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Lars Magnus Ericsson was working for the Swedish government that made telegraph equipment in the 1870s when he started a little telegraph repair shop in 1976. That was the same year the telephone was invented. After fixing other people's telegraphs and then telephones he started a company making his own telephone equipment. He started making his own equipment and by the 1890s was shipping gear to the UK. As the roaring 20s came, they sold stock to buy other companies and expanded quickly. Early mobile devices used radios to connect mobile phones to wired phone networks and following projects like ALOHANET in the 1970s they expanded to digitize communications, allowing for sending early forms of text messages, the way people might have sent those telegraphs when old Lars was still alive and kicking. At the time, the Swedish state-owned Televerket Radio was dabbling in this space and partnered with Ericsson to take first those messages then as email became a thing, email, to people wirelessly using the 400 to 450 MHz range in Europe and 900 MHz in the US. That standard went to the OSI and became a 1G wireless packet switching network we call Mobitex. Mike Lazaridis was born in Istanbul and moved to Canada in 1966 when he was five, attending the University of Waterloo in 1979. He dropped out of school to take a contract with General Motors to build a networked computer display in 1984. He took out a loan from his parents, got a grant from the Canadian government, and recruited another electrical engineering student, Doug Fregin from the University of Windsor, who designed the first circuit boards. to join him starting a company they called Research in Motion. Mike Barnstijn joined them and they were off to do research. After a few years doing research projects, they managed to build up a dozen employees and a million in revenues. They became the first Mobitex provider in America and by 1991 shipped the first Mobitex device. They brought in James Balsillie as co-CEO, to handle corporate finance and business development in 1992, a partnership between co-CEOs that would prove fruitful for 20 years. Some of those work-for-hire projects they'd done involved reading bar codes so they started with point-of-sale, enabling mobile payments and by 1993 shipped RIMGate, a gateway for Mobitex. Then a Mobitex point-of-sale terminal and finally with the establishment of the PCMCIA standard, a PCMCIP Mobitex modem they called Freedom. Two-way paging had already become a thing and they were ready to venture out of PoS systems. So in 1995, they took a $5 million investment to develop the RIM 900 OEM radio modem. They also developed a pager they called the Inter@ctive Pager 900 that was capable of two-way messaging the next year. Then they went public on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1997. The next year, they sold a licensing deal to IBM for the 900 for $10M dollars. That IBM mark of approval is always a sign that a company is ready to play in an enterprise market. And enterprises increasingly wanted to keep executives just a quick two-way page away. But everyone knew there was a technology convergence on the way. They worked with Ericsson to further the technology and over the next few years competed with SkyTel in the interactive pager market. Enter The Blackberry They knew there was something new coming. Just as the founders know something is coming in Quantum Computing and run a fund for that now. They hired a marketing firm called Lexicon Branding to come up with a name and after they saw the keys on the now-iconic keyboard, the marketing firm suggested BlackBerry. They'd done the research and development and they thought they had a product that was special. So they released the first BlackBerry 850 in Munich in 1999. But those were still using radio networks and more specifically the DataTAC network. The age of mobility was imminent, although we didn't call it that yet. Handspring and Palm each went public in 2000. In 2000, Research In Motion brought its first cellular phone product in the BlackBerry 957, with push email and internet capability. But then came the dot com bubble. Some thought the Internet might have been a fad and in fact might disappear. But instead the world was actually ready for that mobile convergence. Part of that was developing a great operating system for the time when they released the BlackBerry OS the year before. And in 2000 the BlackBerry was named Product of the Year by InfoWorld. The new devices took the market by storm and shattered the previous personal information manager market, with shares of that Palm company dropping by over 90% and Palm OS being setup as it's own corporation within a couple of years. People were increasingly glued to their email. While the BlackBerry could do web browsing and faxing over the internet, it was really the integrated email access, phone, and text messaging platform that companies like General Magic had been working on as far back as the early 1990s. The Rise of the BlackBerry The BlackBerry was finally the breakthrough mobile product everyone had been expecting and waiting for. Enterprise-level security, integration with business email like Microsoft's Exchange Server, a QWERTY keyboard that most had grown accustomed to, the option to use a stylus, and a simple menu made the product an instant smash success. And by instant we mean after five years of research and development and a massive financial investment. The Palm owned the PDA market. But the VII cost $599 and the BlackBerry cost $399 at the time (which was far less than the $675 Inter@ctive Pager had cost in the 1990s). The Palm also let us know when we had new messages using the emerging concept of push notifications. 2000 had seen the second version of the BlackBerry OS and their AOL Mobile Communicator had helped them spread the message that the wealthy could have access to their data any time. But by 2001 other carriers were signing on to support devices and BlackBerry was selling bigger and bigger contracts. 5,000 devices, 50,000 devices, 100,000 devices. And a company called Kasten Chase stepped in to develop a secure wireless interface to the Defense Messaging System in the US, which opened up another potential two million people in the defense industry They expanded the service to cover more and more geographies in 2001 and revenues doubled, jumping to 164,000 subscribers by the end of the year. That's when they added wireless downloads so could access all those MIME attachments in email and display them. Finally, reading PDFs on a phone with the help of GoAmerica Communications! And somehow they won a patent for the idea that a single email address could be used on both a mobile device and a desktop. I guess the patent office didn't understand why IMAP was invented by Mark Crispin at Stanford in the 80s, or why Exchange allowed multiple devices access to the same mailbox. They kept inking contracts with other companies. AT&T added the BlackBerry in 2002 in the era of GSM. The 5810 was the first truly convergent BlackBerry that offered email and a phone in one device with seamless SMS communications. It shipped in the US and the 5820 in Europe and Cingular Wireless jumped on board in the US and Deutsche Telekom in Germany, as well as Vivendi in France, Telecom Italia in Italy, etc. The devices had inched back up to around $500 with service fees ranging from $40 to $100 plus pretty limited data plans. The Tree came out that year but while it was cool and provided a familiar interface to the legions of Palm users, it was clunky and had less options for securing communications. The NSA signed on and by the end of the year they were a truly global operation, raking in revenues of nearly $300 million. The Buying Torndado They added web-based application in 2003, as well as network printing. They moved to a Java-based interface and added the 6500 series, adding a walkie-talkie function. But that 6200 series at around $200 turned out to be huge. This is when they went into that thing a lot of companies do - they started suing companies like Good and Handspring for infringing on patents they probably never should have been awarded. They eventually lost the cases and paid out tens of millions of dollars in damages. More importantly they took their eyes off innovating, a common