Android smartphone developed by Motorola Mobility
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Bryan and Adam were joined by Theo Schlossnagle, KellyAnn Fitzpatrick, and Steve O'Grady to talk about conferences in tech. A lot has changed in the past couple of decades about the impetus for conferences and what makes it worthwhile to attend.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers included Theo Schlossnagle, KellyAnn Fitzpatrick, and Steve O'Grady.The lightly edited live chat from the show:ellie.idb: 2005, huh? y'all met when i was 2goodjanet: yea i was younger than 10 loljgrillo_: I was just thinking I feel very young because I was a junior in high school but not anymore lolaka_pugs: my first conference - 1975ellie.idb: oxide appeals to the youthjbk1234: my first one was LISA in 05 or 06... mostly because it took a near act of god because my director didn't believe in sending his people to conferencesjgrillo_: "before software ate the world" is what I usually call "when the internet was still fun"ellie.idb: my earliest memory was, uhhh, Google I/O 2008 when they gave every attendee that android phoneellie.idb: i don't recall which one it was, but i do remember playing with it when i was 5 hahahahataitomagatsu: I've only been to one tech conference in person, and it was a very tame SIGGRAPH that happened in Santiago, CL (I live in Chile). It was a lot about animation. I wanted it to have talks on image processing like the ones over on the US x3 but oh well, beggars can't be choosersgoodjanet: I've never been to a tech conferencedevdsp2175: The Germans know how to run a conference. The chaos communications congress is wild.ellie.idb: same!! never actually attended one as an adult hahahataitomagatsu: Have you attended one remotely?goodjanet: nope, closest is just watching recorded talks after the facttaitomagatsu: I attended the rustconf of 2 years ago remotely. It was amazing and I was soooo tired by the end of it. Brain got depleted of juice for the daynetwork2501: looking forward to in person dtrace conference with a dedicated zball roomahl0003: more of a trade show, but I went to the MacWorld conference in the late '90sahl0003: I still have some BeOS install CDs from thengoodjanet: im so thankful for recorded talksahl0003: this is kind of wild: I went with my brother who was 12 or so and we met a guy at Be... my brother would go on to work with him 30 years later!ellie.idb: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Droid the OG droid with the flip up keyboard and everythingtocococa: ISCA this year was just around the corner from Santiago in Buenos Aires and it was pretty cool, and CARLA took place this year in Santiago tooblacksmithforlife: Since I can never get a conference approved from work, I live off recorded conference videos on YouTubenetwork2501: best momdevdsp2175: The shade! Sending hugs to Bryan's inner child.taitomagatsu: daaaaaamn, I didn't know about either! I might keep an eye on ISCA, maybe I can go next year ❤️devdsp2175: You can't record the hallway track...jh179: Bryan's talk for Papers We Love on the History of Containers is how I found out about him, Oxide and all the rest. Had an incredible tangent about jails...zeanic: Conference idea: all hallway tracksdevdsp2175: YouTube keeps recommending Bryan's talks on running containers on the metal at Joyant.devdsp2175: And I keep watching them!ellie.idb: wow, ISCA had some really fucking cool talks this yearellie.idb: damn. i'm adding this to my watch list too!!! i'll try and see if i can get funding for next year hahahatocococa: yeah, 100%, but my brain was melted after every daynahumshalman: Bryan has the luxury of working on OSS. I think the point that Theo was making is that Surge (I only attended the very last one) was a space where you could be open about proprietary stuff. Talking about failure in a safe space, etc.nahumshalman: Ah, Theo is now making that point.taitomagatsu: Does ISCA have any sort of official YT channel?taitomagatsu: Because I might... have a handful of talks to watchgoodjanet: 18 years ago isnt that long ago?network2501: 18 years ago is almost 3 generations of lives/eras agoellie.idb: what HPC conferences are going on? i need to hear about the deets going on with CXLjgrillo_: although 18yr is ~half my life it doesn't feel very long ago..tocococa: I am not sure, I know that all keynotes were recorded, but I don´t know where they might beellie.idb: 21 years ago i was not alive
