Category: Software

  • Pocket Gamer : “The new religion is cross platform”

    In an editorial at PocketGamer, Jon Jordan describes a growing new phenomena – iPhone developers no longer relying on the consumers finding their applications via the overcrowded app store, but starting their own application discovery websites.

    The power of the App Store charts are well known, with many developers living or unfortunately dying by their position there, and most consumers looking no further than the first page of results.

    NimbleBit, who runs such an application discovery website, notes “If you look at the App Store charts, you’re only looking at a tiny fraction of the total apps on the store. Many the apps will start to slide back down after a few weeks, and even more after a few months. Over the lifetime of the App Store, many apps that have been well received by shoppers are now buried in the charts."

    Jordan points out that the App Store has become exactly what the mobile operator deck became in the world of Java and Brew games; static and controlled by big publishers and big licences.

    The response: Every developer who doesn’t have access to big licences or isn’t in bed with Apple is looking to give away its ad-supported content for free to get consumer eyeballs, and are doing this by joining application portals outside the app store.

    There the resultant increased freedom from the App store charts tyranny has also reminded developers that there is a world outside the app store which they have not been participating in.  As these websites draw visitors looking for games and applications from all over the internet who often do not have iPhones, developers have responded to the demand by taking their applications cross platform.

    According to Jordan, Windows Mobile is set to be one of the platforms to benefit from the new platform and app store agnostic religion.

    Who knows – one day we may go back to going to a website and downloading an app from there directly, like the good old days …

    Read more at PocketGamer here.

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  • 10 Best Ways to Use Your PC While You’re Sleeping or At Work [Useful]

    There’s only so much a processor can handle at once. That’s why we keep our home PC powered on while we’re at sleep or at the office. Forget about energy savings—a powerful PC is meant to be utilized!

    Some processes, like games, monopolize CPU clock cycles, making it inconvenient to run other processor-intensive utilities in the background. From scheduled FTP downloads to converting digital photos and more, here are the ten best ways to keep your PC busy so it won’t miss you when you’re gone. Downtime be damned!

    Record TV Shows and Movies

    Sure, you can record TV shows and movies while you use your PC, but what do you do if you have two or three programs all battling for your attention? If you can’t catch your favorites on Hulu or Boxee, or if you don’t have a TV tuner than can handle multiple programs, take advantage of repeat broadcasts of many programs; catch the game live, and record your favorite news programs or movies later.


    If your favorite movie station insists on having a marathon of your favorite movie, you might as well record the 2AM showing and watch something else in prime time. If you use Windows Media Center, you can use either the program guide or the movies guide to record movies.

    Patch Applications and Run Windows Update

    Windows Update enables you to decide when to download and install updates for Windows and for Microsoft Office and other programs supported by Windows Update/Microsoft Update. The default setting is in the middle of the night, but if your PC is busy with other tasks then, consider a time like Wednesday morning after you head off to work (Wednesday morning is also a perfect time to catch Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday updates). Need a reminder on how to adjust your settings? Here’s how to do it with Windows XP and with Windows Vista (and Windows 7).


    Scan Your PC with Anti-virus and Anti-malware Software

    Although most current anti-virus and anti-malware programs can run while you use your computer for other tasks, you’re still better off to check your machine for problems when you’re not using it. Depending upon your favorite software, you might be able to schedule scans from within the software, or in some cases, you might need to run Windows Task Schedule/Scheduled Tasks service separately.


    To find out if your favorite programs have built-in scheduling, you might need to switch to the program’s advanced mode or advanced menus. For example, to schedule scans with Spybot S&D, you must switch to the Advanced mode and open the Settings tag to locate the scheduler. However, you might need to update to the paid versions of some scan programs to have access to scheduling functions.


    Depending upon the speed of your anti-virus and anti-malware scanners, you might be able to schedule them on the same day or night. If possible, schedule the scanner’s update process to run before the scan program itself.

    Check Your Hard Drive for Errors with Chkdsk+Defrag

    While malware and spyware can deep-six your computer’s performance, so can problems with your hard disk’s structure. Use the dynamic duo of chkdsk and defrag to check your hard disks for errors and defragment files to keep your storage in good shape.

    Chkdsk can be run from the command prompt, and by using command-prompt switches when you schedule chkdsk to run, you have a great deal of control over how chkdsk works. If you want to repair disk errors on the C: (system) drive, you’ll need to schedule chkdsk to run at startup.


