Category: Software

  • Windows Mobile 7 UI concept

    winmonew11By now we have all been bored with the old, rather pedestrian screen shots of Windows Mobile 7. We often see more interesting UI’s in Microsoft’s concept videos, such as this Microsoft Tag video which we have posted on earlier.

    Do you think Microsoft will surprise us with a good-looking and radically different UI such as this, or will we just be seeing Windows Mobile 6.5.3 Plus? Let us know what your wildest fantasies for Windows Mobile 7 is below.

    Thanks Wreiad for reminding us of the video above.

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  • More Apps, More Problems: How the iPad Will Change the App Store [Apple]

    It doesn’t really matter what you think of the iPad itself, because love it or loathe it, it will irreversibly change the landscape of the App Store. Here’s how.

    Apple Will Finally Have to Fix Fragmentation

    Fragmentation in the App Store is a problem already. Even across devices with the same screen size, same core feature set and same product name, you find subtle differences in capability. A first-gen iPhone doesn’t have a compass, so it can’t run augmented reality apps. A second-gen iPod Touch can support mic input, while my first-gen model—purchased just a few months before—can’t. An iPhone 3GS will run a 3D game like N.O.V.A. beautifully, while a regular old 3G struggles to keep a viewable framerate playing Sonic the Hedgehog.

    Part of the current problem is the lack of division between products in the App Store. Developers generally say what kind of device is supported in obvious cases—a compass-based app will most of the time be listed as 3GS-only—but there’s almost no enforcement by Apple, meaning that it’s easy to download an app that you can’t really use. It’s getting to the point that there needs to be separate sections for each device, or some kind of rudimentary search or sort parameter for filtering out incompatible software.

    We’ve needed a fix for fragmentation for a while, and hopefully the iPad, being such an obviously distinct device, will give Apple the kick in the ass they need to implement one. The iPad may run all iPhone apps, but the iPhone will not necessarily run all iPad apps, so assuming downloads aren’t required to be packaged together as dual-mode iPad/iPhone apps, there will have to be a way to prevent purchasers from accidentally purchasing something they can’t use at all on their iPhone. An improved, properly segmented App Store storefront or download system is inevitable; we’ll just have to wait and see what it looks like.

    Data Will Be Freed

    In some iterations, the iPad is a 3G-capable device, and in all, it has a microphone. What it never has is built-in voice capabilities—that is, unless you download them. According to early reports, the new iPad and iPhone SDK has lifted the restriction on voice calls over 3G data (VoIPo3G?). Opening up voice over data services for the iPad could have a larger effect on iPhone apps than on iPad apps, since, you know, they’re for phones.
    AT&T isn’t the first wireless company to allow voice over 3G data, and the iPhone is far from the first phone to support it, but for both to now be onboard with a technology that threatens a core feature of carriers’ business plans is a very, very good sign.

    In-App Purchasing Will Finally Take Off

    The iPad will ship with a book store, but what about all those fancy magazines? (Or to adopt their parlance, “WHITHER THE PERIODICAL?”) If print publications were placing their future success in Apple’s hands, Apple’s just handed it right back. Unlike books, which will be sold directly through an iTunes-style storefront and viewed through a common interface, magazines and newspapers will be in charge of selling their own apps, with their own interfaces, and their own business models. But this could turn out to be a good thing.

    Imagine an icon on your iPad. When you tap it, it’ll open up your favorite magazine, in full color, with magazine-style formatting and interactive content. The app itself is free, but the content is not—new issues come either individually, at newsstand-ish prices, or through a subscription. They will compete with one another to provide the best e-magazine experience. Unique, miniature storefronts, selling content for anything from a single publication to an entire publishing empire: this is the kind of thing the App Store’s in-app purchase system was made for.

    What’s funny about this is that in-app purchases are still App Store transactions, carried out through the same payment system and with a portion of revenues set aside for Apple. Nothing will change except the packaging, but that alone will be enough to fundamentally change the App Store economy, and how we pay for print content. (Increased dependence on in-app purchases could help stem the tide of piracy as well, but that’s another discussion entirely. Soon!)

