1 000 employees are yet to start a cloud initiative because of the security risk.

“Cloud computing carries specific risks that are slowing corporate adoption. For example, cloud providers that serve a large number of customers generally cannot tailor contracts to address the individual needs of a given customer. As a result, most public cloud services operate the same way for all customers, with only minor differences”, says Plummer.

Basso suggests that organisations put policies in place for a more secure service. She also emphasises that investing in mobile device management is important to ensuring a secure mobile cloud service.
Plummer predicts, however, that security issues will persist in the cloud through to 2013 but “80 percent of cloud security incidents will be due to administrative error by cloud service providers or user management of cloud services.”

Ultimately it is up to the organisations who rely on the cloud heavily for collaboration to take the necessary steps to secure their servers and carefully choose their providers.

Gadget Web Site - BlackBerry launches 3 new Curves


BlackBerry launches 3 new Curves

23 Aug 2011 by Editor
* Follow Gadget on Twitter on @gadgetza


Research In Motion today announced the BlackBerry Curve 9350, 9360 and 9370 smartphones, all featuring the company's new BlackBerry 7 Operating System.

Research In Motion (RIM) today announced three new BlackBerry smartphones featuring the BlackBerry 7 Operating System (OS). The all-new BlackBerry Curve 9350, BlackBerry Curve 9360 and BlackBerry Curve 9370 smartphone are exciting additions to the popular BlackBerry Curve series.

These new models are designed to address a large and important segment of the global mobile phone market where customers are looking to upgrade their existing feature phone or existing BlackBerry Curve with an affordable, easy-to-use, full-featured and socially-connected smartphone.

“These new models will build on the incredible success of the BlackBerry Curve line and further expand the largest global launch of BlackBerry smartphones in our history,” said Mike Lazaridis, President and Co-CEO at Research In Motion. “The new BlackBerry Curve smartphones are absolutely stunning and offer a significant performance upgrade with an unmatched mobile social experience for the millions of feature phone users in the market as well as our existing Curve customers.”

Everything You Need

The new BlackBerry Curve smartphones are slim, stylish and simply beautiful. They are ergonomically designed with a comfortable and iconic keyboard for fast, accurate typing and an optical trackpad for easy, one-handed navigation. GPS and Wi-Fi support are also included, as well as a 5MP camera with flash and video recording so that memories can be captured and instantly shared on social networks. The microSD/SDHC slot supports up to 32 GB memory cards for additional media storage.

In addition to supporting the new BlackBerry 7 OS, the new BlackBerry Curve smartphones feature a range of powerful hardware enhancements including upgraded processors, displays and memory, and built-in support for NFC (Near Field Communications), a new technology that is enabling many exciting capabilities, including the ability to pair accessories or read SmartPoster tags with a simple tap of the smartphone.

Next-Generation BlackBerry 7 OS

BlackBerry 7 introduces a next generation BlackBerry browser which combines the dramatically improved performance of the advanced WebKit browser engine with the hardware enhancements in the new BlackBerry Curve smartphones to deliver a significantly faster, more fluid web browsing experience. 

Additional enhancements to this next generation BlackBerry browser have also enabled smoother navigation and optimized HTML5 performance for incredible gaming and video experiences.

BlackBerry 7 OS also includes a number of other pre-loaded applications and integrated functionality for increased productivity and collaboration right out of the box. The Premium version of Documents To Go is included free of charge, offering users powerful document editing features as well as a native PDF document viewer. 

BlackBerry® Protect is also pre-loaded*, offering customers the peace of mind that personal data can be backed up and secured in the cloud. With BlackBerry Protect, users can locate their misplaced BlackBerry smartphone using GPS or remotely turn up the ringer for an audible notification if their handset is close-by. 

BlackBerry® Balance (announced May 2, 2011) is integrated in BlackBerry 7, allowing users to enjoy the full BlackBerry smartphone experience for both work and personal purposes without compromising the IT department’s need for advanced security and IT controls. The popular universal search capability has also been enhanced with support for voice-activated search, so users can now simply speak to begin searching their device and the web for information.

Best In Class Communications and Social Experiences

The next generation BlackBerry Curve smartphones deliver the world’s best mobile communications and social experiences with a highly refined and integrated suite of phone, email, messaging and social apps to keep users connected and productive throughout the day.

The latest release of BBM™ (BlackBerry® Messenger) is pre-loaded and now extends the real time BBM experience to a range of other apps, such as Foursquare, allowing users to easily interact with each other from within the ‘BBM connected’ app (see separate announcement on July 28, 2011).

