Category: Software

  • HTC sees full year 2009 revenue of $4.55 billion, 5% down from 2008

    htcrevenue2009

    Digitimes reports that HTC’s full year revenue for 2009 has clocked in at $4.55 billion, 5.03% less than the year previously. Before tax this left HTC with a $800 million profit and a gross margin of 17.5%.

    Despite hot handsets like the HTC HD2 and the HTC Hero, HTC’s Q4 was still down 13.29% YoY.  2009 saw HTC place a significant focus on their Android handsets, which sell to consumers at a much lower margin than their business-focussed Windows Mobile handsets.

    While HTC saw only a slight decline in revenue in a very difficult economic climate, rivals like Apple and RIM were seemingly unaffected by this, suggesting HTC’s move to Android has not helped it tap into the high-value zeitgeist like its  its other more popular rivals appear to have done.

    See the full report at Digitimes here.

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  • Azuki Adds $3M to B Round

    Wade Roush wrote:

    In an amended regulatory filing, Azuki Systems of Acton, MA, reports that its $6 million Series B equity funding round, originally announced last May, has grown to $9 million. Kepha Partners and Sigma Partners continue as the lead funders. Formerly known as Peermeta, Azuki is developing a cloud-based infrastructure that helps mobile operators and media companies deliver rich media to mobile websites, mobile applications, and desktop widgets.







  • OVP Leads $9M Investment in Aggregate Knowledge, Gets Serious About Online Ads

    OVP Venture Partners
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Kirkland, WA-based OVP Venture Partners is leading a new $9 million Series C financing round in Aggregate Knowledge, an online advertising and analytics firm in San Mateo, CA. Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers, DAG Ventures, and original angel investors are also participating. In connection with the deal, OVP managing director Lucinda Stewart is joining the board of Aggregate Knowledge.

    Although it’s a Series C investment in a company founded in 2005, Stewart says it was priced like an early-stage deal, with the existing investors cooperating in a recapitalization of the firm. (That means the previous investors’ stakes aren’t worth what they used to be.) “We came in to create a fresh new company,” Stewart says. The deal signifies OVP’s emerging interest in the online advertising and marketing sector, where it does not yet have many investments.

    Aggregate Knowledge, led by CEO and founder Paul Martino, currently has 26 employees. The company’s vision is to enable major publishers and retailers to personalize their display ads in real-time. Aggregate Knowledge does this with machine-learning algorithms that make sense of huge amounts of data that publishers and retailers have on their customers. The company counts The Washington Post, Cablevision, and Sam’s Club among its customers and partners. Aggregate Knowledge plans to use its new cash infusion to take its technology a step further, in part by offering it to advertising agencies and marketers who want to run more precisely targeted ad campaigns.

    The Seattle connection to this company came in the form of David Jakubowski, a former Microsoft veteran who joined Aggregate Knowledge about two months ago as its chief revenue officer and general manager. Jakubowski was most recently senior vice president at Specific Media, an Irvine, CA-based ad technology firm which has a Seattle office. He previously worked at Quigo Technologies, a search marketing firm, before becoming general manager of Microsoft adCenter and Search Strategy. Jakubowski has also been an advisor to Seattle-based Lucid Commerce, another OVP-backed startup in the analytics and marketing field.

    It took me a while to see how Aggregate Knowledge is any different from Seattle-area online ad firms like BlueKai, AdReady, and Mpire. As I understand it, BlueKai would sell its consumer data to companies like Aggregate Knowledge. AK (and other firms) then use that data to predict audience behavior, and help advertisers and publishers craft and place ads that change based on precise demographics like gender and age. One key difference is that Aggregate Knowledge is generally focused on bigger customers than AdReady is, for example, although both firms share the goal of making display ads as effective at generating sales as search-engine ads (like those from Google).

    “AK provides transparency into the value of inventory for the demand side, the guys who own the websites, the retail companies,” Stewart says. “For 30 years, the ‘buy’ side has never had these tools…Whoever has the data wins now.”

    As for the broader significance to OVP, Stewart adds, “We have a strong interest in deals that leverage ‘big data.’ That’s the thrust behind our entire computational biology strategy, and a lot of our cleantech and advertising and IT deals.”







