• 17Feb

    Wi-REACH unit

    Like the idea of the MiFi units floating around at various carriers, but don't want to fork out the money when you have a perfectly good 3G dongle at home?  Wi-REACH is the perfect solution.  For $99, the Wi-REACH device allows you to plug your 3G USB stick in and use it like a MiFi hotspot.  The battery lasts for 4-5 hours of use, and the device can handle up to 10 simultaneous connections.  For those concerned with security, the connection is encrypted and password-protected so you can be sure that the sneaky neighbor isn't using it to download questionable things.

    The unit supports the following mobile broadband cards:

    • HUAWEI EM660, EM770, EC1260 (E620 USB Modem), EC169 (E620 USB Modem
    • ZTE AC580, MF622, MF626, MF636, MF637, AC2716, AC8710, AC2726, AC8700 (EVDO), HSDPA Z100M (ZTE AD3801), 
    • iCON 225
    • DTmobile DTM6211
    • Longsung U5100, U6100, U5300
    • Iridium Handset 9555
    • Siemens HC25
    • Motorola H24, C-Light, Phone (H24), Phone (G24)

    The full press release can be found below.  Neat technology, if I do say so myself!

    Connect One Delivers 3G/4G Personal Mobile Hotspot

    BARCELONA, Spain, Feb 15, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Connect One™, the Device Networking Authority™, today unveiled Wi-REACH Classic, a compact, battery-operated, mobile, personal WiFi hotspot that delivers high-speed Internet connectivity for laptops and wireless devices such as cameras, PDAs, and multimedia players. Using 3G/4G mobile network technology, Wi-REACH Classic quickly and easily provides multi-connection Internet access wherever you are, whether at the beach, in the car, or on the train.

    Wi-REACH Classic combines the connectivity of WiFi with the excellent mobile coverage of 3G/4G cellular. This wireless broadband device transforms an existing 3G USB modem into a personal Wi-Fi cloud that can be easily shared between as many as 10 Wi-Fi devices. Wi-REACH Classic is highly portable and completely cordless, fitting easily into a pocket. Its built-in rechargeable battery delivers four to five hours in normal use and can be recharged using the built-in USB connector.

    Thanks to upgradeable software, Wi-REACH Classic is designed to support up and coming networks such as WiMAX and LTE. Users can migrate to 4G networks with a simple software upgrade by simply plugging their next-generation USB modem into Wi-REACH Classic.

    “Wi-REACH Classis is portable, flexible and ready for the future,” noted Amir Friedman, Connect One’s CEO. “We designed Wi-REACH with ultimate flexibility in mind. It moves with you, moves between wireless networks, and keeps moving into the future.” Powered by ConnectOne’s low-power iChip technology, Wi-REACH Classic offers four-to-five hours of up time. Using a USB interface, Wi-REACH Classic supports the most universal and fastest growing wireless modem interface today. Future modems designed with the USB interface can plug into Wi-REACH Classic and keep it viable and current for many years to come.

    At the heart of Wi-REACH Classic is Connect One’s CO2144 “router on a chip” communication engine already in use by hundreds of OEM customers worldwide.

    Connect One’s Private Label Program allows operators, companies and distributors to private label Wi-REACH Classic and to embed Wi-REACH Classic functionality into new, innovative products. Detailed reference designs enable companies to build their own customized products.

    Price and Availability Wi-REACH Classic is available from Connect One at a price of $99. For more information on purchasing Wi-REACH Classic or joining Connect One’s Private Label Program, please contact sales@connectone.com or visit www.connectone.com.

    Via MobileCrunch


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  • 17Feb

    When the HTC Desire was announced yesterday, the first thing most people thought was "hey, it's a Nexus One with Sense!"  And with nearly identical specifications, the statement is mostly true.  As expected, the developer community started work on getting the Desire's ROM over to the Nexus One.  The problem?  After attempting to port the Desire's ROM over, it was quickly discovered that the internal storage is larger on the Desire.  As it stands, the system file is a bit too large for the Nexus One's internal storage, so while it works, it's not perfect just yet (read: not everything works).  The upside?  Flash 10.1 is included and enabled.  If you're up for the plunge, hit the links below, but be warned: any modification of your phone is done at your own risk.

    Via Engadget, xda-developers


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  • 17Feb

     

    Windows Phone 7 is EXCITING!!!

    For the first time I can remember, I am excited about a Microsoft product. I'm not a gamer and Xbox lacks a Blu-Ray drive, so 360 did nothing for me. I tried Vista and Windows 7 for a spell but couldn't find a video editor I liked and so went back to my Mac. Zune HD? Nice product, but I listen to music on my smartphone, sorry. But now a Windows Phone preview, of all things, has me excited about Microsoft.

