Opinion: Amazon To Drop Kindle 3 Price At $99 By Holidays

July 29, 2010

The new Kindle will reach mass market status at the magical $99 price point

As Amazon plans to release a cheaper Kindle next month, the smaller, lighter, faster, brighter e-reader will actually reach “mass market” status when its price drops below $100, instead of $139 today (Wi-Fi only).

“That’s the magic price point for consumers,” confirms Netgear CEO Patrick Lo. “Our retail experience shows that consumers are more willing to buy 2 products at $99 than one at $199.”

So my advice to you is that, if you’re not in a hurry to jump in the e-reader bandwagon of course, to simply wait until mid-December, to buy the Kindle 3 at a $40 discount.

That will also give you the time to evaluate other options, such as smartphones and more complete Tablet PCs – like the Apple iPad – that will lets you read e-books, browse the Web, check e-mails and much more.

But at $99, there’s hardly any reason not to treat yourself with one for Christmas!


Is Apple Making iPhone 3G Totally Unusable To Force Upgrade?

July 28, 2010

The best thing an iPhone 3G user can do is to "downgrade" their not-so-smart phone !

Such customer disdain from Apple comes as no surprise.

It’s been a month since Apple released iOS 4 for iPhone 3G and 3GS and that consumers have been complaining – even on Apple’s discussion forums – of all sorts of problems directly related to the upgrade: unbearably slow, rapid battery drain or excessive heat!

And by the way, the upgrade to 4.0.1 doesn’t help either.

But the worse is Apple’s attitude. Just like with “Antennagate” Apple pooh-poohed criticisms, that is, until today. FINALLY! Steve, where are you? Still in Hawaii?

Apple is investigating reports that the latest iPhone operating system causes problems for users of the iPhone 3G, after a series of complaints on Apple support forums and technology blogs,” writes the Wall Street Journal online.

Here are examples of customer complaints.

But the iphone is very slow with IOS4. It doesn’t work as smooth as it used to be. Also new applications such as the iBook application are very slow, doesn’t respond smooth on screentaps etc.

This is absolutely ridiculous, the additions to the 3G handset are consolidation of email, a zoom to the camera and folders on the homepage….so why the **** has the handset slowed to snails pace??!

5 seconds to open the text window. Another 3 seconds to get a popup text input keyboard. 3 seconds to open the email window

This is such an outrageous situation that even the most loyal Apple fans are feeling that the Cupertino, Calif. is forcing them to upgrade to the iPhone 4 by making their iPhone 3G totally unusable!

“This phone has gone from being a dream to constantly annoying me. Not a way to make friends. I would upgrade to an iPhone 4, but I’m feeling pretty angry that Apple has forced my hand by making my 3G unusable,” wrote a user on the Apple support discussion forum.

So, Apple here’s YOUR roadmap for the next few weeks:

  1. Fix the iOS4 operating system or at least give your most loyal customers an option to downgrade to the older operating system!
  2. Fix the iPhone 4 antenna. Recall the whole damn thing and finally sell a flawless device that actually works the way it should;
  3. Fix the white iPhone 4  manufacturing and please stop lying about shipping dates
  4. Oh, and I forgot… and this one is for the boss… APOLOGIZE for all the trouble your lies caused to faithful fans and aggrieved customers!

Analyst: Apple Must Fix iPhone Faulty Antenna Design

July 21, 2010

In a report published today, MobileTrax principal analyst Gerry Purdy calls Apple to fix the iPhone 4 faulty antenna design.

Apple will need to fix the faulty design of the iPhone antenna. I can assure you that the iPhone 5 won’t have that problem. It might have another problem, but it won’t continue the antenna problems in the iPhone 4. I’m confident that Apple engineering will ensure the future iPhone (and iPad) products will have antennas that work properly.

Apple’s faulty design has consumers wonder if they should buy Apple’s smartphone or not

It has been a real nightmare for Apple, certainly a cause for consternation with millions of iPhone customers, and perhaps a “Wait a minute, should I buy one of these?’ hesitation for a number of prospective iPhone buyers.

And the real winner of Apple’s “Antennagate” ? Antenna engineers!

Simply holding a device should not interfere in any significant way with the network signal reception. And Antennagate will cause other firms such as HTC, Motorola, RIM and Samsung to increase antenna design capabilities to ensure that they won’t have a repeat of the same problem as Apple experienced. It should be a ‘field day’ for antenna design consultants to help all SmartPhone manufacturers fix antenna problems.


Analyst: H-P Buys Palm For Less Than $1 Billion, But Integration Is A Challenge

April 28, 2010

Todd Bradley is the man behind HP's decision to acquire Palm. Bradley heads HP PC's consumer division and is the former Palm CEO

What a deal!