mistake in the history of computing companies. Yet there were innovations. They released Blackberry Enterprise Server in 2004 then bolted on connectors to Exchange, Lotus Domino, and allowed for interfacing with XML-based APIs in popular enterprise toolchains of the day. They also later added support for GroupWise. That was one of the last solutions that worked with symmetric key cryptography I can remember using and initially required the devices be cradled to get the necessary keys to secure communications, which then worked over Triple-DES, common at the time. One thing we never liked was that messages did end up living at Research in Motion, even if encrypted at the time. This is one aspect that future types of push communications would resolve. And Microsoft Exchange's ActiveSync. By 2005 there were CVEs filed for BlackBerry Enterprise Server, racking up 17 in the six years that product shipped up to 5.0 in 2010 before becoming BES 10 and much later Blackberry Enterprise Mobility Management, a cross-platform mobile device management solution. Those BES 4 and 5 support contracts, or T-Support, could cost hundreds of dollars per incident. Microsoft had Windows Mobile clients out that integrated pretty seamlessly with Exchange. But people loved their Blackberries. Other device manufacturers experimented with different modes of interactivity. Microsoft made APIs for pens and keyboards that flipped open. BlackBerry added a trackball in 2006, that was always kind of clunky. Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, and others were experimenting with new ways to navigate devices, but people were used to menus and even styluses. And they seemed to prefer a look and feel that seemed like what they used for the menuing control systems on HVAC controls, video games, and even the iPod. The Eye Of The Storm A new paradigm was on the way. Apple's iPhone was released in 2007 and Google's Android OS in 2008. By then the BlackBerry Pearl was shipping and it was clear which devices were better. No one saw the two biggest threats coming. Apple was a consumer company. They were slow to add ActiveSync policies, which many thought would be the corporate answer to mobile management as group policies in Active Directory had become for desktops. Apple and Google were slow to take the market, as BlackBerry continued to dominate the smartphone industry well into 2010, especially once then-president Barack Obama strong-armed the NSA into allowing him to use a special version of the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition for official communiques. Other world leaders followed suit, as did the leaders of global companies that had previously been luddites when it came to constantly being online. Even Eric Schmidt, then chairman of google loved his Crackberry in 2013, 5 years after the arrival of Android. Looking back, we can see a steady rise in iPhone sales up to the iPhone 4, released in 2010. Many still said they loved the keyboard on their BlackBerries. Organizations had built BES into their networks and had policies dating back to NIST STIGs. Research in Motion owned the enterprise and held over half the US market and a fifth of the global market. That peaked in 2011. BlackBerry put mobility on the map. But companies like AirWatch, founded in 2003 and MobileIron, founded in 2007, had risen to take a cross-platform approach to the device management aspect of mobile devices. We call them Unified Endpoint Protection products today and companies could suddenly support BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, and iPhones from a single console. Over 50 million Blackberries were being sold a year and the stock was soaring at over $230 a share. Today, they hold no market share and their stock performance shows it. Even though they've pivoted to more of a device management company, given their decades of experience working with some of the biggest and most secure companies and governments in the world. The Fall Of The BlackBerry The iPhone was beautiful. It had amazing graphics and a full touch screen. It was the very symbol of innovation. The rising tide of the App Store also made it a developers playground (no pun intended). It was more expensive than the Blackberry, but while they didn't cater to the enterprise, they wedged their way in there with first executives and then anyone. Initially because of ActiveSync, which had come along in 1996 mostly to support Windows Mobile, but by Exchange Server 2003 SP 2 could do almost anything Outlook could do - provided software developers like Apple could make the clients work. So by 2011, Exchange clients could automatically locate a server based on an email address (or more to the point based on DNS records for the domain) and work just as webmail, which was open in almost every IIS implementation that worked with Exchange. And Office365 was released in 2011, paving the way to move from on-prem Exchange to what we now call “the cloud.” And Google Mail had been around for 7 years by then and people were putting it on the BlackBerry as well, blending home and office accounts on the same devices at times. In fact, Google licensed Exchange ActiveSync, or EAS in 2009 so support for Gmail was showing up on a variety of devices. BlackBerry had everything companies wanted. But people slowly moved to that new iPhone. Or Androids when decent models of phones started shipping with the OS on them. BlackBerry stuck by that keyboard, even though it was clear that people wanted full touchscreens. The BlackBerry Bold came out in 2009. BlackBerry had not just doubled down with the keyboard instead of full touchscreen, but they tripled down on it. They had released the Storm in 2008 and then the Storm in 2009 but they just had a different kind of customer. Albeit one that was slowly starting to retire. This is the hard thing about being in the buying tornado. We're so busy transacting that we can't think ahead to staying in the eye that we don't see how the world is changing outside of it. As we saw with companies like Amdahl and Control Data, when we only focus on big customers and ignore the mass market we leave room for entrants in our industries who have more mass appeal. Since the rise of the independent software market following the IBM anti-trust cases, app developers have been a bellwether of successful platforms. And the iPhone revenue split was appealing to say the least. Sales fell off fast. By 2012, the BlackBerry represented less than 6 percent of smartphones sold and by the start of 2013 that number dropped in half, falling to less than 1 percent in 2014. That's when the White House tested replacements for the Blackberry. There was a small bump in sales when they finally released a product that had competitive specs to the iPhone, but it was shortly lived. The Crackberry craze was officially over. BlackBerry shot into the mainstream and brought the smartphone with them. They made the devices secure and work seamlessly in corporate environments and for those who could pay money to run BES or BIS. They proved the market and then got stuck in the Innovator's Dilemna. They became all about features that big customers wanted and needed. And so they missed the personal part of personal computing. Apple, as they did with the PC and then graphical user interfaces saw a successful technology and made people salivate over it. They saw how Windows had built a better sandbox for developers and built the best app delivery mechanism the world has seen to date. Google followed suit and managed to take a much larger piece of the market with more competitive pricing. There is so much we didn't discuss, like the short-lived Playbook tablet from BlackBerry. Or the Priv. Because for the most part, they a device management solution today. The founders are long gone, investing in the next wave of technology: Quantum Computing. The new face of BlackBerry is chasing device management, following adjacencies into security and dabbling in IoT for healthcare and finance. Big ticket types of buys that include red teaming to automotive management to XDR. Maybe their future is in the convergence of post-quantum security, or maybe we'll see their $5.5B market cap get tasty enough for one of those billionaires who really, really, really wants their chicklet keyboard back. Who knows but part of the fun of this is it's a living history.