  • From VC to EDC: Venture Investor Dave Titus Joins San Diego’s Economic Development Corp.

    Dave_Titus
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Dave Titus, a co-founder and managing partner of San Diego VC firm Windward Ventures, notified his friends and colleagues in an e-mail blast yesterday that he’s joining the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corp. (EDC) as managing director of strategic initiatives.

    As it turns out, Titus has had some time on his hands. When we talked by phone yesterday afternoon, he conceded that managing Windward Ventures is no longer a full-time occupation. “Over 13 years, we invested in 24 companies, of which six remain in the portfolio,” Titus says. Semiconductor industry veteran James A. Cole and Titus founded Windward Ventures in 1997, and the firm raised its last venture fund in 2000. Titus told me in October that Windward made its last investment from that fund in 2007, and has been unable to raise additional funds since then.

    Titus also voiced a strong desire to help San Diego’s business community across a variety of industries, and says joining the EDC, “doesn’t feel to me like a big career change. It’s working with CEOs. It’s working with companies. It’s solving problems.”

    The EDC is a nonprofit organization funded by local business and governments that works to support local business and commerce, provides assistance to companies interested in moving to San Diego, and seeks to improve education, transportation, water, and other resource and infrastructure issues of concern to San Diego companies. In a statement released by the EDC, Titus says he’s been working with the EDC for the past year on a variety of issues, and his new role will enable him to help build “a vibrant business culture in San Diego focused on science and technology.”

    Titus was named in October as chairman of a task force to find new sources of capital for the San Diego region, which has emerged as a key concern among the technology and life sciences startups that comprise San Diego’s “innovation economy.” During our conversation, though, Titus said the task force was formed to focus on identifying capital of all kinds—and not just VC funding. Titus was an investor, board member, or both, at several San Diego tech companies, including Primary Access, Medication Delivery Devices, Sitematic, Mohomine, and Network Harmoni. He currently sits on the board of four private companies in San Diego, including Nirvanix and Xifin.

    As the EDC’s managing director of strategic initiatives, Titus says, “I have a pretty broad charter. I’m able to sit down with CEOs around San Diego and ask them what do they need to grow their companies, and to expand here. And I can channel those needs to the EDC’s business development group and their policy group.”

    In talking with Titus, I wondered if there are deeper concerns among San Diego’s business leaders about the regional economy. But he assures me that, “overall, we have a healthy innovation economy, given what’s going on.” On the other hand, he says, “The world economy has everybody on orange alert these days.”

    Titus began his career in venture capital in 1986, when he joined Technology Funding, a Bay Area venture firm with $200 million under management. He was managing director of corporate finance in 1991, when he moved to San Diego. Before that, Titus was a founder and senior vice president of Silicon Valley Bank, which now ranks among the foremost lenders in California that serve emerging growth companies.







  • Windows Mobile 7 in testing

    Its no surprise really, but its nice to see things finally rumbling along for Windows Mobile 7 at Microsoft.

    The latest news from Microsoft’s Press release as job adverts is asking for a Software Development Engineer for the Windows Mobile 7 International/Content Test Team where developers can apparently make an immediate difference.

    Hopefully with the OS going into wider testing it also means it wont be long before we see the first leaks of the OS also.

    Software Development Engineer in Test- Windows Mobile Job

    Product: Windows Mobile
    Accelerate your career while working in a fun, challenging environment! The Windows Mobile 7 International/Content Test Team is a place where you can immediately make a difference, and grow your scope of influence across different groups. We are part of Windows Mobile Division, Microsoft’s fastest growing, most cutting edge business. If you are a strong, enthusiastic software design engineer in test looking for a chance to make an impact on a major Microsoft initiative then this is the role for you!
    We are rolling out a number of new Test technologies, tools, and processes aimed at the improvement of the UI and Localization Quality of the next Windows Mobile releases, while making a continuous effort to increase the productivity of our Testing, which results in significant costs savings, and improved financial results for the organization. If you enjoy venturing in "uncharted territories" to build brand new Test infrastructures as opposed to just maintaining the existent, we have plenty of interesting challenges to offer you!

    Join us and become part of the team which will make Windows phones the most compelling mobile platform on the planet!