H-P said it will pay $5.70 in cash per share for Palm, when only 2-weeks ago, on April 12, the same shares were worth over $6!

And despite the headlines, H-P is really forking less than $1 billion for Palm, as the smartphone maker has roughly $600 million in cash and short term investments, but $387 million in long term debt.

This really shows just how Palm executives felt confident in the viability of their company!

So why would H-P buy Palm, beyond just being a fire-sale? Here’s analyst Jack Gold top 5 reasons:

  1. The key management of HP’s Personal Systems Group is composed of nearly all the execs previously running Palm, including HP’s Todd Bradley. So the business and operations of Palm is well understood.
  2. HPs Windows Mobile phone business is dying a rapid death and HP would have had to totally revamp its product line in order to stay in the smartphone business. It could have designed new devices with Android or Windows Phone 7, either of which would have taken time and would be expensive. Palm brings HP a modern and competitive platform that is already designed, implemented, and in production. This saves HP many R&D dollars as well as dramatically accelerates time to market.
  3. HP can leverage its production capabilities to get large volumes of product into the market at low cost. Palm was not able to quickly reduce its costs and profitably compete in all areas of the market.
  4. HP gets a substantial IP and patent base it can use as a defensive threat against the competition (especially Apple, but potentially HTC and Google as well). This is not a trivial issue as many legal battles lie ahead in the smartphone and mobile/portable device marketplace. A strong IP portfolio that is defensible is important. Indeed, the IP may even eventually result in license revenues to HP form some of its competitors.
  5. WebOS could easily be re-positioned for tablets and other consumer devices to compete with Android, iPad, etc. This is a key growth area for HP. It has already shown a Windows based tablet. And since tablets are primarily front ends to the Internet, it allows HP to deploy many cloud-based services from which it can generate revenues, including those in an app store, streamed services, etc.

However, HP has made acquisitions in the past that did not really work out, and HP has not always been good at integrating acquired technologies in their business.

While the potential for success is there, we will have to wait and see how well HP does at integrating Palm into their mainstream operations before calling this a win for HP.


[Video] SF App Show: Still No Android Mobile Apps Developers!

April 28, 2010

SF App Showcase organiser, Seth Socolow (left) and event moderator Ben Parr of Mashable.com

Larger and more organised than “meetups” but  more casual than larger run conferences, SF AppShow was started by boot-strapped mobile app publisher SF App Studio, to help fellow developers market their mobile apps.

SF AppShow is one those popular “micro-events” that are mushrooming in and around San Francisco, Calif. SF New Tech being another one.

“We needed a venue like this so app developer can come, show off their stuff to a lot of people in person, as well using social media and live video streaming to get this out to a much larger audience,” said Seth Socolow, the co-founder of SF App Studio and the event’s organiser.

Ben Parr of Mashable.com was hosting last night’s event where the following 6 new and upcoming mobile apps were showcased:

  1. TourRecorder by Geotrio, Inc.
  2. Expensify by Expensify
  3. Personal Assistant by Pageonce, Inc.
  4. Magic Window – Living Pictures by Jetson Creative, Inc.
  5. Diner Dash: Grilling Green by PlayFirst, Inc.
  6. And SF App Studio’s own LeanScale iPhone app

You can find the whole recorded show here.

Where are the Android app developers ?

So far, most of the apps showed at these events focus on the iPhone and more recently the iPad. But curiously, no Android apps yet!

“We actually haven’t seen any applications of native Android apps yet. It kind of surprised me. I would have expected by now we would. I think still there aren’t many people making any real money on Android but it’s going to come. It’s just taking a little while longer,” adds Socolow.


[Video] Visible Energy EnergyUFO Lets Consumers Monitor, Control Electricity Use From iPad

April 27, 2010

Visible Energy UFOEnergy iPad application remotely monitors and controls appliances over Wi-Fi or the Web

New and innovative home energy management applications for the iPad, turns the Apple tablet into a versatile home control device!

Control4 and Visible Energy are the first startups to release an iPad application that lets you monitor and control your the electricity usage in your home, right from the Apple tablet.

I’ve met this week with Visible Energy CEO and founder, Marco Graziano, for a test drive of the EnergyUFO iPad application that left me impressed in how simple it was to remotely control – over the Web or Wi-Fi – the company’s smart powerstrip, the EnergyUFO Power Center.

“With EnergyUFO you can monitor in real-time the electricity usage of all your smart Wi-Fi powerstrips, remotely switch on or off and an appliance connected to one of the smart electrical outlet or schedule its daily use. With this granular view of electricity usage, users can finally see how their power is being used, which will help them reduce their power consumption, and thus save money,” explains Graziano.