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Huyen Tue Dao, and Ron Richards welcome Chet Haase, Google engineer and author of "Androids: The team that built the Android operating system" to the show to talk about the earliest days of Android and share his thoughts on whether the Nexus One would have been more successful if it had launched before the Motorola Droid. For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/609 #Google #Android #Nexus Hosts: Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Huyen Tue Dao Guest: Chet Haase You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Huyen Tue Dao, and Ron Richards welcome Chet Haase, Google engineer and author of "Androids: The team that built the Android operating system" to the show to talk about the earliest days of Android and share his thoughts on whether the Nexus One would have been more successful if it had launched before the Motorola Droid. For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/609 #Google #Android #Nexus Hosts: Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Huyen Tue Dao Guest: Chet Haase You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Huyen Tue Dao, and Ron Richards welcome Chet Haase, Google engineer and author of "Androids: The team that built the Android operating system" to the show to talk about the earliest days of Android and share his thoughts on whether the Nexus One would have been more successful if it had launched before the Motorola Droid. For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/609 #Google #Android #Nexus Hosts: Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Huyen Tue Dao Guest: Chet Haase You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
Scott Webster and Luke Gaul continue their trip through time, chronicling the history of the Android platform. This episode finds the two discussing the arrival of Android 2.0 and its features. Also on the agenda are three of the most notable devices of all time, the Motorola Droid, HTC Nexus One, and Samsung Galaxy S. .Topics DiscussedAndroid 2.0/2.1 EclairMotorola DroidHTC Nexus OneSamsung Galaxy SHistorical context for phones of the timeNotable apps and features of the day
Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because by understanding the past, we're able to be prepared for the innovations of the future! Today we're going to look at the emergence of Google's Android operating system. Before we look at Android, let's look at what led to it. Frank Canova who built a device he showed off as “Angler” at COMDEX in 1992. This would be released as the Simon Personal Communicator by BellSouth and manufactured as the IBM Simon by Mitsubishi. The Palm, Newton, Symbian, and Pocket PC, or Windows CE would come out shortly thereafter and rise in popularity over the next few years. CDMA would slowly come down in cost over the next decade. Now let's jump to 2003. At the time, you had Microsoft Windows CE, the Palm Treo was maturing and supported dual-band GSM, Handspring merged into the Palm hardware division, Symbian could be licensed but I never met a phone of theirs I liked. Like the Nokia phones looked about the same as many printer menu screens. One other device that is more relevant because of the humans behind it was the T-Mobile sidekick, which actually had a cool flippy motion to open the keyboard! Keep that Sidekick in mind for a moment. Oh and let's not forget a fantastic name. The mobile operating systems were limited. Each was proprietary. Most were menu driven and reminded us more of an iPod, released in 2001. I was a consultant at the time and remember thinking it was insane that people would pay hundreds of dollars for a phone. At the time, flip phones were all the rage. A cottage industry of applications sprung up, like Notify, that made use of app frameworks on these devices to connect my customers to their Exchange accounts so their calendars could sync wirelessly. The browsing experience wasn't great. The messaging experience wasn't great. The phones were big and clunky. And while you could write apps for the Symbian in Qt Creator or Flash Lite or Python for S60, few bothered. That's when Andy Rubin left Danger, the company the cofounded that made the Sidekick and joined up with Rich Miner, Nick Sears, and Chris White in 2003 to found a little company called Android Inc. They wanted to make better mobile devices than were currently on the market. They founded Android Inc and set out to write an operating system based on Linux that could rival anything on the market. Rubin was no noob when cofounding Danger. He had been a robotics engineer in the 80s, a manufacturing engineer at Apple for a few years and then got on his first mobility engineering gig when he bounced to General Magic to work on Magic Cap, a spinoff from Apple FROM 92 TO 95. He then helped build WebTV from 95-99. Many in business academia have noted that Android existed before Google and that's why it's as successful as it is today. But Google bought Android in 2005, years before the actual release of Android. Apple had long been rumor milling a phone, which would mean a mobile operating system as well. Android was sprinting towards a release that was somewhat Blackberry-like, focused on competing with similar devices on the market at the time, like the Blackberries that were all the rage. Obama and Hillary Clinton was all about theirs. As a consultant, I was stoked to become a Blackberry Enterprise Server reseller and used that to deploy all