Apple Vs. Google: Oh, It's On!
  • Nokia shares tumbled 11% after the announcement. lol.  the world hates the idea.



  • Google's Android overtook the long-time market leader, Nokia's Symbian, as the world's most popular smartphone platform in the fourth quarter, according to the research firm Canalys.


    In total, 32.9m phones running Android were sold to retailers and mobile networks in the fourth quarter of 2010, compared with Symbian's total sales of 31m in the quarter, the researcher said.


    In a press release, Canalys noted that Nokia had, however, retained its lead as the single biggest smartphone vendor, with a 30.6% share of phones shipped.


    The rise of Android to the top of the smartphone sales chart indicates the popularity of the free operating system with vendors, which do not have to pay a licence fee to use it on their phones.


    Pete Cunningham, a senior analyst with Canalys, said that the company's most recent forecast expects Android use to continue to grow at least twice as fast as the smartphone market itself, which grew by 88.6% between the fourth quarters of 2009 and 2010, from 53.7m phones sold to 101.2m.


    But he warned that low-end vendors such as China's Huawei and ZTE would create problems for some of the other players such as LG, Sony Ericsson and Motorola, which are trying to reinvent their product lines to capture high-end sales. HTC and Samsung are in the strongest position, accounting for nearly 45% of Google OS-based handset shipments



    http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jan/31/android-symbian-smartphone-sales



    The number is seriously brutal. Nokia won't survive. They will be like Motorola in the 00's when Nokia ate them alive in GSM handset.
  • wait until they find out how the european geeks hate microsoft with a passion, just like asian electronic outfit. This could be the end of Microsoft as we know it. Specially if they lost tablet battle. Good riddence I say. who needs microsoft?



    ... wait they don't even have a product for next holiday? lol... they are fucked. completely fucked.



    http://blogs.forbes.com/parmyolson/2011/02/14/nokia-shares-extend-fall-on-jpmorgan-downgrade/



    It was bad enough that shares of Nokia dropped 10% on Friday when the company announced its new strategic partnership with Microsoft (while Microsoft’s actually ticked up a little). But today shares of the Finnish mobile giant have dropped another 5% to $8.80 in New York this morning, after analysts at JPMorgan downgraded the stock to sell from buy, and gave it a price target of $7.00.



    Their concerns mainly center around a lack of specifics on the partnership’s terms and a timeline for future product releases:


    • The analysts estimate that Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android platforms are roughly 1,800 times and 900 times more valuable than Windows Mobile 7 respectively. “Catching up will not be easy in our view.”
    • Nokia has not given a timeline for its upcoming Windows Phone 7 phones, but the analysts reckon it’ll be difficult to deliver a single WM7 device by October, in time for holiday shipping. Even if Nokia did release a phone that quickly, there’s a risk it could be buggy, and Nokia’s first Windows phone needs to be seen as a success by the market.
    • Microsoft is charging Nokia a royalty for using WM7, which surprised the analysts, and it’s still unclear how much the alliance will benefit Nokia: “The fact that MSFT is charging a royalty for its OS in the face of Android also shows, in our opinion, a failure to grasp the platform economics at work.”
    • Elop has talked aggressively about cost-cutting but offered few details to determine how much Nokia will be able to save.
    • Symbian is a tricky balancing act. JPMorgan estimates that Nokia will ship 70 million Symbian devices in 2011. Assuming Nokia then intends to completely transition from Symbian by mid 2013, we should see a working lower-end version of Windows Phone 7 by early 2012, “not an easy feat in our opinion.”
    • What this all boils down to: a dent to profits and earnings per share. The analysts have reduced their 2011 earnings per share forecast by 33% to 37 euro cents, and sees the risk of that decline extending by another 16% to 29 euro cents. “The only real floor to valuation is Nokia’s cash,” they add, which is about 1.44 euros per share using on the 2011 net cash forecast.
  • C'mon Squashed, it's the fucking news - who can you really believe?


    Android Market Share Numbers Questioned


    A report that Android has achieved status as the number one smartphone platform in the world has been called into question. According to analyst firms Gartner and IDC, the numbers reported by competitor Canalys are inaccurate...at least for now. Despite 888.8% growth this year, Android did not displace Symbian in Q4 2010 as the world's top smartphone platform, both firms say.

    It seems to me that having one platform hardware and Android would be quite shitty. I personally prefer having choices, different functionality, different UI etc. etc. Not the same shit from everyone.


