Category: Software

  • Clarity Consulting creates Microsoft Hohm client concept

    daylight_6A96D684

    Clarity Consulting seems to be making a business of showing how good applications can look on Windows Phone 7. Their latest concept design is a client for Microsoft’s Hohm web service.  The service is Microsoft’s new venture to make it easy to monitor your home energy usage.

    The concept app works by monitoring home consumption in real time and with yearly projections users can pinpoint vampire devices, times of high or low consumption, and wasteful patterns of energy use. Energy usage meters indicate total current consumption as well as individual device consumption. Users can then use the information to take action, make adjustments, and change their consumption behaviours. The app can be used to automate certain systems like lighting, temperature, or alarms. Other features can be turned on an off at the touch of a toggle switch on your phone, away from home.

    Through settings you can enable and disable features of the phone that apply to your home making it a completely customized and convenient experience.

    Read more on about the concept app at Clarity Consulting here.

    Via Twitter.com


  • Who’s Near Me Beta – A Free Mobile Geo-Proximity Social Networking Service

    Whos Near Me for Windows Mobile Logo Icon

    SynergeTech Solutions has recently announced a new geo-proximity based social networking application/service called Who’s Near Me for the Windows Mobile platform.

    Unlike most social networks, Who’s Near Me assists you in connecting with strangers rather than those that are already your friends. The software establishes your location using cell tower triangulation and displays a list of other users in your area. You can begin an anonymous text message conversation with anyone you want – for professional networking, romance, friendship, or just to chat with a stranger. Your personal information is never disclosed.

    Whos Near Me is a free service and is currently entering into beta testing. SynergeTech Solutions is actively seeking out Windows Mobile users that would be intrested in participating in the early stages of this application’s testing. The software will run on any Windows Mobile 5.x or 6.x device.

    Whos Near Me Displays Nearby Users Review User Profiles Anonymous and free text message conversations!

    You can learn more about the application and sign up to help test the application by visiting the Who’s Near Me – Mobile Proximity Social Networking for Windows Mobile homepage.

    This post was submitted by Brian Hamachek.



  • Technology Alliance Showcases Five Companies in Sensors, Mobile Displays, and Drug Therapies: Investors Take Notice

    Technology Alliance
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Yesterday afternoon, I attended the Seattle-based Technology Alliance’s “Innovation Showcase” at the Rainier Square Conference Center downtown. This is a relatively new event—the fourth one so far, and the first open to the press—in which tech and life sciences companies from Washington state pitch their businesses to a small, select crowd of angel investors, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and service providers.

    The event had a strong University of Washington flavor, as several of the speakers and sponsors had UW ties. Linden Rhoads, vice provost and head of the UW Center for Commercialization, and her deputies, Rick LeFaivre and Tom Clement, each said a few words about the presenters.

    Similar to the NWEN First Look Forum last week, the five presenting companies cut across some very different disciplines, including hardware, wireless sensors, and biotech. Guess how many software or Internet companies presented? None.

    Well, none of the traditional Web 2.0, social networking, or business software, at least. Susannah Malarkey, executive director of the Technology Alliance, told me this was a conscious decision. Her team chose non-software companies for this event, in part because software startups tend to need less capital and can get off the ground more easily these days than other tech and life sciences firms. One of the goals of the Innovation Showcase was to highlight different kinds of companies compared to other events around town—though each was built on a strong technical idea.

    Here’s a quick rundown on the companies, and what stood out to me. No audience voting, no winners, just the facts. I’ll say a little more about some companies than others, but this is by no means comprehensive:

    1. Enravel (Seattle)

    Linden Rhoads introduced this startup by pulling out her iPhone and iPad (yes, one of those) and talking about the devices’ display capabilities. “These are great, these are fun, but they’re going to be so much more fun when there are projectors available for them,” she said. “That day is very, very close at hand.”

