linux

Yahoo Perfecting New Content Strategy And D-Link Is There To Help

by Paul Joseph September 15, 2011 Featured

Yahoo is taking a step towards providing users with more multimedia content in hopes of winning a bigger chunk easy-media consuming users online, in India. Two latest developments have been reported. Curate video content and provide free video streaming on the site A collaboration with D-Link Curating Video Content Just a few weeks back, Yahoo had a catalogue of Hindi cinema called MoviePlex . The minimalistic library of MoviePlex was in no way comparable to that of Netflix of United States. Yahoo.in will soon be getting a video section that will curate sports highlights from Zee-Ten Sports, stand-up comedy acts, etc. In a separate announcement, Yahoo India said they will be offering regional (Tamil) content to their users in India and internationally. If Yahoo is really looking to make its mark as an online multimedia company, they need to continue tying-up with big brands and pioneer a web streaming business model in India. Collaboration with D-Link Talking of Yahoo collaborations – one was announced during CES in early 2011. D-Link has a product called Boxee Box based on open-source multimedia software—Boxee. The software can be installed on a Mac, Windows or Linux machine and it will categorize multimedia on your system. In addition, Boxee also pulls in content from computers on your network allowing you to have a comprehensive library of your multimedia spread throughout your computers. In the US, Boxee comes with several applications for 3rd party services like Netflix, Youtube, Pandora, Grooveshark etc. In India however, D-Link’s press release for Boxee Box launch doesn’t mention any of the major content providers. As noticed by Medianama, country-locked service —Pandora—is listed, which is intriguing. D-Link India has announced the launch of Boxee Box in India. We can only make a correct guess at which direction this collaboration is heading in. To sum it up, Yahoo wants a bigger slice of living room entertainment and is going to great lengths to achieve it while also staying afloat in the search engine sea.   By: Sahil S

0 comments Read the full article →

Samsung N100 – 10.1-inch netbook pre-loaded with MeeGo OS

by Paul Joseph July 21, 2011 Featured

The new Samsung N100 is a 10.1-inch display , ultra-portable netbook pre-loaded with the MeeGo OS  (MeeGo is a Linux based mobile operating system backed by Nokia,Intel,AMD,Linux , and Novell ).It is encased in a scratch-resistant Duracase and the display is anti-reflective . Samsung N100 netbook specifications : Display : 10.1-inch LED WSVGA (1024×600) Operating system :

0 comments Read the full article →

Acer Aspire 5750z – 15.6-inch Affordable price laptop powered by 2nd Gen Intel Pentium B940

by Paul Joseph July 15, 2011 Featured

Acer Aspire 5750z The new Acer Aspire 5750z is a 15.6-inch entry level laptop powered by the latest Intel Pentium Dual Core B940 processor and comes pre-loaded with the Linux OS only (no Windows OS , you have to install it on your own after buying it) . The Intel Pentium B940 processor is an

