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Windows Mobile 7 to kill multi-tasking?

By Will Park on Monday, February 8th, 2010 at 2:39 PM PST
In Mobile World Congress 2010, Rumors, Windows Mobile

windows mobile 7 logo Windows Mobile 7 to kill multi tasking?

One of the things we’re most excited to see at Mobile World Congress 2010 is the unveiling of the Windows Mobile 7 platform from Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT). Ever since the iPhone came on the scene and showed the world just how horribly behind the times Microsoft’s Windows Mobile operating system had become, we’ve been hearing a lot of rumors about what to expect in the revamped WM7. They’ve mostly painted WinMo 7 in a positive light, but the latest rumor chops our excitement down a notch. Word on the street suggests that Microsoft will not allow multi-tasking in Windows Mobile 7. That means you can only actively use one mobile app at a time, much like the iPhone OS.

The rumor goes on to mention that Windows Mobile 7 will allow apps to be “paused,” rather than allowing them to continue running in the background. That pretty much means Windows Mobile 7 will allow apps to save their current state when the user closes them or switches to another app. When the “paused” app is reactivated, the user will see the app exactly as they had left it – text intact, cursors in the same place, document scrolled to the same position, and maps pointing to where you left off. The rumor also makes mention of a push notification system, similar to the way iPhone apps notify iPhone users of updates even when the apps are not running.

There are a lot of things about the iPhone OS that we’d love to see in WM7. There’s the intuitive interface, the finger-friendly buttons and menus, the lack of a stylus. Microsoft would do well to emulate Apple (NSDQ: AAPL)’s iPhone OS on those fronts. But, when it comes to multi-tasking, we’d rather see Microsoft going down a different road. Push notifications are great, but they’re still a compromise. Allowing apps to save their state (pause) is handy, but still not the same as allowing apps to run in the background. Granted, multi-tasking is resource intensive, but seeing as how it’s already 2010 and we’re not flying around in spaceships or eating food made by replicators, it’d be nice to at least have a Windows Phone that can multi-task.

As for the user interface, Microsoft is rumored to be using design elements from its Zune HD interface. The interface is codenamed “Metro” and is said to be clean and soulful. It’s this interface that Microsoft will unveil at MWC. Unfortunately, we’re also hearing that apps will only be allowed to install through official channels, like Windows Marketplace for Mobile. The days of side-loading apps on your Windows Phone might soon come to an abrupt end.

We’ll know more next week, at Microsoft’s press conference in Barcelona. Make sure to keep an eye on IntoMobile, we’ll be coming to you live from Mobile World Congress with complete coverage of the event!

[Via: PPCGeeks]

Samsung to introduce SUPER AMOLED device at MWC 2010

By Ben Robinson on Monday, February 8th, 2010 at 1:51 PM PST
In Mobile World Congress 2010, Samsung

samsung logo1 Samsung to introduce SUPER AMOLED device at MWC 2010Our buddies at Oled-display.net have let us know about a nifty new Samsung handset that is going to be announced at MWC 2010, packing a SUPER AMOLED (yes, SUPER!) touchscreen!

We do a little bit more, but not much – the AMOLED will be WVGA, and around 3.3 inches. Apparently Samsung have suggested that the new screen is 5x more vivid than normal screens, and 20% better outdoor. I’m not 100% sure I believe it will be that much better outdoors (AMOLEDs aren’t historically the best in sunlight), but giving more vivid colours is definitely something we could all do with.

Unfortunately we don’t know the model name/number yet – but, we will dear readership, oh yes, soon we will!