the things. The first iPhone was released in 2007. I think we sometimes think that along came the iPhone and Blackberries started to disappear. It took years. But the fall was fast. While the iPhone was also impactful, the Android-based devices were probably more-so. That release of the iPhone kicked Andy Rubin in the keister and he pivoted over from the Blackberry-styled keyboard to a touch screen, which changed… everything. Suddenly this weird innovation wasn't yet another frivolous expensive Apple extravagance. The logo helped grow the popularity as well, I think. Internally at Google Dan Morrill started creating what were known as Dandroids. But the bugdroid as it's known was designed by Irina Blok on the Android launch team. It was eventually licensed under Creative Commons, which resulted in lots of different variations of the logo; a sharp contrast to the control Apple puts around the usage of their own logo. The first version of the shipping Android code came along in 2008 and the first phone that really shipped with it wasn't until the HTC Dream in 2009. This device had a keyboard you could press but also had a touch screen, although we hadn't gotten a virtual keyboard yet. It shipped with an ARM11, 192MB of RAM, and 256MB of storage. But you could expand it up to 16 gigs with a microSD card. Oh, and it had a trackball. It bad 802.11b and g, Bluetooth, and shipped with Android 1.0. But it could be upgraded up to 1.6, Donut. The hacker in me just… couldn't help but mod the thing much as I couldn't help but jailbreak the iPhone back before I got too lazy not to. Of course, the Dev Phone 1 shipped soon after that didn't require you to hack it, something Apple waited until 2019 to copy. The screen was smaller than that of an iPhone. The keyboard felt kinda' junky. The app catalog was lacking. It didn't really work well in an office setting. But it was open source. It was a solid operating system and it showed promise as to the future of not-Apple in a post-Blackberry world. Note: Any time a politician uses a technology it's about 5 minutes past being dead tech. Of Blackberry, iOS, and Android, Android was last in devices sold using those platforms in 2009, although the G1 as the Dream was also known as, took 9% market share quickly. But then came Eclair. Unlike sophomore efforts from bands, there's something about a 2.0 release of software. By the end of 2010 there were more Androids than iOS devices. 2011 showed the peak year of Blackberry sales, with over 50 million being sold, but those were the lagerts spinning out of the buying tornado and buying the pivot the R&D for the fruitless next few Blackberry releases. Blackberry marketshare would zero out in just 6 short years. iPhone continued a nice climb over the past 8 years. But Android sales are now in the billions per year. Ultimately the blackberry, to quote Time a “failure to keep up with Apple and Google was a consequence of errors in its strategy and vision.” If you had to net-net that, touch vs menus was a substantial part of that. By 2017 the Android and iOS marketshare was a combined 99.6%. In 2013, now Google CEO, Sundar Pichai took on Android when Andy Rubin was embroiled in sexual harassment charges and now acts as CEO of Playground Global, an incubator for hardware startups. The open source nature of Android and it being ready to fit into a device from manufacturers like HTC led to advancements that inspired and were inspired by the iPhone leading us to the state we're in today. Let's look at the released per year and per innovation: * 1.0, API 1, 2008: Include early Google apps like Gmail, Maps, Calendar, of course a web browser, a media player, and YouTube * 1.1 came in February the next year and was code named Petit Four * 1.5 Cupcake, 2009: Gave us on an-screen keyboard and third-party widgets then apps on the Android Market, now known as the Google Play Store. Thus came the HTC Dream. Open source everything. * 1.6 Donut, 2009: Customizeable screen sizes and resolution, CDMA support. And the short-lived Dell Streak! Because of this resolution we got the joy of learning all about the tablet. Oh, and Universal Search and more emphasis on battery usage! * 2.0 Eclair, 2009: The advent of the Motorola Droid, turn by turn navigation, real time traffic, live wallpapers, speech to text. But the pinch to zoom from iOS sparked a war with Apple.We also got the ability to limit accounts. Oh, new camera modes that would have impressed even George Eastman, and Bluetooth 2.1 support. * 2.2 Froyo, four months later in 2010 came Froyo, with under-the-hood tuning, voice actions, Flash support, something Apple has never had. And here came the HTC Incredible S as well as one of the most mobile devices ever built: The Samsung Galaxy S2. This was also the first hotspot option and we got 3G and better LCDs. That whole tethering, it took a year for iPhone to copy that. * 2.3 Gingerbread: With 2010 came Gingerbread. The green from the robot came into the