Category: Software

  • HTC Imagio to get Fios TV remote control software

    Fios TV is releasing a Windows Mobile application which will allow HTC Imagio owners to use their phone as a remote control for their Fios set top box.

    The software will allow owners to change their channels, manage parental controls, pause, rewind, fast forward or record a TV show. Further great features are the ability to transfer one photo at a time from the handset to the TV or even view an entire slide show of photos stored on the mobile device.

    The software will also allow users to use their cell phone touch screen to easily edit favourite channels and even feature the ability to automatically mute your television when you have an incoming call.

    The software works over WIFI, and the application can be downloaded via Marketplace.

    Read more at Verizon’s forum here.

    Via Mobileburn.com

  • Create The Ultimate ChatRoulette Matchups [PhotoshopContest]

    Random chat site ChatRoulette is absolutely nuts. It’s the best place on the internet to see a random naked fat man having intercourse with a piece of fruit or a stuffed animal. But it’s so rife with possibilities!

    What sorts of random pairings of people would be absolutely epic on ChatRoulette? What sorts of interactions would you love to see played out on the site? Use Photoshop to make your fantasies a reality!

    Send your best entries to me at [email protected] with ChatRoulette in the subject line. Save your files as JPGs or GIFs under 800k in size, and use a FirstnameLastname.jpg naming convention using whatever name you want to be credited with. Send your work to me by next Tuesday morning, and I’ll pick three top winners and show off the rest of the best in our Gallery of Champions. Get to it!






  • Lack of backward compatibility for Windows Phone 7 confirmed by Microsoft

    nobackward We had posted previously about a comment by Maarten Sonneveld of Microsoft Netherlands that appeared to confirm backward compatibility in Windows Phone 7.

    Microsoft has now responded to correct the apparent misconception, making it clear that this was indeed not the case.

    What Sonneveld originally said was "there is no reason why programs written for Windows Mobile 6 cannot run on the new version of the OS.”

    According the Register.com apparently what he meant to say was there was no reason developers could not rewrite their application in .Net and Silverlight, a rather different and ominous message to developers.

    Consumerist.com notes Windows Mobile developers are not too happy with this “solution”, and as suggested in our earlier article may suspend development of their current applications until the situation is clearer.

    developercomment Anthony Wieser of Wieser Software had been working on several applications for the existing Windows Mobile 6.5.

    He complains:

    "Everything looks different," "It’s difficult to see how existing applications will fit into the new framework."

    Charlie Jorgen of Seattle’s Trinket Software believes it’s inevitable that he’ll have to redo all his existing applications for WP7. "I’m surprised there won’t be compatibility and concerned about the rework we’ll have to do," he said.

    Will Microsoft’s clean break with the past do more harm than good? Let us know below.

  • You Can Now Download iPhone Apps Up to 20MB Over 3G [IPhone Apps]

    I think you’d have to nearly suicidal to attempt it—especially if you’re in NY or SF—but Apple’s doubled the max size of apps you can download over 3G to 20MB. [9to5Mac]






  • Microsoft-Yahoo Search Deal Approved

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Tech giants Microsoft and Yahoo announced today they have received clearance for their search and advertising agreement from U.S. and European regulators. The news means the companies can move forward with their plan to transition Yahoo’s search platforms to Microsoft’s Bing (which should be complete by the end of this year), while Yahoo will handle sales for both companies’ search advertisers globally. The Microsoft-Yahoo search alliance was first announced last July, and is seen as a major effort to compete more effectively against Google in search and online advertising.







  • Asus Windows Phone 7 phone delayed to next year, possibly all WP7 devices?

    wp7asusdelayed Northeast Securities analyst Ashok Kumar has told The Street that Asus’s Windows Phone 7 smartphone has been delayed, probably to early next year.

    Production of the phone has been stopped temporarily. "The phone is still alive," says Kumar, but its arrival to the market will now probably be put off until early next year.