    You can shut down and restart Windows automatically using Task Scheduler, enabling you to run Chkdsk on the system drive at startup. You should run Chkdsk before you run Defrag on a given drive to assure that files are not being moved to corrupt portions of the disk.


    In Windows 7, you can select multiple drives for defragmenting, which realigns small file fragments into larger contiguous blocks. This enables faster file reads and writes, especially on drives with frequent changes, such as the drive you use for temporary or swap files or drives with frequent modifications to data files.


    Backup Your PC!

    You can configure most commercial backup programs as well as Windows’s own backup programs to run on a schedule. To make scheduled backups work properly, keep the following in mind:

    • Use an external hard disk or network location that’s big enough for the backup (you won’t be around to flip DVDs or removable media in and out of a backup drive). Use the default compression setting for the best combination of backup performance and backup size.
    • Use the backup scheduler included in the backup software.
    • Make sure your backup location is ready to receive the backup. With an external hard disk, make sure it’s turned on and connected to your PC. With a network backup, make sure the remote drive or server is connected to the network – preferably, to a wired rather than a wireless connection.
    • If you have time, verify the backup.
    • For best performance, use gigabit Ethernet for network backups and eSATA or USB 3.0 for local drive backups.


    To learn more about using Windows 7 backup, see our Windows 7 feature focus article.

    Process Photos and Transcode Videos

    If you’re a serious digital photographer, you already know that shooting in RAW mode provides much more control over exposure, white balance, and other factors than shooting in JPEG. However, when it comes to sharing or printing your photos, JPEG rules. Cut out the tedium of converting your photos manually by using automation features in your photo editing software.


    With Photoshop Elements and Adobe Camera RAW, you can use Process Multiple Files to convert RAW files into virtually any other format supported by Photoshop Elements, apply quick fixes, resize images, rename files, and add labels.


    With Adobe Photoshop CS4 and Adobe Camera RAW, you can use the Image Processor to automate the conversion process and run actions. If you still use Adobe Photoshop CS3 and Adobe Camera RAW, you can also use Image Processor.


    Depending upon what type of video you’re encoding or transcoding, there are many choices, all of which take time better spent when you’re away from your PC. Here are some of our tutorials and product guides:

    How To: Download, Save and Convert Flash Video to Play on your iPod or DVD Player


    Ultimate Guide to Playing and Transcoding Downloaded Videos

    The Last DVD and Blu-Ray Ripping Guide You’ll Ever Need

    The Power User’s Guide to Video Encoding with Handbrake

    The Top Transcoding Apps for Watching Content on Consoles

    Schedule Bittorrent Downloads and Pre-Load Steam Games

    Whether you use FTP or Bittorrent to transfer files or play games delivered via Steam, you’re pushing a lot of information through your home network to the Internet (and vice-versa). Here’s how you can take advantage of away from your PC time to handle heavy bit-pushing.


    If you use file transfer protocol (FTP) to shuffle files around, you know there are plenty of freeware versions to choose from. Unfortunately, just about all of those that include a scheduler feature will cost you a few bucks. One that won’t cost you anything is WinSCP. Use its scripting feature to schedule file transfers. For a low-cost FTP program that doesn’t require scripting to schedule transfers, consider ProSoft FTP Scheduler Standard Edition (about $25, 15 day trial).


    Want to schedule Bittorrent transfers? Check out the Scheduler feature built into uTorrent. Scheduler allows you to adjust transfer speeds, go idle, or upload only at the times you select. For a tutorial, see page 7 of our own Paul Lilly’s 20 Essential Tricks and Skills Every BitTorrent User Should Know. Be sure to see the comments for tips on using Dropbox and PeerBlock to improve uTorrent performance.

    While Steam doesn’t provide a way to schedule your downloads, you can pause and restart a game download whenever you want.

    Run a Music Server

    There’s no need to drag your music collection between home and office. Give your iPod or Zune a rest and use our own Norm Chan’s How To: Stream Your Music Library to Any Computer tutorial to bring your music to your office. The most time-consuming step (page 2) is importing your music into Netjukebox, so it’s a perfect candidate for running it before you hit the hay or head to the office.


    Compiling Code or Render Graphics

    Compiling code and rendering graphics are among the most time-consuming tasks you can perform, so you shouldn’t waste precious playtime by watching your computer munch program and video bits.