0 comments Read the full article →

Open Source Software To Be Used For E-Governance Projects

by Paul Joseph July 8, 2011 Featured

The Economic Times carries a report on a draft policy which says all new E-Governance projects should use open source software on computers and attached devices . The Department of Information Technology which is behind the draft has put forward the draft to hardware manufacturers and others before finalizing it. A major benefit after this draft gets implemented is of course ‘ saving money ‘. Open source projects are available to use for absolutely no cost at all. In addition to that it would even give the implementing agencies control over their hardware and the ability to further customize it as per their needs. The report goes on to say that the Aadhar Project makes extensive use of Blackberry phones , a closed platform. It is ironic that the government has been taking steps to jeopardize the existence of Blackberry phones in India, and the same phones are being used in a very important government project. India has been a supporter of Free and Open source software (FOSS) since a long time, but this is the first instance where a policy is being made to make the use of FOSS compulsory. India in fact has its own Linux distro named BOSS Linux which was developed by the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing to deliver better security and display content in Indian languages. Even the government’s Rs. 1600 Sakshat tablet runs Android which is open source. The Dept. of IT has been promoting the use of Open Standards for E-governance. Such standards avoid technology lock-ins and reduce costs involved in making applications available on different platforms. Another major benefit that India has is its major user base, i.e the population . The huge volume of people using these open standards would make them the most popular standards and hence compel other nations to accept them as well. This policy would affect industry bigwigs like HP , IBM , Sun and others, they would have to supply hardware that works well with open source operating systems. This in turn would increase costs for these companies. Not just PCs but this policy includes printers , servers , chips , tablets and all other devices associated with computers. The e-governance market in worth $20 billion to MNCs in India . Hopefully the implementation of this policy would mark the death of Windows XP and more importantly IE6 in Indian offices . [via Penn Olson ] Looking For A Social Media Agency?? – Contact WATConsult – India’s Leading Social Media Agency Related Posts Is Open Source Now Getting More Unopen? Events Update : IIT E-Summit 2008, Techhare India 2008 and Open Source Madurai 2008 Aadhar Project Expands To Various States; A Million UIDs A Day From October Basic Aadhar Authentication API To Be Available For Free A Tale Of 2 Schemes: Aadhar And Rural Telephony

0 comments Read the full article →

Microsoft Launches Internet Explorer 9, Now Available To Download

by Paul Joseph March 16, 2011 Featured

Yesterday, we had reported that, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer is loosing market share in India, as well as in other major markets. Users are changing their preferences and shifting to Chrome and Firefox. This not the first time that such a trend has been reported. We had previously informed about the decline of Microsoft back in June 2010, after a report from Statcounter, and again in December when Net Applications released its Browser Market share statistics. But, Microsoft will not go down without a fight. They have officially launched their much anticipated browser, Internet Explorer 9, at SXSW. The release to world build has been launched months after the beta version made available , which saw over 2 million downloads in just two days after it’s launch. The beta along with the release candidate, which was unveiled last month, have seen more than 40 million downloads. Dose IE9 have what it needs to compete with the likes of Firefox and Chrome? It does…And packs in more punch than its competitors. IE9 is not just an update to the popular but maligned IE8. The company has rebuilt IE9 which boasts radical speed and graphics improvements. The new browser sports a completely new user interface and supports HTML5. We had previously mentioned that the World Wide Web (W3) Consortium has announced that Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 9 is well ahead of other major browsers in terms of HTML5 compliance. The best part about the IE9 is the its ability to utilise the graphics card acceleration for graphics-heavy animated images and to render motion more quickly. It is not that Microsoft is the first company which has enabled its browser with some form of hardware acceleration. But, it is the first to take full advantage not only of the CPU but also the GPU (graphics processing unit), which dramatically increase its performance. IE9 packs in something which its predecessors lacked — security of the user. IE9 includes Tracking Orotection and stronger filters against malware. Tracking Protection allows users to block sites from dropping cookies which track their movement around the Web. Not many changes have been implemented on the RTW build since the release of the RC. But, it is expected to produce improved performance for low end machines which are not equipped with graphics cards for hardware acceleration. There is just one caveat though, IE9 only runs on Windows 7 and Vista, not even on XP. This is just one place where Microsoft’s IE9 falls behind its competitors which run on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. If you have been using the beta version or the RC installed, you will automatically get the RTW build via Windows Update. If you do not have it then you can download it at BeautyoftheWeb.com . What makes IE9 more powerful, is a step taken by its competitors at Google. The one thing which IE9 lacked — support for WebM videos — is now available as well. Google has released a WebM plugin for Microsoft’s new browser that would allow WebM video playback. This step taken by Google seems to be an effort to return the favour after Microsoft had released an extension for Google Chrome which enabled H.264 HTML5 video playback. You can download the plugin at the microsite set up by Goolge. Looking For A Social Media Agency? CLICK HERE! Related Posts Microsoft Sending Windows 7 To Europe Without Internet Explorer – A Sign Of Things To Come? IE 8 Goes out of Beta – Microsoft Releases the Latest Public Version of Its Famed Browser Is Microsoft Getting Naughty With IE8? Microsoft Research Working On New Malware Detection Tool ‘Zozzle’ Chrome Gains Browser Share As IE Falls