[Via: oled-display.net via: Koreatimes / jknews]

Our buddies at Oled-display.net have let us know about a nifty new Samsung handset that is going to be announced at MWC 2010, packing a SUPER AMOLED (yes, SUPER!) touchscreen!
We do a little bit more, but not much – the AMOLED will be WVGA, and around 3.3 inches. Apparently Samsung have suggested that the new screen is 5x more vivid than normal screens, and 20% better outdoor. I’m not 100%  sure I believe it will be that much better outdoors (AMOLEDs aren’t historically the best in sunlight), but giving more vivid colours is definitely something we could all do with.
Unfortunately we don’t know the model name/number yet – but, we will dear readership, oh yes, soon we will!
[Via: oled-display.net via: Koreatimes / jknews[

Sagem Wireless, UPEK team-up to bring fingerprint identity capabilities mobile devices, Android phones included

By Dusan Belic on Friday, February 5th, 2010 at 3:32 AM PST
In Android, Mobile World Congress 2010, Sagem, Technologies

fingerprint identity on a mobile phoneSagem Wireless and UPEK are teaming up to bring fingerprint identity capabilities to a range of new devices that Sagem Wireless is expected to launch later this year, including new Android-based smartphones.

UPEK is the company that is considered to have a superior fingerprint technology, which offers industry-leading recognition accuracy, ruggedness, power efficiency, and enhanced touch-input capabilities as well as support of a standards-based, open-platform software solution.

Together, the two companies will offer an open fingerprint identity solutions, enabling all interested parties to make mobile applications and services more secure, faster and easier to use…

And that’s about it. If you want to see how this works in real-world (and you’re also in Barcelona during the Mobile World Congress), make sure to check out Sagem’s booth in Hall 8 (stand B94).

AdMob to keynote the Mobile Premier Awards event

By Dusan Belic on Friday, February 5th, 2010 at 3:30 AM PST
In Mobile World Congress 2010

Mobile Premier Awards

Mobile Premier Awards announced that this year’s program will have a new twist. AdMob, which is arguably the most successful startup in mobile history, will keynote the show. More specifically, Russell Buckley, AdMob’s Vice President Global Alliances will be sharing thoughts on how to start and grow a successful company in mobile; whereas Richard Wong from Partner Accel Partners (investors in AdMob) will talk about his experience as a VC with some of the key mobile startups in a presentation called “The Inexorable Rise of Open Mobile.”

Of course, the event will keep the classic live 3-minute pitches. Mark Palmer, Founder of Maverick Planet, will serve as the event’s host.

Additional information, including how to book a seat, is available from here.

13 days until Mobile World Congress: What does the IntoMobile team want to see, and want to avoid?

By Stefan Constantinescu on Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 at 1:14 PM PST
In Mobile World Congress 2010

2008mwc 13 days until Mobile World Congress: What does the IntoMobile team want to see, and want to avoid?

It’s difficult to describe what attending Mobile World Congress is like. I’ve only been there once, in 2008, and I’m excited to be going again this year. For those of you who have never heard of Mobile World Congress, it’s a trade show where everyone in the mobile telecommunications industry, from device makers, to infrastructure providers, to software vendors, all get together and either try to network their way into a big fat business deal, get the attention of the press, or simply relax and enjoy a few days away from the office and the wife and kids. It’s been taking place since 1987, and has been held at the Fira de Barcelona in Spain since 2007. It actually used to be called 3GSM, but since WiMAX isn’t based on any previous GSM architecture, the name had to be changed to be more accommodating for any new wireless technologies being demonstrated. To give you an idea how big this thing is, more than 47,000 people were at last year’s event.

I’ll never forget Mobile World Congress 2008 because it was the first time I got to meet my team in the flesh, since we all work remotely, that and I got to check out the city of Barcelona. I’ve been to Spain before, but only to Madrid. Dusan arranged for our apartment, and we got a really good deal, but regret started sinking in the moment we got out of our cab and confirmed that the address scribbled on the back of my itinerary was indeed correct. The front door leading to the lobby, and the lobby itself, was covered in urine, there was no heating except for the electric radiators we all took turns sitting in front of, the 5 of us had to share 2 beds, thankfully some people brought sleeping bags, our only source of internet access was a Windows Mobile device that had some hotspot software installed, and our water boiler mounted directly above the toilet provided barely 5 minutes of lukewarm water to shower with. It’s wasn’t all doom and gloom however, by the end of our trip we fell in love with that place and to this day I miss it dearly; the location was phenomenal, it was quite literally in the center of town.