Gingerbread with the black and green motif moving front and center. More sensors, NFC, a new download manager, copy and paste got better, * 3.0 Honeycomb, 2011. The most important thing was when Matias Duarte showed up and reinvented the Android UI. The holographic design traded out the green and blue and gave you more screen space. This kicked off a permanet overhaul and brought a card-UI for recent apps. Enter the Galaxy S9 and the Huawei Mate 2. * 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, later in 2011 - Duarte's designs started really taking hold. For starters, let's get rid of buttons. THat's important and has been a critical change for other devices as well. We Reunited tablets and phones with a single vision. On screen buttons, brought the card-like appearance into app switching. Smarter swiping, added swiping to dismiss, which changed everything for how we handle email and texts with gestures. You can thank this design for Tinder. * 4.1 to 4.3 Jelly Bean, 2012: Added some sweet sweet fine tuning to the foundational elements from Ice Cream Sandwich. Google Now that was supposed to give us predictive intelligence, interactive notifications, expanded voice search, advanced search, sill with the card-based everything now for results. We also got multiuser support for tablets. And the Android Quick Settings pane. We also got widgets on the lock screen - but those are a privacy nightmare and didn't last for long. Automatic widget resizing, wireless display projection support, restrict profiles on multiple user accounts, making it a great parent device. Enter the Nexus 10. AND TWO FINGER DOWN SWIPES. * 4.4 KitKat, in 2013 ended the era of a dark screen, lighter screens and neutral highlights moved in. I mean, Matrix was way before that after all. OK, Google showed up. Furthering the competition with Apple and Siri. Hands-free activation. A panel on the home screen, and a stand-alone launcher. AND EMOJIS ON THE KEYBOARD. Increased NFC security. * 5. Lollipop came in 2014 bringing 64 bit, Bluetooth Low Energy, flatter interface, But more importantly, we got annual releases like iOS. * 6: Marshmallow, 2015 gave us doze mode, sticking it to iPhone by even more battery saving features. App security and prompts to grant apps access to resources like the camera and phone were . The Nexus 5x and 6P ports brought fingerprint scanners and USB-C. * 7: Nougat in 2016 gave us quick app switching, a different lock screen and home screen wallpaper, split-screen multitasking, and gender/race-centric emojis. * 8: Oreo in 2017 gave us floating video windows, which got kinda' cool once app makers started adding support in their apps for it. We also got a new file browser, which came to iOS in 2019. And more battery enhancements with prettied up battery menus. Oh, and notification dots on app icons, borrowed from Apple. * 9: Pie in 2018 brought notch support, navigations that were similar to those from the iPhone X adopting to a soon-to-be bezel-free world. And of course, the battery continues to improve. This brings us into the world of the Pixel 3. * 10, Likely some timed in 2019 While the initial release of Android shipped with the Linux 2.1 kernel, that has been updated as appropriate over the years with, 3 in Ice Cream Sandwich, and version 4 in Nougat. Every release of android tends to have an increment in the Linux kernel. Now, Android is open source. So how does Google make money? Let's start with what Google does best. Advertising. Google makes a few cents every time you click on an ad in an advertisement in messages or web pages or any other little spot they've managed to drop an ad in there. Then there's the Google Play Store. Apple makes 70% more revenue from apps than Android, despite the fact that Android apps have twice the number of installs. The old adage is if you don't pay for a product, you are the product. I don't tend to think Google goes overboard with all that, though. And Google is probably keeping Caterpillar in business just to buy big enough equipment to move their gold bars from one building to the next on campus. Any time someone's making money, lots of other people wanna taste. Like Oracle, who owns a lot of open source components used in Android. And the competition between iOS and Android makes both products better for consumers! Now look out for Android Auto, Android Things, Android TV, Chrome OS, the Google Assistant and others - given that other types of vendors can make use of Google's open source offerings to cut R&D costs and get to market faster! But more importantly, Android has contributed substantially to the rise of ubiquitious computing despite how much money you have. I like to think the long-term impact of such a democratization of Mobility and the Internet will make the world a little less idiocracy and a little more wikipedia. Thank you so very much for tuning into another episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We're lucky to have you. Have a great day!