    Note: Apple may be faced with some resistance in this model, though, since magazine publishers would much rather handle billing themselves, if just for the valuable data they could glean about their subscribers.

    “Apps” Will Grow Into “Applications”

    Apps are small, they’re simple, they’ve got a short title. They’re like applications, but nuggetized. And that’s fine! We call software on phones by a different name than we call software on PCs, because something about the products feels different. The iPad could bridge that gap.

    The SDK has been out for less than two days, so nobody has had time to really delve into the app potential of the iPad. Except, of course, Apple. Steve Jobs spent what probably seemed like too long on iWork for the iPad, a set of $10-a-pop apps that Apple fully redesigned for the iPad’s touch interface which are an order of magnitude more complex than anything on the iPhone right now. (Our friend John Mahoney at PopSci goes so far as to say these are a sneak preview of Apple’s entire future software philosophy. He could be right.)

    Of course, these are Apple apps, so you’d expect them to be executed well, and to use Apple’s device to its maximum potential. But with more screen real estate, more power, serious text entry abilities and a more mature SDK at their disposal, the developers are going to give us apps of an entirely new caliber, not just a new size.

    Apple Will Rule With an Iron Fist, Or Learn to Let Things Go

    With iBooks, Apple is setting itself up for an awkward situation. Apple has strict (if sometimes inscrutable) rules about what types of apps are permitted, mostly concerning appropriateness of content and the safety and stability of the app’s code. The prohibition that always rubbed developers and customers the wrong way, though, is the ban on apps that duplicate the functionality of Apple’s apps, like email clients, new browsers, and by extension, alternative music stores and app stores. These are now joined by iBooks, which is unique in that its actually invading territory inhabited by preexisting apps, like Amazon’s Kindle app and indie favorites like Stanza. So what does Apple do? Do they purge Kindle and co. from the App Store, or mark ereader apps as incompatible with the iPad? The Kindle app is to iBooks what an Amazon MP3 store app would be to iTunes, all the way down to the competing file formats and DRM systems (iBooks renders a proprietary type of ePub file, while the Kindle sells books in a proprietary AZW format), so even if this would be a terribly dickish thing to do, it’s possible.

    The more likely path is a continuation of the gradual erosion of Apple’s tight grip on the App Store. Along with explicit, proactive feature additions like the ones we saw in OS 3.0, Apple’s been letting more and more types of apps slide through the approval process. The Rhapsody app may not provide a plain music download service like iTunes, but it is music that you pay for, in an app that doesn’t come from Apple. you may not be able to download a browser with an entirely new rendering engine, but now you can download a cornucopia of alternative browsers that render through WebKit. Some apps can stream video over 3G now; others can broadcast voice communication over AT&T’s data network. It’s too early to presume, but if iBooks doesn’t murder its competition, Apple could be charting a course toward a more open App Store, not a more tightly controlled one.

    [The iPad on Giz]






  • Microsoft directly confirms Windows Mobile 7 for Mobile World Congress

    Microsoft has been extremely cagy about Windows Mobile 7, preferring to always couch statements about it in vague terms such as their favourite, “the next generation of our mobile OS”.

    Clearly no-one told Peter Klein, CFO of Microsoft that, as he came out and responded directly to a Windows Mobile 7 question in this Fox news interview.

    Fox News: “Are we going to see Windows 7 Mobile come out in 2010?  What is your plans for that?”

    Peter Klein: “We are heads down working on Windows Mobile 7  and we will have much more to say about that at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February.”

    There we have it.  Let any speculation about whether Windows Mobile 7 will be discussed at Mobile World Congress end now.

    Check the video at the 4 minute mark to hear this in person above.

    For all our Windows Mobile 7 coverage follow up at twitter.com/wmpoweruser.