    See the full advert here.

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  • Toshiba works on instant voice translation software for cell phones

    toshiba-tg01-6_w500

    It makes a lot of sense, but it seems to be hard to realize: Using the cell phone for instant voice translation of basic sentences whenever you’re in a foreign country. But Toshiba is one of the companies working on this, and apparently they’re almost ready to offer a decent solution.

    Their translation software, in its current iteration, enables cell phones to interpret between English, Chinese and Japanese. Toshiba says that the database, used on their TG01 “smartphone” (pictured above), for example, boasts a database of 30,000 words spoken in each of these languages. Toshiba optimized existing PC software for use in cell phones, which obviously have less processing power.

    All that users need to do is to speak into the phone in any of the three languages, let the handset analyze what you said, translate the sentence and say it out loud in the language desired, using the inflections of a native speaker. The solution doesn’t require users to be online, which is ideal for tourists traveling in foreign countries.

    Toshiba says they had exactly this target group in mind when developing the software, claiming it’s able to cover around 70% of simple travel-related conversations. The company aims at offering a practical version of the software within this year.

    Via The Nikkei [registration required, paid subscription]

    Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


  • Wake you HD2 up by shaking it

    ShakeWake Pocketnow reports on an application which allows you to wake your HTC HD2 from suspend simply  by shaking it.

    The software stays active even when the smartphone is suspended, and also keeps the G-sensor awake.  The effect on battery life is not known yet, but if you decide to try it out, let us know in the comments below.

    The software by zzattack can be downloaded from this XDA-Dev thread here.

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  • Flash Player 10.1 demoed again on Snapdragon

    To commemorate the launch of the HTC Nexus One Adobe published this video showing the upcoming Flash Player 10.1 for Mobile, which will be coming to Android, webOS and of course Windows Mobile, in action.

    The software was intended to be released at the end of last year, but of course has not been, but does appear pretty close to production.

    Hopefully we will soon see the wide release, which should allow many streaming media services that use flash to work reliably even on mobile devices.

    Via Mobiletechworld.com

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  • Straight Voicemail for Windows Mobile

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    If you have been in search for a way to call and just go straight to the voicemail, this might be for you. This little free application is for Windows Mobile and its called Slydial. The application is suppose to allow the user to make a call and go right to the person you are calling’s voicemail. That sound nice, I might just have to try it out and get you guys a review of the service when possible.

    Get it 
    Source:PN

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  • New Windows Mobile 6.5.3 Threaded E-mail feature demoed

    Outlook2 WMExperts have published this video showing the new threaded e-mail feature found in the latest builds of Windows Mobile 6.5.3

    The new Conversations feature groups e-mails threads together and shows a 3-line preview of the latest e-mail. Conversations can be sorted by date received, subject or alphabetically, and mimics the features of the latest Exchange 2010.

    Read more about this new software feature at WMExperts here.

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  • DataSphere Raises $10.8M to Help Media Companies Manage Hyperlocal Websites (and Make Money)

    DataSphere
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Bellevue, WA-based DataSphere, an Internet software and advertising sales company, has raised $10.8 million in equity and options, according to a filing with the SEC. The investors in the round were not disclosed, but the company is backed by the venture firm Ignition Partners, also based in Bellevue. John Connors of Ignition is listed on the form as a director of DataSphere.

    DataSphere and Ignition Partners could not immediately be reached for comment. According to the regulatory filing, “The total offering amount reflects $8,805,382 of the issuer’s Series B preferred stock, and warrants exercisable to purchase up to $1,999,999 of the issuer’s Series B preferred stock.”

    In the past few months, DataSphere’s technology has been used by Fisher Communications and Cowles California Media to launch a large number of “hyperlocal” neighborhood news websites—some 43 in Washington (Seattle area), 38 in Oregon (Portland and Eugene), and 40 in California (Monterey and Santa Barbara).

    DataSphere was founded as SecondSpace in 2006 and changed its name last year. The company makes an online platform to help media, real estate, and retail firms do things like manage websites, track audience behavior, and do search and information discovery. It is led by CEO Satbir Khanuja, a seven-year Amazon.com veteran who holds a Ph.D. in ceramics engineering from MIT, according to his biography on the DataSphere website.