Welcome to Episode 7 of 0G, A History of Forgotten Phones! 0G is a limited-run podcast where we look back at how weird and wonderful smartphones were back in the days before iOS and Android took over and your only option became a rectangular slab running one or the other. 0G is hosted by two people who were there: Christie Pitts (now at Backstage Capital), who started her career selling phones at a Verizon store, and Peter Rojas (now at Betaworks Ventures), founder of Gizmodo, Engadget, and gdgt. In Episode 7 we take a look at the phones of 2009, including the Palm Pre, the BlackBerry Storm 2, the Microsoft Kin 1 & 2, the Motorola Droid, and the HTC HD2. Want to contact us? Christie is @imchristiepitts and Peter is @peterrojas on Twitter. We'd love to hear your thoughts on the show.
When I met Andy Rubin, the founder of Android, earlier this year to talk about his new company, he showed me a PowerPoint deck from 2009. His team put it together just before the debut of the Motorola Droid, Android's first real chance to take on the iPhone. The campaign slogan was “Droid Does,” and Motorola planned to harp on all the things the iPhone couldn't do. It crowed about multitasking, “real keyboards,” and interchangeable batteries.
Rey Brown recalls working at Circuit City in 2003 when he was transferred to the mobile phone department. It was around the time the first BlackBerry® phone hit the market. Little did he know then that he would eventually be devoting a good amount of his time discussing mobile technology via podcasting, a term virtually unheard of a decade or so ago but widely popular today. Brown spent time working for wireless carriers and device manufacturers over the years, including helping Verizon Solutions Specialists learn about Motorola Droid phones. Based on his interactions with customers, which he enjoyed, he quickly realized he wanted to help others better understand how mobile technology could improve their lives in ways they may not realize. Brown decided he wanted to help people get more out of their devices. Brown's mother was the director of several daycare centers, and he started teaching weekend classes when the kids weren't there. He also discovered podcasting, realizing the potential it had for reaching others.
In this episode we're talking about #pengate, leaked Motorola Droid phones, HTC's iPhone copycat, the next Moto 360, and much more. Top Stories #Pengate, Samsung’s response, etc. Motorola leak (DROID Maxx 2, Turbo 2) Quick Hits Moto 360 2 pictured in the wilds of Chicago Android Wear 1.3 with Together watch face (list of 21 interactive watch faces) YouTube Gaming now available LG’s new flagship launching Q4 2015 won't be “super premium” HTC Aero looks like an iPhone Project Ara failing drop test was just a joke Bing on Tap Animated BlackBerry Venice GIF Wins/Fails Joe: / Note 5 and Edge+ are slippery Chris: Over the OnePlus 2 / Huawei Nexus leak Ashley: Nvidia Recall / Samsung push notification ads App Picks Joe: Doodle for Messenger Chris: Link Bubble Browser (now free) Ashley: Mujo
Сто двадцать шестой выпуск подкаста от сайта keddr.com. Ведущие – Саша Ляпота, Семен Кременюк и Юля Рябухина. Сегодня мы говорим про самые последние новости из мира IT: про предстающую презентацию Apple, про копию iPhone 6 от Lenovo, интересные умные часы от украинских разработчиков и др.