    Nokia with Win phone may succeed or not. But Elop said it best:


    Elop also defended the Microsoft deal for its impact on the broader marketplace dynamic.
    "If we had made the decision to swing in the direction of Android, it would have delivered substantial market share, and would have tilted the mobile ecosystem in that direction," Elop said, according to FierceMobileContent. "By partnering with Windows Phone 7, we've established a very different dynamic, and created an environment where Windows Phone 7 is a challenger. We've created a three-horse race."

    "We also believe firmly that creating a three-horse race was also in the best interest of consumers: It gives them more choice," Elop told the AP.

    Hey, didn't you say Apple is going to go away from the smartphone business? Doubt it. I want one of these:


    Big Rumors About Little iPhone, MobileMe Revamp


    According to an unnamed source, Apple has decided to strip the new iPhone Nano (or iPhone Mini, or any other unofficial name you’d like to use) of all of its storage memory in order to reduce its size. In place of internal storage, the iPhone Nano will use Apple’s MoblieMe cloud computing service. This further corroborates the WSJ piece, which said that MobileMe “would serve as a ‘locker’ for personal memorabilia such as photos, music and videos, eliminating the need for devices to carry a lot of memory.”

    The WSJ also reports that MobileMe will become a free service, rather than the $99 to $149 annual fee Apple currently charges, and could enable music streaming, through iTunes, on devices like the iPhone and iPad.


    image


    image


    But actually, I think I will wait for one of these (Nokia-Microsoft Concept phones):


    image

  • Who needs Microsoft? Probably the 91% of computer users that have Windows as their operating system.
  • I use computer to get things done, not run OS. Considering that the next smartphone cpu will be as powerful as current low end laptop, I think I can safely guess that it's all a question of porting for most apps. Plug it to big screen, i couldn't tell the difference if it is a desktop or a smartphone. For 5-10% remaining large software,... well, I don't need them on me all the time.



    Old software hopefully will run on emulator. With that I cover 80-90% of my computing need. If they all can be done on $100 smartphone, who cares if it is running on windows or unicorn magic dust.  I only care if my data is secure and I don't get screwed.



    --------------



    hey, I am still wondering what causes the 2006 motorola implosion. They never recover from that RAZR misreading.

    my quick impression: Motorola failed to scale up their manufacturing line following explosive demand for consumer wireless, by the time they sort things out, Nokia ate them alive with fun looking consumer wireless.



    Nokia itself then die, can't jump from voice oriented phone to net/web centric smartphone. They were too busy fighting Palm-RIM-microsoft, to see Apple, google coming in. Samsung on the otherhand transition nicely from voice to web smartphone.



    If google is shrewed, now is the time to kill Nokia. They should poached the unhappy Nokia engineers, and set up a research center for

    a) low cost smartphone  b) next generation wireless device.



    Nokia just made a colosal blunder, as big as Ericsson in the 90's. Probably nobody will remember Nokia 5 years from now if google plays this right. Google should ripped out the  Nokia core engineering capability, make them bankrupt, then in 2 years buy their patent assets.



    Google, could be the most powerful corporation in history if they can provide the next 3 billion people with wireless net access. Motorola failed because they only think in several million device, instead of hundreds of million. Nokia failed because they only think in voice. Apple will fail because they only think in term of tens of millions.



    in order to provide the next 3 billion internet wireless they have to think beyond current telcos set up. And there isn't many company have the strength and skill to pull it off.



    "


    Shompa February 12, 2011, 6:04 p.m.


    This is just like when Ericsson hired Rolf Skoglund in the late 90is. Ericsson was then world nr1 cellphone company then. About 3 years with Rolf and Ericsson was almost bankrupted.


    I bet that the same witch hunt that was in Ericsson will happen in Nokia. Ericsson had a working IT platform to develop mobile phones and base stations. With Rolf in charge, all Sun/HP unix workstations and servers where swapped to Microsoft stuff. From developing on a rock stable platform like Sun where you had every single workstation with an uptime with over a year to a platform that had to be rebooted a couple times per day. Developing base stations and mobile phones can't be done in Excel. To bad that MS professionals believe you can that.


    Rip Ericsson. Rip Nokia. Loads of HPUX stuff will get booted from Nokia.