This year I’m excited that I’ll get to meet Simon and Ben, IntoMobile’s newest Editors, and see the old team after two long years. We have a proper hotel lined up this time, right next to the Sagrada Familia, and we actually have a plan in terms of how we’re going to upload content, rather than simply wandering around aimlessly like we did before, and then find a local internet café to get our material up to the website. Enough with the reminiscing, what about Mobile World Congress 2010 is exciting the team?

  • Will: I’m looking forward to seeing Windows Mobile 7! There’s also some cool stuff in HTC’s pipeline that may see the light on day at MWC, like the Bravo. Maybe the Motorola (NYSE: MOT) Zeppelin too, and oh yeah, don’t forget project Pink! I’m also hoping to eat lots of incredible food and wear my body down to the point of illness over the course of the week.
  • Ben: Very much looking forward to seeing the range of Android handsets that will be announced by different manufacturers, expecting to see something that matches, and maybe surpasses iPhone OS+UI? I’m really looking forward to all the lame copies of Apple (NSDQ: AAPL)’s App Store that are going to be announced, or “refreshed” for MWC – NOT!
  • Simon: I’m looking forward to App Planet. Piling all of those software solutions in one spot will let me talk with developers directly. BlackBerry (NSDQ: RIMM) is getting a designated day, so it’ll be cool to see how that will compare to the BlackBerry Developer Conference.
  • Dusan: Symbian has that countdown timer. I’ve got no clue when that ends/starts, but it’s about time they dig themselves out of the hole they’re in. Android should be strong … super strong. Hopefully someone except Motorola will figure out users want a WVGA touchscreen coupled with full QWERTY keyboard.

I have to share Will’s enthusiasm for Windows Mobile 7. Microsoft is not a stupid company, and they’ve proven that they can innovate. Windows 7 compared to Windows XP and Vista, XBOX 360 compared to XBOX, Office 2007 compared to Office 2003, there are talented people inside Microsoft and they know that the mobile space has potential to bring a lot of revenue to their bottom line. Windows Mobile is still the only smartphone OS that manufacturers have to pay to use, so Microsoft has to justify why they should keep on paying those fees versus building something with Android or Symbian instead. Speaking about Android, I don’t share the team’s upbeat attitude. The industry was hoping Android would be an awesome competitor to Apple’s iPhone, but it’s been 15 months since the T-Mobile G1 shipped and we’ve yet to see an Android device that makes anyone really go “WOW”. Google needs to shove that OS back into the oven for at least another year or two, then maybe it’ll be worthy of attention.

I’m curious to see what Simon has to say about App Planet, and I may even check out the side event myself. For all this talk about mobile applications, and how they’re changing the world, I’m still using the same handful of applications on my Nokia (NYSE: NOK) E71, a handset that will turn 2 years old this summer by the way, that I’ve been using since getting the device. As for what excites me the most about this upcoming event, it’s the people.

swag 13 days until Mobile World Congress: What does the IntoMobile team want to see, and want to avoid?

I personally hate trade shows. They’re full of irrational attendees who probably make double, or even triple what I do, yet they still fight over free coffee, pens, posters, shirts, lanyards, and other promotional material that medium and large size companies use to lure people to their booth. Small time developers and startups save up enough of their pennies to get a booth, but forget to bring anything more than a table, a chair, maybe a poster that’s obviously a rush job done in Photoshop and printed at the local Kinko’s, and only 1, if you’re lucky 2, devices to demo their application.

The giants, like Nokia and Sony Ericsson (NYSE: SNE), announce devices that don’t come out for months, and if a model is buggy then you don’t even get to play with it, you only see a highly controlled demo given by someone who is scared shitless that if they open an application that wasn’t supposed to be launched, the entire phone will suddenly reboot. Remember the Sony XPERIA X1? No one was allowed to get hands on time, and it finally started shipping by December of that same year, in limited quantity. You’re going to see a repeat of that at least once or twice. But wait, there’s more!