    Start these processes before you clock out for the evening or as you start off to work. To make sure they run as quickly as possible, set your computer’s power management for high performance and turn off other tasks that might interfere, such as Windows and application updates and other processes (such as the ones listed in this guide). If you’re rendering graphics to an external drive or building a DVD or Blu-Ray disc, make sure your external drive is ready to roll and that you have a suitable blank disc in your drive.

    Contribute to Distributed Computing


    You can “give something back” to the world by devoting unused computer cycles to a cause you support. You can help make scientific discoveries or fight deadly diseases, and there’s no shortage of causes looking for your help. For a list of projects, see these Maximum PC stories: Facebook and Intel want You to Donate Your Spare Cycles, Freeware Files: Five Free Distributed Computing Projects for your Idle PC!, and New Distributed Computing Initiative Wants to Create Artificial Life. Need more options? See Wikipedia’s list of distributed computing projects and Distributed Computing Info’s list of projects.


    How to Manage It All When You’re Away

    Whether you’re running apps that include built-in schedulers or need to start them yourself, you’re going to want a way to log into your home PC from the office and keep an eye on what’s going on. You could use commercial services like GotoMyPC, but if you’re looking for a powerful freebie, check out the remote connection apps in our story The Ultimate Free Network Applications, Period. During your coffee breaks or lunch, you can stay in complete control of your PC at home.


    Maximum PC brings you the latest in PC news, reviews, and how-tos.






  • Opera Mobile 10.3 released, now supports Windows Mobile Standard, Flash Lite

    The latest version of Opera Mobile 10 has now been released for Windows Mobile.  Beta 3 does not bring much user interface changes, but does finally bring a modern Opera browser to Windows Mobile Standard.

    Additional features include Flash Lite support, and due to the Click to play feature this will not slow down the browser in general use. Flash Lite 3.1 support is disabled by default, but can be enabled by visiting Tools -> Settings -> Advanced and set plug-ins to "On".

    The main improvements from the previous betas are:

    • keypad/smartphone support
    • Flash Lite 3.1 support (disabled by default)
    • Complete bookmark sync in Opera Link
    • BIDI support also for language extensions
    • phone numbers in plain text are converted to links
    • support for background sound
    • general bug fixing (stability, UI)

    Known issues include:

    • Opera Link: Bookmarks saved in Beta 2 are lost when upgrading to Beta 3
    • Hotmail does not work, please use the mobile version www.hotmail.com/m
    • Dragonfly – need to do ‘connect’ two times in a row to get a connection working
    • Flash is only a preview/in alpha state, expect instabilities, performance degradation during use
    • Flash is only supported on touch devices
    • Need to double-click on Flash content to view it in full-screen, another double-click to return
    • right-to-left support is not complete in the UI
    • On certain WM5 Smartphone/WM6 Standard devices, the dictionary is not disabled in the password field
    • Unable to type special characters on Moto Q9
    • Certain HTC devices with TouchFLO will force Opera back to portrait mode if visiting home screen when Opera is in landscape
    • Some input method editors are known not to work well with Opera because they do not comply with Microsoft’s SIP and/or IME standard.

    Unfortunately there is no support for multi-touch or the accelerometer on the HTC HD2 at present.

    Read more on www.opera.com/mobile or download the browser at www.opera.com/mobile/download/ from a PC or "m.opera.com" from a mobile phone.

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  • New freeware Notes app with stylish UI released

    MyLostBlog has released version 2.5.1 of their notes application MyNote, which features a stylish iPhone-like user-interface.

    In this latest version the software is a new thumbnail preview function, the option to change the size and colour of the brush you are using and the ability to draw tables and rows and columns.

    The software can be downloaded here and should also be available in OpnMarket.

    Via Pocketnow.com

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  • The First Rule of FounderDating, and More Takeaways from the Group’s First Seattle Event

    Finding the right co-founder is hard
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    The next big startup out of Seattle might have been conceived on the top floor of the Washington Athletic Club this past Tuesday. That’s where 35 carefully selected tech entrepreneurs and business people gathered over drinks and light appetizers for the first-ever FounderDating session in Seattle.

    The idea, as we reported on a couple weeks ago, was to have an event dedicated to helping prospective co-founders meet new people who could be complementary in starting companies or at least talking about ideas. FounderDating started in the San Francisco Bay Area, and Brian Schultz—formerly of Seattle startups Ontela and Djinnisys, and now at Microsoft—helped bring it to the Northwest.