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  • How To Automatically Save Email Attachments in the Cloud

    Now here’s a clever use for the cloud if I ever saw one. Lifehacker shines the spotlight on MailDrop — a free Windows application that automatically saves email attachments to your Dropbox account in the sky. You configure MailDrop to monitor a specific mail folder or label, aptly named “Dropbox.” If MailDrop finds any mail there, it scans the messages for attachments and saves them to your local Dropbox folder.

    At that point, the Dropbox service takes over — since it synchronizes your local folder with the one in the cloud, those email attachments are shot up to web for later use. And with the collaborative sharing that Dropbox natively offers, you could even share those attachments with your peeps.

    With some rules or filters, you could essentially automate the whole process with MailDrop. Maybe you just love spreadsheets and want them in the cloud as opposed to pesky Power Points? Configure such an rule with that .PPT exclusion and you’re set. Since MailDrop runs locally on your Windows PC, there’s no need to provide your Dropbox credentials to a third party and it works with any IMAP mail service.

    Although this MailDrop software is geared for DropBox, other cloud storage and sync services work in a similar fashion. I wonder if you could tweak the usage for them?

  • Windows Mobile 7 still in line for Spring Release to Manufacturers?

    windows-mobile-7-spring-rtm

    MSFTKitchen, clearly an amazing data spelunker, has found this slide on Microsoft’s server in a Chinese presentation created on the 11th December 2009 which indicates that Windows Mobile 7 was, then at least, still set for a Spring RTM. 

    This is of course exactly the time scale Microsoft should be looking for id they expect to have Windows Mobile 7 smartphones available in the fall on 2010.  The news here is of course that Microsoft is still on track, and that rumours of a delay are just that.

    Read more at MSFTKitchen here.

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  • What’s So Magical About an Oversized iPhone? Plenty—And There’s More to Come

    World Wide Wade
    Wade Roush wrote:

    The Apple iPad is one of the most eagerly anticipated computing devices in history. With all the heat and hype that preceded Wednesday’s public debut of the device, it was inevitable that the backlash from skeptical bloggers and Twitterers would be equally ferocious. Still, even after you filter out all the bozos who keep repeating “It’s just a giant iPhone,” or who dismiss all Apple customers as fey elitists, or who have a sophomoric fascination with the hygienic overtones of the name “iPad,” you’re still left with a surprising number of critics who seem inconsolably disappointed over inconsequential details like the width of the iPad’s bezel, or whether the device has USB ports, or Flash, or multitasking, or cameras, or windshield wipers.

    These cranky commentators are missing the point. They can’t see the screen for the stuff around its edges, as it were. There was never any chance that Version 1 of the iPad would have all of the features that fanboys want, or even all of the features that Apple wants. (More on that in a moment.) But it’s already got the three things that really count: 1) a huge touchscreen, 2) an operating system designed around multitouch gestures, and 3) a development kit that will allow thousands of software builders to do amazing things with #1 and #2.

    Apple iPadAmidst the dozens of iPad reviews I’ve read this week, two sentences have struck me as particularly insightful. One was from David Pogue, writing for his New York Times blog: “Like the iPhone, the iPad is really a vessel, a tool, a 1.5-pound sack of potential.” The other was from writer and blogger Rory Marinich: “The product is, simply put, a magical screen that can do anything you ever want it to, no matter what that is.”

    “Magical” is a word so often abused by technology marketers that someone should call Amnesty International. It’s the word Apple itself is using in its central pitch for the iPad: Our most advanced technology in a magical and revolutionary device at an unbelievable price. It’s practically the first word out of designer Jonathan Ives’ mouth in Apple’s propaganda video for the iPad.

    Nonetheless, I think it’s a pretty good word for the feeling I got the first time I played with an iPhone. The fact that the phone really did all the things that I had seen it doing in the TV commercials astonished me. I couldn’t believe that the little icons on the home screen could be so bright and crisp; that they could so instantly respond to my touch; that I could flick my way through a photo album or zoom in on a picture simply by spreading my thumb and index finger.