    (when you develop a Cellphone/base station you need to run simulations. These simulations lasts about 3-4 weeks. It is almost impossible to have an uptime in windows with that time. If the server crashes, you have to rerun the simulation from scratch. I saw so many product be delayed at Ericsson when I worked there between 1997-2002 thanks to switching from *nix to Microsoft)"


    http://www.semiaccurate.com/2011/02/12/nokia-gets-bed-microsoft/













    http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/android-to-control-half-of-smartphone-market-say-analysts/38881
  • Nokia itself then die, can't jump from voice oriented phone to net/web centric smartphone.

    Ummmm.....What the fuck are you talking about?


    Nokia had the 1st smartphone in the industry - Nokia 9000 (1996)


    The Nokia Communicator line was the first of Nokia's smartphones starting with the Nokia 9000, released in 1996. This distinctive palmtop computer style smartphone was the result of a collaborative effort of an early successful and costly personal digital assistant (PDA) by Hewlett Packard combined with Nokia's bestselling phone around that time, and early prototype models had the two devices fixed via a hinge. The Nokia 9210 was the first color screen Communicator model which was the first true smartphone with an open operating system; the 9500 Communicator was also Nokia's first cameraphone Communicator and Nokia's first WiFi phone. The 9300 Communicator was the third dimensional shift into a smaller form factor, and the latest E90 Communicator includes GPS.

    Nokia Smartphones

    Nokia N97 Mini smartphone - Specs


    image


    Nokia N8 smartphone - Specifications


    image


    Nokia N900 smartphone - Specifications


    image


    Nokia C7 smartphone - Specifications


    image


    Nokia C6-01 smartphone - Specifications


    image


    Nokia C6 smartphone - Specifications


    image


    Nokia C5-03 smartphone - Specifications


    image

  • P.O.S. Their smartphone never really catch public imagination the way apple's and android did.  And at this point, they have to compete with insanely advance design from korea and japan. It's over for them. They won't be able to get by just by adding cute loud color curvy plastic.  People want more internet and power.



    eg. kyochera. dual screen. (the power management alone is mind boggling.)







  • Hmmm, check the specs on those Nokia smartphones, they're much more than "cute loud color curvy plastic".


    Fuck Kyocera, their shit is about as reliable as a GM or Ford car. Nokia built to last - solid, powerful and internet savvy.

  • yawn. they were so 2009. none of them does flash. (can't display mp3 blog properly, duh...)



    yeah, but kyochera stuff will migrate to  docomo, samsung and htc. (eg. if the double screen sells, samsung will do it better and cheaper)
  • Nokia shareholders are not very happy right now with NOK taking a 25 percent hit since the announcement of the Microsoft marriage. Stephen Elop, Nokia's first foreign-born CEO, is taking heat on multiple fronts even as he prostrates himself to the media in hopes of getting his message out. Already, we've heard numerous conspiracies calling Elop a "trojan horse," sent by Steve Ballmer to sabotage Nokia from within. Conspiraloons are quick to point to records showing Elop holding a significant number of Microsoft shares -- a situation that Elop says is temporary (and outdated) having already sold a majority of his Microsoft position with plans to sell off the rest in favor of Nokia stock just as soon as he's free to do so under regulatory moratoriums meant to prevent insider trading. Nevertheless, Nokia will be facing at least two very real showdowns on its near-term horizon.



    First, will be a battle with the Finnish trade union Pro which is demanding €100,000 (in addition to severance payments) for every Nokia employee that loses their job under Elop's new strategy -- money the unions says will be used for reeducation. The union estimates that Nokia could cut as many as 25% (5,000 people) of Nokia's 20,000 workers located in Finland. The second major hurdle facing Elop, and the board of directors that appointed him, will come at Nokia's Annual General Meeting for shareholders. Already, a cabal of nine frustrated shareholders have been grabbing attention with its "Nokia Plan B" proposal to oust Stephen Elop and return Nokia to a MeeGo focus giving Symbian a five-year minimum reprieve. The group has since disbanded after its plan was rejected by institutional investors. Nevertheless, we don't expect Symbian / MeeGo fans and developers to give up without a fight, and we expect Helsinki Fair Centre, Amfi Hall to be center-ring when the event kicks off on May 3rd in Helsinki.



    http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/16/nokia-shareholders-and-unions-fight-back-against-microkia/
  • Everyone (including you) have ragged on Nokia being too bloated and their days are over in the mobile phone business. So, their board of directors realize that they have problems and are not acting fast enough in the market. Yes, they are bloated. So, bring on Elop, someone they hired to make change, slim things down and get the company operating at a less bloated pace. And Elop, is trying to do what he got hired for. Unfortunately, to achieve the goals set for him, he has to let go of 5,000 employees. Well, keep in mind something very important. In Finland, people pay close to 50% of their wages in taxes. This provides them free healthcare, pays the complete cost of their children to attend college and among many other things, pays them 2 years in salary when they lose a job. They will survive.