    The cause of the delay is not known, but Kumar speculates that if it’s a software issue, it could affect all other OEMs, leading to delays across the board.

    Of course this news come very soon after the announcement, and one has to assume when Steve Ballmer said that phones will arrive by the holiday season he already factored all such issues in.

    Do you think Windows Phone 7 devices will arrive on time? Let us know below.

    Source: The Street.com

  • ZTE also making Windows Phone 7 devices?

    ztewp7 We have mentioned ZTE a few times at WMPU, mostly in reference to the Chinese market, but also in connection with Windows Mobile smartphones in USA and UK.

    Now the company has announced, despite not being listed as a launch partner, it will in fact also be producing a Windows phone 7 device at the end of the year.

    "We have our Windows Phone 7 that we are going to launch in Q4 at the end of this year," said ZTE Europe CEO Lin Qiang.

    Due to the sheer size of the Chinese market ZTE is one of the biggest cell phone manufacturers in the world, and the company has clear ambitions to spread world wide.

    The company also has plans to continue shipped Windows Mobile 6.5 (now Windows Phone Classic) devices, which should be free to licensees in developing countries and will make a good low-cost platform.

    "We will develop 7 and 6.5 devices in parallel," Qiang said. "The requirements of hardware are totally different."

    Given the new emphasis on uniformity and quality of experience Microsoft has recently revealed, and the hope that updates will now come directly from Microsoft instead of from OEM’s, are our readers now more willing to buy devices from lesser known OEMs than before? Let us know below.

    Source:Gearlog.com

  • RealNetworks, With Narrowed Focus, Seeks to Help Consumers Manage Digital Media Clutter

    Real Networks
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    You might not know it, but you could say RealNetworks is being reborn today. The Seattle-based company (NASDAQ: RNWK) is announcing a new version of RealPlayer SP, its signature software for downloading, sharing, and transferring personal videos to smartphones and other devices. The new features include quick video editing—so you can keep just the parts you want—as well as compatibility with devices like Nexus One and Droid smartphones. The new product also provides easier ways to share video and audio with social sites like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

    OK, that doesn’t sound earth-shattering, but it’s the first tangible step in Real’s revamped strategy that president and acting CEO Bob Kimball first outlined last week. Essentially, Real is doubling down on its core offerings—digital media management for consumers, and media software-as-a-service for wireless carriers—while it sheds its less lucrative digital music and gaming businesses.

    Indeed, it is a time of sweeping changes at RealNetworks, brought about largely by founder and former chief executive Rob Glaser’s stepping down last month. I recently spoke with Jeff Chasen, a vice president of product development at Real who leads the RealPlayer group, to get more details on the company’s new priorities as well as to hear more of the thinking and context around the latest product.

    Chasen is a longtime company veteran who worked on RealJukebox, often hailed as the first commercially viable digital music organizer, back in 1998-99. He says the new RealPlayer product has roots in two trends of the past few years—the rise of portable devices like phones and game consoles, and user-generated video. That led to the release of RealPlayer 11 in 2007, and ultimately to RealPlayer SP, which was rolled out in beta form last June. So far, the company says, RealPlayer SP has been downloaded 70 million times, and has been used to download more than 100 million videos. (The software is free but also available in a premium, paid version.)

    Feedback from consumers has helped shape the latest version, which appears to be simpler and easier to use. “We’ve been working on our vision [for you] to access your video wherever you want,” Chasen says. That might mean a clip from YouTube, or something you shoot on your own Flip camera, for example—it is meant to work for any format and on any device. “We listened to what people said in the last six or seven months. We’ve taken a simplicity approach,” he says.

    In terms of competition, Chasen freely admits that tech giants like Apple, Google, and Microsoft are all trying to help consumers manage their personal digital media—videos, photos, music. And large photo sites and services like Photobucket, Picasa (run by Google), and every video company out there all have various offerings to help with pieces of the problem. But so far, he says, “nobody’s really resonated” yet—and so a smaller company with deep expertise, like Real, still has an opportunity to own the space.