    Don’t get me wrong. I’d read about the basics of capacitive sensors and multitouch interfaces, so I didn’t think anything supernatural was going on. In fact, I violently disagree with Ives’ argument, in the Apple video, that something has to “exceed your ability to understand how it works” before it can seem magical. What impressed me was that …Next Page »







  • Alnara Adds $35M, Harvest Power Teams Up with Waste Management, & More Boston-Area Deals News

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    We spent some time this week looking at the data on last year’s venture deals, big and small, while New England’s tech and life sciences companies announced some of the first deals of 2010.

    —All but one of the 10 biggest Boston-area private equity deals in 2009 were closed by life sciences firms, a survey by Dow Jones VentureSource revealed. The largest deal, however, was clinched by Watertown, MA-based lithium-ion battery maker A123Systems (NASDAQ: AONE), which scored a whopping $99.9 million in a Series F financing before it went public in September.

    —Life sciences firms also dominated the list of pint-sized financing deals, worth between $100,000 and $1 million, that our partner ChubbyBrain put together for us. Erin gave the rundown of the 21 such deals in December, which included companies working in fields glucose monitoring for diabetics, private air travel booking, and beer brewing.

    —Harvest Power, a Waltham, MA-based startup aiming to turn yard and food waste into high-quality compost and renewable fuels, inked a deal with Houston, TX-based garbage hauling behemoth Waste Management (NYSE: WM). Under the terms of the alliance, Waste Management will help Harvest expand to more cities, starting with the East and West Coasts, and will provide the Massachusetts firm with raw material for its composting process and fuel production systems.

    —Cambridge, MA-based Clarus Ventures contributed $17 million to a Series D financing for Irvine, CA-based Neomend, a developer of surgical hydrogels. The round, which totaled $30 million, included investments from Novo Ventures, Prospect Venture Partners, Sanderling Ventures, and Vivo Ventures.

    —Landslide Technologies, a developer of customer relationship management software with offices in Burlington, MA, and Pittsburgh, PA, raised $8 million in growth capital. Pittsburgh-based Adams Capital Management led the deal.

    Alnara Pharmaceuticals of Cambridge raised $35 million in a Series B financing round led by MPM Capital. Bessemer Venture Partners, Frazier Healthcare Ventures, and Third Rock Ventures also participated. Alnara is preparing to seek FDA approval for its first product, an enzyme-replacement drug for patients with cystic fibrosis.







  • Lyrics Finder 1.0 reviewed

    Lyrics Finder 1.0 is a new windows phone app developed by rvanavr from ppcgeeks.com , the app will download the lyrics for your favourite song on windows mobile. Read the full review at BestWindowsMobileApps here.

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  • Pure and Turtle Zune phones proven again, Microsoft’s denials notwithstanding

    pure-turtle-rm-eng

    Microsoft’s vociferous denials of making a Zune phone is starting to sound more and more hollow, given the evidence unearthed in their latest Zune 4.2 software.

    The software has references to the Pure and Turtle phones leaked by Gizmodo some time ago , and also makes references to managing your pictures and video taken by your phone at Studio, a url which redirects to Zune.net.

    500x_web2 web1

    The likelihood is that these devices represent a new generation of the Sidekick platform, and not real smartphones as we know it, and could therefore be released much sooner than we expect, possibly soon after Mobile World Congress.

    Read more at ZuneBoards.com.

    Via Engadget.com

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  • HouseKeeper iPhone App will Remind You To Do Daily Chores

    housekeeper 202x300 HouseKeeper iPhone App will Remind You To Do Daily ChoresSo we all have chores to do, and sometimes sticking a list on the fridge isn’t the most productive way of remembering to do things. So of course there is an App for that called HouseKeeper. HouseKeeper reminds you to do all those annoying, but necessary chores like cleaning out the dryer vent or inspecting your extinguisher and smoke detector – so that you’ll survive in case of an emergency. It will also keep a list of the 10 most common household chores, and send you a text or email notification so you have no excuse for forgetting them. HouseKeeper is available for $1.99 at the App store.