0 comments Read the full article →

Chrome Gains Browser Share As IE Falls

by Paul Joseph December 2, 2010 Featured

Its time to party for the open source community. Chrome, Google’s version of the open source browser Chromium is gaining market share, that to at the cost of Microsoft’s IE. A report from PC World stated that “Usage share of Internet Explorer 6, the nine-year-old browser even Microsoft wants to kill, fell by 1.3 percentage points during November, its biggest drop in eight months.” This came after Net Applications released its Browser Market share statistics for November 2010. Chrome has got the largest growth and now stands at 9.26 percent. Microsoft is still holds the biggest market with 58.4 percent of the share. Firefox has also lost market share by .1 percentage point since October and stands at 22.76 percent. Safari, the browser from Apple’s stable has also gain market nominal market share and stands at 5.36 percent. Mashable has reported that, Chrome has set a new record with its growth rate. Chrome has been made available to Linux and Mac users for just about a year and during this short span it has managed to double its market share. It is not just eating into IE’s share but also that of Firefox, which is considered to be the best browser around but looses out for being so heavy. Chrome is light, easy to use, develops rapidly, comes from Google’s stable and will soon have its very own Web Store . All these make it a big competitor for top spot eventually. Do you think Chrome will ever be No.1? Let us know what you think! Looking For A Social Media Agency?? TRY US! Related Posts Google Chrome Completes One Year. Gets Sony PCs as Birthday Gift! RockMelt – A Cloud-Based, Social-Focused Web Browser Netscape Founder Looks to Re-Enter the Browser Wars with RockMelt (The Facebook Browser?) Orkut Asks Users to Stop Using IE 6: A Very Good Idea 4 Reasons Why Opera Unite Has Got Things Wrong