    That doesn't mean Windows Phone 7 Series will be any good when it ships. And it obviously suffers from one of the worst names in the history of names (seriously, guys, at least knock it down to "Windows Phone 7"). But it has me excited right now.

    Why? Because it's different. What Microsoft showed in Barcelona this week is different from anything else in the smartphone game - at least visually. And what they did in building WP7S is different from how they build ... well, it's just not what Microsoft does.  Ever. Steve Ballmer and Co. tied WIndows Mobile up with some twine and tossed it out into the dumpster in favor of a brand new mobile platform built on a new kernel (Windows CE 6) with a new UI (derived from Zune HD). 

    Different. Totally different. And different, coming from Microsoft, is enough to make me pay attention. Plus, I kinda like the way the UI looks - at least for now, in semi-working, not shipping for 10 months, not tied to any one particular piece of hardware form.

    Windows Phone 7 is DIFFERENT!!!

    Apple's first iPhone moved smartphones away from Desktop-style Start Menus and directory folders and layers upon layers of lists and menus and towards a simple grid of icons. You want to do something on an iPhone? You look at a grid and choose an icon. You want to do something on an Android or Palm webOS phone? Sure, you can tap a widget or swipe a notification bar, but lurking beneath it all is that grid of Applications, beckoning you to look at it and choose an icon. As Microsoft so unabashedly beat us over the head with it at the WP7S launch, we're living in a grid-of-icons sea of sameness when it comes to our smartphones.

    Microsoft is throwing us a new metaphor: Hubs. Hubs that move seamlessly, sometimes seemingly infinitely, from function to function, data point to data point, task to task. There's a People Hub, a Zune (music) Hub, a Messaging Hub ... there are lots of Hubs.  Maybe even a Gaming hub that leverages the enormity of the Xbox Live network.  And there are photos and icons and sexy-looking text that live in "un-chromed" boxes on the Home screen and all of the other screens. The user interface just plain looks different from anything else on a phone right now.

    Will WP7S actually do anything different than other smartphones on the market? Well, yes and no. For all that the UI looks eye-catching, it sounds so far like it'll pretty much do the same things as Android and webOS when it comes to cloud services and unified messaging and integration of social networks with local contacts. But hey, that's a lot. That's state-of-the-art right now in many ways. And it's certainly more than iPhone OS does, right?

    Jettisoning the "PC Desktop on a tiny screen" approach that ultimately rendered WinMo 6.x a bloated pile of frustration is a great move. It also was just about the only move Microsoft had, given their fast eroding market share and blatant need to embrace the human part of the user experience that has led Apple to such great success with iPhone. Smartphones have gone mainstream, and mainstream wants a device that's easy, fluid, and maybe even fun to use. They don't want to poke around four layers of triple-tabbed settings screens in hopes of figuring out how to change a ringtone. They want to swipe and move and pinch and zoom - that's the mantra of Apple, Google, Palm and now Microsoft, too, when it comes to the modern smartphone experience.

    Windows Phone 7 MIGHT TICK EVERYONE OFF!!!

    The path to great reward is often lined with great risk, and Microsoft obviously rolled the dice in a big way in announcing WP7S. First off, the first phone running the new OS won't ship until "Holiday 2010," which means six to ten months from now (rumors have LG releasing a device as early as September, HTC has said "Q4 2010" for their WP7S debut). That's an eternity in cell phone land. What happens between now and then? Does Apple blow everyone's doors off with iPhone OS 4? Does Google takeover the space by sheer volume of Android devices spreading across the globe like a push notification virus? 

    Do millions of ticked-off Windows Mobile users write MSFT off forever because that Toshiba TG01 they just paid $500 for is now more or less useless because WM7S is literally the end of WinMo? 

    Seriously, who's going to buy a WinMo phone now outside of certain Enterprise and other users beholden to specific pieces of software, data, and other tech that will only run on their WM 6.x devices? Buying an Android phone is a crapshoot, sure, 'cause you have no idea if or when your myTouch Eric Clapton Special is going to get a 2.1 upgrade. But buying a WinMo 6.5 device is all of the sudden as close to a sure thing as there is: That baby will never run Windows Phone 7 Series. Sure, an HTC HD2 with its capacitive display and Snapdragon chipset might qualify for an upgrade one day. But your Samsung Jack or HTC Pure? Sorry, friend, no seven for you.

    Oh, those WinMo legacy apps you and your IT department are so beholden to? We'll know more at Mix 10 next month, but for now there's no indication whatsoever that you'll be able to run those on a WP7S device.