    “We all have digital messes on our laptops. Nobody’s making sense of that,” Chasen says. “We want to try to be the guys you relate to in helping you solve these problems. It’s all part of your content.”

    Lastly, I asked Chasen to talk about Real’s current prospects for innovation. “Focus is really important. It’s about simplifying and getting to the stuff that matters to our vision,” he says. “We keep teams small, and we allow innovation to happen. We won’t do as many things as we did before. We are focused on this vision, and on making consumers love our software.”







  • MWC 10: Acer P400 hands-on

    Here is a video of us fumbling with an Acer P400 handset at Mobile World Congress. Clearly running Windows Mobile 6.5.3, the Half-VGA 3.2 inch small screen of the handset appears to be overwhelmed by the giant menus of the OS update designed for a capacitive screen, which the P400 does not have.

    The handset is aimed for a May 2010 launch.

    See the specs after the break.

    acer_neotouch_p400_specifications

  • Windows 7 Trail

    You know that I am an happy Mac users but still I read that the Trail version of Windows 7 is expiring March 1st and then you will have to reboot every 2 hours and apparently will not be able to save you files any more (I only red this somewhere) and in June it will be completely stop working.

    So maybe this is the time to get a version of Microsoft Windows 7

  • Claimed Windows Phone 7 ad leaked

    Are you excited yet? Let us know below.

  • Taskbar Helper : Hide Your Opened Windows In System Tray

    Taskbar Helper is free utility that lets you hide or show application windows in the system tray. You can do this for any program even if the program does not offer this by default e.g Google Chrome. By doing this you can have less cluttered taskbar.

    Download Taskbar Helper and install it.

    Start the application. Now you will see the opened application windows listed in it.

    hide-open-windows-on-taskbar-taskbar-helper-main-window

    There are options using which you can set any opened application to hide in the system tray when you minimize them. You can also make those windows totally invisible (not recommended).

    You can use the “Start With Windows” checkbox to make the tool start when your Windows boots.

    Although you can configure the hiding options for any opened window from the Taskbar Helper main window, the changes are valid only for that instance of the application. Hence to make them applicable to all the instances of the application use Preferences. The Preferences button an be found at the top of the window. Click it and make the necessary changes and press “Apply” once you are done.

    hide-open-windows-on-taskbar-taskbar-helper-preferences-window

    Techie-Buzz Verdict

    Taskbar Helper is a free tool with very little (2-3Mb) memory requirements. The configuration process is also very simple. The tool is compatible with all Windows platforms. On a concluding note, I must mention that it’s a perfect choice for people who prefer to multi-task and need to keep multiple windows opened while working.

    Techie-Buzz Rating : 3.5 / 5 (Very Good)

    Taskbar Helper : Hide Your Opened Windows In System Tray originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Soumen Halder on Thursday 18th February 2010 06:00:13 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

    Don’t miss these Related Posts:

    Join Techie Buzz on Your Favorite Social Networking Sites


  • Sentillion Sees Brighter Future in Healthcare Software Under Microsoft’s Ownership

    Microsoft
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Sentillion is no longer one of the little guys on the block. The Andover, MA-based provider of healthcare software announced this month that it officially became a subsidiary of technology giant Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), a development that Sentillion founder Robert Seliger says will accelerate adoption of the firm’s software around the globe.

    Seliger, who had been CEO of the firm, is staying on as general manager to lead the Sentillion business, which is now part of Microsoft Health Solutions Group. Sentillion, which is by some measures the largest operation to be acquired by the healthcare unit of Microsoft, has developed technology that is supposed to make it easier for staff in hospitals to access multiple software systems without having to stop and log in to each application. And while financial details aren’t being disclosed, it’s clear that Microsoft is investing in this technology to make its healthcare software user-friendly and practical for busy doctors and nurses.