Bonjour à tous et bienvenue sur le ZD Tech, le podcast quotidien de la rédaction de ZDNet. Je m'appelle Pierre Benhamou et aujourd'hui je vous invite à un voyage dans le temps pour examiner avec moi les raisons du naufrage d'une marque de téléphones qui ont marqué des générations entières. Et oui, vous avez bien deviné, nous allons évoquer le sort funeste de BlackBerry. Fut un temps – que les moins de 20 ans ne pourront malheureusement pas connaître – où votre identifiant BBM – la messagerie intégrée du constructeur BlackBerry – comptait parfois plus que votre numéro de téléphone. Entre 2003 et 2010, souvenez-vous, le fabricant canadien a connu son heure de gloire avec ses téléphones, puis ses smartphones, reconnaissables entre tous à leur clavier physique iconique. Hélas, tout empire a une fin et BlackBerry n'échappera pas à cette règle, puisque la société vient officiellement de fermer sa branche dédiée aux smartphones pour se concentrer sur l'édition de logiciels. Exit donc le BlackBerry Charm, BlackBerry Curve ou BlackBerry Bold – des modèles d'abord dédiés aux professionnels mais bientôt adoptés par le plus grand nombre – qu'il n'était vraiment pas rare de croiser voilà de cela une quinzaine d'années seulement. Mais alors, à qui la faute ? Si la société canadienne n'est certainement pas exempte de tout reproche, l'origine de son déclin remonte en réalité à 2007 et à l'irruption sur le marché des smartphones d'une marque que vous connaissez aujourd'hui parfaitement. Je veux bien sûr parler d'Apple, qui lança cette année là son désormais légendaire iPhone ! A ce stade, le glas avait déjà sonné pour le constructeur canadien. Et oui, sur ce marché, l'inertie a un coût, et BlackBerry ne l'a compris que trop tard. Malheureusement pour lui... et pour nous. Pour autant, la situation de BlackBerry n'a vraiment empiré qu'à partir de 2010. Imaginez-donc, en septembre 2010, le constructeur avait la main sur plus de 37 % du marché des smartphones, tandis qu'Apple et Google suivaient avec environ 23 % des parts de ce marché ô combien lucratif. Et pourtant, en décembre de la même année, la donne s'était déjà inversée, et BlackBerry chutait au niveau de ses concurrents. A son crédit, BlackBerry ne s'est pas laissée faire. L'entreprise a même tout tenté, depuis sa propre version d'un nouveau système d'exploitation adapté aux écrans tactiles, jusqu'à la reprise des modèles BlackBerry classiques, en passant par la décision difficile de développer des téléphones pour l'écosystème Android. Rien n'y a fait et la société, ironiquement basée à Waterloo, avait déjà – et c'est le cas de le dire – perdu la bataille. Si la marque a encore pu vivoter un temps, en étant cédée sous licence à des fabricants tiers, le sort en était jeté et il aura fallu attendre 2022 pour que la messe soit finalement prononcée pour BlackBerry. Et voilà, normalement on a fait le tour du sujet. Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur ZDNet.fr et retrouvez tous les jours un nouvel épisode du ZD Tech sur vos plateformes de podcasts préférées.
Wanna split £100? You get £50 free AND save money on 100% green electricity by moving to Octopus Energy. Plus I get £50 to support this podcast but ONLY if you do it by using my unique referral code. I moved to Octopus recently and had been putting it off for ages, but I kicked myself for not doing it sooner, as it’s literally a 5 minute job to give them your details. Click here: https://share.octopus.energy/free-puma-452 On today’s podcast: UK confirm 2030 ban for new petrol and diesel vehicles Becomes first major car market to bring forward ban to 2030 Massive investment in charging and incentives How UK compares to rest of the world What key figures said in reaction today Show #932 Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are in the world, welcome to EV News Daily for Wednesday 18th November. It’s Martyn Lee here and I go through every EV story so you don't have to. Thank you to MYEV.com for helping make this show, they’ve built the first marketplace specifically for Electric Vehicles. It’s a totally free marketplace that simplifies the buying and selling process, and help you learn about EVs along the way too. UK BECOMES EARLIEST MAJOR CAR MARKET TO ANNOUNCE 2030 COMBUSTION BAN The UK will ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030, 10 years earlier than previously announced, as part of a 10 Point plan announced by our Prime Minister today. Boris Johnson is calling this the "green industrial revolution" as wind power, nuclear, hydrogen and Carbon Capture and Storage all got promoted today part of our legally binding goal to hit emissions targets. £1.3bn of cash will be injected into new car charging infrastructure and £580m for EV grants to encourage buyers into new models. However one point to note is that hybrids are allowed until 2035 if they travel significant range on electric. That range? Not announced today. It's a bold move that will give the market a clear sense of direction. It allows for investment in skills training from auto technicians to emergency responders. For fleet buyers to run cost analysis. For towns and cities to press on with plans for zero-emission zones to clear up the air around our kids schools. For charging companies to justify extra investment from their investors. Here's the plan: "Backing our world-leading car manufacturing bases including in the West Midlands, North East and North Wales to accelerate the transition to electric vehicles, and transforming our national infrastructure to better support electric vehicles." Following extensive consultation with car manufacturers and sellers, the Prime Minister has confirmed that the UK will end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans by 2030, ten years earlier than planned. However we will allow the sale of hybrid cars and vans that can drive a significant distance with no carbon coming out of the tailpipe until 2035. The UK car industry already manufactures a significant proportion of electric vehicles in Europe, including one of the most popular models in the world. To support this acceleration, the Prime Minister has announced: £1.3 billion to accelerate the rollout of chargepoints for electric vehicles in homes, streets and on motorways across England, so people can more easily and conveniently charge their cars. £582 million in grants for those buying zero or ultra-low emission vehicles to make them cheaper to buy and incentivise more people to make the transition. Nearly £500 million to be spent in the next four years for the development and mass-scale production of electric vehicle batteries, as part of our commitment to provide up to £1 billion, boosting international investment into our strong manufacturing bases including in the Midlands and North East. This will help protect and create thousands of new jobs, particularly in the Midlands, North East, and North Wales. We will also launch a consultation on the phase out of new diesel HGVs to put the UK in the vanguard of zero emission freight. No date has been set yet. So how does the UK compare? California have set the aim of banning fossil cars and trucks by 2035. Whilst that was an executive order, it's still intent. Norway already has around 75% of new vehicles having a plug socket, almost half of all the new cars sold in the first half of 2020 were fully electric. This is a country built, in part, on oil and gas revenue. And they have an even more ambitious target. 