    I asked Schultz yesterday how the event went. He says he is in the midst of surveying the attendees, who were culled from more than 100 applicants. “I’m really excited about the feedback,” Schultz says. “People were definitely passionate about it.”

    The tech sectors represented that evening included mobile, enterprise software, advertising, commerce, and recommendation systems. Nametags helped distinguish business people from tech people (engineers), as well as their sectors of interest. Schultz says there was a big range in experience—some people were in their first jobs out of school, while others were former CEOs with multiple successful startup exits or executives at big companies.

    The identities of the attendees are supposed to be kept secret to the outside world, because some have employers who might not appreciate hearing that they’re looking to start something new. As Schultz jokes, the first rule of FounderDating is you don’t talk about FounderDating. (Which makes me think, a CEO fight club in Seattle would be pretty awesome. I can think of some good matchups already.)

    There was freeform mingling, a 60-second speed dating round, small-group activities, and more mingling. Early reviews seem to indicate most attendees weren’t recruiting for a specific startup, but were focused on meeting a variety of new people. Several wanted to see more younger and hungrier engineers. “It’s really about the people,” Schultz says—not necessarily their startup ideas.

    Founder Dating

    In any case, it sounds like the event was successful enough that Schultz will try to organize them quarterly in Seattle, and create stronger linkages between Seattle participants and those in the Bay Area via the FounderDating website. The next Seattle event will probably be in May or June, Schultz says, and he’s looking for more help in organizing and screening applicants.

    Schultz also says he wants to survey the same 35 people three to six months from now, and see what new projects have come about from their discussions. Because ultimately that’s what this is about—doing something new to help startups get formed. “Can you attribute anything to the people you met that night?” he says. “There were definitely some new connections made.”







  • WinMoSquare – FourSquare client for Windows Mobile demoed

    CareAce has published a brief review of the new FourSquare app for Windows Mobile, WinMoSquare.  They note the app is stable and smooth, and the user experience enjoyable. 

    The latest beta adds:

    • Added code to determine rough location based off device IP address
    • Times were not always being adjusted for local time zones
    • Times are now displayed in consistent manner through out application
    • Application title appeared as ‘Main’ instead of ‘WinMoSquare’ in some situations
    • Latitude and longitude formatting correction for non US locales
    • Better error and exception handling
    • Added ‘About’ screen off the ‘Settings’ screen
    • Check In screen clears and resets on load now
    • Add Venue screen clears and resets on load now
    • Added Venue Details screen
    • Zero Email Bounce: we’ve at least read all emails now :D
    • Various small and minor fixes throughout

      The beta can be downloaded here.

      Read more at Careace here.

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    • RealNetworks Acting CEO Bob Kimball Speaks on Rebuilding the Company, Transforming the Culture, and Spinning Off Music and Games

      Bob Kimball, RealNetworks
      Gregory T. Huang wrote:

      In today’s RealNetworks earnings call, we heard from president and acting CEO Bob Kimball for the first time. Kimball recently took over from founder Rob Glaser, who stepped down as CEO a month ago.

      Kimball originally joined RealNetworks (NASDAQ: RNWK) in 1999 and served for 10-plus years as the senior executive responsible for all legal matters and business development. Prior to Real, he was senior attorney and manager of business relations at IBM Global Services.

      2009 was a rough year for Real financially, but Kimball is all about the future. And about getting things done quickly and decisively, starting now. He spoke on the call about the company’s retooled strategy and his plans to “transform RealNetworks” into a “far more focused and simple company” with a “strong new sense of purpose.” He also thanked Glaser for providing the leadership and innovation that “forms the bedrock of Real today.”

      The bottom line is that Real is spinning out its music service, Rhapsody, as a separate company (announced earlier this week), and will separate out its games division soon after that’s complete. The ownership, financial, and legal structure of the gaming entity is yet to be determined. That leaves two main focuses for Real, both built around its media entertainment software platform: its software-as-a-service business for wireless carriers, and its RealPlayer business for consumers. (These two divisions create virtually all of Real’s cash flow today.)

      Here are some more highlights from Kimball:

      —“I know where our strengths are, and, perhaps more importantly, I know where our weaknesses are,” he said. “I know how we make money, and how we don’t.”

      —“I haven’t seen this level of excitement in the hallways of RealNetworks in many years,” Kimball said. Besides the talent and determination of Real’s employees, he pointed to the company’s “pristine balance sheet,” which includes nearly $400 million in the bank, and no debt.