    Seliger tells me that, besides his new laptop from Microsoft and other planned upgrades at Sentillion’s main office in Massachusetts, there are few visible differences at the firm since he began reporting to Redmond, WA. Microsoft’s purchase of Sentillion followed a licensing agreement between the companies made in April to use some of Sentillion’s access-management technology for Microsoft’s Amalga Unified Intelligence System. Amalga aggregates data from separate sources within hospitals’ IT systems, enabling clinicians to, say, get a single view of a patient’s allergies, prescriptions, and lab tests without having to search the separate systems where those data live.

    “We’ve known Sentillion for a long time, and the timing worked out really well for us to push forward with a deeper relationship,” said John Donaldson, director of business development and strategy for Microsoft Health Solutions Group, who has been dispatched from Redmond to oversee the integration of Sentillion into its new owner. “We’re anticipating learning a lot from Sentillion’s experience in the [healthcare] market.”

    Microsoft has been providing software to customers in the healthcare sector for decades, yet it wasn’t until …Next Page »







  • Windows Phone 7 development docs leaked

    devdoc1

    Click for larger versions.

    We can always count on XDA-Developers to bring us the news early.  In this case it is some snippets of the developer documentation for Windows Phone 7.  The above bit confirms the OS is multi-tasking capable, but then we knew this already.

    More after the break.

     

     devdoc2

    However most developers will be limited to managed code, with even OEM’s and operators having to bed for access to native API’s and being closely audited in their use.

     

    devdoc3

    As has leaked earlier also, Visual Studio and Expression Blend for the XAML UI will be the primary development tools.

     

    devdoc4Click for larger version.

    The above document confirms both Silverlight and XNA development.  Silverlight is interesting, as we know it will not be present in the browser yet. XNA is however more interesting, as it is the same language used to program the ZuneHD and more importantly X-Box Live games, suggesting cross compatibility between the 3 platforms.

    The software also makes passing references to runtime services that can be used for notifications, including 3rd party notifications, suggesting applications even after suspended can register with a background service to be woken up in response to external data.

    Read more from some real developers, who are not too happy, at XDA-Developers here.

    Thanks freyberry for the tip.

  • Windows Mobile 6.5 To Be Renamed Windows Phone "Classic" Instead of "Disliked Immensely" [Windows Phone]

    Cars. Coca Cola. Bo Derek. Mickey Mouse. Transformers on a Saturday Morning. These things are classic. But the renaming of Windows Mobile 6.5 to “Classic” is kinda weird. How about calling it Windows Mobile “Immensely Disliked”?

    From Wikipedia, “classic” means the following:

    The word Classic means something that is a perfect example of a particular style, something of lasting worth or with a timeless quality. The word can be an adjective (a classic car) or a noun (a classic of American literature). It denotes a particular quality in art, architecture, literature and other cultural artefacts. In commerce, products are named ‘classic’ to denote a long standing popular version or model, to distinguish it from a newer variety. Classic is used to describe many major, long-standing sporting events. Colloquially, an everyday occurrence (e.g. a joke or mishap) may be described as ‘an absolute classic’.

    I get that Windows Mobile 6.5 can’t just be killed off. That corporations need to have it supported. That most hardware out there won’t simply upgrade to the new OS. That it’s the older of the existing platforms and that its getting a branding makeover from “6.5.3”. And that “classic” is the most optimistic label for “old”. But such branding in the face of incontrovertible “dislike” comes off as desperate or ignorant. And most importantly, unnecessary since Steve got a brand new Smartphone called Seven. Embrace the new, especially when the new is shiny and awesome, Redmond friends. The 6.5.3 moniker’s inability to stick in any non-geek’s mind is something positive.

    [JKontheRun and IstartedSomething]






  • Windows Phone Starter Edition confirmed, does not do HSDPA

    wmstarterBSQUARE Corporation has announced it will offer the new Windows Phone 6 Starter Edition SKU, software designed to help OEMs reach new and emerging markets with their consumer mobile handsets.