  • Verdiem Nabs $4.7M To Help Make Computers Use Less Energy

    Verdiem
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Verdiem, the Seattle-based developer of software that helps computers use less energy, has raised $4.7 million in new equity financing out of a round that could be worth as much as $5.9 million, according to a regulatory filing.

    The filing doesn’t say who is pumping in the new capital, although it says eight investors have participated in the round, and the filing lists the same five directors on the board that are profiled on the Verdiem website. A spokesman for the company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    My colleague Greg Huang has reported on the growth at Verdiem, most recently in August, when it said it reached a milestone of having its software installed on one million desktop computers. Verdiem was founded in 2001, and is led by CEO Jeremy Jaech, the co-founder of Aldus, Visio, and Trumba. The Verdiem software, as Greg has described, is supposed to help big companies cut their energy bills by offering simple features like automatically turning off computers when they’re not in use, and turning them back on when they need to install software updates. Back in August, the company said more than 300 corporations, government agencies, and universities had used the software, and slashed their PC energy costs by 30 to 60 percent.

    Verdiem’s board of directors includes Jaech; Mark Silverman of Catamount Ventures; Trevor Traina, an entrepreneur and private investor; Ted Schlein of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers; and John Laing, a technology executive.







  • The 12 Days of Xconomists: Leading Innovators Give Their Top Advances of the Past Decade

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Over the last few weeks, as the holiday season heated up and the decade wound down, we reached out to our distinguished network of Xconomists—who include many of the top technologists, scientists, and business innovators in our three cities—and asked them (and a few more tech and life sciences leaders) to describe the most important innovations of the past 10 years in their respective fields.

    We figured we’d get two or three who could take time out during this busy season to write for us, but we were wrong. The response was staggering. We received so many thoughtful posts about the last decade (more than a dozen) that we’ve only just begun to look forward and process their responses to the other question we asked—about the biggest advances they think will come in the next decade.

    Beginning today, with Boston Xconomist Michael Greeley’s Venture Capital Oscars piece about the films that best represent the economic and investment climate of the next few years, we will be running a series of posts about the coming decade. But before we dive deeply into those, we thought it would be useful to take a minute—pause—and actually think some more about what these experts have told us so far. So here is a rundown of 12 Xconomist Forum reflections on the 2000s, noughties, or whatever you want to call them:

    Top Five Robotics Hits of the 2000s (Rod Brooks)
    Highlight: “Thousands of remotely piloted and autonomous aircraft in the U.S. military.”

    Top Five Biotech Innovations of the 2000s (Jay Lichter)
    Highlight: “Genentech’s ranibizumab (Lucentis)—The first treatment of its kind for the ‘wet’ form of macular degeneration.”

    Top Five Global Health Innovations of the 2000s (Christopher Elias)
    Highlight: “New recombinant, platform-based [vaccine] technologies may greatly speed vaccine production, decrease manufacturing costs, and increase production in developing countries.”

    Top Five Medical Innovations of the 2000s, and One Big Concern (James Topper)
    Highlight: “The development of novel mechanisms and combination therapies in HIV, which have turned a universally fatal disease into a chronic one.”

    Four Groundbreaking Innovations from the 2000s, and One More Life-Changing Event (Chad Waite)
    Highlight: “A night that I was in NYC (home of the ENEMY) in October 2004 when the Red Sox FINALLY won the World Series!” (OK, also the iPod. And Facebook.) …Next Page »







  • CourseSmart Looks Ahead at eTextbooks on Apple’s Tablet

    The Wall Street Journal reports on eTextbook publisher CourseSmart, which is looking ahead to the release of Apples much-rumored tablet and is using this weeks CES conference in Las Vegas to show off its thoughts on how its content could be offered on the new device. In order to promote its vision, CourseSmart has developed a preview video demonstrating eTextbook usage on a concept Apple tablet. While the company has no inside knowledge of the device, it has clearly paired its ideas of how the tablet might function with Apples existing software design aesthetics.

    via Mac Rumors

  • Echo Nest Raises $1.3M

    Wade Roush wrote:

    The Echo Nest, a Somerville, MA-based music search and recommendation startup, has raised $1.3 million in new equity financing, according to a regulatory filing today. The investors weren’t disclosed in the filing, but the company’s directors include Eliott Katzmann of Commonwealth Capital Ventures (which led a previous funding round in September 2008). Xconomy profiled The Echo Nest in October 2008.