0 comments Read the full article →

Nokia N900 Review

by Paul Joseph March 25, 2010 Featured

The N900 is the first phone from Nokia based on the Maemo Platform.  Nokia has expressed their intentions to use Maemo in high-end phones.  The Nokia N900 is a Touchscreen, full  QWERTY slider phone and one of most talked about members of the N-Series recently. Does the first phone built on the top of this relatively new phone platform live up to it’s expectations ? Find out in our N900 review. N900 Specs The phone boasts of some pretty impressive specs including powerful ARM Cortex-A8 600MHz Processor with 256 MB of RAM and a 3.5 inch 800×480 pixel resistive touchscreen display. Quad-band GSM EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 Mhz), Tri-band WCDMA / 3G support (900/1700/2100 Mhz) TI OMAP 3430: ARM Cortex-A8 600 MHz CPU , OpenGL ES 2.0 support Maemo 5 OS with Multiple Homescreens 800×480 pixel touchscreen display supporting upto 16 million colors 32GB inbuilt memory plus microSD slot. Slide-out QWERTY keyboard. 5 MP Camera with Dual LED Flash ,16:9 video recording Media player , FM transmitter Kickstand Wi-Fi ,  Bluetooth v2.1 ,  GPS 3.5 mm jack for Audio /TV-Out MicroB Browser powered by Mozilla technology with full Flash 9.4 support Skype , Google Talk IM Integration Internet calling Email : Mail for Exchange, IMAP, POP3, SMTP OVI Maps with geotagging BL-5J 1320mAh with USB Charging More specs here and here Maemo has been around since 2005 Maemo has been around since 2005 in the name of the Internet Tablet OS. The Nokia 770 pictured below was one of the first internet tablets from Nokia. Sadly, the internet tablets 700, N800,N810 never went mainstream and was sold only in limited countries. It was popular amongst the linux and hacker community but not amongst consumers.Some of the main drawbacks about these devices was that they were generally slow and lacked GSM / phone capabilities. Linux meets Phone The N900 is the first linux-based Phone from Nokia. The operating system on the Nokia N900 is Maemo 5 (Fremantle).  Maemo is based on the popular Debian linux distribution.  The N900 can be seen as an internet tablet with phone capabilities. Package Contents The phone comes in a black package with an image of the phone embossed on the top. This is pretty similar to the N97/ N97 Mini’s Box Nokia N900 with a stylus Nokia Battery (BL-5J) Nokia High Efficiency Charger (AC-10) Nokia Stereo Headset (WH-205) Video out cable (CA-75U) Nokia charger adaptor (CA-146C) Cleaning cloth User Guide In addition to the above we also got a converter plug for old nokia chargers . There’s no memory card / extra stylus / carry case in the retail package. Design This is a touchscreen phone with a slide-out QWERTY keypad and it’s certainly big when you compare the N900 to other devices such as Nokia E72 or the iPhone . But We’ve had no issues holding the phone. It felt comfortable to grip. We have no complaints about the placement of controls on the phone except for the weird placement of the hardware-unlock key on the right. Its not the most pocketable phone out there  but it still fits in your pocket. In the front the screen is surrounded by a glossy bezel which bears the letters nokia on the left and n900 on the right. There are no physical buttons in the front, not even call and hangup keys. Although the phone is designed to be used in the landscape mode for the most part , the phone functionality needs to be used in portrait mode as the earpiece , proximity sensor and video calling camera are present on the top when the phone is used in portrait mode. You will also find a notification light which can toggle between white , blue and yellow.The is a speaker on either side of the phone which justifies the entertainment capability of the device. On the left you would find the microUSB port which is used for both charging and PC connectivity . On the right is the hardware unlock key , 3.5 mm audio jack which also serves as a TV-out. The stylus finds a place at the bottom. On the top sits the volume rocker keys , power button and the camera key. On the rear sits the 5 Megapixel Camera surrounded by a kick stand. The camera shutter encloses the lens and the dual LED flash. The microSD card slot is beneath the real panel which houses the battery and SIM card. Display The phone is designed to be used mainly in landscape mode and widescreen display is a proof of that. The 800×480 display is crisp and colors are reproduced quite well. Although the phone uses a resistive touchscreen, it’s very responsive and finger friendly. Keyboard The keyboard is made up of 3 rows  and  the keys provide good feedback. But since the long press for numbers was not there at the time of this review ,  it’s bit hard to use. But the keyboard is powerful as there are tons of a keyboard shortcuts available out of the box Build Quality Although the build quality of the phone is good , the plastic material used makes it feel a tad cheap considering the price of the phone. The phone does not make any noise when gripped and will certainly survive a fall or two.  Wish Nokia uses some metal on Maemo phones in future.  You would notice this especially when you put the N900 next to the N97 Mini which uses a lot of metal on the exterior. Sadly a huge percentage of users give a lot of importance to looks and the N900 might not win the Beauty Pageant for Mobile Phones if at all there was one. The N900 is a beast when it comes to multitasking and web browsing,  but the looks are too soft. UI  Maemo 5 The Maemo UI is just lovely and there is lot of eye candy out of the box. The notifications system esp for incoming messages is super cool.  The interface certainly has a learning curve but any sensible user will pick it up easily. The multitasking is just fabulous and demonstrates the power of Maemo This is what you call multitasking Phone Call quality was pretty good and the phone functionality is pretty simple and easy to use. One cool feature is the integration of contacts with Google Talk / Skype contacts. One downside of the phone app is a lack of DTMF support out of the box. Signal strength was never an issue on GSM or 3G. And the best part is Skype calling right from your phonebook. Connectivity Since this device evolved from an internet tablet , connectivity is flawless.  