    Enravel is led by UW mechanical engineer Brian Schowengerdt, an expert in alternative displays, user interfaces, and human visual perception. He co-founded the company in 2009 to commercialize a laser-based “pico projector.” The idea, he says, is to “take a display of iPad size and compress it into the size of an iPhone.” More specifically, to shrink a projector to “the size of a grain of rice” and use it to project on-screen images, video, games, websites, e-mail—you name it—onto any larger surface.

    The core technology is a “scanning fiber” projector that uses fiber optics and a vibrating element to scan an image and blow it up, for example, to a size of 17 inches across from just five inches away. A matchbook-size assembly of laser diodes (off the shelf) provides the light source to project the image. You could imagine such a projector might be crammed into a smartphone and used …Next Page »

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  • Microsoft launched ‘my kind of phone’ website

    mykindofphone Microsoft has launched a website dedicated celebrating phones and their use for music, gaming and photography.

    Aimed at UK users, the site is the brainchild of the Windows Phone UK team and will feature photos, videos and stories that they find interesting, quirky and cool, from phone cases, photography and screen layouts, to music, photography and gaming.

    The site will also be sharing Windows Phone 7 news and promises to show “the weird and wonderful things you can do with your mobiles today” in a “Windows phone 7 world”.

    Read more at Mykindofphone.com here.


  • PointChase 1.0 reviewed

    PointChase brings the classic chase the dot game on to your windows phone. The game is quite simple , in fact its too simple but can be fun for a while.

    The game has been released in the Marketplace by l3v5y, yes you would most likely know him as a Mod on xda-developers or an editor on WMPowerUser. If you have been on xda-developers chances are you might have used some of the apps / games by this developer.

    Read the rest of the review at BestWindowsMobileApps here.


  • Year Of The Dragon? Introducing Dragon For Email By Nuance Available In The BlackBerry App World

    You’ve heard of Dragon Naturally Speaking for the PC. Based upon that very software,  Nuance has created and released the Dragon For Email Mobile Beta for BlackBerry. This app gives you the ability to dictate directly to your email, as your secretary. Imagine an app that you can speak into and it will write the email five times faster than just typing.

    For a limited time you are able to download Dragon For Email free in the U.S. from the BlackBerry App World.

    You can download Dragon For Email free for a limited time from BlackBerry App World here

    Compatible with the following carriers and devices:BlackBerry® Tour™, BlackBerry® Storm and BlackBerry® Storm2 on the Verizon network; the BlackBerry® Bold™ series and BlackBerry® Curve series on the AT&T network; and, the BlackBerry® Curve series and the BlackBerry® Bold on the T-Mobile network.

    To learn more about Dragon For Email, click here

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    Year Of The Dragon? Introducing Dragon For Email By Nuance Available In The BlackBerry App World

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  • Telus Motorola Milestone, Get Some 2.1 Love

    Droid owners got their update many weeks ago, now the Telus Motorola Milestone is up at bat. The update is not over-the-air (OTA) so don’t stop reading this post just yet. The update must be downloaded from the Motorola website and applied via computer. Visit the Motorola Support Website, select Telus as the carrier and Milestone as the phone type. After you have done this you will be provided with detailed instructions on what you will need and how to apply the update to your phone. It should be noted that this update will cause your device to lose all media including pictures, photos, and even any apps that did not come with the phone. Enjoy the update and see you on the other side with live wallpapers and more homescreens!

    Source: Androinica

    Might We Suggest…

    • Motorola Milestone Now Available On Telus

      From the carrier that brought you the highly acclaimed HTC Hero, Telus is now officially offering the Motorola Milestone. It is available for $199.99 on a 3 year term. As a bonus, Telus and Motorola…


  • OpenCandy Gets $5M in Round Led by Google Ventures

    OpenCandy logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    OpenCandy co-founder Darrius Thompson confirms in an e-mail that the San Diego-based startup, which operates a kind of online marketplace for open-source software, just raised $5 million in a series B round of venture funding, which was reported today by TechCrunch.