Transatlantic flying ranks up there as one of my most hated activities. They absolutely destroy your sense of time of space, and I honestly don’t know how one is supposed to sit down for 10 hours. I’m always waling up and down the aisles, not because I’m claustrophobic, but because I need to get my blood moving. Then you get off the plane, customs takes forever and you now need to deal with a cab driver who doesn’t speak English or understand the address you’re written down of where you’re supposed to go.

Barcelona, once you get there, is a beautiful city, but it never shuts up. I grew up in New York City, supposedly the city that never sleeps, but it’s got nothing on this place. The streets of Barcelona are as packed at 3 and 4 in the morning as they are at 5 and 6 in the afternoon. It’s fun, you feel that party vibe that transcends nationality and language, but combine that and the previously mentioned jet lag, and you’re just asking to get your sleep cycle mutilated. When you do finally wake up, you need to check your email for any last minute scheduling changes, and that’s a whole other level of hell.

My inbox is packed, stuffed to the gills, with people requesting meetings. Some people have emailed me 3, even 4 times, with the very same email, asking for a meeting with the company they represent. A company that I’ve never heard of and whose website looks like it was designed in 1994 and hasn’t been updated since. It’s painful.

But after all of that, the bitterness, the anger, the doubt cast upon your decision to even come to this stupid thing, the people make the experience completely worth it. All my fellow press people that I chat with over instant messenger, or on Twitter, I finally get to sit down face to face with over a beer and have a genuine conversation about what’s going on at the event. Shaking hands with folks that your friends introduce you to at the bar that’s so packed it takes 10 minutes of saying “I’m sorry” in 3 or 4 different languages before you get to the back and have to queue to take a piss. All the people who work for large companies who I regularly talk to, yet who will never feed me a rumour, suddenly will after a bottle of red wine from Rioja and a bloody rare piece of steak that they’re paying for since they’ve got an expense account. Meeting the guys who I’m honored to call my colleagues.

That’s what I’m most excited about, and I can’t wait to get on that flight from Dallas to Atlanta to Madrid to Barcelona.

DoCoMo to showcase eye-controlled interface, handset made of real wood at the MWC

By Dusan Belic on Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 at 2:23 AM PST
In Announcements, DoCoMo, Mobile World Congress 2010

DoCoMo at the MWC

We do know NTT DoCoMo will be showing off the first LTE-enabled devices at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. And here are few more juicy tidbits of what to expect from the Japanese carrier:

  • Headset with eye-controlled interface that converts eye movements into system commands
  • TOUCH WOOD demonstration handset made of real wood
  • i-concier concierge-like service providing customers with highly personalized information and support, and the compatible “auto GPS” service offering pinpoint positioning for location-based services
  • imadoco search location service, enabling a child’s whereabouts to be confirmed, even if they do not have a GPS-compatible handset, through the use of base stations

Finally, we’ll also see the current lineup of all those cool handsets announced last November. :)

[Via: DoCoMo]

Microsoft to unveil the Tegra-based Zune at the Mobile World Congress?

By Dusan Belic on Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 at 2:21 AM PST
In Devices, Mobile World Congress 2010, Rumors

Zune phone

A Spanish website MuyComputer is claiming that the Zune phone will be launched at the upcoming Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Moreover, they say that the device will be powered by NVidia’s Tegra chipset ensuring smooth media playback. Features are unknown, but it is speculated that the Zune phone will rock WiFi, HDMI video output, and a 272×480 pixel touchscreen (why now WVGA?).

Personally I’m not that convinced on the specs, but I do believe we’ll see the Zune phone unveiled at the event. After all, we have the Windows Mobile 7 launch confirmed and we even saw that Zune software driver leaked. Any bets?