Семьдесят второй выпуск подкаста от сайта keddr.com. Ведущие – контентный владыка Саша Ляпота, технический король Семен Кременюк, мобильный император Миша Карпенко и просто москвич Андрей Барышников. В сегодняшнем выпуске: Впечатления от Meizu MX2 и покупка Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx HD Гаджеты родом из 60-х Вопросы слушателей Shownotes Meizu MX2 Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx HD Гаджеты из 60-х
HotHardware - Technology, Computer and Gadget Reviews and Industry News
http://hothardware.com - The Motorola Droid RAZR features a slim body that measures 7.1mm thick. According to Motorola and Verizon Wireless, the Droid RAZR is the world's thinnest 4G smartphone. And while thin is definitely a key feature in today's competitive smartphone market, we all know horsepower is equally important. Motorola has given the Droid RAZR a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, 1GB of RAM, a 4.3-inchd qHD Super AMOLED Advanced display, 8MP camera, and Android 2.3. The phone will be upgradeable to Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) at some point in the future. By HotHardware Tags : 4G, Android, Cell, Cellphone, Droid, Google, LTE, Motorola, Phone, RAZR, Verizon, Wireless, cream, fourth, generation, ice, sandwich, smartphone, wireless
В новом выпуске MFcast'а ведущие обсуждают первые официальные фото и характеристики 2-ядерного QWERTY-слайдера от Motorola, будущий самый тонкий смартфон HTC Ville, а также массовый анонс новых телефонов и планшетов на Андроиде от компании Lenovo. Не обошли вниманием и ажиотаж вокруг Nokia Lumia 800, а точнее 5000 её предзаказов в России, планы LG по обновлению топовых и не очень девайсов на Ice Cream Sandwich и некоторые другие новости. Темы выпуска: — Официальные фото и спецификации Motorola DROID 4; — HTC Ville станет самым тонким смартфоном у HTC; — Nokia Lumia 800 собрала в России около 5 тысяч предзаказов. А ее продажи начались 1 декабря; — LG объявила планы обновления устройств на Android 4.0 ICS; — Lenovo анонсировала смартфоны LePhone S2, Lenovo LePhone K2 и S760 и три планшета LePad; — Alcatel One Touch 918/918D на базе Android Gingerbread и дуалсим 318D скоро в продаже; — Samsung анонсировала суперскоростной чипсет Exynos 5250 с частотой 2 ГГц. Если вам нравится наш подкаст, не забывайте на него подписываться! Эту ссылку можно "скормить" плееру (например, iTunes или Juice), который каждую неделю будет скачивать для вас новый MFcast. А еще ссылку на наш RSS можно добавить в ваш ридер и каждый день читать наши интересные новости, а по понедельникам-вторникам "ловить" свежие подкасты.
Au programme de ce 7è numéro du 360 HI•TEK : Paris Games Week, 2è édition du salon qui a ouvert ses portes au public, ce vendredi matin, porte de Versailles à Paris. Nous avons suivi la nouvelle Secrétaire d'État à la Famille, Claude Greff, dont le discours a rassuré les organisateurs (le Syndicat des Editeurs de Logiciels de Loisirs - SELL) ; Galaxy Nexus, le nouveau fruit de la collaboration entre Samsung et Apple est aussi le premier smartphone équipé d'Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). Sortie prévue : courant novembre ; Motorola dont le nouveau Droid Razr devra attendre début 2012 pour profiter d'Android 4.0. Motorola Mobility appartient pourtant, désormais, à Google ; les révélations du biographe de Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson, au sujet de son cancer du pancréas : le co-fondateur d'Apple a refusé, pendant 9 mois, une opération qui, faite plus tôt, lui aurait peut-être sauvé la vie ; Lytro, l'appareil photo révolutionnaire qui permet de faire la mise au point après la prise de vues ; le Canon EOS-1D X dévoilé mais il ne sort pas avant le mois de mars ; enfin, l'inconnue autour de la date de sortie en France d'Uncherted 3 Drake's Deception : date avancée du 2 novembre au 28 octobre, pour ne pas tomber pendant le Pont de la Toussaint mais les Américains, visiblement, ne sont pas d'accord. Et le sortie pourrait bien n'avoir lieu que le 2 novembre…