      —“We plan to be content agnostic. We will make it easy and fun for consumers to enjoy their content anywhere, anytime,” he said.

      —Kimball outlined a three-step plan for Real: simplify, restructure, and grow. Not necessarily one after the other, but in parallel. “We must move quickly,” he said. “By the end of the year, we will …Next Page »







    • LMT Launcher 0.2 released!

      As of a few days ago, my Multitouch launcher was released, and today, v 0.2 is released.

      It has been developed in co-operation with noname81 from XDA-Developers, and is available for download now on XDA-Developers.

      image

      It features a few more gestures than shown in the video above, including arrows and a “learn” mode.

      – DoubleSquare: Close LMT
      – DoubleQuestionMark: Learn mode; the following gesture will be connected to the process related to the foreground window. Next time the gesture is done, LMT will start the connected process
      – DoubleLineUp: Close the current process
      – DoubleLineDown: Connect e.g. to TaskFacade as a “Multitouch Taskmanager”
      – DoubleLineLeft, DoubleLineRight
      – DoubleArrowLeft, DoubleArrowRight

      It also features the ability to send “back” messages when in things like Opera, so you can swipe to go back a page :)

      It can be downloaded from here.

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    • Developers: Even this app will sell, why are you missing out?

      speedtracker

      Joel Ivory Johnson, a pretty active mobile developer, has written about his experience in submitting a simple application to marketplace. The very simple demo application, Speedtracker,  which simply measures speed using GPS measurements, was coded specifically to test the ease of the submission process.

      Joel initially planned to release the app for free, but was convinced to try and charge for it, and released it for the lowest cost, $0.99. The app became available about a month after submission.

      He reports sales of nearly $100 in the first week, and now seems to have developed a taste for the money, as he plans to release an update with better utility and a more attractive user interface.

      The lesson developers should take away from this however is that Joel will likely make a few hundred dollars from possibly a 2 hours of work, and that the submission process to the Windows Mobile Marketplace is not onerous.

      In essence, if you have a simple application and are not porting it to marketplace, you may as well be flushing your money down the toilet.

      Read Joel’s blogpost here.

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    • Microsoft Releasing Windows 7 Anti-Piracy Update Later This Month [Software]

      In the next week or two, Windows Update will list a new, “Important” update for you to download. It’ll be called “Windows Activation Technologies Update for Windows 7,” and if you’re running a bootleg copy of Windows 7, beware.

      The optional update will sniff out 70 “known and potentially dangerous activation exploits” that are meant to distinguish a genuine copy of Windows 7 from a pirated one.

      However, if you’re busted with a bootleg, it’s not that big of a deal. Microsoft promises that none of your personal information will be sent to them. Instead:

      If any activation exploits are found, Windows will alert the customer and offer options for resolving the issue – in many cases, with just a few clicks. Machines running genuine Windows 7 software with no activation exploits will see nothing – the update runs quietly in the background protecting your system. If Windows 7 is non-genuine, the notifications built into Windows 7 will inform the customer that Windows is not genuine by displaying informational dialog boxes with options for the customer to either get more information, or acquire genuine Windows. The desktop wallpaper will be switched to a plain desktop (all of the customer’s desktop icons, gadgets, or pinned applications stay in place). Periodic reminders and a persistent desktop watermark act as further alerts to the customer.

      It is important to know that the customer will see no reduced functionality in their copy of Windows – a customer’s applications work as expected, and access to personal information is unchanged.

      Of course, even if your Windows 7 copy is completely legitimate, there might be good reason not to download the update. Windows validation has been known to mislabel legit copies of software as pirated, which even if rare, is a pain that nobody wants to deal with. [The Windows Blog via ZDnet]






    • TouchXperience demo possibly the coolest interface you ever saw

      TouchXperience is a new 3rd party UI being developed that takes full advantage of the hardware in the latest Windows Mobile smartphones, creating a user interface that is pretty amazing.

