Mobile Phone News

27
Aug

Android 1.0 Loses Bluetooth and IM APIs

By Kate Crowley

Google has dropped Bluetooth and the GTalkService instant messaging APIs from Android 1.0, according to the Android Developers Blog. Handsets using the Android OS will still work with other Bluetooth devices, such as headsets and handsfree stuff. Like the iPhone, the OS won’t offer a Bluetooth API to allow other people to write apps.

The company decided to drop the Bluetooth API because they “plain ran out of time”. Google has promised that a Bluetooth API will be released in the future but can’t say when that will be. As the old adage goes, better late than broken. The IM API was dropped because of security flaws. The service could have revealed sensitive information, including a person’s real name and email address.

Source: The Industry Standard

13
Aug

Will the US get Google’s Android Phone in September?

By Kate Crowley

Google Android logo

TMONews is reporting that T-Mobile USA could put the new HTC Android phone on sale for select customers as early as the 17th of September. Apparently they’ve heard this from a very reliable source, but the news contradicts other rumours that Android phones could be delayed into 2009. In this crazy world of unconfirmed internet rumours, who can we trust?

The phone will cost $399 at full retail price or around $150 for a subsidised phone on a two-year contract. Only existing T-Mobile customers will be able to buy the handset during the presale timescale. Other customers will have to wait a few weeks until the start of October to get their hands on one.

The best part of the source article is CNET’s claim that Sprint Nextel have lost 901,000 subscribers but still managed to retain 51.9 subscribers. I think they might be rounding up.

Source: CNET News

You can see the latest video of the HTC Android phone here

14
Jul

Google Phone Rumours Gathering Ammunition

By Ernest Doku

A huge rumour regarding Google’s entry to the mobile phone market has been resurrected, igniting interest in the future plans of the search company.

Their open source Android operating system has been developed as a low-cost alternative for manufacturers, allowing them to offer iPhone-esque bespoke functionality for their handsets without a protracted development time and costs. Due to be released on a number of devices by the end of the year, the unveiling of Android as a product Google was not keeping to themselves quashed speculation of them making a phone for the market.

However, a press conference held by Google’s co-founders this week has rekindled the fires of suspicion regarding a ‘gPhone’ to counter Apple’s new dominance in the smartphone sector. An apparent misquote in an article from Dan Cox of the Hollywood Reporter got the community revved again about the possibility of the phone’s development, rumours quickly debunked by Google themselves.

TechCrunch still won’t let this rumour lie though, with word that San Francisco product design firm Ammunition are working hard on designing the new handset for Google. A quick peek at their site proves the pedigree of the former Pentagram employees, with a number of concept designs for heavyweights such as Dell, Microsoft, Logitech and mobile phone company Sprint. These certainly look like the go-to guys for designing something like the gPhone.

Oh, and Ammunition’s founder? One Robert Brunner, Director of Industrial Design at Apple Inc. until 1997. Yes, he was succeeded by the amazing Jonathon Ive who went on to design everything Apple is now famous for, but he Brunner wasn’t shabby himself, designing the original Powerbook.

Silicon Valley Insider has a great piece on exactly why Google shouldn’t make a phone, especially now. Going for the masses with a software based solution is far more likely to prove successful than attempting to break off a piece of an already fractured market with hardware.

It could all just be conjecture and speculation, but TechCrunch spies often turn out to be right on the money. Time will tell as Google moves towards releasing the Android platform, as they will have to disclose their own plans to other manufacturers. Exciting times ahead, with Nokia’s Symbian architecture soon to be the choice for most mobile makers and the iPhone’s supremacy being cemented with 3G, Android will have to prove to be something special.

19
Jun

Google Android Running On A Nokia N95

By Kate Crowley

They may look like “One Night In Paris” but these crap quality, alarmingly-soundtracked videos are supposedly Android running on a Nokia N95. It appears to be running most of the applications, including Google Maps and the dialer. Do you believe that this intrepid developer has achieved what others have only dreamed of?

29
May

Does the Google Android-Powered HTC Dream of Tortured Headlines?

By Kate Crowley

The HTC Dream was shown off yesterday at the Google Conference. It’s a phone with a touchscreen and large QWERTY keypad. The screen’s 5×3 inches and there’s an accelerometer. The Android Community describes the user interface as being a blend of iPhone and Samsung GUI (graphical user interface) genius, with a touch of Google’s minimalism.

Much of the GUI is interactive –swipes and taps reveal menus and activate shortcuts. There’s also an interactive compass, which you can see in the video below. You can pan around a location-based image, creating an “augmented reality device”. Augmented reality sounds like a pretty sweet deal to me.

Oh yeah, and there’s a port of Pacman.

Check out the Android Community for more videos, pictures and explanations.