  • Another job post by Microsoft speaks of upgraded media player and gaming experience

    We are now pretty used to Microsoft’s  press releases as job posts, and the latest one again confirms Microsoft’s aim to bring the Windows Mobile media and gaming experience up from its current dismal experience.

    The job, which is for a senior software engineer, speaks to cutting edge user experiences in music and video, killer photo capture and sharing experience and a great gaming experience in the next release of Windows Mobile (presumably 7), and also asks for XAML experience, which is usually associated with a Silverlight-based UI.

    The job post is below:

    SENIOR SDE(706388 -External)
    Job Category: Software Engineering: Development
    Location: United States, WA, Redmond
    Job ID: 706388
    Product: Windows Mobile
    Division: Entertainment & Devices Division 
    The Windows Mobile Phone Entertainment team is looking for a Software Development Engineer to help us through our next big release.

    We are looking for an experienced UI developer to work on the next-generation of Windows Phone products.
    Responsibilities will include (but are not limited to) developing features for the phone that drive the joy and fun of using the device. This role will work on cutting edge User Experiences – touching everything from music and video experiences to killer photo capture and sharing experiences to great mobile gaming experiences. Feature development includes designing, coding and unit testing for one of the technical areas as well as ensuing that the end to end solution is complete and fantastic.

    If you feel that mobile computing is the future for our industry – come help us win!!
    Qualifications: Strong analytical, design and C++ programming/debugging, Win32 UI, and COM required, Mobile (CE) development skills are desired as well as XAML experience.

    At least unlike other posts, this one speaks of existing projects rather than initiating new ones, which gives hope that this important work is already underway.

    See the job listing here.

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  • Consumer Electronics Show Offers Showcase for San Diego Tech Companies

    ces_logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    [Corrected 1/5/10, 2:45 pm. See below.] “Connectivity” will be one of the prevailing themes at the annual International Consumer Electronics Show, according to analyst John F. Bright of the investment banking firm Avondale Partners. And several San Diego firms are poised to get connected at the show, which officially begins Thursday in Las Vegas.

    [Correction: Entropic Communications is a public, not privately held, company] Connecting devices in the home encompasses the core business of Entropic Communications, (NASDAQ: ENTR) a fabless semiconductor company in San Diego that has developed technologies that provide connectivity to home entertainment systems. Entropic is among many companies that plans to showcase its latest innovations at the four-day show, which is expected to draw 110,000 attendees before closing Sunday.

    Another San Diego company at CES is DivX, (NASDAQ: DIVX) the digital media technology company that specializes in video compression. Bright says DivX is expected to demonstrate technology related to its September acquisition of AnySource Media, a Pennsylvania company with technology that allows users to directly connect their TV to a wide variety of Internet-based content and services. He writes in his preview that a key question for DivX is whether the Anysource technology, which is designed to facilitate browsing on Internet-connected TVs, is approaching marketability.

    VMIX, a privately held San Diego company that also specializes in digital video technology, has been focused on providing its media clients monetization strategies as well as a complete video platform, according to spokesman Bill Curci. As part of that continuing effort, VMIX CEO Mike Glickenhaus is participating in a CES panel discussion on “Monetizing Digital Content” that is set for noon Saturday. (Other local digital media companies headed for CES include Carlsbad, CA-based Sorenson Media and Veoh Networks.)

    Under the heading of mobile connectivity, Avondale’s Bright points to San Diego-based Novatel Wireless (NASDAQ: NVTL) which specializes in USB modem cards for laptops and related broadband access technologies. Novatel has focused much of its marketing efforts in recent months on its credit card-sized MiFi wireless router, which converts a cellular 3G signal into a Wi-Fi bubble so Wi-Fi computers and gadgets can get online anywhere.