The Palo Atlo, Calif.-startup expects to ship its Wi-Fi smart powerstrips in the second half of this year. The powerstrips will come with either one smart outlet (Visible Energy Monostrip) or four (EnergyUFO Power Center).

Pricing starts at about $99, versus several thousands of dollars or more for the Control4 solution that requires a professional installation.

“Unlike Control4, we’re targeting the mass market, no professional installation required. Our vision is that, the more people use our smart powerstrip technology, the more they will conserve energy, save money, and save our planet.”


[Video] Verizon Wireless Is Microsoft KIN Exclusive Carrier; Plans May Launch

April 12, 2010


Verizon confirmed today that it will be the exclusive mobile carrier for Microsoft’s KIN social phones in the US that will launch in May.

Vodafone – which owns 45% of Verizon Wireless – plans to release a GSM version of the KIN in Europe (UK, Germany, Spain and Italy) this Fall.

KIN is better than FLIP, contends Verizon

In an interesting twist, that goes beyond Microsoft’s vision, Verizon believes that the KINs could reach a broader audience than just the “sociologists” or the socially connected crowd.

“I would contend that KIN utility and functionality serves a broader audience than just the socially connected. When you think about it, it’s really for anybody that’s a photo or video obsessed person, parents come to mind specifically, because not only is the video and picture capture quality remarkable, it’s better than the Flip, but also where the magic really happened for me is when I first used the phone, took some video, and then saw that over the Verizon Wireless Network, all the videos got loaded into the studio Web site waiting there for me in chronological order, and geotagged.

KIN will reduce support questions

So, this all happened without any cables to connect your PC and your phone, and without any SD cards to manage. Thousands of customers call us every month, and walk into our stores asking, how do I get these photos off my phone? KIN makes it simple for that,” said John Harrobin, the Senior Vice President of Marketing and Digital Media at Verizon Wireless


[Video] KIN, Microsoft’s Social Phone

April 12, 2010

Microsoft's KIN ONE social phone fits in the palm of a hand

This morning Microsoft revealed KIN, a Windows Phone designed specifically for the social generation of consumers, and with social networking (Facebook, Twitter…) built in the fabric of the phone.

Friends, friends and friends

“Their social life is their priority number one… People have as you heard thousands of ‘friends’ who are: 1) people they know, 2) famous people that they follow and 3) there’s maybe 10-15 people that they deeply care about. And those are different. And this whole idea of being socially connected with all of those groups was very powerful for these people. We call them ‘socialogist‘. And these social connections bring meaning to their live and that’s what they want to do everyday,” said Robbie Bach, the Microsoft president of its entertainment devices division (Xbox, Zune) at a launch event this morning in a bar in San Francisco.

Lifecasting from a phone

According to Bach, “self-expression” is super important for these socialogists.

“What they are, what they are doing. They want to share their journey everyday. It’s like constantly publishing a magazine of their life… On Facebook: 3 billion photos every month, 5 billion pieces of content shared every week. This is high volume. This is read all about me things that people are doing. And we call it lifecasting,” adds the Microsoft executive.

Bach then went to explain why Windows Phone 7 is just not suited for the socialogists who want to lifecast from their phone. And as Microsoft engineers were working on Windows Phone 7, they saw an opporunity to go after this specific target audience.

“So we took a small group of people (designers, business folks, engineers) and we said explore what you can do if you went specifically after these social group. What if we created something from the same design and the same core elements than Windows Phone 7 but customised uniquely for this audience around social communication.”

KIN vs. Windows Phone 7: amplify vs. simplify your life

Despite using the same Windows CE kernel, KIN phones are not compatible with upcoming Windows Phone 7 devices.

“Our strategy is really a cohesive focus around Windows Phone. Windows Phone 7 that will bring the multi-purpose phone for the broad audience to the marketplace later this Fall. And a new deeply social phone that will give for people what they want. Windows Phone 7 is about simplifying people’s lives, this social phone is about amplifying their life.”

KIN is designed to navigate your social life !

“[KIN] is a phone that knits together a community of kindred spirits whose lives are shared and who broadcast all the time from their phone. It’s a phone that personifies true kinship between people and technology, developers and customers.”

KIN is couture software. It’s hand-tailored, it’s custom fit for generation upload, for those sociologists that I talked about.