    The new $5 million round was led by Google Ventures, and in a winking sort of way, Thompson tells me, “I think you hinted in the past that you could see us having a deep relationship with Google. Good insight!” Also participating in the round are existing investors Bessemer Venture Partners and O’Reilly AlphaTech. (The company raised $3.5 million in its first round.)

    As I reported previously, OpenCandy operates a Web-based network that allows a software publisher to advertise its product—and to offer it as optional download—while a user is installing another program available through OpenCandy’s website. During the installation, OpenCandy’s system suggests other software that the user might want, with the idea of helping software publishers to distribute their products and services. OpenCandy also emphasizes that its system is consumer friendly because users must actually choose to download the optional software offer. It’s not an automated process that installs additional software whether you want it or not.

    So how will OpenCandy use its proceeds?

    Thompson says in his e-mail: “It’s all about scaling now. As mentioned… scaling in our current market and segment and then beyond. A good portion of the proceeds would be utilized to hire great individuals that can help us scale in a way that reinforces and builds upon the great foundational culture we’ve set. Finding great talent in San Diego is a key focus for us right now.”

    Thompson also says he’ll have more to say in a few weeks, so stand by.

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  • Gates on giving, getting, sharing

    William Henry “Bill” Gates III dropped out of Harvard College in 1975 in the fall of his junior year. Barely 20, he went on to build the computer giant Microsoft, an entrepreneurial feat that earned him billions and helped to usher in the Internet age.

    Gates came back to Harvard today (April 21), this time for less than an hour at Sanders Theatre, where hundreds of students were packed in like lines of software code. It was the last stop on a three-day, five-campus tour.

    “When I dropped out,” Gates said to a few whoops and cheers, “I told my dad I’d be back.”

    It was his first visit to Harvard as a full-time philanthropist, and Gates came armed with a burning question: “Are the brightest minds working on the most important problems?”

    Defining who the best people are is not easy, though many of them are at Harvard and other great universities, Gates said. And defining the biggest problems is not easy either, he said, though they certainly include abject poverty, unequal opportunity, overpopulation, farm efficiency, and finding sources of low-cost, nonpolluting energy.

    Anyone can name “eight or 10 problems,” said Gates, but are “the top innovators” addressing them?

    A few breakthroughs and some modest efforts on the part of the world’s gifted can add up to great gains, he said. But maybe our minds are elsewhere.

    Gates told the story of a recent two-day visit with friends. The conversation kept coming back to two things: college basketball and investments — what was new in stocks, derivatives, mergers, and other financial instruments.

    Gates had to wonder: “Couldn’t we be having that same conversation about what makes a great teacher?”

    The Seattle-born billionaire loves a good book, movie, basketball game — or investment — as much as anyone, he said. But there is a social cost.

    “A lot of our best minds are going to sports or entertainment or finance,” said Gates, and the genius of science is often turned toward remedies for baldness in a world desperate for cheap vaccines.

    There are exceptions and signs of hope, he said, mentioning the work at Harvard of George Whitesides (nanoscale science) and Paul Farmer (medical care), “an exemplar,” said Gates, “who’s drawn a lot of people into global health.”

    And 324 members of the Class of 2010 at Harvard — 18 percent of seniors — have applied for jobs with Teach for America.

    In his own college days, said Gates, few people were aware of, for instance, food and health problems on a global scale. Nor were they aware that their careers could be steered toward doing good.

    “I fell into computers at the age of 13,” he said of his career path, and loved the idea that computers “scared other people. That attracted me.”

    As it turned out, that kind of work has social merit, said Gates, offering the world new ways to get information through personal computers and the Web.

    But there is still an imbalance between what people do and what the world needs, he said. Gates suggested to a questioner later, “The allocation of IQ to Wall Street is higher than it should be.”

    With a businessman’s incisive brevity (his talk lasted 24 minutes), Gates focused on two major problems: global health and American education. He discussed how much can be achieved in those areas by bringing the brightest minds to bear on them.