      The software features:
      – Any interface can be customized
      – Over 100 widgets (clocks, audio player, shortcuts, etc)
      – Animated backgrounds (like with Sense 2.5)
      – Interactive backgrounds (similar to live wallpapers on the Nexus One)
      – Some backgrounds react to lighting, cool day/night reactions
      – Access to favorite quick panels via accelerometer and by rotating device
      – Messaging interface for emails and texts
      – System settings panel
      – Easy access to music, videos and recorded TV via an entertainment panel
      – Tons of radio links
      – Ringtone manager
      – Fully featured communications manager
      – Explore network computers and connected devices
      – Create custom profiles
      – Integrated file explorer
      – Remotely turn on home devices, like TVs, lights, etc
      – Pull up programs or documents with a search bar
      – Will find installation (CAB) files for you, so you don’t have to use file explorer
      – Remove programs panel
      – Built-in shopping list
      – Search the Internet by typing in words and clicking desired search engine or directory (Google, Bing, Yahoo, Twitter, Wikipedia, Amazon)

      The software is not released yet, but is expected to go into beta soon.

      Read more at Touchxperience here.

      Via Pocketnow.com

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    • CEO Christian Chabot on Tableau Software’s New Consumer App for Making Data Social

      Tableau Software
      Gregory T. Huang wrote:

      “I make the bold claim that this will be of interest to anyone who posts content online,” says Christian Chabot, the co-founder and chief executive of Seattle-based Tableau Software.

      We were talking recently about his company’s big move into consumer software, which was just announced today. “The target is really bloggers, journalists, writers, critics, researchers, students—anyone who wants to put information online,” Chabot said.

      Tableau is focused on data visualization and business intelligence. The company sells its software to businesses and organizations that need powerful tools to dissect large amounts of data and pull out trends and patterns more efficiently. That’s everyone from Microsoft, Yahoo, and Google, to three-letter government agencies, to Barnes-Jewish Hospital and the Dallas Cowboys.

      And now the tools are being offered to consumers for free, at TableauPublic.com. The move fits with Tableau’s goal of becoming the “Adobe of data.” It also seems like a smart move to get the company’s tools in the hands of a much broader audience. “It’s for the public good, for the public Web, and for public information. If there’s anything mildly private, you’d want to use Tableau’s business product,” Chabot says. “We think it will flow back to us with exposure. It will expose people to our technology.”

      Chabot puts data in perspective with the history of digital media on the Internet. “We’re finally going to make data on the Web as fun and useful as an online video,” he says. “The history of the Web is it started as a bunch of text, marked up, and then images finally became a first-class citizen, and Flickr exploded. Images are a properly respected object on the Web canvas. Now, thanks to Adobe Flash and YouTube and the Flip camera, video is a first-class citizen. We at Tableau, we’d say there’s only one more type of content that humans produce, and that’s data.”

      Granted, the idea of playing with data seems more abstract and doesn’t have as broad immediate appeal as pictures and video. But Chabot says, “It needs its Flickr, it needs its Flip camera. Take any dataset. You can do two things—you can tell stories really well, and you can answer people’s questions.”

      And that’s the key here—Tableau is trying to make data social and easy. “The real breakthrough here isn’t that you couldn’t have gotten to this destination,” Chabot says. “It’s not that we invented interactive visualization. It’s the ability to do it fast without any programming, and do it free and bring it to the whole world.” (That’s as opposed to hiring a team of Flash developers that might take $50,000 and 30 days to produce a high-end interactive visualization for CNN, say.)

      Tableau is one of the fastest growing software companies in the country. It currently has 105 employees and is actively hiring in areas like software development, quality assurance, operations, and sales. Chabot says the company has had record sales the past two quarters, after a bit of a slowdown in early 2009. Tableau has roughly 6,000 business-level customer organizations. “We’re adding thousands every six months,” Chabot says.







    • Slacker radio liberated from T-Mo HTC HD2

      slacker5 slacker6

      We wrote yesterday about the treasure trove of entertainment software on the HTC HD2.  One of those packages is the Slacker streaming radio service, which appears to have made the transition to Windows Mobile very nicely, with a very attractive UI.

      The package has now been ripped from the HTC HD2 ROM, and is available to download from XDA-Developers here.

      The software, much like Pandora, only works in USA unfortunately, is designed for WVGA screens and you are only allowed to skip 6 songs in one hour, but for US residents it is still a great find.

      Give it a try and let us know how it works for you below.

      Via FuzeMobility.com

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    • HTC Headsets become a little more useful

      image HTC is one of the best designer in the Windows Mobile world with their sexy headsets, but the functions that come with these things are not as great. This tweak created by an XDA member attempts to fix this issue. The tweak, which is very old changes what happens when you press the call button on your headset. here is exactly how it works “one long press on the headset’s microphone button => play/pause press quickly two times => play next track.” The tweak was confirmed for the HD, but I can not personally test this due to my headset being broken and cannot find another. Give this tweak a go and give us a comment on how it works out for you.