2025 is the date set parliamentary goal for only zero-emission cars, light vehicles and urban buses being sold. Some German cities already ban older diesels. In China they want 50% of new car sales to be NEV by 2035. India is consulting their vehicle makers on a 2030 ban for new vehicles. Scotland was 2032 before today's announcement, we'll see if they come in line with the PM's ambitions. Sweden, Denmark, Netherlands, Ireland all 2030. In France and Spain it's currently 2040 but as countries like the UK make these promises, we'll be watched closely to see if green policies are vote winners, or vote losers. Sorry for being cynical! And you’ll notice I've said nothing of Eastern Europe, Russia, Africa, South America, Australia, any kind of U.S. policy which aligns all 50 states. Why is ambition policy so important? Because there ARE places where it has already been achieved. Shenzhen in Southern China has the largest electric fleet of buses and taxis in the world. They started in the lawmaking 2008 and the buses hit the road from 2010, to improve air quality. And if you want to buy a petrol car, you have to enter a government lottery, or auction. But you can buy an EV any time you want. Money and technology followed policy. Boris Johnson wrote yesterday for the Financial Times: "we’ll invest more than £2.8bn in electric vehicles, lacing the land with charging points and creating long-lasting batteries in UK gigafactories. This will allow us to end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans in 2030. However, we will allow the sale of hybrid cars and vans that can drive a significant distance with no carbon coming out of the tailpipe until 2035. On Wednesday I will meet UK businesses to discuss their contribution. We plan to provide clear timetables for the clean energy we will procure, details of the regulations we will change, and the carbon prices that we will put on emissions. I will establish a “task force net zero” committed to reaching net zero by 2050, and through next year’s COP26 summit we will urge countries and companies around the world to join us in delivering net zero globally. Green and growth can go hand-in-hand. So let us meet the most enduring threat to our planet with one of the most innovative and ambitious programmes of job-creation we have known." https://www.ft.com/content/6c112691-fa2f-491a-85b2-b03fc2e38a30 What can we do to help people get into an EV. The U.S. has a $7500 federal tax break for manufacturers who haven't yet sold 200k vehicles - something which many say now unfairly hinders the early adopters who took the risks, like Tesla and GM. So that may change under a Biden administration to boost domestic EV production - a 'Made In America' rebate? In France there's up to 12,000Euros off a new EV if you also scrap an old combustion car. What would make you buy an EV? For fleets it's Total Cost of Ownership. And so many them are more than ahead of the general public on this. Fleet buyers can see that when you factor in cheaper electricity, they save money with EVs. Large fleet will take a long time to change over, and many do it in step with adding charging at depots or where vehicles are kept often overnight. Jim Holder is the Editorial director, Haymarket Automotive: "So, new EVs and PHEVs only from 2030, just EVs from 2035. Nothing to fear from the ambition, plenty of challenges in the execution. Huge hurdles ahead, but those that should know say it’s entirely doable with the right investment and mindset. Can we be world-leading? Why not..." Jonny Smith @CarPErvert: "New piston cars banned in UK from 2030. As I said before, the key word here is new. EV charging is improving every quarter, as car ranges improve. Interesting petrol cars will survive for occasional amusement, EVs do bulk of the miles. I'm cool with that. Autocar said: "So far, individual manufacturers have been mainly mute on the changes and their effects, although their collective body, the SMMT, called them “extremely concerning” while issuing a broad welcome. BMW has given voice, noting that the UK is only one of its 140 markets and somewhat of a lone voice, but it expects to be well able to supply UK-compliant cars when the law changes." And Mike Hawes is the head of a lobby group which many car makers, interesting not TEsla, are part of. His job is to speak on their behalf and, as is the point of a trade association, sometimes to say things the car makers don't want to be saying directly themselves. He told the BBC Andy Eastlake, Managing Director - Low Carbon Vehicle Partnership: “Its clear and ambitious but we believe necessary and achievable, if we work in partnership!”" Keith Johnston, Cofounder greentech biz @urbaneleclondon retractable on-st charging hubs."As we scale up for the 2030 ban, we need on-street fast charging infrastructure that "reduces the streetscape impact of charge points, maintaining accessibility of the pavement for pedestrians"" Chris Stark, Chief Executive of the UK's Climate Change Committee: "The 2030 commitment to phase-out sales of petrol and diesel cars and vans is *massive*. It’s a transport commitment, a consumer commitment, and an industry commitment. Crucially, it will drive fundamental change in the whole energy system. So its impact can’t be overstated." Electric Vehicle Association (EVA) Scotland: "The move towards electric transportation can play its part, and that should include phasing out the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2025, instead of the current target of 2032." Adam Vaughan. Chief reporter, @newscientist: "On petrol/diesel ban, there is a big concession to the motoring industry - govt appears to be allowing new plug-in hybrid electric vehicles to be sold until 2035, judging from language. (e.g. so ones Mistubishi Outlander PHEV okay, mild hybrids like old Toyota Prius prob not)" Some of the madness media coverage: "The law on having a petrol or diesel car is set to change". https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/law-having-petrol-diesel-car-19299959 IN conclusion: it's unquestionably a good thing. The devil is in the detail. What do they mean by allowing hybrids which do a significant distance? Is that 10 miles, or 100 miles? And here's the key thing - it's only for new vehicles. And it's 9 years away. EVs are more silicon valley than detroit. It's hard for us, and it's part of human nature, to comprehend the pace of innovation. We either tend to massively under estimate or over estimate innovation. It’s 2020 and I’m still waiting for my hoverboard. And yet the phone I carry around with me is the stuff of science fiction. So what phone were you using 9 years ago? The iPhone 3G (and apps you could download from the recently launched App Store), Blackberry Bold, Google's Nexus One, Nokia's Symbian-powered N8. We know from VW's plans to sell 20 million EV's a year by 2030, from China's aggressive EV industry, from Tesla's plan to become their own cell maker which allows for a range of 500, 600, 700 miles. And that's probably by 2025, another 5 years after that it will just be normal. Battery costs have come down over the last 10 years form $1000/kWh to $100kWh. That's the most expensive part of an EV and costs are coming down. EVs are already cheaper to buy than combustion cars when you factor in running costs and lack of servicing over a typical ownership period. Soon, cheaper to buy. At that point you don't need state of national governments to be involved. Economics takes over. The pound in your pocket, the dollar in your wallet is stronger than anything else. EVs are better in every way, and if the trend of the last 10 years continues, soon they're cheaper to buy. Finally, I'll conclude with perception. I'm interested in this, and so you are because you've got to the end, but most people are busy having a life. They'll read the headlines - "petrol cars being banned!" - and that will impact buying decisions and residual prices. Who's buying a diesel car today when they're going to be worth nothing when you come to sell it. Maybe not reality, but perception. What do you think? Leave me a comment. You can listen to all 931 previous episodes of this this for free, where you get your podcasts from, plus the blog https://www.evnewsdaily.com/ – remember to subscribe, which means you don’t have to think about downloading the show each day, plus you get it first and free and automatically. It would mean a lot if you could take 2mins to leave a quick review on whichever platform you download the podcast. And if you have an Amazon Echo, download our Alexa Skill, search for EV News Daily and add it as a flash briefing. Come and say