    Since Elop was hired to create change, of course there will be a backlash from the huge bureaucratic engine that is in place at Nokia. Symbian is still a powerful force but will not be able to compete in the future. MeeGo just needs to go. So, it's either Win phone or Android. By picking Win phone, Elop is creating another formidable contender in the marketplace. Do consumers and carriers want to buy/sell phones that are all the same hardware all running Android? Of course not. If that happened all there would be is a gazillion phones that all did the same thing with "cute loud color curvy plastic". Consumers and carriers want varieties, options, different OS's, different features. And that is what Elop is trying to do, raise competition, and make Nokia a viable competitor (especially in the US).


    And as Sean said, over 90% of computers use the Microsoft Windows OS. There is a huge population that will embrace a solid, well respected, brand like Nokia with Win Phone. Yeah, yeah Android is wonderful. But fuck Google. They want to take over the world but their arrogance will fuck them over soon enough (see stuff about their search engine BS).


    RIM and Nokia: Carrier-friendly smartphone alternatives


    But where Apple and Google are often seen as a threat to wireless operators because they offer value-added services, such as music, navigation, and even language translation, RIM's Balsillie said he wants to help wireless operators extract value from their networks. And Nokia's Elop agreed.
    "The tricky dilemma is that there are 900 different carriers," Balsillie said. "How do you enable these different carriers so that they are not hijacked [by someone else's services]?"

    Elop said that when carriers talk about Apple and Google there is a sense that they are enabling services thorugh which profits are going in another direction. He said that it's important for the "third ecosystem" in mobile to help carriers retain a lucrative stake.
    "The philosophy of this third ecosystem and what Nokia has done for many years is to find a balance with carriers," he said. "There needs to be an operator-friendly player. And we aim to be the most operator-friendly platform out there."

    Carriers around the world are embracing devices running iOS software and Android, mostly because these are the devices and services that consumers want. But there is a real fear among wireless operators that the services and capabilities developed as part of these platforms will make the carrier itself irrelevant. It will be Google and Apple that offer all the value to consumers via applications and app store services, while the carrier will only provide basic connectivity. In other words, carriers will become a mere conduit.
  • Elop is a moron!



    Name ONE company, that he stick around and didn't destroy.



    Remember IBM, Apple, Ericsson in the late 90's? They can't transition to the web centric smartphone. (listen to the guy talking. It's buzzword bingo time.)
  • What?


    Apple, "can't transition to the web centric smartphone"?

  • I meant, nokia. They don't get the web. Apple and Google are web/computer company, they don't have the 'feature phone' hang up, so they have no problem twisting telcos arm telling them what to do when it comes to browser or softwares installation.  Nokia didn't do it that way. They want to lock everything and put meter just like the telcos want it. Limited apps, limited data . so web browsing experience on nokia phone sucks.



    That's also why they come late with wifi and gps, because you suppose to pay for those service instead of thinking your phone as little computer. Everybody else packs as many features as possible.



    Between Google and Apple, I think google will win, because google couldn't care less about making buck from gadgets, they want to sell traffic, advert. and web search. Sooner or later they gonna wonder how to make smartphone for 3 billion peoples so they can sell advert to all of them. Apple on the other hand cannot commodify their hardware business, because that's where they make half the money. In the short run Apple is more profitable, but smartphone is not about shiny gadget. It's about information. android will be more readily available.
  • Nokia has web centric phones, as I tried to show you yesterday. Fuck, they invented the goddam smartphone.

  • Nokia invented feature phones that can browse the web. browsing web is similar to ringtones, little game, or what not.



    They didn't invent smartphone. (open pocketable computer that happens to make wireless call too.)