Analyst: iPhone OS 4.0 Needs Easier Phone Interface, Multitasking, Flash Support…

April 7, 2010

Apple plans to unveil new iPhone features tomorrow. A bit earlier than usual to steal some thunder away from Microsoft's Pink announcement

Analyst Rob Enderle wants amoung other things, multitasking, Flash in the iPhone OS 4.0

Apple will unveil the next version of the iPhone OS tomorrow.

A tat earlier than the previous 2 generations launched in past Julys, in order probably to steal some thunder from Microsoft, that is coming next Monday with yet another phone operating system – this one targets at the youngest crowd – code named “Pink.”

Instead of speculating on what the iPhone OS 4.0 will look like, we asked analyst Rob Enderle – the world’s most quoted tech analyst ! – to share his thoughts on the iPhone’s next new features.

The phone functions should be simpler and easier to use, a common complaint (and joke) is that the iPhone is wonderful at everything but being a phone.

Multi-tasking has been turned off and for a device like this that has been a problem. This should be turned on in a way that doesn’t adversely impact performance and the user interface should be updated so this capability doesn’t impact ease of use. This should likely come with some kind of a performance manager so that performance hogs can be identified by the user and Apple and addressed.

Stronger power management/better battery conditioning. One of the common complaints is dead batteries or batteries that have worn out prematurely this could be improved in the OS and should be.

Voice-to-text Google pioneered this in their phones, Apple has Voice Control but it isn’t as good, and given this has no real keyboard better voice to text is critical to saying up with Google.

A single in-box option for folks who want one place to look for email, this is a common complaint with the current product and should be addressed.

Improved phone Sync, SugarSync on the iPhone has been very successful. This likely should be a native feature in this next operating system.

Better support for native music streaming. Third party applications do this but you can’t do it from iTunes. Apple bought LaLa, this should be integrated in the OS this round.

Improved browsing experience. This is a moving target and Apple currently has one of the best experiences but Android is arguably better now with their leading phones. Personally I think they should bite the bullet and support Flash, since this is a “should” not “will” piece I’d include Flash on this list.


Apple iPad To Disrupt eReader, Netbook Markets

January 27, 2010

Apple's iPad is a nice PC tablet that outperforms current high-end eReaders at a lower price

Despite all the buzz prior to its unveiling earlier today during Steve Jobs’ keynote (you can watch it here), the iPad is anything but magical or revolutionary as Apple CEO wants us to believe.

Consider the iPad as a big iPod touch or an iPod touch XL or DX (in honour to the large sized Kindle).

Super thin, unbelievably light, reasonably priced

First, the good news. The iPad is really thin (half an inch), super light (1.5 lb) and has a 10-hours battery life and 1-month standby; a great achievement for a device that thin.

At CES, a couple weeks ago, Nvidia showed  a Tegra-powered tablet with 16-hours HD video playback time or  140 hours of audio playback, surpassing the iPad. Note that these numbers were for  tablet prototypes and might be better or worse on the final product.

Starting at $499, the iPad looks cheap compared to the similarly sized Amazon Kindle DX, which sells for $10 more: the iPad has a full colour screen, can browse the Web, read ebooks (with the iBooks app and the ePub format) and run applications (games, maps, social networking…).

All these things that the Kindle just can’t do. But to be fair, we’d have to compare the Amazon device with the 3G data-only connection (and Wi-Fi) iPad version, which then costs a whopping $630, without the optional data plan – but included with the Kindle.

The optional Bluetooth keyboard dock transforms the iPad into an "interesting" netbook

No Flash, camera, USB port and extended storage

Now the bad news.

As its smaller siblings, the iPad still doesn’t support Flash, which makes it a poor device to browse the Web, even compared to other ARM-based tablets – running Linux or Google Chrome OS for example – which offer support for Adobe’s Web video technology.

More surprising is the lack of an integrated camera. Not sure why this design choice, especially as the iPhone has one; making me think that the iPad is really just a souped-up iPod touch.

The lack of a USB port and an extended storage (e.g. an SD card slot) are two additional unpleasant surprises. However, Apple does sell a dongle to copy photos from a camera through a USB connector or an SD card slot.

The iPad is a killer eReader

All in all, the iPad is anything but magical or revolutionary. But I can see it be a cheap Mac (although it can’t run MacOS apps), an Apple version of a netbook, with its optional keyboard.

“Netbooks aren’t better at anything! They’re slow, they have low quality displays and run clunky old PC software. They’re not better than a laptop in anything. They’re just cheaper. They’re just cheap laptops,” Jobs joked.

Moreover, the iPad relatively lower price could very well disrupt the whole eReader market, that is currently inundated with over-priced devices like the Kindle or the $400 Sony Daily Edition. And I’m not sure the sleek Skiff e-reader stands a chance now.


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