News

Lions of Bath 2010


The Lions of Bath layer has finally arrived, creating a city wide, Augmented Reality safari. Our new layer adds a new element of discovery and makes tracking down the elusive felines much easier.
 
The public art event takes place in and around the World Heritage City of Bath from the end of May to mid September, during which time, iPhone 3GS and Android device owners can use Layar to navigate their way around the city to track down the lions.
 
The Lions of Bath event was inspired by the successful King Bladud’s Pigs event in 2008, which brightened up the city, increased tourism and raised £200,000 for charity.
 

 

Lions of Bath Reality View Lions of Bath Map View

 

The fibre-glass lions, carefully designed by Alan Dun, have already had a number of outings, including the recent Bath Spring Flower Show and amongst a pride of real lions at Longleat. Lord Bath of Longleat being the event sponsor and lion designer.
 


See the lions at Longleat with their ‘real’ friends.


 
The lions shop, which opens soon in Milsom Place, will provide visitors with the starting point for their safari. To help raise awareness of this layer, we’ve created a simple video which we hope will run on the installed television during the event.

 


Posted in Android, Augmented Reality, Media Grand Products, iPhone | Tagged , , | Comments Off


Adobe EDGE article : Flash Player 10.1: Rich media experiences go mobile


A great overview of the latest Flash Player as it goes mobile.

Read the article


Posted in Adobe, Air, Android, Blackberry, Flash Player 10, Motorola, Nokia, Palm, Smartphone | Comments Off


Google Nexus One Android Superphone (gPhone)


Google have launched their Nexus One Android based ’superphone’ which looks fantastic (Super). Made by HTC with a 1Ghz Snapdragon chipset, it looks like a great alternative to the iPhone. It doesn’t have multi-touch as yet but that may be just around the corner with a later release of Android.
 
It comes loaded with Google products as one would expect (Gmail, Google Maps, Google Earth) and shows signs of a significant shift towards the popularity of mobile Internet. The device which is slimmer and lighter than the iPhone, is the first device to be sold direct from the manufacturer, SIM free and may well be the latest ‘must have’ device for 2010.
 
Google’s blog has all the details and how to get your hands on one.
 
Maybe it’s wrong to compare it only to the iPhone, but are there really any other competitors out there who can launch a huge marketing campaign (or will Google do what they do best and not advertise) and get not just techies, but regular folk buying it too?


Posted in Android, Apple, Products, Superphone, gPhone, iPhone | Comments Off


Adobe’s Flash 10.1 Goes Mobile (Minus iPhone)


Adobe’s next version of Flash supports Windows Mobile, Google’s Android, Palm’s webOS and RIM’ BlackBerry platforms. Missing from the list: Apple’s iPhone.
 
Adobe Systems today unveiled details on its rollout of Flash 10.1 to mobile devices, introducing support for Windows Mobile, webOS, Android, Symbian and the BlackBerry platforms.
 
Adobe’s Flash technology powers much of the video and interactive content on the Web, but currently smartphones can run only a lightweight version, Flash Lite, which supports some but not all pages that employ Flash.
 
That’s about to change. Adobe said today at its annual developer conference that the next iteration, Flash 10.1, supports Microsoft’s Windows Mobile, Google Android, Palm’s new webOS, Nokia’s and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry platform.
 
A public beta of Flash 10.1 for Windows Mobile and webOS will be available later this year, while Android and Symbian versions are due early next year.
 
The mobile version of Flash will also support multi-touch, accelerometers, multiple screen orientations and hardware graphics acceleration.
 
In the past, Apple CEO Steve Jobs has publicly criticized Flash technology, saying it’s too slow and inefficient for mobile devices. His company’s iPhone OS is now the only major platform that isn’t supported by Flash 10.1.
 
Adobe has been working to improve performance, increasing software rendering speed by 87 percent on mobile platforms versus desktop platforms, and reducing memory consumption by 55 percent, according to Adobe.
 
“With Flash 10.1, it’s more integral to these devices, so you’re getting fluid animation, faster rendering. It’s not consuming computing cycles and it’s not draining the battery power consumption, and that’s a major consideration for mobile,” Tom Barclay, Adobe senior product marketing manager for Flash.
 
Flash Player 10.1 is also designed to take advantage of media delivery with HTTP streaming, including integration of content protection powered by Adobe Flash Access 2.0. This initiative, codenamed Zeri, will be an open format based on industry standards and will provide content publishers, distributors and partners the tools they need to utilize HTTP infrastructures for high-quality media delivery in Flash Player 10.1 and Adobe Air 2.0 software.
 
The news comes as developers face an increasingly fragmented mobile market, having to program mobile apps for several different operating systems and smartphones, but that could change with Flash 10.1, said Avi Greengart, analyst at Current Analysis.
 
“This (news) is significant for several reasons: It ‘completes’ the Web browsing experience in many cases. For example, many newspapers and travel sites are useless without Flash. And, it enables Web developers who are already familiar with Flash to target mobile users, and it provides some level of cross-platform application development, for instance, write your mobile application in Flash 10.1 rather than, say C++ for Symbian, and your application will work on any mobile device with Flash 10.1 support, not just Symbian.”
 
Still, he says the new iteration of Flash is not the answer to all the issues faced by mobile developers. “It is not a panacea: Flash applications are not optimized specifically for a particular operating system or hardware implementation, and getting to market can be more straightforward with native applications and the platform vendor’s app store,” said Greengart. “It’s also worth noting that this is still just an announcement, not product delivery. We’re still a few months away from this being directly meaningful to consumers.”
 