    Subtle, but big difference, in term of experience. (I mean look at the way they sell their phone, the spec list. ... compare it to apple selling their phone) One is old school phone company, another selling it like computer.
  • "ARM is showing off a test handset at Mobile World Congress, which runs Android 2.3 and Ubuntu 10.04 at the same time on a Texas Instruments OMAP 4 chip. ARM envisages a time when the only computer you'll ever need is your smartphone and with Nvidia announcing it will be putting quad-core mobile processors into tablets by autumn and smartphones by Christmas, that prospect looks to be approaching faster than anyone expected."



    http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/02/16/1655209/Dual-core-Smartphone-Runs-Android-and-Ubuntu



  • That "thing" looks a bit bigger than an iPhone (4.5"H, 2.3"W, .4"Depth, 4.8 oz weight). Nice concept though. I guess they could pack all the hardware in a "relatively" small form factor. But what about heat dissipation, battery (guess you plug it into AC power?)? Plus, you still need a display (at least 10"), a keyboard (guess you could struggle along with the phone keyboard).


    So, you use the thing as a phone/internet device, out and about, and will probably get two hours max. off the battery. You come home and plug it into a dock, monitor, keyboard, mouse. Big deal. I would rather have a small form factor smartphone (iPhone Nano) and a high powered tablet/laptop. Sync everything to the cloud and you're done.


    These chip guys can keep innovating and doing awesome stuff. But the fact is, battery technology is the key to having a real high powered "smartphone". And that problem has been worked on for years without a good solution. I'd rather see these high tech wizards focusing on solving the battery technology problem.

  • probably too expensive ...



    (japan only tegra)



  • Google forgot to bribe the FTC guys. (hey where is ma' money? You can't sell people cheap subscription!)

    Wrong tactic google. You need a method to squeeze their balls first.

    http://www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/6842-android-subscription-plan-faces-ftc-investigation

    Mobile platforms are encouraging for new business models, with a
    beacon of hope for the publishing industry in particular. Google’s (GOOG)
    Android is becoming an attractive distribution channel for magazines
    and newspapers, and its new subscription options are less expensive than
    Apple’s (AAPL)
    for publishers looking to digital content delivery. But making money in
    this manner has raised questions around its validity and transparency,
    spurring an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission.

    “Let me assure you we will look closely at the current industry
    practice with respect to the marketing and delivering of these types of
    applications,” FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz wrote
    to Rep. Edward Markey in a letter this week. After Markey and Sen. Amy
    Klobuchar requested that the FTC look into Google and Apple for their
    in-app purchase features, the agency set its inquiry into motion.


  • Someone soon, needs to develop a robust, higher capacity battery for these smartphones instead of monkeying around with this nonsense.  It's only gonna get worse as smartphones become smarter.

  • this is half the thickness of latest iphone.


  • Yup, and you can get it, only if you live and shop here.....




  • Android activations visualized from October '08 to January '11

    http://www.androidcentral.com/android-activations-visualized-oct-08-jan-11

  • Apple looking to offer higher quality 24-bit music on iTunes - report

    Apple is said to be in talks with record labels to improve the
    quality of song downloads available from the iTunes Music Store, making
    them available in a 24-bit high-fidelity format.




    Apple's current downloads are 16 bits, but Apple would like to increase the quality of purchased songs on iTunes, according to CNN.
    Studio recordings are usually captured as 24-bit audio, but before the
    tracks are pressed to CD or made available to iTunes, they're downgraded
    to 16 bits.



    Jimmy Iovine, chairman of Universal Music Group's
    Interscoe-Geffen-A&M record label, revealed Apple's intentions after
    showcasing new HP products with integrated "Beats Audio" support. Many
    Macs and some PCs support 24-bit sound, and the iTunes media player can
    playback 24-bit files.

    http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/02/22/apple_looking_to_offer_higher_quality_24_bit_music_on_itunes_report.html
  • "Many Macs and some PCs support 24-bit sound" - seriously?!
    Both have been able to playback 24-bit audio for a long long time, and the differentiation is the soundcard. Standard macs don't have 24-bit cards as far as I know, just like standard PCs - if you pay more on either you get more and may have such an audio card. Many Macs AND many PCs can playback 24-bit.

    Those with old soudcards that don't natively support 24-bit audio automatically downsample and it as 16-bit, so other than a little CPU overhead most people may never know. On top of that, the unbelievably awful speakers that come with most Macs and PCs would negate any improvement, as would the standard free headphones of iPhones and Android smartphones.

    I'm all for getting music in higher quality, but the general population would notice far more if the phone/ipod manufacturers would just bundle decent headphones and I for one would not pay a premium for 24-bit audio files.