[Via: Unwired View]

Ultrabrief: NTT DoCoMo to show off LTE enabled device at Mobile World Congress 2010

By Stefan Constantinescu on Monday, February 1st, 2010 at 11:14 AM PST
In DoCoMo, Mobile World Congress 2010

godzilla Ultrabrief: NTT DoCoMo to show off LTE enabled device at Mobile World Congress 2010

Martyn Williams, IDG News Service, says that Japanese operator NTT DoCoMo (NYSE: DCM) will show off the world’s first LTE enabled mobile handset at Mobile World Congress later this month. NTT DoCoMo is spending roughly $4 billion on their LTE network and how to commercially launch it this year, but only for data devices.

Why should you care about this? It’s proof that LTE can be shrunken down into something that can fit into your pocket, and the battery life, if they’re silly enough to disclose real world figures, should be an indication of what to expect in terms of how many times you’re going to have charge your device in the course of a full working day.

Note that NTT DoCoMo wanted to be the first to launch a commercial LTE network, but the Swedes beat them to it. TeliaSonera launched in December 2009 and are offering unlimited LTE data for $85/month.

Windows Mobile 7 confirmed for debut at Mobile World Congress

By Will Park on Thursday, January 28th, 2010 at 5:07 PM PST
In Mobile World Congress 2010, Rumors, Windows Mobile

windows mobile 7 logo Windows Mobile 7 confirmed for debut at Mobile World CongressWindows Mobile fans should have reason to get excited for the Mobile World Congress show next month in Barcelona, Spain. The world’s largest mobile-related trade show will apparently be where Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) will finally take the wraps off its supposedly revamped Windows Mobile 7 operating system, according to the company’s CFO Peter Klein. In just a few weeks, Microsoft will show the world the new version of Windows Mobile, which is expected to bring Microsoft mobile operating system into the capacitive touchscreen era.

WM7 should bring with it a completely overhauled user interface that centers more on finger inputs and easy-to-navigate controls rather. Compared to the impossibly tiny buttons and incredibly frustrating menu-based interfaces of past WinMo versions, WinMo7 should be an impressive refresh, and could give Microsoft a chance at competing with Android and iPhone. We know that WM7 will support Zune functionality and will support multi-touch. There’s also talk of Windows Mobile 7 having minimum hardware requirements that bring tears of joy to our eyes – 1Ghz processor, 800×480 touchscreen, 3G, WiFi, and GPS.

Microsoft has been steadily losing smartphone market share to the likes of the iPhone and the many high-end Android phones that are gunning for the top of the smartphone list. Mobile World Congress may very well be the turn-around point for Microsoft’s aging mobile OS.

Keep it tuned to IntoMobile, as we’ll be bringing you live, in-depth coverage of MWC from beautiful Barcelona!

[Via: Electronista]

Mobile Premier Awards in Innovation 20 finalists announced

By Dusan Belic on Thursday, January 28th, 2010 at 12:27 AM PST
In Announcements, Mobile World Congress 2010

Mobile Premier AwardsAs expected, the Mobile Premier Awards has announced the 20 finalists to the Mobile Premier Awards in Innovation, as chosen by their peers in partnership with MobileMonday. The companies were selected by an international jury of recognized mobile industry experts. Now they will be able to pitch their idea, application or project at the Mobile Premier Awards event that takes place in Barcelona, at the Petit Palau of Palau de la Musica on February 15, 2010.

The year’s MPA best in Mobile Startup innovation Finalists are: Austria – Mobilizy, Barcelona – fonYou, Berlin – spendino, Bogota – RedSalvavidas, Chennai – mobiSiteGalore, Copenhagen – Cepa Mobility, Edinburgh – Mobile Acuity, Estonia – TaxiPal, Lithuania – SendFlow, London – Audioboo, Milan – Soundtrckr, Munich – Aloqa, New Delhi – Voicetap Technologies, New York – PercentMobile, Oslo – Bipper Communication, Rest of EMEA – Layar, Silicon Valley – CloudMade, Slovenia – Visionect, Stockholm – MoSync, Tel Aviv – waze.

We’ll definitely keep watching Mobile Premier Awards and keep you folks in the loop.