hi on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter just search EV News Daily, have a wonderful day, I’ll catch you tomorrow and remember…there’s no such thing as a self-charging hybrid. PHIL ROBERTS / ELECTRIC FUTURE (PREMIUM PARTNER) BRAD CROSBY (PREMIUM PARTNER) AVID TECHNOLOGY (PREMIUM PARTNER) PORSCHE OF THE VILLAGE CINCINNATI (PREMIUM PARTNER) AUDI CINCINNATI EAST (PREMIUM PARTNER) VOLVO CARS CINCINNATI EAST (PREMIUM PARTNER) NATIONALCARCHARGING.COM and ALOHACHARGE.COM (PREMIUM PARTNER) DEREK REILLY FROM THE EV REVIEW IRELAND YOUTUBE CHANNEL (PREMIUM PARTNER) RICHARD AT RSYMONS.CO.UK – THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE SPECIALIST (PREMIUM PARTNER) DAVID AND LISA ALLEN (PARTNER) OEM AUDIO OF NEW ZEALAND AND EVPOWER.CO.NZ (PARTNER) GARETH HAMER eMOBILITY NORWAY HTTPS://WWW.EMOBILITYNORWAY.COM/ (PARTNER) BOB BOOTHBY – MILLBROOK COTTAGES AND ELOPEMENT WEDDING VENUE (PARTNER) DARIN MCLESKEY FROM DENOVO REAL ESTATE (PARTNER) JUKKA KUKONEN FROM WWW.SHIFT2ELECTRIC.COM RAJEEV NARAYAN (PARTNER) ALAN ROBSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ALAN SHEDD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ALEX BANAHENE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ALEXANDER FRANK @ https://www.youtube.com/c/alexsuniverse42 ANDERS HOVE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ANDREA JEFFERSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ANDREW GREEN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ASEER KHALID (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ASHLEY HILL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BÅRD FJUKSTAD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRIAN THOMPSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRUCE BOHANNAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CHARLES HALL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CHRIS HOPKINS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CHRISTOPHER BARTH (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) COLIN HENNESSY AND CAMBSEV (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CRAIG COLES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CRAIG ROGERS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAMIEN DAVIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVE DEWSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID FINCH (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID MOORE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID PARTINGTON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID PRESCOTT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DON MCALLISTER / SCREENCASTSONLINE.COM (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ERU KYEYUNE-NYOMBI (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) FREDRIK ROVIK (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) GENE RUBIN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) GILBERTO ROSADO (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) GEOFF LOWE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) HEDLEY WRIGHT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) IAN GRIFFITHS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) IAN SEAR (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) IAN (WATTIE) WATKINS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JACK OAKLEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JAMES STORR (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JIM MORRIS (EXECUTIVE PRODICERS) JON AKA BEARDY MCBEARDFACE FROM KENT EVS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JON MANCHAK (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JUAN GONZALEZ (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) KEN MORRIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) KEVIN MEYERSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) KYLE MAHAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LARS DAHLAGER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LAURENCE D ALLEN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LEE BROWN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LUKE CULLEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARCEL WARD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARK BOSSERT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARTY YOUNG (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MATT PISCIONE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MIA OPPELSTRUP (PARTNER) MICHAEL PASTRONE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MIKE WINTER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) NATHAN GORE-BROWN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) NEIL E ROBERTS FROM SUSSEX EVS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) NICHOLAS MILLER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) NIGEL MILES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) OHAD ASTON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PAUL RIDINGS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PAUL STEPHENSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PETE GLASS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PETE GORTON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PETER & DEE ROBERTS FROM OXON EVS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PHIL MOUCHET (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PHILIP TRAUTMAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RAJ BADWAL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RENE KEEMIK (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RENÉ SCHNEIDER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RICHARD LUPINSKY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ROB HERMANS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ROB FROM THE RSTHINKS EV CHANNEL ON YOUTUBE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RUPERT MITCHELL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) SEIKI PAYNE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) STEPHEN PENN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) STEVE JOHN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) THOMAS J. THIAS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) TODD OAKES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) THE PLUGSEEKER – EV YOUTUBE CHANNEL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) TIM GUTTERIDGE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) WILLIAM LANGHORNE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CONNECT WITH ME! EVne.ws/itu nes EVne.ws/tunein EVne.ws/googleplay EVne.ws/stitcher EVne.ws/youtube EVne.ws/iheart EVne.ws/blog EVne.ws/patreon Check out MYEV.com for more details: https://www.myev.com
Tinh tế radio 4/9: Trên tay Galaxy Z Fold 2 50 triệu; Hoài niệm BlackBerry Bold 9900
The US government may have dealt a fatal blow to ZTE's consumer ambitions, preventing it from sourcing any components or software from the country. How does this Chinese telecoms company go forward? Tim Cook thinks macOS and iOS should stay apart for our benefit. John Chen wants to see the BlackBerry Bold 9900 back on store shelves. And the LG V35 ThinQ is apparently coming in just a few weeks. All this and more with our guest, Domenico Lamberti, as you tune into the Pocketnow Weekly! Watch the YouTube live broadcast from 3:00pm Eastern on April 20 or check out the high-quality audio version right here. You can shoot your listener emails to podcast@pocketnow.com for a shot at getting your question read aloud on the air at the end of the month! Recording Date April 20, 2018 Hosts Juan Carlos Bagnell Jules Wang Guest Domenico Lamberti (MobileTechTalk) News LG V40: Apparently will come after the V35 this year ZTE: The Commerce Department ax falls, Android's could, too LCD iPhone: Once thought to be $800, now could be $550? mac/iOS: Tim Cook hates "trade offs and compromise" Nubia: Mobile gaming needs a little Red Magic ASUS: ROG phone may also be coming soon BlackBerry: A Bold 9900 for $150? The CEO wants one Galaxy S10: Patents for bezelless phones with and without a notch Strictly Not Phones Honor: Magicbook debuts as the brand's first laptop Pixelbook: Google's test bed may run Windows soon Intel: New Devices Group shuttered, Vaunt smart glasses canceled • See you soon! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