The updated Social Feeds (2.0) app has been extended to capture updates from media, podcasts, and favorites all in one consolidated view. The new Facebook® for BlackBerry smartphones (2.0) app introduces features like Facebook chat and BBM integration that makes it easier for users to connect with their 
Facebook friends in real time utilizing push notifications. Twitter for BlackBerry smartphones also delivers a deeply integrated experience including use of real time push notifications and Social Feeds integration.

Availability

The BlackBerry Curve 9350, 9360 and 9370 smartphones are expected to be available from carriers in Canada this month and from other carriers around the world beginning in September. Availability dates and pricing for specific devices from specific carriers will be announced in conjunction with RIM’s partners.

Why do businesses need to benchmark communication costs?

You don’t know what you don’t know, and you cannot manage that which you don’t measure.

We are always amazed at how businesses [big business included] make decisions around vendors and solutions for their communications needs with little or no accurate fact-based information of their own. The reliance on vendors and their sales person[s] is high. And uninformed decision making can lead to poor decision making.

Time and time again businesses we are working with implement solutions based on information received from the sales person who sold the solution to them in the first place. This information is typically neither supplier agnostic nor the full picture due to lack of access to information.    

At CommsCloud we believe that managing telecoms without Business Intelligence [BI] tools is like running a large business without accountants or computers. Your procurement decisions in the communications space can end up being with your business for many years to come and we see the results thereof in our customer base every day.  

Our point of departure for any new client is to gain a detailed understanding of their communications costs before offering up any opinion. We do this by performing a detailed Audit of all their fixed and variable costs; for all their service providers.

During this process we benchmark their communications costs against;
  • Market trends in SA 
  • Industry Best Practice Standards   
The information we gather and report on in during this audit phase is used to build a documented business case which informs all the decision making for all the roles players going forward. 

And in our experience if decision makers and their project managers are well informed, return on investment and user experience with new solutions and services will be greatly enhanced.

Lastly, with accurate information [benchmarking included] your business is able to measure savings, hold service providers accountable to their SLA's and ensure a successful implementation of any solution or service.  

Peter Walsh
Cape Town
August 2011

Monday, August 22, 2011

Vodacom reduces business data prices - ICT | Moneyweb

Johannesburg 22 August 2011:

Further to the recent announcement on reductions in data pricing, Vodacom’s Business Services has announced a significant reduction in broadband prices for its Premium Business DSL offerings.

“Our premier DSL services cater for the specific needs of businesses in South Africa and provide companies, from SoHos and SMMEs to large corporations, with an Internet connection that delivers greater choice, exceptional quality, increased cost efficiencies and an excellent user experience,” says Chris Ross, Managing Executive: Commercial Development.

Delivered through Vodacom’s Business Services, and exclusively for business customers, DSL broadband services are delivered over fixed lines to business users almost anywhere in the country. Additional and optional 3G failover brings even higher reliability to users.

Ross explains that Vodacom procures bandwidth from a variety of cable systems, including SAFE, SAT3, SEACOM and EASSY, and uses technology that blends these to create complete reliability. “We are not dependent on any one system and so if one fails there is a transparent switch to another source. With the addition of an optional 3G failover service, available on our CPE routers, our users enjoy reliable connectivity – one of the most important benefits for our users.”

In addition, because Vodacom provides lower contention rates, this results in the delivery of a higher quality service to their business customers.

There are several packages and service bundles available, including hardware such as routers, modems and VoIP devices. Existing customers are welcome to either upgrade or renew contracts to take advantage of the new pricing, says Ross.

“We are committed to meeting the market needs of our business customers, and have heard what they want from a services supplier – reliability, availability, robustness and quality at a reasonable cost. Our new pricing structure, together with our existing infrastructure delivers this and gives them the flexibility and power to choose the solution that best meets their needs,” Ross concludes.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Motorola Xoom review: fit but fat tablet | TechCentral

Craig Wilson, TechCentral

Motorola’s Xoom has (finally) gone on sale in SA. Though it was originally regarded as the ultimate Android response to Apple’s iPad, much has changed since it was first released in international markets in February. TechCentral’s Craig Wilson spent some time with the Xoom to see how well it stacks up against the competition.

The Xoom — which has a recommended retail price of R6 599 — comes preinstalled with Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) from Google, but this can be updated to 3.1 immediately. The update is necessary to enable the SD card slot, which allows expansion the Xoom’s 32GB of internal flash memory by up to another 32GB.
Though the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 is today regarded as the iPad’s greatest rival, the Xoom was lauded highly when it came out. It won the coveted award for best tablet at CES in January. However, SA consumers won’t be comparing the tablet to what was available at the start of the year, they’ll be matching it up against what’s on sale now. And, despite the Xoom’s impressive specifications, it has a couple of glaring problems when compared to its nearest rivals.