    And let's just touch briefly upon the HTCs and SPBs of the world who've made a nice little business out of software like Sense and SPB Mobile Shell that make WinMo phones better by hiding every possible trace of the Windows UI. What do they do now? HTC - and Samsung and LG like them - can continue to innovate on Android devices, but Microsoft has essentially reduced them back to being hardware-only partners in saying that custom skins will not be supported on WP7S devices. Vagaries are being bandied about regarding "extendibility" possibilities, but the days of HTC Sense for Windows are basically over.

    Windows Phone 7 ... just had to happen

    But again, Microsoft had no other choice. Tacking modern UI schemes like "finger friendliness" onto aging mobile platforms does not work. See: Nokia and Symbian S60. Or RIM, Verizon, and BlackBerry Storm. Or Microsoft and Windows Mobile 6.5, for that matter. Nokia's trying to figure out what to do with Symbian S60, Symbian^3, Maemo, and now MeeGo, and BlackBerry's now where Microsoft was three years ago (huge US marketshare but all sorts of outdated tech). Microsoft this week said, "Enough already!"

    Ballmer and Co. made their stand with the Windows Phone 7 Series launch and have given themselves the rest of this year to get the thing onto phones and into the market. They're also doing that Project Pink (Sidekick Sequel) thing, but that's another story. A lot will happen between now and December, and by then the excitement around this week could well have worn off, leaving Microsoft to start selling a new mobile platform while staring at the business end of Apple and Google - and maybe even RIM, still - holding an insurmountable lead in the US smartphone market. The men and women of Microsoft's mobile division certainly have their work cut out for them between now and then.

    But for now, it's exciting. I'm excited. About a Microsoft operating system for phones. Never thought I'd say that. Now if only they'd do something about that name. "Windows Phone 7 Pad" has a nice ring to it, no?


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  • 17Feb

    Editor's Note: For all things BlackBerry, be sure to check out our sister site, BBerryDog.com.

    When it comes to software updates for BlackBerry devices, I usually refrain from posting them on PhoneDog (due to the many leaks that happen on a regular basis).  But this one is a big one.  As most BlackBerry owners know, the Tour 9630 seems to be a forgotten member of the BlackBerry family (similar to the original Storm, if you remember that snafu).  Tour owners have written about their frustrations, and while there's a new (unofficial) OS released regularly for most of the current BlackBerry devices, the Tour has seen only a handful of updates.  Granted, RIM isn't responsible for unofficial OS leaks, so you can't directly blame them.  However, leaks are often a way of seeing what the company has in store for the device.

    On to the point.  Sprint has officially released OS 5.0.0.484 for the BlackBerry Tour 9630 online and through Desktop Manager.  Gone is the need to perform an unofficial upgrade, as it's live, in the flesh, and official!  Verizon users, the update hasn't arrived for you just yet - though you could run it (unofficially) on your device.

    All in all, great news for Tour users.  Hit the download link (here), or plug your 'Berry into Desktop Manager to get 5.0 rocking on your device!

    Via BBerryDog, CrackBerry


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  • 17Feb

    So it’s the end of day three of MWC, and what is normally the last busy day before things start to slow down on Thursday. Here are our key shouts, from today and last night.

    Sagem:

    The company announced its mobile phone, dedicated to sport. The Sagem Puma phone unveiling confirmed previous suspicions about its feature set. A few key features include assisted GPS, a 3.2mp camera, solar panelled rear and a 2.8”touchscreen. It will hit the shops in Q2, just before the 2010 Fifa World Cup.

    RIM:

    Rim has demonstrated its new BlackBerry web browser today at MWC. First impressions look promising; the new browser was built with the same tool as Google Chrome, Safari and Symbian S60’s browsers. Here’s hoping the final version reflects this

    Vodafone:

    Vodafone has announced a new handset, the Vodafone 150. The standout feature is the price tag, coming in at just £10 it’s the world’s cheapest phone. But don’t get too excited just yet, it’s aimed at the developing world and is being launched initially in India and Turkey and eight African countries.

    HTC:

    Just when you thought HTC had nothing left to give, along comes another budding handset. The HTC Smart is a mid-range mobile running Qualcomms Brew OS, it will also feature HTC’s signature Sense UI.  It looks as though the Smart has been snapped up by O2, and we should expect to see it in shops from April.

    Global Mobile Awards Key Points:

    Best Handset or Device: HTC Hero

    Mobile Industry Personality of the Year: Apple Co-Founder and CEO, Steve Jobs

    Best Mobile Enterprise Product or Service: RIM, for the BlackBerry Enterprise Server v5.0

    Best Mobile Technology Breakthrough: Orange for its mobile HD voice technology

    Best Mobile Game of the Year: The Last City

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  • 17Feb
    Hands on with Motorola's newest Android phone, the Cliq XT. Also known as the Quench, this is a touch-only device with MotoBlur.