    Bsquare will offer two versions of the Windows Phone 6 Starter Edition SKU: Multilanguage versions with and without Microsoft ® Office Mobile.  The Windows Phone Starter Edition SKU supports 2G (GSM), 2.5G (CDMA2000 xRTT, EDGE, GPRS), CDMA (Rev A, EV-DO Revision A) and TD-SCDMA radios.

    “Businesses are hungry for mobile solutions that can support the needs of both knowledge workers and field service professionals while also providing scalability to IT organizations,” said Brian Crowley, Bsquare’s president and CEO. “Windows Phone is an ideal platform for developing smarter, more compelling devices and the new Windows Phone 6 Starter Edition SKU makes it available to a broader set of device manufacturers globally.  By providing the technical support, training, software products and engineering services to a broader base of customers, we offer a complete solution and are helping expand the Windows Phone device ecosystem beyond the traditional smartphone.”

    “Bsquare is now serving the broader mobility market by making Windows Phone licensing available to a wider audience,” said Nalin Rohatgi, mobility channel business development manager at Microsoft Corp. “OEMs can choose the Windows Phone operating system for vertical market devices to help customers extend their business systems to mobile devices.”

    Read more at www.bsquare.com/windowsmobile.

  • Windows Phone 7 will come with twitter, 70 other feeds integration

    windows_phone_7_series_htc_hd2Aaron Woodman, director of consumer of experiences at Microsoft, provided an in-depth interview with Laptop Magazine about Microsoft’s new mobile OS.

    When asked how tiles helped applications, Woodman noted:

    To the right of the Start experience is an application list. But I want the most important or most used or the things I care about most up on the Start experience. The difference is that the application list is just a set of general tiles and as you promote them they become live tiles in the Start experience. So they become much more dynamic and have the ability to expose information dynamically and kind of have a heartbeat

    We’ll be pretty prescriptive in terms of what extensibilities will be available in which hubs, and that’s true with the live tiles as well, where we actually have prescriptive ways to build a live tile and making that dynamic and bringing information to it. So we’ll expose that pretty broadly, and ISVs wil ultimately get to decide how best to articulate that.

    Regarding twitter integration, he said:

    We will absolutely support Twitter, and we’re working through the Windows Live team to do that. We actually have a pretty significant advantage in the sense that Windows Live has in most cases private reciprocal agreements with social networking. The point is that Windows Live actually helps us interact with those social networking feeds. And you’ll not only see Facebook and Windows Live but over 70 other feeds at launch. So you’ll see pretty wide integration.

    In terms of contact integration where you see a lot of people show up I think that might be limited to your Webmail bases, so Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail, and your corporate mail like Exchange, and then Facebook and Windows Live. I’m not sure whether we will pull contacts from Twitter or just feeds.

    Lastly and most significantly, he was asked how Microsoft intends to prevent being leapfrogged by the other mobile OS’s in the 9 months between announcement and actual release of devices.

    Aaron replied:

    We talk a lot about this internally. We will continue to see competitors march. We’re announcing early so that we can motivate and move the developer story forward and be ready at GA (general availability) for a powerful experience for end users with applications. And that’s an important part of the strategy. In a perfect world we’d launch with all of our partners including ISVs at GA and no one would know about it, but I don’t think that’s reasonable.

    The second thing I would say is that we feel very good about our long-term differentiation. I think we have a very unique perspective about how to build a phone around putting end users and building the user experience around the task rather than just access to applications. And the result is a very different look and feel. But those are very, very deep principles. Additionally, we’re bringing to market a set of services and integration that is not easily copied. That’s something that we’ll be able to defend over a long period of time. And if you look at Xbox Live as an example there is nobody else that has an Xbox Live in their back pocket that they haven’t brought to market. That sort of differentiation is something that is going to sustain us over a long period of time

    Read the full interview, which contains many more interesting questions and answers, here.