BlackBerry CEO John Chen talks with Recode’s Kara Swisher about how the once-pioneering mobile phone company has happily pivoted into a new business model, focusing on enterprise security and embedded technology for connected cars. Chen says “somebody should make” a new version of the BlackBerry Bold 9900, explaining that there’s still a sizable audience of professionals and government workers who want their phones to be ultra secure. He also discusses why he took the CEO job in 2013, why he just committed to another five years and how governments should direct their regulation of self-driving cars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
En este episodio os comento como he aprovechado unas tarjetas multi SIM para poner en uso y cacharrear con algunos teléfonos antiguos (Ericsson R380, Nokia 6600, BlackBerry Bold 9900,...) ENLACES RELACIONADOS: Hago mención a un capítulo que escribí en mi blog sobre la ubicuidad. Este es el enlace: - http://www.unicorn-st.com/2012/03/la-quimera-de-la-ubicuidad.html También hablo de lo que es un MiFi. De esto grabé un podcast y escribí un artículo, lo podéis leer y/o escuchar aquí: http://www.unicorn-st.com/2017/10/viva-el-mifi-y-la-madre-del-que-me-lo.html Esta es la información sobre las Multi SIM en Movistar: http://www.movistar.es/particulares/movil/servicios/multisim?_ga=2.259479114.1592060973.1515426481-911482678.1495181658 INFORMACIÓN Y DATOS DE CONTACTO Twitter: @SansaTwit e-mail: info@unicorn-st.es www.unicorn-st.com www.wintablet.info www.genide.es Grupo Telegram Unicorn ST https://t.me/joinchat/GE4OBA7P3NCeTvNiNrFD1g Podcast Unicorn --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcrastinando/message
En este episodio os comento como he aprovechado unas tarjetas multi SIM para poner en uso y cacharrear con algunos teléfonos antiguos (Ericsson R380, Nokia 6600, BlackBerry Bold 9900,...) ENLACES RELACIONADOS: Hago mención a un capítulo que escribí en mi blog sobre la ubicuidad. Este es el enlace: - http://www.unicorn-st.com/2012/03/la-quimera-de-la-ubicuidad.html También hablo de lo que es un MiFi. De esto grabé un podcast y escribí un artículo, lo podéis leer y/o escuchar aquí: http://www.unicorn-st.com/2017/10/viva-el-mifi-y-la-madre-del-que-me-lo.html Esta es la información sobre las Multi SIM en Movistar: http://www.movistar.es/particulares/movil/servicios/multisim?_ga=2.259479114.1592060973.1515426481-911482678.1495181658 INFORMACIÓN Y DATOS DE CONTACTO Twitter: @SansaTwit e-mail: info@unicorn-st.es www.unicorn-st.com www.wintablet.info www.genide.es Grupo Telegram Unicorn ST https://t.me/joinchat/GE4OBA7P3NCeTvNiNrFD1g Podcast Unicorn --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcrastinando/message
En este episodio os comento como he aprovechado unas tarjetas multi SIM para poner en uso y cacharrear con algunos teléfonos antiguos (Ericsson R380, Nokia 6600, BlackBerry Bold 9900,...) ENLACES RELACIONADOS: Hago mención a un capítulo que escribí en mi blog sobre la ubicuidad. Este es el enlace: - http://www.unicorn-st.com/2012/03/la-quimera-de-la-ubicuidad.html También hablo de lo que es un MiFi. De esto grabé un podcast y escribí un artículo, lo podéis leer y/o escuchar aquí: http://www.unicorn-st.com/2017/10/viva-el-mifi-y-la-madre-del-que-me-lo.html Esta es la información sobre las Multi SIM en Movistar: http://www.movistar.es/particulares/movil/servicios/multisim?_ga=2.259479114.1592060973.1515426481-911482678.1495181658 INFORMACIÓN Y DATOS DE CONTACTO Twitter: @SansaTwit e-mail: info@unicorn-st.es www.unicorn-st.com www.wintablet.info www.genide.es Grupo Telegram Unicorn ST https://t.me/joinchat/GE4OBA7P3NCeTvNiNrFD1g Podcast Unicorn --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcrastinando/message
En este episodio os comento como he aprovechado unas tarjetas multi SIM para poner en uso y cacharrear con algunos teléfonos antiguos (Ericsson R380, Nokia 6600, BlackBerry Bold 9900,...) ENLACES RELACIONADOS: Hago mención a un capítulo que escribí en mi blog sobre la ubicuidad. Este es el enlace: - http://www.unicorn-st.com/2012/03/la-quimera-de-la-ubicuidad.html También hablo de lo que es un MiFi. De esto grabé un podcast y escribí un artículo, lo podéis leer y/o escuchar aquí: http://www.unicorn-st.com/2017/10/viva-el-mifi-y-la-madre-del-que-me-lo.html Esta es la información sobre las Multi SIM en Movistar: http://www.movistar.es/particulares/movil/servicios/multisim?_ga=2.259479114.1592060973.1515426481-911482678.1495181658 INFORMACIÓN Y DATOS DE CONTACTO Twitter: @SansaTwit e-mail: info@unicorn-st.es www.unicorn-st.com www.wintablet.info www.genide.es Grupo Telegram Unicorn ST https://t.me/joinchat/GE4OBA7P3NCeTvNiNrFD1g Podcast Unicorn --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcrastinando/message
It’s Gareth and James this week as Matt and Tracy are off … well you’ll have to listen to find out why. Covering the biggest and most exciting news of the week the guys actaully have a few exciting exclusives from HTC and Orange for you. Prepare yourself! Direct DownloadiTunesDownload the iPhone AppDownload the Android AppRSS Feed Regulars - Gareth, Matt, Tracy and JamesEmail us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757 Show Notes RIM announce the BlackBerry Bold 9790 and BlackBerry Curve 9380 Smartphones HTC Sensation XE unboxing video HTC Edge to boast Tegra 3? Three taking pre orders of the Nokia Lumia 800 Pre order the Galaxy Nexus from Three Orange San Francisco II more than rumoured! O2 begin London 4G trial Samsung Omnia W available at Play.com Tablet Table Killer Lenovo tablet Bargain Basement Orange San Francisco II - £99.99 inc Top Up from the 21st November Sony Ericsson Xperia Play 16Gb for £149.89 HTC radar windows 7.5 mango phone, sim free, £289.95, Carphone Warehouse SONY S Tablet PC - 16GB £379 Also 32GB for £459 & S1 3G for £479 limited use code STABLET20 which gives £20 off Listeners Garden Crickets App Attic BBM Music Pogoplug ------Email us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757Gareth Myles – @garethmyles James Richardson – @jpr7373 Matt and Tracy Davis - @tracyandmattMany thanks to The Stetz for the music Subscribe in iTunes to our weekly podcastRSS Feed for our weekly podcastDownload the iPhone AppDownload the Android App
Whilst Gareth and James wait patiently for Matt and Tracy to finish there huge bottle of cheap spirits they chat about the Blackberry Bold 9900, The Asus EEE Pad Transformer, the Orange Monte Carlo and the HP Pre 3. Google have been shopping for hardware and are talking up their next Android version, Ice Cream Sandwich Direct DownloadiTunesDownload the iPhone AppDownload the Android AppRSS FeedRegulars - Gareth, Matt, Tracy and JamesEmail us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757 Show Notes Google to Acquire Motorola Mobility BlackBerry Bold 9900 Review Motorola announce the Defy+ The Motorola Fire – Pre order Android 4.0 coming in October? HTC Evo 3D available now from Clove HP Pre 3 coming to Orange Orange Monte Carlo Unboxing Video The Orange Monte Carlo – Bargain of the year? Xperia Play gets FIFA 12 exclusive + Minecraft!!! Tablet Table Asus EEE Pad Transformer review Motorola rolling out Android 3.1 for the XOOM Galaxy Tab 8.9 on sale very soon Bargain Basement 12 month contract deal 400 Any network minutes, 1000 Texts, 1GB Internet. HTC Desire S Total price £360. Less quidco £330. Less 3 months redemption £240. So £20 a month. Orange Monte Carlo £119.99 delivered. They offer a £30 discount and give £10 free credit to all orange pay as you go customers that have been a customer for 3 months or more. Call the freephone number (from landline) 0800 079 2000 Samsung Galaxy S2 £99. This is a 12 month contract and includes 400 minutes, 1000 texts and 1GB Internet for £30/month. So that's a total cost of £459.99 for the phone together with the contract. Listeners Garden Crickets App Attic Food Spotting iPhone, Android Skies of Glory iOS – Android ------Email us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757Gareth Myles – @garethmylesJames Richardson – @jpr7373Matt and Tracy Davis - @tracyandmatt Many thanks to The Stetz for the music Subscribe in iTunes to our weekly podcastRSS Feed for our weekly podcastDownload the iPhone AppDownload the Android App Posted by Gareth Technorati Tags: Podcast,mobiletechaddicts,uk,three,iphone,mobile,apple,blackberry,orange,t-mobile,vodafone,htc,samsung,palm,rim,motorola,nokia,advent,android,webos,symbian,o2,3uk,playbook,galaxy,ipad 2,HP,ZTE,Xperia,Archos,Arnova,Acer,Windows Phone 7,LG,Xoom,Flyer,gingerbread,honeycomb,Microsoft,9900,Asus,Ice Cream sandwich