You can choose to automatically switch to Wi-Fi from 3G / GPRS when you are near a hotspot.  The only issue is many phone networks don’t support automatic configuration of access points on the phone. So you might have to go the manually route. The GPS receiver gets a fix pretty soon and is pretty accurate. Messaging The Maemo 5 OS uses the concept of Conversations to group your SMS and IM such as Google Talk , Skype. This is good if you communicate a lot and don’t want to juggle between apps. There is no native MMS support from there is a already a app from the community which brings MMS Email works pretty well and there is support for all a lot of email providers such as gmail,yahoo,hotmail and exchange . There is support for multiple accounts and multiple attachments. it supports full HTML content within the email. Web Browsing This device deserves the title of the best internet device. Considering the fact that this device has it’s roots in an Internet tablet it does not disappoint. In fact it amazes.The N900 has one of the best browsers in the market and brings PC-like browsing to the palm of your hand. The Flash 9.4 support means that you can view full flash content within a webpage. Youtube, Vimeo are work fine.  You can even connect the phone to your TV and watch the action on the big screen. Watch the speed test of the N900 over 3G and Wi-Fi which uses the Flash capability The Browser does not support multiple tabs but you have to open multiple windows.  Zooming into a webpage is accomplished by double tapping , circular motion or using volume keys. There’s a special hover mode which lets you use select text using a cursor and interact with page elements. You can invoke this mode by swiping your finger from the left of the screen. Swiping from the right side shows your browsing history for that window in a visual manner. You can also install the AdBlock Plus plugin so that you can disable ads and save some bandwidth. You can also save web pages and later view them offline. Memory The device comes with 32 GB of inbuilt memory and has a microSD slot which supports upto 16GB cards. Multimedia Camera The Camera does take some great pictures and the fixed focus video recording which enables macro video recording is cool. But sadly the camera application is a bit slow. You might actually miss the moment in the process of capturing.  The sharing plugins like pixelpipe make photo sharing and blogging a piece of cake. You can even email multiple photos and upload them in a jiffy Nokia N900 Camera Samples Music & Video Playback Music playback is decent and the playback via the stock earphones is pretty good.The speakers are quite loud too. Video playback on such a big screen is good to watch and the kick stand does help. DivX support is worth mentioning. But given the rise of AMOLED displays this one feel a bit dated although it’s not a deal breaker. Tv Out Although most phones high-end phones have a TV-out this phone is special as it can even drive a 50 inch TV and play a DVD Quality movie Apps This is one area where we feel let down. The impressive hardware does not have apps which utilize the hardware like on other platforms. Apps worth mentioning are Qik (video broadcasting), Angry Birds which is a cool game, Pixel Pipe which makes photo/video sharing a piece of cake. There is also Sketch which lets you draw on a canvas. There is a Documents-To-Go viewer edition trial which lets you view office docs. The news from the maemo community is that KOffice is available. Skype works flawlessly including SkypeOut calls. There are some apps which have been developed by the community and the linux nature of the platform might bring a lot more apps to the platform. Nokia just needs to bring more developers on board the Maemo platform. Baseball game developed by India Games for Maemo We hope to see more applications in the coming months / years for the Maemo Platform as Nokia has grand plans for Maemo with a Maemo6 device expected to launch towards end of this year. Battery Life The 1320 mAh battery on the device practically lasts for a day and half of light use and just about a day for heavy use.  As with all phones it lasts longer over Wi-Fi compared to 3G / EDGE.  The spec sheets don’t indicate battery life .At Nokia World , we heard that battery life was linked to user behavior and the device was built to last a day for average use.  We don’t complain about the battery life but a 1500 mAh battery would have given that extra run time ! And one tip ,  you don’t have wait for the battery to go empty before charging the device. Charge it when the the battery indicator is at about 50% and its charges faster. What’s Hot Maemo UI and Notifications Crisp 800×480 pixel Display Mutitasking Multiple Homescreens  and Widgets Browser Skype , IM Email client with HTML support 5MP Camera with Fixed Focus Recording Responsive touchscreen Barely need to use stylus Divx Movie playback. Audio quality though headphones USB Charging OTA updates GPS PDF Reader , File Manager What’s Not Slow Camera app No Long press for numbers / symbols. Weird placement of Hardware unlock key Lack of  Portrait mode Lack of Apps Limited Settings and Configurations when compared to other Nokia phones No Multitouch Conclusion If you are a person who loves to be online 24/7 , be it browsing the web, chatting with friends or checking email the N900 is a great option.  It’s a must have gadget for Linux enthusiasts or hackers.  This is not for the average consumer but a geeky crowd.  If you are one of those geeks you won’t be disappointed.  And if you are a fan of Open Source the N900 is for you ! Although the N900 lacks in a few areas ,  it’s pretty powerful in some areas.  It’s the first phone based on the Maemo platform and it’s obviously not complete. Maemo is a new ray hope for Nokia and the N900 is a live example of that hope . You may want to experience it or wait for the next device Screenshots Similar Posts: Nokia N900 MultiTasking in action 33 Apps Nokia N900 is Official runs Maemo Linux and might be the Best Nokia Phone Ever Nokia N900 Photo Gallery And N810 Comparison Nokia Rover (RX-51)/N900 Pictures and Specifications! Video : Rightware Cross platform 3D UI on Nokia N900