Adobe last year established the “Open Screen Project,” in partnership with companies in the wireless industry with the goal of bringing full Flash support to mobile devices, and today RIM and Google both joined the group.
 
“As part of the Open Screen Project, RIM will be working with Adobe to deliver a great Flash technology experience on BlackBerry smartphones and to enable users to enjoy the exciting content and services that Flash technology developers and content creators are bringing to the Web,” said Alan Brenner, RIM senior vice president, in a statement.
 
Additionally, handset manufacturers such as Motorola will ship Google Android based devices with Flash Player support “early next year,” according to a Motorola statement.
 
“We’ve always believed that open platforms lead to greater innovation on the Web and we see participating in the Open Screen Project as another step in that direction. We’re excited to continue working with the teams at Adobe on pushing the web forward and to see where the next generation of Web development will take us,” says a post by Bill Coughran, senior vice president of engineering, at the Google Blog.


Posted in Adobe, Android, Apple, Blackberry, Flash Lite, Nokia, Palm, Smartphone, Windows Mobile | Comments Off


Mobile’s Next Big Thing: Augmented Reality


Developers have high hopes for smartphone apps that overlay data on images of the real world. First up, iPhone 3GS and Android devices.


Read article


Posted in Android, Augmented Reality, Smartphone, iPhone | Comments Off


Google Android goes Donut


So Google has released the next version of its Android operating system, codenamed Donut. Oh, those wacky names.
 
With a few tweaks here and there and an improved camera and app store capability, Donut (aka Android 1.6) may not sound like much. But it’s just the thing that pro developers have been waiting for.
 
First of all, there’s Archos, and similar companies, waiting in the wings with their Google-powered devices. Archos’s new 5-inch media player, shown to the press the other day, has an 800 x 480 resolution screen, which was too much for old Android to handle. They had been waiting, they said, for Donut, but didn’t know when it would arrive.
 
Now all they have to do is update all the systems on the machines they’ve already made, and they’re quids in. Next to benefit will be people who want to sell paid apps via Google. Donut will make it easier for them to do this. Another bunch of people quids in.
 
In fact, with all this free software goodness floating around, just about the only people who aren’t quids in are the established software makers. Apple’s doing fine with its shiny shiny iPhone for now, but Microsoft must be a little concerned, with the launch of its new Windows Phone system just a few weeks away.
 
If Android keeps going at this pace, and consumers love it as much as they seem to, how much longer are smartphone manufacturers going to keep forking out for Windows licences on consumer phones when they can get Android for nothing?


Posted in Android, Smartphone | Comments Off


Flash Development with Android SDK 1.5


Great guide to developing Flash Lite applications for Android phones.
 
Read article


Posted in Android, Flash Lite | Comments Off


Flash Lite on Android phones


Loads of news floating around about putting Flash Lite on Android phones and it looks like the future may be even brighter, with full Flash support being introduced by the end of 2009. Shame there are only around 10 Android devices available in the UK and the take up has been fairly slow, and mostly by tech-types. Will have to see what happens toward the end of the year.


Read more


Posted in Android, Flash Lite | Comments Off


Motorola’s first Android phone a good start, but what’s next


Motorola introduced its first highly anticipated Android device this week.
 
A check of reviews around the Web yielded some positive comments of the Motorola Cliq, which will go on sale with T-Mobile USA. The same device will sell worldwide in 2010 under the name Motorola Dext. The unique part of the device is Motorola’s MotoBLUR user interface, which syncs information from different popular social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, email accounts and other useful sources and streams the updates on the home screen. The idea is you don’t have to move from application to application. The Cliq also features cloud computing that can preserve users’ data on a secure server if the phone is lost.
 
Also, one day a Nokia executive said Nokia will not alter the software of the new high-end, Linux-based N900 to meet the desires of specific wireless carriers, insinuating that it’s in the same league as Apple and Android, which are less about providing customization to operators and more about providing a value proposition to the end user. The next day the company clarified its position in its blog, saying that “a few people are getting ahead of themselves” in terms of drawing conclusions about the company’s plans for the N900. “While we have not announced immediate plans to offer an operator variant for the N900, there are many customization points for operators on the N900,” the company said. “It would be absolutely incorrect to assume that we will not offer operators the ability to tailor future Maemo devices to suit their needs.”


Posted in Android, Apple, Maemo, Motorola, Nokia, Smartphone | Comments Off


LG’s first Android based Smartphone


LG Electronics has shown off its first Android based mobile phone, just a week after it announced plans for three new Windows Mobile based smartphones. The new android OS based LG-GW620 features a 3-inch full touchscreen and slide out QWERTY keypad.
 
“The LG-GW620 will appeal to first-time smartphone customers by offering a new and different kind of user experience,” said Dr. Skott Ahn, President and CEO of LG Electronics Mobile Communications Company. “Our objective is to provide a wide selection of smartphones to satisfy the diverse preferences of today’s consumers. This Android phone is just one of many smartphone models we plan to introduce worldwide in the years ahead.”
 
In addition to the Android model, LG announced in early September that it will be introducing a minimum of 13 new smartphones over the next 16 months that utilize Microsoft’s Windows Mobile. The newest release, version 6.5, was announced just last week.
 
The LG-GW620 will be available in the fourth quarter of this year in select European markets. Pricing and technical specifications are still to be confirmed.
 
LG’s first Android smartphone


Posted in Android, LG, Smartphone, Windows Mobile | Comments Off