On this weeks show we talk about the our Sony Ericsson Xperia Neo review, the excellent BlackBerry Bold 9900 views that James recorded last week and also have a special guest, Dan Carter from Coolsmartphone. Gareth is still away this week so there's sill a little mayhem but James and Matt manage to keep Dan's bad language under control.Direct Download iTunes Download the iPhone AppDownload the Android AppRSS FeedRegulars - Gareth, James, Matt, and Tracy with special guest Dan Carter from CoolsmartphoneEmail us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757Show NotesSony Ericsson Neo ReviewBlackBerry Bold 9900 hands onGoogle and HTC team up against Apple Star Front Collision review Everything Everywhere gets a new CEOHTC Gratia unboxingZTE to produce WP7 deviceNokia Sea RayGoogle Plus iOSThree Premium Dongle YouTubeKing of GadgetsKindle CompetitionTablet TableiOS multiple user accountsBargain BasementFirst cashback offer for iPad2 - 4% Quidco at Apple Store - Expires 25 JulyListeners GardenJust listened to the podcast. Loved the end. It should be a regular feature. JaroIs it true or false?Mike CoxlongApp Attic------Email us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Tel: 0208 123 3757Gareth Myles – @garethmylesJames Richardson – @jpr7373Matt and Tracy Davis - @tracyandmattMany thanks to The Stetz for the music Subscribe in iTunes to our weekly podcastRSS Feed for our weekly podcastDownload the iPhone AppDownload the Android App
Iniciando sistema… cerrando navidades… arrancando el año 2011… ¡Feliz año nuevo! Tras Papa Noel, los polvorones, las uvas y los Reyes Magos volvemos a la carga con un nuevo episodio que hará historia, más que nada porque es el primero del año, pero no el último (sería muy triste si fuera así). Así que aquí os dejamos el guión que os cargará las pilas este nuevo año: Oscar hace una review en profundidad de la nueva Blackberry Bold 9780 y el sistema Blackberry OS 6. Fran habla de las novedades multiplataforma más jugosas para este 2011, los títulos que acompañarán a la Nintendo 3DS y nos hace una review de League of Legends (para PC y pronto en Mac) Roberto opta esta vez por el western y nos habla de El bueno, el feo y el malo (1966) y El bueno, el malo y el raro (2008). Promo de Completely Madafaka. A escucharlo antes de que se ponga más duro que ese turrón que tenéis en la despensa y está tan rico… crujiente y… perdón, me largo a la despensa… --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kafelog/message
This week James and Gareth take on the latest mobile news. Matt and Andy are AWOL and if found please exterminate immediately. James has reviewed the Desire HD and he’s playing with the Bold 9780. Gareth is trying to get his teeth around a massive Android tablet and fathom is Sony is taking the PSP in the right direction. Direct Download iTunes Download the iPhone App RSS Feed Regulars – Gareth and James Show Notes HTC Desire HD Review Flash Video Now On iOS Nexus Two to arrive at Carphone Warehouse Gareth has Archos 101 Bread, Milk, Eggs, Android Tablet – Asda selling 7” Tablet for £97 (but don’t get too excited) BlackBerry Bold 9780 now showing as coming soon to Orange James has a BlackBerry Bold 9780 Sony’s PSPhone finally a reality? Anyone see Phoneshop? Bargain corner Blackberry internet service free on Vodafone PAYG till June 2011 O2 3000 international minutes £10 (limited to 3 numbers) Dell Streak £364.99 (Unlocked, black or red) 10% off voucher - V$RJ2TPN4NXN3$ iPad 32GB £474.74 - Reserve and Collect at Comet on line using the promotion code: 3005. Available on orders over £300 till 7/11/10 Sony Ericsson Elm £49.90 + £10 top up Matt's bed has been reduced Listener corner Mobile Tech Addicts How are you today? I Hope you are fine in good health. I deemed it necessary you immediately.I appreciate you to reciprocate to by dropping on my mail so that we will introduce ourself better and share the passionate of love. I will be waiting for your email for more details because i have something suitable to tell you. Have a nice day, Best Regards. miracle James' Lymericks ------ Email us: Podcast@tracyandmatt.co.uk Gareth Myles – twitter.com/garethmyles Andy Lee – twitter.com/weirdshanghai James Richardson – twitter.com/jpr7373 Matt and Tracy Davis - (and James the love child) twitter.com/tracyandmatt Many thanks to The Stetz for the music Subscribe in iTunes to our weekly podcast RSS Feed for our weekly podcast Download the iPhone App Post Tags: Mobile Tech Addicts,mobiletechaddicts,windows mobile,Windows phone,android,iphone,palm,HTC,samsung,motorola,nokia,symbian,iPad,Dell,O2,Orange,Vodafone,3UK,T-Mobile,iPhone4,giffgaff,Everything Everywhere,Blackberry,Playbook,Archos 101 Internet Tablet,Tablets
Das neue iPhone ist da, das erfordert ungewöhnliche Maßnahmen. Daher veröffentlichen wir den Podcast diese Woche einen Tag früher. Steffi, Lisa und ich diskutieren die Frage, ob das iPhone 4 wirklich Neues bringt. Reichen Multitasking, eine Zweitkamera und ein flacheres Gehäuse, um die Erfolgsstory fortzusetzen? Wenn Ihr hier klickt, landet Ihr direkt bei iTunes und könnt Xonio 214 abonnieren. Natürlich liefern wir auch alle Fakten zum iPhone 4, auch zum Marktstart in Deutschland und dem voraussichtlichen Preis. Dazu gibt´s Infos zum Test des Sony Ericsson X10 mini und zum brandneuen BlackBerry Bold 9800. Mehr nicht - aber momentan reden ja ohnehin alle nur über Apple. (uba) Hier sind die Shownotes zu Ausgabe 089 von Xonio 214: News: iPhone 4: Neues iPhone kommt am 24. Juni Mehr aktuelle Infos zum iPhone gibt´s täglich auf chip.de. BlackBerry Bold 9800: Bilder und Video Test: Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Software Die 50 besten Gratis-Spiele fürs iPhone
IBM tech evangelist Turbo Todd Watson gives his thumbs up/thumbs down for 2009
Mobile Tech Addicts Podcast No 49 Our latest podcast, Episode 49, is now available for download, the HTC HD2 vs the Acer s200, a phone company selling your details and the Nokia E72. Direct Download iTunes RSS Feed Show Notes Andy has unlocked his iPhone Clove selling Blackberry Bold 9700 on Friday Staff of unnamed mobile phone company sold customer data Windows Marketplace for Mobile now available on 6.0 and 6.1 devices Operator in data protection breach Twitter comes to Orange UK Nokia E72 in stores now Orange defending Unlimited* 750mb data cap o2 deliver iPhone unlock as promised Review: Acer s200 Neotouch HD2 Thoughts and Unboxing videos Vodafone UK first to stock Nokia N900? ANDY's RANT ON PHONES 4 POO....and CITY LINK COURIER Skype Voicemail : mtaddicts Twitter @mtaddicts Email : mobiletechaddicts@gmail.com Many thanks to The Stetz for the music
I needed a new PDA. I had originally set out to get a Blackberry Bold, but when I found out could get an iPhone for $200 cheaper. Well I'm now a member of the cult of iPhone. As much as I love this information device, I think I'm seriously developing a problem. I don't think I can go an hour without checking my e-mail. Somebody Help Me. In the News: Some of the latest headlines from the Oklahoma blog-o-sphere and (Bum Bum Buuuum) the main stream media. This Week in Oklahoma History: The Battle of Middle Boggy Depot Links mentioned in this episode: Music: Contact:
Todd "Turbo" Watson talks smartphones, the Blackberry Bold in particular, and why he loves it.