    Global health has improved in the last five decades, and some progress can be attributed to rising wealth, said Gates. In 1960, about 20 million children under age 5 died from preventable diseases. Last year, fewer than 9 million did.

    The biggest reason for declining death rates came from one of medicine’s strongest weapons, vaccines, though they remain “a tiny part of the investment we make in medicine,” said Gates. (The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has pledged more than $10 billion to develop and deliver new vaccines in the next decade.)

    About half a million people die each year from flu-like rotaviruses. There are vaccines but “no large market,” said Gates. “It wasn’t getting out, it wasn’t getting done.”

    Once a country’s health picture improves, parents tend to have fewer children. Add in improvements such as female literacy, farm productivity, and other “catalytic” steps, and escaping “the poverty trap” is possible, said Gates. He cited the efficacy of early, inexpensive aid interventions in South Korea, Mexico, and Brazil.

    As for American education, Gates said it has slipped from the gains of 1945-1975, and now 30 percent of entering high school freshmen do not graduate — a figure that is 50 percent for minorities.

    “We really need to improve this,” said Gates. “The other rich countries are doing a lot better,” and they spend less.

    But there is room for hope, he said, pointing to research being done at Harvard and elsewhere on what makes the strongest teachers, and how to pass along their best practices.

    In education, online learning will help improve the situation, with links to videos on key concepts, along with ways to develop online advising, forums, and testing. “That’s a very doable thing,” said Gates. “Technology is going to have a role there.”
    And innovative education does not have to cost a lot, he said, referring to his sometimes controversial support of charter and nontraditional solutions.

    “Every time I get discouraged,” he told one questioner later, “I go to a KIPP school and say: This can be done.” KIPP stands for the Knowledge is Power Program, a network of college-preparatory U.S. public schools that Gates said now number 82 — and that send 95 percent of their graduates to four-year colleges.

    A lot of other problems cry out for innovation and modest investments, he said, including energy and good governance. But underlying such matters is a single “meta-question,” Gates emphasized. “How do we get the brightest people onto the biggest problems?”

    The audience members at Sanders had a few questions of their own.

    Which is better, asked one man: Take a high-paying job and give to a good cause, or take a job in the nonprofit sector?

    “Both models work,” said Gates, who outlined one scenario: Work, but study one problem or country, and devote extra resources to that. “Then when you get lots of time,” he said, “you can get even more involved.”
    Some of the queries were — don’t we all want to ask? — self-serving. One questioner asked Gates to meet him on vacation in 2012. Too busy, said the billionaire. Another touted a friend’s nontraditional malaria cure. “It’s definitely a long shot,” said Gates, though long shots sometimes work out.

    Another man, a would-be applicant to the Harvard Kennedy School, got even more personal. “So my question is: Can you pay for me?” he asked Gates. “I’m one of the best students in Kazakhstan.”

    The billionaire dropout was ready. “I applaud your boldness,” he said.

  • Samsung Omnia II Update to WM 6.5.3

    imageThe Samsung Omnia II was released late last year with an awesome spec sheet, and buggy software(from my experience.)  Well Samsung is working on an update and it will include Windows Mobile’s finest software… Windows Mobile 6.5.3. This comes from Samsung Hub, who reports that Samsung Sweden has confirmed the WM 6.5.3 update for the Omnia II, which I am sure many O2 Owners are happy to hear.

    The update is rumored to be released the second half of May. That means you have to wait merely months before you can do the update to a better, stable, faster world of finger friendly touchability. This update is not WP7S or anything close, but its something that I am sure many Samsung Omnia II owners would find important, and maybe will fixes those issues that I experienced when I had the device for testing.

    Via: unwiredviews


  • Cray Wins $20M Brazilian Contract

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based Cray, the supercomputer company, announced today it has been awarded a multi-year, $20 million contract with the Foundation for Space Technology, Applications and Science in Brazil. Under the terms of the contract, the company will deliver a Cray XT6 supercomputer to Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research, to perform weather forecasts and climate studies; the computer will go into production later this year. Cray (NASDAQ: CRAY) has won a series of large government contracts, both foreign and domestic, in the past year. Last July, Cray CEO Peter Ungaro gave me a detailed overview of the company’s strategy, shortly before it posted a surprise profit for the second quarter of 2009.