The main problems are that the Xoom is heavy and relatively thick. At 730g, it weighs the same as the first generation Wi-Fi-and-3G iPad, but that makes it 120g heavier than either the iPad 2 or the Galaxy Tab 10.1.

Also, like the first iPad, it’s considerably thicker than either the iPad 2 or Galaxy Tab 10.1. The result is a tablet that feels bulky and heavy, and one that demands to be handled with two hands at all times. These aren’t minor problems.

The Xoom could be considered a great device when it came out, but six months is an aeon in technology terms.

Let’s look at its specifications. It’s powered by Nvidia’s Tegra 2, 1GHz dual-core processor and has 1GB of DDR2 RAM. It supports just about every major video and audio file format, includes a GPS, an electronic compass and even a barometer (for the weather geeks).

There’s also a dual LED flash with a 5-megapixel rear-facing camera, a 2-megapixel front-facing camera — better than the VGA offering on the iPad 2 — and it’s possible to connect the Xoom to any HDMI compatible screen (cable not included).

The Xoom’s screen deserves special mention. At 10,1 inches and with a resolution of 1280×800, it’s bright, crisp and capable of HD video playback — and is responsive to the touch. It’s clear that in the specifications department the Xoom holds its head high, even if it is the chubby kid out of the current pack of tablets on the market.

But what’s it like to actually use? We have a couple of criticisms of the Xoom in this department. The decision to put the power/unlock button on the rear is strange, and one that takes some getting used to.
Then there’s the user interface (UI) itself. Strangely, the Xoom only allows widgets and shortcuts to be placed a minimum of an inch away from the left and right sides of the screen when in landscape orientation — no doubt to allow it to squash everything in when in portrait mode. It’s also pretty restrictive in terms of how
close together you can place widgets.

But given the camera is centred above the screen in landscape mode, and the placement of the power/unlock button also suggests landscape is intended as the default orientation, there was surely a better solution than forcing users to sacrifice an inch of screen real estate on each side, on each home screen.

Motorola has opted to put the notification bar, which includes a digital clock, connectivity and battery indicators as well as the back, home and switch application buttons along the bottom of the Xoom’s display. It works well enough, but in order to access things like Wi-Fi settings users have to tap the connectivity icon, then a settings icon, and then Wi-Fi.

We didn’t like the Xoom’s unadorned and overlay-free Honeycomb UI out of the box, but we love the possibilities the processing power and screen afford the intrepid Android fan who isn’t afraid of doing a little bit of interface tweaking.

However, no amount of fiddling is going to make the Xoom weigh any less. And that’s really the problem: the Xoom was great in its day, but it doesn’t stack up anymore, especially not next to the only slightly pricier Galaxy Tab 10.1.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Microsoft’s Mango is unexpectedly sweet

[By Alistair Fairweather]
 
I’m not the biggest fan of Microsoft. I’ve made that pretty clear over the years. The company has spent a decade in various degrees of stagnation, largely thanks to keeping Uncle Fester’s evil twin as its CEO. It has made a string of expensive and stupid acquisitions, including buying profit-less Skype for US$8,5bn and pumping a reported $1bn into an ailing Nokia in an attempt to buy its way into a market in which it has proved too inept to make its own way.

And it has let the new Gang of Four (Apple, Google, Amazon, Facebook) colonise all the vibrant new markets from mobile phones and tablets through to search and social media. After two decades of almost complete dominance in the realms of software, Microsoft now looks like a bit of a lame duck.

And so when I heard about Windows Phone 7, it was all I could do to stifle a yawn. “Wow,” I thought, “so Microsoft has finally caught up with the iPhone circa 2007. Pity it’s 2011.” (I’m a lot more sarcastic in my head than I am out loud.) I’ve never seen a Microsoft mobile device that impressed me in the least bit. Its Windows CE devices were just depressingly bad — at least the ones I saw and played with anyway.
And so when I picked up Chris Rawlinson’s new Samsung Focus running Windows Phone 7 “Mango” — the latest version of the operating system — I wasn’t expecting much. I’m an iPhone guy, and a snob, and (as I’ve said) I have pretty clear feelings about M$oft.