  • Introducing Erin Kutz, Belatedly

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    You know a new hire is a good fit when by the end of her first day you’ve already forgotten that she’s new. And that’s just what happened when our new assistant editor, Erin Kutz, joined the Boston team a couple weeks ago. In fact, we so quickly forgot that she’s new that we forgot to introduce her to our readers—classy, I know.

    So without further ado, allow me to introduce Erin. She’s a New England native who earned her degree in journalism from BU and scored some excellent internships at the likes of Reuters and USA Today. At Xconomy, she’s been diving in on all the different fields we cover, including mobile technology, venture capital, and, of course, geek-rock trash talk.

    You’ll be seeing Erin’s byline a lot, if her first two weeks are any indication. And if you join us in the Boston office for pizza tomorrow or at the Battle of the Tech Bands next Thursday you can meet her in person as well.

    Welcome aboard Erin!







  • Bill Gates Funds Geoengineering and Climate Projects, Steve Ballmer on China, and Other Microsoft-Related News

    Microsoft
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Lest Apple take all the headlines this week, a certain software powerhouse in Redmond, WA, is making waves in its own way. Analysts and stockholders are anxiously awaiting the results of Microsoft’s fourth-quarter earnings call today, with some predicting a boost in revenues thanks to Windows 7. But there are other things going on too.

    —OK, he doesn’t technically work at Microsoft anymore, but chairman Bill Gates has certainly been in the news a lot lately. One item you might not have noticed, however, was a report this week from Science magazine reporter Eli Kintisch. He wrote that Gates has been funding academic research on geoengineering, climate change, and energy since 2007. According to the story, Gates has put up at least $4.5 million to explore things like altering the stratosphere to reflect some solar energy, filtering carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and brightening ocean clouds. None of this is surprising, given Gates’s involvement with huge, Earth-scale projects at places like Bellevue, WA-based Intellectual Ventures. But the specific connections to the University of Calgary, the Carnegie Institution for Science, and Silicon Valley inventor Armand Neukermans are interesting.

    —Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer went on the record yesterday about doing business in China. This is a topic I have some familiarity with, having documented Microsoft’s research and development efforts in the Middle Kingdom over the past decade. Ballmer’s post comes on the heels of the flap involving Google in China. He didn’t say anything earth-shattering, but his comments reinforced the notion that Microsoft has been in China far longer than Google has, and has built up deeper relationships with Chinese government officials and businesses.

    He wrote, “We have done business in China for more than 20 years and we intend to stay engaged, which means our business must respect the laws of China. That’s true for every company doing business in countries around the world: we are all subject to local laws.” Ballmer continued: “At the same time, Microsoft is opposed to restrictions on peaceful political expression, and we have conversations with governments to make our views known. In every country in which we operate, including China, Microsoft requires proper legal authority before we remove any Internet content; and if we remove content, we give users notice.”

    —On the healthcare-IT front, Ryan reported today that Microsoft’s HealthVault software platform for managing electronic health records has expanded to its third country (after the U.S. and Canada), via a licensing deal from German conglomerate Siemens. The partnership was created through Siemens’ IT services and solutions division. Financial terms weren’t given, but it could be an important step in getting Microsoft’s health-related products to be adopted much more widely.







  • Boston Startups Stake Out iPad Territory: Big Plans at Apperian, Jumptap, Skyhook

    Apple iPad displaying the New York Times
    Wade Roush wrote:

    For Boston-area startups that have already spent years staking out their corners of the mobile marketplace, getting on board with the Apple iPad—and the new set of business opportunities it creates—is a no-brainer. At least two local companies have already announced they’re providing technologies or services targeted at the tablet-sized device, and the area’s application developers are diving in too, looking for ways to optimize existing mobile apps for iPad, or build entirely new ones.

    I’ve touched base today with a number of these local players, and have rounded up their news, comments, and approaches below. Many of these folks have clearly known about the iPad project for months, but couldn’t talk due to Apple’s strict confidentiality rules. If there’s a common theme in what they’re saying now, it’s that they expect the technology and marketing elements that have worked so well on the iPhone—things like location awareness, specialty apps, and rich-media advertising—to work even better on the iPad. And each is ready to help clients and consumers take advantage of the new platform.