      Try it: Here

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    • Windows Mobile 7 development, roadmap to be discussed at Tech-days 10 in Geneva

      Want to learn more about Windows Mobile 7 development and happen to be around Geneva, Switzerland on April 14th?  Microsoft will be discussing development tools and software for the new OS at it tech-days 1- event.

      Academic tech·days 10 is a Microsoft tech·days track organized specifically for technically focused students and faculty members. The Academic tech·days are free of charge half-day event that gives introductory level information for academic audience interested in software development on Microsoft platform and technologies.

      Windows Mobile 7 will be discussed in the Mobility-V session hosted my Microsoft evangelist Sascha Corti.  The event is free to all student card holders and faculty, but does require registration.

      Read the details of the session below:

      14:45 – 15:45 Mobility V-Next (professional tech · days session)
      Sascha Corti, Developer Evangelist, Microsoft Switzerland
      Speaker Biography
      Presentation Details
      Front Switzerland, you will see the next generation
      Windows Mobile platform, the code-named "Windows 7 Phone". After an overview of the platform and the roadmap, the development tools for creating your own applications the new generation of smartphones will be announced. The content depends on information available at the overview.

      To learn more visit this Microsoft page here.

      Thanks Sirleamont for the tip.

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    • Happy 2010: Bay State Startups Ring in the New Year with $355M in January Venture Funding

      Erin Kutz wrote:

      Apparently, Massachusetts venture investors aren’t like most American consumers in January, when purse strings tighten and spending comes to a halt following the previous month’s holiday shopping excesses. By contrast, they significantly upped their investments in the state’s tech and life sciences startups, investing $355.2 million across 28 equity deals, according to information provided by private company intelligence platform CB Insights.  That’s at least $130 million more than the $224 million in venture funding that 36 startups wrapped up in December.

      January’s dollar figures make it the best month in venture investing that we’ve tracked so far (we started in June), thanks to huge deals in software, healthcare, and energy. In fact, January’s dollar totals toppled the previous best month to date, September, by more than 50 percent, when startups raised $228 million across 25 deals.

      The largest January equity deal came in at a whopping $120 million for Southborough, Ma-based IkaSytems, providers of process automation and intelligence management software for the healthcare payer market. Essex Woodlands Health Ventures and Providence Equity Partners led the growth equity round. This put it $85 million ahead of the next biggest venture deal of the month, the $35 million Series B round that went to Alnara Pharmaceuticals, a Boston-based company that plans to seek FDA approval for its enzyme-replacement drug for patients with cystic fibrosis. The spread between the top two deals was much bigger than the $4 million difference between the first and second place deals in December, when venture financings were all grouped more closely in value. The Alnara financing was also way ahead of the January third-place deal, $23.8 million for Lowell-based energy company Konarka Technologies. The remaining January venture deals followed more closely at each other’s heels, as you can see in the list at the end of this story.

      January Venture Investing

      Software companies took home the biggest share of venture funds at $167.7 million, and knocked the healthcare sector off of its throne, largely thanks to the IkaSystems deal (healthcare had previously led all other sectors in venture dollars every month that we tracked). The five remaining software startup venture financings accounted for $47.7 million. Even without the IkaSystems financing, software companies still pulled in more than they did in December ($30.5 million across five deals), when the sector ranked fourth in dollars raised.

      The previous sector champ, healthcare, came in second in terms of venture dollars amassed at $121.1 million, but still had …Next Page »







    • Zenonia, RPG for Windows Mobile reviewed

      Zenonia is a brilliant RPG (role-play game) for windows mobile. It reminds me in many ways of playing Pok?mon on a Gameboy. The plot is based around the life of a boy called Regret (that’s you in the game) and his journey discovering who he is and learning about his past…

      Read more and see an additional video at BestWindowsMobileApps here.

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    • SinglePoint Buys M2Junction, Wants to Become Mobile Advertising Leader in India

      SinglePoint
      Gregory T. Huang wrote:

      Bellevue, WA-based SinglePoint, a mobile messaging software company, announced today it has acquired M2Junction, a leading mobile advertising startup based in Hyderabad, India. Financial terms of the deal weren’t given. The move should make it easier for SinglePoint to connect with and sell its services to content publishers, mobile operators, brands, and ad agencies in India.