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  • 17Feb


    Just when you though HTC had shown everything it had at yesterday’s press conference, another phone shows up, but this time it’s not a big-money Android or Windows Mobile device, but a mid-range affordable smartphone named the Smart.

    What makes the Smart especially interesting is HTC’s choice of operating system, which will be the Qualcomm-developed BREW. We’ve seen BREW in the UK before on the Skype phone and we also heard a rumour late last year about an HTC device named the Touch.B which would run the OS, but this is now official confirmation that the BREW Smart will be coming to the UK.

    Powered by a 300MHz processor with 256MB of RAM, the little handset does bare a passing resemblance to the original HTC Touch. The screen measures 2.8″ and HTC Sense will be used, while the phone will be equipped with a 3 megapixel camera with flash, MicroSD card memory expansion, Bluetooth 2.0, a 3.5mm jack socket and will come in a choice of black, white or pink colours. Best of all, the Smart will be a 3G phone with HSDPA.

    Pocket-Lint report that the HTC Smart will be exclusive to O2 in the UK from April and the pricing will be highly competitive.

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  • 17Feb

    Indian police report that Maoist terrorists have blown up a mobile phone tower in Orissa. The guerrillas asked the guard to leave – which he sensibly did, as he was

    • outnumbered twenty to one
    • outgunned
    • only defending a mobile phone tower

    They then destroyed said tower with a landmine.

    Maoists have destroyed dozens of towers over the last few years, fearing that improved communications (and basic civilization) threaten their existence. And they’re right. But they’re being short sighted (a common flaw in such groups) if they think turning back the tide of technology will help them. For one thing it’s impossible, and for another they end up turning their own people against them – as the Taliban discovered when they conducted a similar campaign: cutting mobile phone communications led to a huge backlash from the population, who lost enthusiasm for the glorious cause and in some cases even turned up to defend the towers.

    It just goes to show: you can curse the infidels all you want, but when you interrupt an unlimited airtime plan you’re playing with real fire.

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  • 17Feb

    The web browser inside BlackBerry OS could never be described as the best available and certainly not on par with the comprehensive and easy-to-use email client, however RIM have been working hard on the next generation of BlackBerry browser and have demonstrated it at Mobile World Congress.

    The new browser has been built using WebKit, the same as Google Chrome, Safari and Symbian S60’s browser, and was put through a series of tests to provide an idea of its future performance.  The results were excellent, with the browser earning a 100% score in the Acid 3 tests and boasting AJAX, HTML 5 and CSS compatibility.

    Although no mention was made of Flash or Silverlight support, the demo video did show a potentially Flash-based advert onscreen and RIM was previously rumoured to be adding Microsoft Silverlight to their next web browser, so we can keep our fingers crossed for both.  RIM didn’t discuss a release date, compatibility or delivery method – a download or via anew OS – during the event.

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  • 17Feb

    We reported on the Puma Phone last week, just as Puma put up a teaser website counting down to its launch and as expected, Sagem and Puma held a press conference yesterday at Mobile World Congress to debut this exciting new phone.  Initially the idea of another branded sports phone didn’t set our pulses racing, thanks to memories of lacklustre handsets like the Samsung Adidas miCoach, however, the Puma Phone is different. Why?  Let’s find out:

    • 2.8″ touchscreen with a 240×320 resolution.
    • 3G with HSDPA and HSUPA.
    • Solar panel.
    • Assisted GPS.
    • 3.2 megapixel camera.
    • MicroSD card slot.
    • 3.5mm jack socket.

    Things start to appear different when you use the phone. The OS is Sagem’s own and is full of colour, big icons, clear text and most importantly, a fun-filled feeling. Emphasising this is the way regular features have been given a playful side, for example there is a Sarcastic Calculator, plus Icon Messaging and an MP3 turntable. A front-mounted video call camera lets you make video calls too.

    But let’s not forget that the Puma Phone is a sports phone, so it also has an analogue stopwatch, a GPS run and bike speed tracker, a pedometer and a yachting compass. The rear mounted solar panel will charge the battery and an onscreen counter tells you the usage you can get out of the phone purely from sun-power, measured simply in texts or minutes.

    What could have been another dreary marketing exercise has instead become one of the highlights of Mobile World Congress. The Puma Phone is a proper phone whose technical side hasn’t been neglected, with only Wi-Fi missing, the design is great, the UI looks simple and fun and it has a cool solar panel for up-to-the-minute style. All this while incorporating the Puma brand with relevant features and injecting the company’s true personality into the device. Believe us, bringing all these things together at the same time is very difficult!

    Plus, any phone whose spec sheet lists an 81kg On-Demand Digital Cat named Dylan under ‘New Stuff’ gets our vote!

    The Puma Phone is scheduled for release during the first week of April, and there is a countdown along with some video demonstrations over at the phone’s official site.

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