    A major San Diego technology company not on Bright’s list is Qualcomm, which has pushed into an unfamiliar role as a consumer-facing business with its Flo TV mobile television network. The wireless giant has long served as a major, albeit behind-the-scenes, supplier of wireless technologies for mobile network operators and other big businesses, and Qualcomm provides Flo TV to consumers with Flo TV-enabled cell phones as an add-on subscriber service through Verizon and AT&T. But Qualcomm also introduced its handheld Flo TV device as a $250 mobile personal TV just in time for Christmas, and the company has been marketing the gadget to sports fans and youngsters.

    Qualcomm’s foray into consumer markets also helps to explain why 2010 marks the first time that the San Diego company’s chairman and CEO has agreed to deliver a keynote address at the international conference (which has a predicted attendance this year of 110,000). Qualcomm’s Paul Jacobs, who is set to speak Friday morning at the Las Vegas Hilton, has been the primary driver in the company’s emphasis on accelerating wireless data services. As a result, mobile devices based on Qualcomm technology are moving beyond voice communications—expanding into entertainment, social networking, computing, and information access.

    Other keynote speakers scheduled for the four-day conference include Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer, Ford’s Alan Mulally, Intel’s Paul Otellini, Nokia’s Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, and Hisense’s Zhou Houjian.

    Another major player to watch at CES this week will be Japan’s Sony Electronics, which was once the world’s leading brand for premium-priced consumer electronics. Sony Electronics maintains its North American headquarters in San Diego. The company still makes Vaio laptops at its suburban manufacturing plant in Rancho Bernardo, which also hosts Sony’s new center for research and engineering development. But it’s been a long time since the maker of Walkman radios and Trinitron TVs has led the industry, and the Japanese goliath has been undergoing wrenching organizational changes over the past year under CEO Howard Stringer.

    A Sony spokeswoman in San Diego would not discuss the company’s plans for CES, even in a general way, except to say, “I would say that our TV announcements are going to be huge.”

    Sony could be among the major consumer electronics manufacturers with plans to introduce 3-D television technology at this year’s CES. CNET’s John Falcone is among those who predicts 3-D TV will be the biggest trend at this year’s show, but Falcone remains doubtful that consumers are ready for 3-D and he calls the industry’s enthusiasm “premature.”







  • Dot Hill Buys Cloverleaf Communications

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Dot Hill Systems (NASDAQ: HILL), which provides data storage equipment, says today it is buying Woodbury, NY-based Cloverleaf Communications, a privately held software developer. Dot Hill says the deal, which calls for issuing about $9.5 million in Dot Hill shares and $2.5 million in cash, will significantly broaden its capabilities in virtual data storage, data management services software and unified storage markets. The transaction is expected to close by mid-January.








  • New President/COO at Brightcove

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Brightcove, the online video hosting startup in Cambridge, MA, has created a new president/chief operating officer position and appointed Adobe Systems veteran David Mendels to the role.  Mendels was a founder of Macromedia (now part of Adobe) and led that firm’s acquisition of Allaire Company, the first business started by Brightcove founder and CEO Jeremy Allaire, who announced Mendel’s appointment in a blog post this morning. Brightcove said Mendels will be responsible for leading the company’s international expansion.







  • Will there by any Windows Mobile announcements at CES?

    CES%20Logo Steve Ballmer will be delivering the CES keynote tomorrow.  While the company has had much success in 2009, principally with Windows 7, Bing, the X-box 360 and Microsoft Sync, the loss of market share by Windows Mobile has had many calling for the head of Steve Ballmer.

    CES 2010 will start on 7th of January 2010 and lasts until 10th. Many are expecting news regarding Windows Mobile 7 to be announced there.  More likely however is news about an update to Windows Mobile 6.5, with a version designed for capacitive screens

    Additional areas where useful announcements could be made for Windows Mobile would be announcements regarding services to Windows Mobile, such as better integration with Microsoft’s other properties such as Xbox Live and Zune, or improvements to existing services such as My Phone.

    With much of Microsoft’s public image now riding on how well they do in the mobile sphere we will not be the only one keeping a close eye on Steve Ballmer’s keynote, which will be streamed live here on Wednesday January 6th at 6.30pm PST (2.30 am 7th London time).

    What are our readers expecting from CES?  Let us know below.

    Via  i4u.com

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