      It looks like a significant step in SinglePoint’s global expansion strategy. India is one of the fastest growing text-messaging markets in the world, with some 525 million mobile subscribers as of December 2009. And in general, text messaging (SMS) is considered one of the most powerful channels for brands to reach new audiences and do mobile marketing. M2Junction, for its part, is already a SinglePoint partner, and a collaborator in terms of market positioning and knowledge of the Indian mobile ecosystem and culture.

      Gowri Shankar, SinglePoint’s new CEO, noted in a statement that there is “an incredible mobile advertising opportunity” in India. “We at SinglePoint want to be a part of this growth and revolutionize the Indian industry with our offerings,” he said.

      SinglePoint makes a Web-based software platform for handling transactions in contextual mobile advertising—delivering things like brand messages and interactive coupons within text messages. With its move into the Indian market, the company says it is looking to deliver more than a quarter of all the mobile advertising opportunities in India in its first year, and within two years, to become the nation’s biggest player in SMS advertising.

      That sounds pretty ambitious, given what must be fierce competition among local companies in India. But in the past few years, SinglePoint has become a leader in helping publishers and brands reach mobile subscribers, and it has expertise in the Indian market. The company, formerly called Wireless Services, was co-founded by former Microsoft and McCaw Cellular veteran Steve Wood in 1996. It has been backed by a slew of venture investors and private equity firms including Ignition Partners, Madrona Venture Group, SeaPoint Ventures, Intel Capital, Northwest Venture Associates, and Rally Capital.

      Last week, SinglePoint announced that Swedish mobile giant Ericsson had bought its mobile aggregation business, and that Shankar has become chief executive. Shankar succeeds Rich Begert, who led the company from 2004 until this year and remains on the board.







    • MyTunes gives your device something to listen to

      imageimage

      The Windows Mobile world, for ages has experienced an acute shortage of eye candy, best excemplified by by the media player , but an XDA member has ventured into the app making world to bring us the above application. The software is called MyTunes and unlike WM media player, it looks mildly attractive while keeping most of the essential functions. The application is currently in test phase and while not as great at HTC’s media player, it has some great potential and as it evolves I am sure we will see more improvements.

       

      Here are the new features(VGA & WVGA Only):

      –a new album song list view with the ability to change albums while in the view.
      –updated shade slider; reversed the direction that it moves the albums so its more of a slider than any sort of album flow
      –holding the top bar until it turns red will bring up settings page.
      –The player now shows you the current playing track in blue so that you can easily jump back to the album that the song is in.
      – you can now clear out the current playlist, save playlists, load playlists and also Concatenate multiple playlists… sort of (just got it set up so its not perfect yet. )
      – Settings allow you to set default folder , and the default playlist. repeat and random toggle buttons are hooked to anything yet.
      – new volume slider, just click on the speakers in the corner to bring it up, then slide it back down when you are done.
      – you can now throw away albums you no longer want in your playlist by swiping them down into your folder

      GET IT: HERE

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    • A Good Start? WA Companies Raised $57M in January, Up from $22M in Previous Month

      Gregory T. Huang wrote:

      Last month, companies based in Washington state raised a total of about $57 million in venture capital, in eight deals. That’s up from about $22 million in December 2009 (four companies), and $44 million (10 companies) in the month before that.

      The VC stats are courtesy of private company intelligence platform CB Insights. See the table below for a full list of January venture financings.

      In terms of dollars, the trend is going upward, but it’s notable that only one of the deals was a Series A financing—Seattle-based Exponential Entertainment raising $1.45 million for social gaming services.

      The biggest financing was Bellevue’s Visible Technologies raising a $22 million Series C round to expand its global presence in brand monitoring and online reputation management. Next up was DataSphere, also in Bellevue, raising a $10.8 million Series B round as it continues to help media companies make money from hyperlocal websites. Interestingly, Bellevue-based Ignition Partners was involved in both financings.

      The venture deals for the month break down pretty evenly by sector: three in Internet, two in healthcare, and arguably three in cleantech—though you could also call Lagotek home automation software, and Verdiem business software.

      All in all, it’s a decent start to the year for Washington state companies. But the innovation community does need some early-stage funding, and it needs it fast. Here is the recap of January 2010 venture deals in Washington:

      .

      Venture deals for Washington-based companies, January 2010 (ChubbyBrain)