    At Boston-based Skyhook Wireless, which makes software that allows laptops and mobile gadgets to translate Wi-Fi or GPS signals into an exact location fix, CEO Ted Morgan announced via Twitter yesterday that Skyhook’s software will be built into the iPad. That means iPad owners, just like iPhone users, will be able to locate themselves on the device’s native map interface, as long as there are a few Wi-Fi networks in the neighborhood. (Skyhook’s software works by collecting the IDs of nearby Wi-Fi networks, checking them against its global database of Wi-Fi access point locations, and triangulating.) It also means that the location data will be available to third-party apps running on the iPad, starting with the 140,000 existing iPhone/iPod Touch apps in the iTunes App Store.

    The significance of the iPad deal, for Skyhook, is that “it shows in general that all mobile devices are going to have location in them,” Morgan told me. “It’s our goal at Skyhook to make sure we are the ones providing location on all of them, and this just broadens our technology into a whole new device category.”

    Morgan points out that more and more apps are incorporating location awareness, even those that have nothing to do with maps or navigation. “Music apps, movie-finders, newsreaders are all starting to have location,” he says. On the iPad, location data will initially be used in much the same way that it’s used on laptops, Morgan predicts. For example, Skyhook announced this week that …Next Page »







  • Siemens Licenses Microsoft HealthVault

    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Microsoft reports today that the German conglomerate Siemens has licensed its HealthVault personal health technology platform. Siemens, through its IT services and solutions division, will be the exclusive provider of HealthVault in Germany. Germany will be the third country to adopt the technology, which enables people to store their personal health records in a secure online account and to share their information with their doctors. Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) launched the system in the U.S. in 2007, and the telecom company Telus gained rights to the technology last year to develop an electronic health service for people in Canada.







  • MenuPages App Hits the App Store: Delicious and Free [IPhone Apps]

    Do you live in New York, San Francisco, LA, Philly, Boston, Chicago, DC or South Florida? Then you have no reason not to download this app, which has stunningly complete restaurant listings with full menus for your entire city.

    Since MenuPages doesn’t do reservations (update: it does, though the restaurant’s profile page! But only on select, OpenTable-ready restaurants) or emphasize a social function like Yelp, its strengths lie in its completeness—I’ve got about twice as many proper restaurants listed in my neighborhood on here than in Yelp—and raw information. With MenuPages, you’re not looking up restaurants; you’re looking up specific dishes, usually with listed ingredients. The app itself is minimalist, but not to a fault: listings are easy to access either manually or according to your current location, the refinement tools are just like the ones you’re used to on MenuPages.com, and map/list search results are easy to sort through. And it’s free. SO WONDERFULLY FREE. [MenuPages]






  • BuddyTV Rising Fast, Looking for New Revenue Streams in a Changed Media Landscape

    BuddyTV
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    This Seattle-based website draws some 6 million visitors a month. It has been seeing annual traffic growth of about 300 percent, and was recently named the #2 fastest-growing website in the U.S., according to comScore.

    Yes, I’m talking about BuddyTV, the social site for television fans led by prominent entrepreneur and investor Andy Liu. Fans go to BuddyTV.com to get news about their favorite shows, play TV-related games, and gossip with other fans. I stopped by the company’s office in Lower Queen Anne yesterday for a Seattle Lunch 2.0 meeting (thanks to Josh Maher for organizing it). Very nearby are some other notable startups, including Cheezburger Network and BigDoor Media. It’s an intriguing little pocket of Internet entrepreneurship in Seattle.

    Neal Freeland, BuddyTV’s head of marketing (and a former Microsoft and Zango veteran), gave an informal update on the company to a packed room of about 80 entrepreneurs and tech-business types. My take is that 2009 hit everybody hard, especially consumer tech and Web 2.0 startups. And although BuddyTV is doing well—its revenues roughly follow its traffic, Freeland says—the company has been looking beyond its bread-and-butter revenue model of Web advertising to figure out how it can make more money.

