News

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


Our Christmas game on Ovi store


We have just published our first game to Nokia’s Ovi Store, just in time for Christmas, which is a good thing as it’s themed for the festive season!
 

Quistmas Quest game

Quistmas Quest game

Quistmas Quest is a Flash Lite game for Symbian S60 3rd edition (Nokia N95, etc) and Symbian S60 5th edition touch screen (Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, etc).
 

Flash Lite Player 2.1 and above is required to play the game, which has 10 levels ranging from way-too-easy, to no-not-again. There’s also a high score table so you can try to beat your own score.
 


Posted in Flash Lite, Nokia, Products, S60, Touchscreen | 1 Comment


The pill bottle cap with a mobile phone


“Hi! This is your aspirin bottle calling. I haven’t seen you in a while. Why don’t you come see me soon? I’m good for the heart, you know.”
 
That’s the spirit, if not the wording, of the calls that will come from new pill bottle caps that connect to AT&T Inc.’s wireless network.
 
A Cambridge, Mass. based startup called Vitality Inc. was set to announce the pill-bottle system Thursday, saying it helps solve one of the biggest problems in medicine: that people don’t consistently take the drugs they’re prescribed.
 
That costs the U.S. $290 billion in added medical spending each year, according to a study published in August by the New England Healthcare Institute. Mortality rates are twice as high among diabetes and heart disease patients who don’t take their pills properly, it said.
 
With Vitality’s system, when a pill-bottle cap is opened, it uses a close-range wireless signal to tell a base station in the home. That station, which looks like a night light, essentially has a cell phone inside that can send messages through AT&T’s network.
 
If the bottle isn’t opened at the appointed time, the cap and night light start blinking to remind the owner to take the medication. If that doesn’t serve as enough of a hint, they start playing jingles as well. If the bottle stays unopened, the night light will send a message to Vitality’s system, which can then place an automated phone call or send a text message with a reminder.
 
That points to another possibility opened by the wireless bottle cap: making the pill-taking routine more than just a matter between the patient and the bottle. Vitality’s system can be set to alert a relative if someone isn’t taking medicine.
 
“The social aspect of this is important,” Vitality CEO David Rose said. “Almost every successful behavior change program, the academics will tell you, involves social dynamics, whether it’s smoking cessation or Weight Watchers.”
 
A price for the new system hasn’t been disclosed. Vitality hopes insurance and drug companies will get on board with the system and cover the cost.
 
Vitality has been selling an earlier version of the product in small numbers from its Web site for $99. In that version, the night light doesn’t contain a cell phone. Instead it connects to a third piece of hardware, a “gateway” plugged into a home’s Internet router. But not all homes have routers, and configuring them can be tricky. The AT&T-powered night light simplifies the installation.


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Nokia Buys Dopplr


Continuing its tendency to buy up smaller mobile content companies, Nokia has announced that it has acquired Dopplr Oy, a privately-held mobile service provider for international travellers. Dopplr has a team of seven people with office­s in London and Helsinki.
 
The acquisition­ does not change the current Dopplr service which is available at Dopplr.com and on platforms where Dopplr is integrated.
 
Financial terms were not disclosed, although a Nokia spokeswoman told Reuters that the price “was a fraction” of the $15-$22 million estimate that has been rumoured in some reports.
 
Dopplr was co-founded by the former Director of Design Strategy at Nokia, Marko Ahtisaari.


Posted in Nokia, Products | Comments Off


Comic books on Nokia 5800 Smartphone


It was only a matter of time before some developer ported the comics to the vibrant touchscreens of the Nokia 5800. Thanks to Carnival Comics, the first comics has finally arrived on the Symbian stage.

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Posted in Nokia, Products, Smartphone, Touchscreen | Comments Off