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  • Google Maps for Windows Mobile updated, ads voice search

    gm41

    Despite Microsoft’s benign neglect, Windows Mobile is still getting some attention from an unexpected source. 

    Google Maps for Windows Phone has seen an update to version 4.1, and ads a pretty nice feature. Version 4.1 ads voice search capabilities, interestingly tied to the hardware call button.

    The app claims to work with a wide range of English accents, including American, British, Indian, Australian, & New Zealand English and also Mandarin.

    The update can be downloaded at m.google.com/maps using your mobile browser.

    Via Pocketnow.com


  • Want to create amazing UI on Windows Mobile? Check out SlideUI .NET CF Mobile Controls

    slidenetMobile application development differs significantly from desktop development. Specialized developer tools are required to create a successful and professional looking application. With usability as a crucial factor, each control in the SlideUI Mobile Controls library has been developed specifically for the user to be able to easily operate each control via touch without a stylus.

    Product Features:

    All Controls Available in Design-time
    Simply drop a SlideUI control to your form and set its properties. Please note that design-time appearance of the control will be simplier for some controls (such as button, progress bar or textbox).

    Optimized for Fingers
    SlideUI comes with UICanvas control which adds animated sliding to your forms and lists. The control supports accelerated fallback and both vertical / horizontal scrolling. In addition to this each control is easy to click without stylus.

    Perfectly Designed With Color Themes In Mind
    SlideUI Mobile Controls supports 5 basic color themes for all controls which would let you adjust them to color scheme of your application.

    Designed to Work in Any Screen Resolution
    SlideUI Controls designed to work in all screen resolutions (QVGA, QWVGA, VGA & WVGA).

    .NET Compact Framework 2.0 & 3.5
    SlideUI Mobile Controls can be used in projects which utilizes .NET Compact Framework 2.0 and 3.5 so that you can be sure your application won’t require any additional software to be installed on user’s device starting from WM 6.0.

    A single developer license and one year of software support starts at $499.00.

    Checkout the DEMO or Buy this from the developers website: www.devslide.com/products/slideui

    This post was submitted by devslide.


  • VCs Add $10M to Imagine Communications

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Digital video developer Imagine Communications, a five-year-old startup based in San Diego with R&D operations in Israel, says it has raised $10 million in a Series C round of venture funding from Columbia Capital, Carmel Ventures, and Court Square Ventures—all existing investors. The company, which has now raised more than $34 million, says the new funding will be used to expand its support of customers that are multiple system operators and accelerate its commercial deployment for the MPEG-4 digital video technology standard.












  • Windows Phone 7 -like push notifications twitter app in development

    Shanks from appslah.com dropped us a note to talk about his new project, which is a twitter client for Windows Mobile 6.5 which uses Windows Phone 7 like push notifications to not only get you your tweets (in this case mentions) as soon as they arrive, but also saves battery life in the process.

    The app has not been released yet, but the video demo above already shows some interesting ideas, such as showing the tweet directly on the screen without interrupting your work flow.

    Keep an eye on appslah.com for the eventual release of the app and more info.

    Does the elegance of the idea mean Microsoft (and by extension Apple) have got it right regarding push notifications as an alternative to multi-tasking? Let us know your thoughts below.


  • Report: Google Courting ITA

    Wade Roush wrote:

    ITA Software, the Cambridge, MA-based maker of airline fare search software, is in talks with Google about a potential acquisition, Bloomberg reported this morning. ITA, whose investors include General Catalyst Partners, Battery Ventures, Spectrum Equity, PAR Investment Partners, and Sequoia Capital, is seeking as much as $1 billion, according to the Bloomberg report, which cited unnamed sources. ITA’s software could help Google compete with Microsoft in the travel search arena, but if Google were to acquire the 500-employee company, it would also make the search giant into a major provider of behind-the-scenes airline reservations systems. Xconomy profiled ITA in December 2008.