    If you have a 24-bit soundcard and good speakers or some good headphones then great
  • Apple iPad 2 is here and tablet rivals need to hit the drawing board

    But you kind of have to hold the iPad 2 to really get the redesign. It’s thinner by a third, plus its edges taper to a thin line of metal. It’s almost inconceivable that this thing you’re holding is a multicore tablet computer. The Xoom tablet is trim, light, and very pretty ... but when you place it next to the iPad 2, it looks as though it was designed and built by angry Soviet prison labor instead of by Motorola.
  • Nook, running Kindle app  ahahahaha......




  • Microsoft gutted Nokia and left them without a chance


    The Manchurian CEO did his job as ordered


    That brings us back to Nokia and MS. Nokia is getting more than $1
    Billion to dump Symbian and/or not move to Android. Fair enough. For the
    sake of argument, lets just say that WP7 ‘costs’ $10/phone to license,
    and MS kicks back anyone using it $15/phone in ‘bend over, smile, and
    think of the queen’ money. Sources tell SemiAccurate that these numbers
    are very close to what MS is shelling out, but we were asked to keep
    more exact numbers private to avoid identifying sources.


    If you look at the numbers of smartphones shipped by Nokia, most of the numbers are pretty close to the ones quoted by Ars Technica,
    about 30 million units a quarter. Lets say Nokia loses a bit of
    marketshare because of the deal, and in 2012 only ships an average of 25
    million WP7 or WP7.x phones a quarter, 100 million for the year. If
    each of those costs Nokia $10, Nokia is paying MS $1 Billion/year in
    licensing. MS kicks back $15/phone, or $1.5 Billion to everyone else, so
    if MS paid HTC/Samsung rates to Nokia, the Finnish company would have
    made that proverbial $1 Billion after 2 years by simply using the MS OS
    on over the counter rates. With the current setup, after 2 years, MS
    makes their $1 Billion back, and then Nokia is bleeding money.


    If you look at the Businessweek article that first mentioned the $1 Billion number,
    there are two operative quotes. The first is that “Microsoft Corp. will
    pay Nokia Oyj more than $1 billion to promote and develop Windows-based
    handsets as part of their smartphone software agreement, according to
    two people with knowledge of the terms”. Great. Then a bit farther down,
    there is this quote, “Nokia’s royalty payments will help Redmond,
    Washington- based Microsoft make a profit on the accord even after the
    payments to Nokia, one person said.”

    http://semiaccurate.com/2011/03/14/microsoft-gutted-nokia-and-left-them-without-a-chance/

    Now that Symbian and RIM are dead. It's Android and iOS all the way. Google will make loads of money selling crap on smartphone. They practically has no competition. (Apple is too weak to compete in the long run.)

  • RIM is collapsing spectacularly, right behind Nokia.
  • lol!!!
  • uh oh. Free Beer fight...!

    Come on Google. don't be evuuuulll.....

    http://linux.slashdot.org/story/11/03/17/1719248/Does-Android-Have-a-Linux-Copyright-Problem

    Well, from the last article linked from the summary:

    Linus
    Torvalds himself has clearly rejected the idea of using the original
    Linux kernel headers in programs that aren't licensed under the GPL. In a
    posting to the official Linux kernel mailing list, he made the
    following unequivocal statements:


            "In short: you do _NOT_ have the right to use a kernel header
    file (or any other part of the kernel sources), unless that use results
    in a GPL'd program."


            "So you can run the kernel and create non-GPL'd programs [...]

            BUT YOU CAN NOT USE THE KERNEL HEADER FILES TO CREATE NON-GPL'D BINARIES.

            Comprende?"

    Now, I have no idea if
    Linus making this assertion is a fully valid legal opinion, but he's
    sure as hell under the impression that they're certainly copyrighted.

    And, the second link in the summary says:

    Recently,
    Ray Nimmer, a well-known copyright law professor, observed that there
    could also be a problem with the way Google used some key Linux software
    code, called kernel header files, to create a vitally important element
    of Android. In fact, the way that Google used these files creates a
    legal quandary for manufacturers of Android devices and many developers
    writing code and applications for those devices.

    So, I'm not entirely convinced that your assertion that the header files aren't copyrighted is actually true.

    Most of these articles seem to be saying that this quite likely is a violation of copyright.