The interface is much slicker and more beautiful than any of the videos I’d watched led me to believe. Samsung’s beautiful Amoled screen certainly helps. It seems a little less sharp than the iPhone’s retina display, but the colours are incredibly vivid. Having grown up under the yoke of Microsoft’s trademark interface design ethos (that is, difficult, fiddly, clumsy and flat), I was expecting Mango to be more of the same. It’s not. Intuitive, fluid, immersive and reactive — this is a great user experience. It’s quite different from the iPhone, but for once “different” doesn’t just mean “we changed it so we wouldn’t get sued” or, even worse, “crap and poorly thought out”.

The Samsung Focus

I particularly enjoyed the active panels on the home screen, and the way social media and your contacts list are so neatly interwoven. The interface isn’t just a product of care and thought, but of passion and joy — things that have lacked in so many of Microsoft’s core products for years.

And so, I am eating humble pie. Microsoft, I will stop jeering at your failure with the aborted Kin, and at the crapness of Windows CE. Your mobile team has really impressed me, and that takes a lot.

Whether Mango will be enough to reverse the stranglehold that Android, Research in Motion and Apple have on the market is another question. It would tragically ironic if Microsoft finally found its mobile mojo two years too late. It’s going to have to pump billions into its applications platform in order to get a brand new ecosystem off the ground from a standing start. Without the buy-in of third party developers they are just not going to be able to make any headway.

But the Nokia deal is starting to look a little less foolish. If Nokia’s manufacturing scale can be combined with Mango’s beauty in a pleasing package, then Nokia has a chance to rise from its early grave. The problem is that both Nokia and Microsoft will have to spend their way into the market even to be heard. The momentum is not on their side.

Be all that as it may, the Focus is a beautiful device, running a beautiful operating system. I am still happy with my iPhone, but I can imagine this bad boy is a lot of people’s idea of heaven.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Apple vs Android vs Blackberry: Smartphone and tablet PC trends in SA « Gadgets « MyBroadband Tech and IT News

August 3, 2011

BMI-T recently revealed the results of their study in smartphone and tablet PC trends in SA

BMI-T recently conducted an online survey on MyBroadband.co.za in order to gauge tablet PC and smartphone trends among South African early adopters.

Ryan Smit, digital consumer unit head at BMI-T, explained that MyBroadband’s demographic includes highly technologically minded people which represent the early adopters of technology rather than the main stream mass market.

The survey had 1,500 respondents, BMI-T said, adding that the trends among early adopters are not necessarily indicative of what will happen in the mass market.

Ryan Smit, digital consumer unit head at BMI-T, described early adopters as the “tip of the wave” and explained that their perceptions are fairly fickle.

How likely are you to get a tablet PC?

BMI-T asked respondents how many already have tablet PCs, and whether they are looking at getting tablet PCs in the next few months.

Among the respondents, 13.1% said they have tablet PC now, with 24.1% saying they plan to get a tablet in 3 months, 36.3% in 6 months, 53.6% in 12 months, and 71.6% in 24 months.

Smartphone vendors rated

Respondents were also asked how highly they rate smartphone vendors. Unsurprisingly, Apple came out on top. The ranking was as follows:
  1. Apple – 65.4%
  2. HTC – 55.7%
  3. BlackBerry – 44.3%
  4. Samsung – 41.3%
  5. Nokia – 26.5%
  6. Motorola – 10.4%
  7. LG – 5.2%

Service provider smartphone offerings

The smartphone offerings of South Africa’s service providers were also rated. Vodacom received the highest rating at 54.8%, followed by MTN at 48.4%. The ratings then take a sharp drop with Cell C at 23.3%, Nashua Mobile at 19.4%, Autopage at 14.8%, and other service providers steadily getting lower ratings thereafter.

Smit said that 8ta wasn’t included in the survey as the new operator wasn’t around when they developed the survey.

Past, present, future handset choices

BMI-T also asked the respondents which handset they used previously, which they use currently, and which they plan to use in the future.

Here their findings correlate with those which World Wide Worx released earlier this year (2011), with Nokia’s market share amongst early adopters declining and BlackBerry, Apple, and Android manufacturers’ market share increasing.

Manufacturer Previous Current Future
Nokia 40.70% 23.40% 6.90%
Samsung 14.80% 11.80% 16.20%
Motorola 3.50% 1.50% 1.60%
Sony 14.80% 5.80% 2.90%
HTC 10.50% 15.10% 17.50%
BlackBerry 6% 23.60% 20.20%
Apple 6.30% 16.20% 30.80%
LG 1.90% 1.30% 1.00%
Other 1.40% 1.30% 2.80%

Interestingly, the current sentiment among early adopters seems to indicate a slight decline in the favour BlackBerry has enjoyed in South Africa, while the aspiration to Apple’s iPhone is quite high among the respondents.