    Thanks MobilePaddy for the tip.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Will Fennec be delayed for Windows Phone 7?

    fennec1-728-75 Jay Sullivan, VP for Mobile at Mozilla, told TechRadar  they were no longer sure about delivering Fennec for Windows Mobile 6.5.

    "Now we have the decision: do we target Windows Mobile 6.5 or 7? How much architecture will there be to work with?"

    Mozilla was meant to deliver a beta for Fennec on Windows Mobile in the next few months, but it is now no longer clear if they will proceed with this.

    The situation is further complicated by the lack  of information regarding backwards compatibility in Windows Phone 7, and if 3rd party software will even be able to replace the default browser for example.

    Hopefully more will become clear after MIX10 next month, but Mozilla’s quandary is the same facing many developers – should they still pursue new Windows Mobile software plans, or wait for the new rising star, Windows Phone 7.  It is unfortunately likely we will see a further reduction in the release of new titles until Windows Phone 7 itself reaches the market.

    Do our readers agree? Let us know below.

    Read more at TechRadar here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Yapta, Kayak Team Up in Travel Search

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based Yapta, the online airfare-tracking service, announced today it has formed a partnership with travel search site Kayak, based in Norwalk, CT. Financial terms of the deal weren’t given, but Kayak will power the flight search engine on Yapta.com, which should give consumers more options in tracking fares and planning travels. Kayak is also interested in pairing Yapta’s service with its own search results. Yapta, which was founded in 2006, says it has tracked prices for more than 3 million flights and has saved its members a total of more than $300 million.







  • How to Win the Future of Social Mobile Gaming: The Z2Live Story

    Z2Live
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Take two technology areas that Seattle is best known for: mobile and gaming. Mix them together in a fast-growing market (iPhone multiplayer games), put some shrewd venture capital behind it (Madrona Venture Group), and what do you get? Answer: Z2Live.

    This isn’t two guys in a garage working on their passion. This Seattle startup was very carefully built, and the story of how that happened—and why—holds lessons for anyone interested in building the most promising tech companies of the future.

    Let’s flash back to November 2008. The tech community, like everyone else, was reeling, and diving into the depths of the recession. But Apple’s iPhone was already huge, game applications were taking off, and there were plenty of talented people with gaming and mobile expertise looking for work around Seattle. So Paul Goodrich and his partners at Seattle-based Madrona decided to make a big move in mobile, initially based around the iPhone.

    The first step was to assemble the best possible team. Madrona hired Damon Danieli, a 14-year Microsoft veteran and senior developer who had designed some of the core features of Xbox Live, including its community and multiplayer offerings. If there’s anyone who knows the technical problems of social gaming, it’s him. Danieli got matched up with David Bluhm, who previously co-founded Medio Systems, a Seattle-based mobile search and advertising company. Bluhm has been involved with more than 20 startups—including two that went public and seven that were acquired—and also has experience at Motorola and Hewlett-Packard. (Danieli and Bluhm happen to both be University of Washington alums—Danieli in electrical engineering and computer science, Bluhm in mechanical engineering.)

    Madrona invested a seed round of $1 million that fall, and followed it up with $3 million more last summer. The big idea was to develop a software platform to enable multiplayer social gaming across all mobile devices and all wireless networks—something that did not exist yet—and start with the iPhone and iPod Touch.

    It sounds tricky, and it is. There are big technical challenges involved in making reliable and efficient connections between gamers across networks and devices—especially while they’re in the middle of a game. For starters, the Internet has routers that don’t accept inbound requests, and you have to set up a new server to negotiate those connections, as Bluhm explains. (It’s similar to the problem Skype has solved for Internet communications.) To do it right, you have to “serve the game” on the gaming nodes themselves. That means using the processing of the individual consoles or mobile devices to do the networking between players.

    So that’s the concept behind Z2Live—“creating the multiplayer experience for the mobile device, starting with iPhone,” Bluhm says. That means enabling players to talk to other players during …Next Page »