0 comments Read the full article →

ELSE Mobile – Something totally different from the crowd

by Paul Joseph March 20, 2010 Featured

While we are wrapping up MWC 2010 coverage on FoneArena, we definitely didn’t want you to miss out on the First ELSE phone which is based on the ACCESS Linux platform. The Else Intuition User Interface on this phone is something totally different. It’s definitely something ELSE !  FoneArena’s Aanjhan & Varun got a chance to speak to Eldad Eilam , CTO of Else Mobile based who are based in Israel. He highlighted the fact that this phone is optimized for one-handed use The phone has dedicated scrolling keys to make sure that scrolling does not hinder the main UI.  The keyboard is smart with Advanced Predictive Typing and Swipe The phone boasts of configurable Gesture Shortcuts which will let you perform any operation by just drawing a gesture on the screen. ex: You can configure the gesture F to open fonearena on the browser, no typing no menu hunting. Watch the UI in action below ELSE Mobile Specifications 3.5 inch 854×480 Touchscreen with Tactile feedback. Capacitive Touch Peoximity , Ambient Light and Tilt sensors Quad Band GSM and Tri-band 3G support( 850, 1900 2100 Mhz) Wi-Fi , Bluetooth 5 Mega Pixel Camera with 30 fps video captyre GPS, AGPS 1450 mAh battery TI OMAP 3430 CPU which normally is known to run at 600 MHz 32GB inbuilt memory Inbuilt Call recorder Call Urgency Checker Live paper Desktop-Class web browser Push-Email support Else Mobile Launch Date and Price The company is planning to launch this handset first in USA and Europe by middle of this year. Pricing will be announced soon. Similar Posts: Nokia N900 is Official runs Maemo Linux and might be the Best Nokia Phone Ever Motorola MING A1200 Nokia don’t Forget to Launch the N900 in India at a Realistic Price Nokia N900 Live Pics Motorola to give some handsets a Google icon

0 comments Read the full article →

Nokia and Intel Merge Software Platforms to launch “Meego”