    The entire medium of television is going through big changes. From broadcast to niche, analog to digital, scheduled to anytime, and—crucially—from advertising-supported to “nobody really knows,” Freeland says. Nevertheless, it’s clear that TV still matters a lot. And online, he says, “Ads are good, but not enough.” The key is that nobody has figured out how to make banner ads really work on the Web, in order to create the kind of demand for advertising you see (or at least used to see) in print, radio, and TV.

    Freeland didn’t offer any magic bullets. But he says BuddyTV has been looking at other options besides subscriptions, like virtual currencies—including micropayments, decorative benefits (dressing up your avatar online), and virtual gifts (e-cards, for example)—and lead-generation models. One problem with lead generation and “offer” models, which typically ask consumers to take surveys or sign up for subscriptions to other products, is that they sometimes include hidden fees, or have very low retention rates for subscribers. (People will sign up for Netflix in order to keep playing a game online, say, but then they might immediately cancel their subscription.)

    But the virtual currency model has picked up steam, Freeland says, with Café World (from social gaming company Zynga) raking in more than $100 million a year, virtual world IMVU making $25 million a year, and Facebook Gifts hauling in some $50 million annually.

    “We’re in a revolution which is changing media consumption and marketing,” Freeland says. I took this to mean, consumer Internet companies beware—but get ready to seize new revenue opportunities in 2010 and beyond.

    BuddyTV is still running lean with about 20 employees, including six writers who crank out hundreds of articles a week for the site. The company was founded in 2005 and is backed by Madrona Venture Group, Gemstar-TV Guide, and Charles River Ventures.







  • There Are No Good Games On Android, If You Ignore All These Good Games On Android [Android]

    It gets tiresome, that old “Android doesn’t have any games!” refrain, especially now that it’s not really true. Disgruntled French site Android HD has compiled annotated video proof of at least 50 worthy titles. See, look! Right there! Fun. [AndroidHD]






  • Microsoft planning TWO Windows Mobile analyst briefings in February

    3gsm_world_congress_logoWe  are all expecting Windows Mobile interest to really hot up in February, and it seems Microsoft agrees. They are planning to hold not just one, but two financial analyst briefings in February, one immediately after their Mobile World Congress announcement, and one a week later.

    Microsoft financial analyst briefing at the 2010 Mobile World Congress
    Monday, Feb. 15, 2010
    7 p.m. CET/ 10 a.m. PST
    Andy Lees, senior vice president, Mobile Communication Business

    Windows Mobile financial analyst conference call
    Monday, Feb. 22, 2010
    8 a.m. PST
    Andy Lees, senior vice president, Mobile Communication Business

    Hopefully the announcement, which is expected to bring news on Windows Mobile 6.5.x a Windows Mobile 7, will have more than enough for the analysts, and ourselves, to chew on for the rest of the year, until the first batch of Windows Mobile 7 handsets arrive.

    Read more at istartedsomething.com

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  • Peggle Mobile 1.0 for Windows Mobile reviewed

    Peggle is the port of a fun and widely appreciated game called Peggle. It’s available on a variety of devices including the iPhone and Nintendo DS but despite people saying it’s not as good as other versions, it’s still a good game in itself. It supports both portrait and landscape and can be controlled …

    Read more at BestWindowsMobileApps here.

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  • LunaTagGen for Mobile – share info via Microsoft Tag

    Luna Development has created LunaTagGen for Windows Mobile, which allows users to generate tags directly on their mobile phone and share data with other Tag users without needing to use Bluetooth or SMS.

    TagGEN_menuThe software allows you to keep one pre-generated tag on your phone for your contact info, and also create a password-protected tag for sharing small snippets of info like phone numbers, url’s etc.

    Snapp_LunaTagGenBeta The app features:

      • Easy to install

      • One click Microsoft Tag generation

      • Windows Mobile 6 (or above) compatible

      • Free to generate Microsoft Tags

      Read more here, or download using the Microsoft tag. (gettag.mobi or Marketplace).

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