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  • Android 2.2 Froyo on May 19th?

    Is Android 2.2 just around the metaphorical corner?  The next update for Google’s mobile platform is currently being tested by the company, reckon Android and Me, who have been digging through their visitor stats and finding records of devices running v2.2.  They’ve also heard from additional sources that the new build is, indeed, being trialled prior to public release.

    As for the date we can expect it, that’s not finalised but the current guesstimate is in time for, or alongside, May 19th; that’s when Google I/O 2010 kicks off, and it would make sense for the company to push out the new version to coincide with that.  There’s also talk of Flash 10.1 for Android being released at the same time.

    So what can we expect?  Well, more available RAM is looking like it’s locked in, as Google switch to the new Froyo Linux kernel, as are multi-colored trackball notifications on the Nexus One.  An OTA update is tipped, for the Nexus One at least, unlocking the “many secrets” left in the phone that Google’s Erick Tseng apparently teased about during CES.

    [via T3]

  • Confident Technologies Makes Its Debut in Restart of Vidoop’s Security Software

    Confident Tech logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Curtis Staker tells me that Portland, OR-based Vidoop had a Web security idea that was just too good to let die. So Staker, a veteran software security executive, helped to acquire Vidoop’s assets in January, moved the software development operation to Solana Beach, CA, near San Diego, and today is launching the reincarnated business as Confident Technologies.

    What’s the idea?

    Instead of requiring online users to gain access to a secure website by providing a username and password, Confident Technologies has developed an alternative authentication process based on recognizing images. The company says its technology generates a unique, one-time access code each time a user seeks access to a secure website, yet Confident’s approach also is intuitive and easier for customers to remember.

    Staker says the human brain has an easier time remembering images and broad categories, such as dogs, airplanes, and flowers, than remembering lengthy strings of letters and numbers—especially when many users must keep multiple user-password combinations for all the different sites they log onto. In terms of intuitive simplicity, Staker says, if you’re searching for your car in a big parking lot, is it easier for you to remember your license plate number, or what your car looks like?

    image grid

    image grid

    In announcing its business debut today, Confident Technologies says its approach makes life easier for online users by providing a randomly generated image to protect online transactions and sensitive information. With “image-based verification,” a user selects categories of images that are easy to remember, such as cars, airplanes, and insects, the first time he or she registers with a website, such as an e-commerce or online banking site. Then, every time the user logs into that website, he or she is presented with a grid of randomly generated images—each with a randomly generated number or letter overlaid on the photo. A user simply identifies the images that fit the previously selected categories.

    Confident Technologies says its authentication software can work …Next Page »












  • Google Maps Navigation arrives in UK

    Up until now, despite having a fair few Android 1.6 or 2.x devices to choose from, UK owners didn’t have (legitimate) access to Google’s Maps Navigation beta, with its free turn-by-turn directions.  That’s all changed today, with an unannounced overnight update delivering the 4.1.1 Beta (that hit US Android phones back on April 6th) to UK handsets.

    As with the US version, the app supports verbal directions together with 2D and 3D mapping views; you can choose to view directions as normal, or tap over into “Navigate” mode which looks more like a standalone PND.  Various overlays are possible, including ATMs and fuel stations.

    If you’ve a Nexus One, you’ll also be able to use the voice command functionality to enter a destination without using the onscreen keyboard: just say “Navigate to” and wherever it is you want to go.  Screenshots in the gallery below.






    [via Engadget]

  • iPhoneToday 1.5.2 reviewed

    Well once Windows Phone 7 is out we can say goodbye to custom home screen interface. Today though, iPhoneToday is a good finger-friendly option for those of us who like the iPhone style interface. There are a few glitches here and there that need to be ironed though. Read on to see if this suits your taste.

    Read more at BestWindowsmobileApps here.