  • Nexus S Beats iPhone 4 In 'Real World' Web Browsing Tests

    "In a series of measured real-world web load tests, the Android-based Nexus S phone spanked the iPhone 4.
    The Android phone and iPhone 4 median load times were 2.144s and 3.254s
    respectively. The sample size was 45,000 page loads, across 1000 web
    sites. It also follows rumors that Apple is intentionally slowing down web apps to make their native apps more favorable."

    http://mobile.slashdot.org/story/11/03/17/1810253/Nexus-S-Beats-iPhone-4-In-Real-World-Web-Browsing-Tests

  • Ouch ...

    I wonder how fast Nokia will die and get out of handset business.  2 years? A year? 18 months?

    http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/phone-maker-publicly-says-‘no’-wp7

    Smartphone maker ZTE has publicly dissed Microsoft, saying the Windows
    Phone 7 mobile operating system is not popular enough, nor has Microsoft
    done enough to make it so, and that ZTE sees no reason for it to
    develop a smartphone running WP7. This is not the kind of news Microsoft
    likes to hear as it struggles to gain traction for its well regarded
    but not well received OS.

    The comments, attributed to Wu Sa, ZTE’s U.K. director of mobile device operations, were reported in the Wall Street Journal.
    ZTE may not be a household name like phone makers Samsung, Motorola or
    Nokia, but it is the fifth largest handset maker globally. Wu told the
    Journal that ZTE is testing WP7 phones in its laboratories but has no
    immediate plans to bring a WP7 phone to market. ZTE phones run the
    Google Android OS and it makes carrier-branded phones such as those
    running on the Orange network in Europe.


  • Microsoft is continuing its fight against Android… not just by
    focusing on Windows tablets and Windows Phone 7 smartphones, but also by
    taking legal action against companies producing Android devices that
    Microsoft says are in violation of the company’s patents. Last year Microsoft sued Motorola over patent infringement in some Motorola smartphones. Now Microsoft has announced that it’s filed legal actions against Barnes & Noble, Inventec, and Foxconn.


    The Barnes & Noble NOOK and NOOKcolor
    eBook readers are both powered by Google Android. Microsoft says the
    “Android platform infringes a number of Microsoft’s patents,” and is
    seeking to have Foxconn and Barnes & Noble license Microsoft’s
    intellectual property for use in the tablets.


    Foxconn and Inventec are the Taiwanese manufacturers that build the
    NOOK devices for Barnes & Noble… as well as a pretty large
    percentage of the consumer electronics available in the West.


    It’s too early to say whether this action could kill the Barnes &
    Noble NOOKcolor or raise the price of the Android tablet and eBook
    reader. But if you’re in the market for a $249 Android tablet, now might
    be a good time to pick one up.

    http://liliputing.com/2011/03/microsoft-sues-foxconn-inventec-barnes-noble-for-patent-infringement-in-android-devices.html

    B&N maybe too weak to fight. but foxconnn and inventec? lol

    Microsoft just signed its death warrant. Nobody will build them any device after this. no tablet, no smartphone, no netbook,. And probably soon, no PC. they'll have to build their next PC using stick and glue in their  backyard, since the entire world PC supply chain is owned by foxconn/inventec. If these two say F.U, we are building our own microsoft free computers. Microsoft is going to gasp for air in a hurry. probably samsung and LG, but the two aren't big. Or worst, they make sure every microsoft tablet coming out in the market is buggy, laggy, and shitty. (tho' that doesn't take industrial sabotage to do.)

    Probably Microsoft can make Nokia to do tablet....

    bahahahahaaa.............  Cost $4500 and half the feature. It'll make Motorola Xoom pricing looks smart and competitive.

    I can see serious problem with Apple and Microsoft, neither of them can build hardware, but everybody has software. Litigation shield is the remaining missing piece.

    This is going to be more amusing to watch than the death of Palm Inc. (now that was epic.)

  • HTC is going to be near or bigger than Apple this year. Wow, RIM is really going to die this year.

    Mobile Device Unit Sales to End Users in 2010 (Source: Gartner)




    #1Nokia461M
    #2Samsung281M
    #3LG114M
    #4RIM47M
    #5Apple46M
    #6S/E42M
    #7Motorola38M
    #8ZTE28M
    #9HTC24M
    #10Huawei23M
    http://www.infosyncworld.com/reviews/cell-phones/htc-smartphone-sales-exploded-in-january/11780.html
  • this is hilarious






Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!