Join us for the first of two special Smartphone Round Robin Roundtables! This week, Casey, Kevin, Rene, Jennifer, and Dieter all come together to discuss three of the Smartphone Round Robin devices: The iPhone 3G, the Treo Pro, and the BlackBerry Bold!
Join us for the first of two special Smartphone Round Robin Roundtables! This week, Casey, Kevin, Rene, Jennifer, and Dieter all come together to discuss three of the Smartphone Round Robin devices: The iPhone 3G, the Treo Pro, and the BlackBerry Bold!
Después de un largo noviembre, llegan los anuncios de juguetes, colonias y videojuegos para las distintas consolas. Nosotros nos lo hemos pedido todo, todo, todo y ya veremos si los Reyes Magos, o Papá Noel, tienen huevos de traérnoslo de una sentada. De momento, vamos a por el nuevo episodio de Kafelog. Muchísimas gracias a Machuca por la ilustración que nos envió y por la nueva imagen que hemos recibido: Y ahora, el guión del Kafelog #040: Hablamos de los terminales de gama alta para estas navidades: Nokia 5800, Blackberry Storm, Blackberry Bold, HTC Touch HD, Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 y Samsung Onmia. Primer Nokia que recomendaríamos: Nokia 6260 Slide. Imagina… la boda de tus sueños. Lively de Google. Mi granja alrededor del mundo. La beta de Aion rompe records en Corea. Hablamos de Fable II y Fallout 3 para Xbox360. Hablamos de Uwe Boll: House of the Dead, Alone in the Dark, BloodRayne y Postal. Promo Mix Podcast. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kafelog/message
Episode 11 of the Bark: Basking in the aftermath of PhoneDog TV Episode #1, Noah rants about bad drivers on their cell phones. Also, lightning reviews of the BlackBerry Bold, HTC Fuze and Touch Pro, Motozine ZN5, Samsung Behold and Eternity, and much much more!
Noah's Bark Episode 10 - It's smartphone week around here - well, that and the rise of T-Mo's cameraphones. HTC Fuze and Touch Pro, T-Mobile T919 Behold, BlackBerry Bold, and where's my Storm & Xperia X1 already? Plus, PhoneDog TV Preview: Bold vs G1 vs Touch Pro!
The Cell Phone Junkie Show #128 1:11:35Show NotesQ3 earnings results are in, the Blackberry Bold is available officially in the US, and tethering may be coming to the iPhone.
The Bark is Back for Election Day! Noah gets his paws all over a dozen new phones, including the BlackBerry Bold for AT&T, HTC Touch Pro for Sprint, Motorola ZN5 for T-Mobile, and LG Lotus for Sprint. Plus, an update on PhoneDog TV and the latest from spy::mix.
The Cell Phone Junkie Show #118 1:25:45 Show Notes Photos of the new Android phone get leaked, a new date for the Blackberry Bold in the US and Windows Mobile 6.1 hits multiple devices. It's great to be together to record a show!
This week we're bringing you an absolute WHOPPER of a show. The how comes live from the Tower of London (special thanks to Tim at the Historic Royal Palaces publicity department). This week we take a look at the 3 Skypephone S2, Lastminute Labs / Google Gears, Orange hiring iPhone-fans, Nokia Maps, Blackberry Bold's browser issues, IKEA MVNO, James Body of Truphone makes an appearance, a review of Etymotics Headphones, special Sony Ericsson News, the first EVER Whatley Goes Wild segment, we announce the winners of our competitions, Dan get's his present and James talks about the Nokia N78.
This week we're bringing you an absolute WHOPPER of a show. The how comes live from the Tower of London (special thanks to Tim at the Historic Royal Palaces publicity department). This week we take a look at the 3 Skypephone S2, Lastminute Labs / Google Gears, Orange hiring iPhone-fans, Nokia Maps, Blackberry Bold's browser issues, IKEA MVNO, James Body of Truphone makes an appearance, a review of Etymotics Headphones, special Sony Ericsson News, the first EVER Whatley Goes Wild segment, we announce the winners of our competitions, Dan get's his present and James talks about the Nokia N78.
This week we're bringing you an absolute WHOPPER of a show. The how comes live from the Tower of London (special thanks to Tim at the Historic Royal Palaces publicity department). This week we take a look at the 3 Skypephone S2, Lastminute Labs / Google Gears, Orange hiring iPhone-fans, Nokia Maps, Blackberry Bold's browser issues, IKEA MVNO, James Body of Truphone makes an appearance, a review of Etymotics Headphones, special Sony Ericsson News, the first EVER Whatley Goes Wild segment, we announce the winners of our competitions, Dan get's his present and James talks about the Nokia N78.
Treo 800w pics signal imminent release, Apt for Palm OS, BlackBerry Bold confirmed
Handy-News der 20. Kalenderwoche (12. Mai - 16. Mai 08). Themen: Apple-Killer HTC Touch Diamond, Mobiado CAMO, MaXXim: Neuer Discounter bietet 8 Cent pro Gesprächsminute, Blackberry Bold mit HSDPA-Funk, DVB-H verzögert sich. Handy der Woche: LG HB620T.