by Paul Joseph February 15, 2010 Featured

Today at Mobile World Congress 2010 , Nokia and Intel announced that they are merging software platforms “ Moblin ” and “ Maemo ” to create “ MeeGo “, a Linux-based software platform that will support the broadest range of device segments, including pocketable mobile computers, netbooks, tablets, mediaphones, connected TVs and in-vehicle infotainment system etc. MeeGo will be hosted and governed by the Linux Foundation using the best practices of the open source development model. MeeGo will also offer the Qt application development environment, and builds on the capabilities of the Moblin core operating system and reference user experiences. Using Qt, developers can create applications for various devices and market them through Nokia’s Ovi Store and Intel AppUp Center. The first release of MeeGo is expected in the Q2 2010 with devices based on it, launching later in the year. From the press release: ESPOO, FINLAND, and SANTA CLARA, CALIF., Feb. 15, 2010 – In a significant development in the convergence of communications and computing, Intel Corporation and Nokia are merging their popular Moblin and Maemo software platforms. This will create a unified Linux-based platform that will run on multiple hardware platforms across a wide range of computing devices, including pocketable mobile computers, netbooks, tablets, mediaphones, connected TVs and in-vehicle infotainment systems. Called MeeGo, the open software platform will accelerate industry innovation and time-to-market for a wealth of new Internet-based applications and services and exciting user experiences. MeeGo-based devices from Nokia and other manufacturers are expected to be launched later this year. This announcement strengthens the Nokia and Intel relationship, and builds on the companies’ broad strategic collaboration announced in June 2009. Intel and Nokia now invite participation in MeeGo from existing Maemo and Moblin global communities and across the communications and computing industries. “Our vision for seamlessly communicating between computing devices from the home, auto, office or your pocket is taking a big step forward today with the introduction of MeeGo,” said Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini. “This is a foundational step in our evolving relationship with Nokia. The merging of these two important assets into an open source platform is critical toward providing a terrific experience across a variety of devices and gaining cross- industry support.” “MeeGo will drive an even wider range of Internet computing and communication experiences for consumers, on new types of mobile devices,” said Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, CEO, Nokia. “Through open innovation, MeeGo will create an ecosystem that is second to none, drawing in players from different industries. It will support a range of business models across the value chain, building on the experience and expertise of Nokia, Intel and all those who will join us. Simply put, MeeGo heralds a new era of mobile computing.” MeeGo blends the best of Maemo with the best of Moblin to create an open platform for multiple processor architectures. MeeGo builds on the capabilities of the Moblin core OS and its support for a wide range of device types and reference user experiences, combined with the momentum of Maemo in the mobile industry and the broadly adopted Qt application and UI framework for software developers. MeeGo also unites the robust worldwide Maemo and Moblin applications ecosystems and open source communities. For developers, MeeGo extends the range of target device segments for their applications. Using Qt for application development means that they can write applications once and easily deploy them on MeeGo and across other platforms, for example, on Symbian. The Ovi Store will be the channel to market for apps and content for all Nokia devices, including MeeGo and Symbian-based, with Forum Nokia providing developer support across all Nokia device platforms. The Intel AppUpSM Center will be the path to market for Intel-based MeeGo devices from other device manufacturers, with the Intel® Atom™ Developer Program providing support for applications targeting devices in a variety of categories. The MeeGo software platform, running on high-performance devices, will deliver a range of Internet, computing and communication experiences, with visually rich graphics, multitasking and multimedia capabilities and the best application performance. Since MeeGo runs on multiple device types, people can keep their favorite applications when they change devices, so they are not locked into one kind of device or those from any individual manufacturer. For More details on Meego OS, you can visit www.meego.com . Similar Posts: Video : Qt demo on Maemo , Symbian and Windows Mobile Which mobile platform do you love and why ? Win a N900 by Hacking it at Push N900 Nokia N900 Keyboard Shortcuts Firefox RC3 For Maemo Released: Disables Flash Share/Save

0 comments Read the full article →

LG GW990 Announced at CES 2010

by Paul Joseph January 11, 2010 Featured

LG has announced the GW990 smartphone. This is a truly amazing smartphone. It has a cool form factor and runs Moblin It’s features include: 4.8″ Touchscreen display with 1020*480 resolution 5 Megapixel Camera with Autofocus, LED Flash and HD Video GPS with A-GPS Support, 3D Gaming 16 GB Internal Memory, micro-SD Card Slot Intel Atom 45nm Processor (Unknown Speed) 1850 mAh Battery, 512MB RAM Linux Moblin OS with LG S-Class UI 7.2 MBPs HSDPA, 5.6 MBPs HSUPA The handset is quite a handful and yet it is said to consume 10 times lesser energy than previous Intel Atom powered devices One thing not sure is whether applications for other Linux based platforms such as Maemo will work on the GW990. The device is expected to come out sometime during the 2nd half of 2010. via Similar Posts: Samsung SGH- i780 – Windows Mobile with TV out and optical mouse Motorola innovations from CES – Moto Z10, Rokr E8 and more Samsung SGH-i620 HTC HD2 to get released on T-Mobile Nokia at CES 2010 Share/Save

0 comments Read the full article →