Au programme de ce 7è numéro du 360 HI•TEK (Version SD) : Paris Games Week, 2è édition du salon qui a ouvert ses portes au public, ce vendredi matin, porte de Versailles à Paris. Nous avons suivi la nouvelle Secrétaire d'État à la Famille, Claude Greff, dont le discours a rassuré les organisateurs (le Syndicat des Editeurs de Logiciels de Loisirs - SELL) ; Galaxy Nexus, le nouveau fruit de la collaboration entre Samsung et Apple est aussi le premier smartphone équipé d'Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). Sortie prévue : courant novembre ; Motorola dont le nouveau Droid Razr devra attendre début 2012 pour profiter d'Android 4.0. Motorola Mobility appartient pourtant, désormais, à Google ; les révélations du biographe de Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson, au sujet de son cancer du pancréas : le co-fondateur d'Apple a refusé, pendant 9 mois, une opération qui, faite plus tôt, lui aurait peut-être sauvé la vie ; Lytro, l'appareil photo révolutionnaire qui permet de faire la mise au point après la prise de vues ; le Canon EOS-1D X dévoilé mais il ne sort pas avant le mois de mars ; enfin, l'inconnue autour de la date de sortie en France d'Uncherted 3 Drake's Deception : date avancée du 2 novembre au 28 octobre, pour ne pas tomber pendant le Pont de la Toussaint mais les Américains, visiblement, ne sont pas d'accord. Et le sortie pourrait bien n'avoir lieu que le 2 novembre…
for show notes please visit - http://www.thebit.tv/episode14 twitter - http://www.twitter.com/thebittv website - http://www.thebit.tv facebook - http://link.thebit.tv/thebittv youtube channel - http://link.thebit.tv/ip4sUL
Темы выпуска: - Samsung анонсировал Android-раскладушку с двумя сенсорными AMOLED-экранами - Недорогой Philips Xenium X116 с поддержкой двух SIM-карт одновременно - Новый смартфон Nexus S с NFC и ОС Android 2.3 Gingerbread (а в России - без AMOLED-экрана) и отличия Nexus S от Galaxy S - TAG Heuer Fuchsia MERIDIIST: нержавеющая сталь и кожа водяной змеи - Motorola Droid 2 взорвался прямо в руках владельца - А также: обзор Android-плеера Samsung YP-G50, гид покупателя по мобильным новинкам 2010 года, Samsung Galaxy S против iPhone 4 Подписка на подкаст: RSS
In this episode,John Federico (twitter: @gadgetboy), Craig Calder (twitter: @ccalder), Steve Hatch (twitter:@shatch) and Chia-Lin Simmons (twitter: @zeropts) chat about: Events: John attended Greg Verdino's (@gregverdino) microMarketing event. Craig attended the Yield Executive Summit, OMMA Global and SMX. Coming up: John and Craig will be at ad:tech, Craig will attend OMMA Performance and Chia-Lin will be on a panel at Digital Hollywood on October 21st discussing Micro-Transactions and Advertising on mobile devices. She'll also be attending "Under The Radar" on November 12th at the Microsoft campus in Silicon Valley. Steve will attend nothing, as usual. ;) .ly top-level domains in jeopardy as Libyan government exerts control Bit.ly close $10 million in series B round, still growing like crazy Google TV availability announced John got his Apple TV! We hash it out. Five bars! We're all on John's 3G Microcell. New Facebook Dashboard, Groups, "Download My Information" The Facebook location patent. Did they miss Crowley/Rainert/Dodgeball patent? Chia-Lin needs a replacement for her Motorola Droid. waiting for the Verizon iPhone announcement! Our music is Democracyfrom Alexandr Blu. Send us tips, comments, questions or gripes to comments@odmcast.com. For partner or sponsor information, contact John Federico at http://newrules.com.
Если вам нравится наш подкаст, не забывайте на него подписываться! Эту ссылку можно "скормить" плееру (например, iTunes или Juice), который каждую неделю будет скачивать для вас новый MFcast. А еще ссылку на наш RSS можно добавить в ваш ридер и каждый день читать наши интересные новости, а по понедельникам-вторникам "ловить" свежие подкасты. Темы выпуска: - Google Nexus One представлен официально (и уже есть проблемы) - HTC Smart: первый "несмартфон" от HTC - Motorola Backflip на платформе Android - LePhone: первый смартфон Lenovo на платформе Android - Серия Shark от Samsung: моноблок S5350, и два слайдера - S5550 и S3550 - Памяти все больше (64GB NAND, 32GB microSD) - Cравнение экранов iPhone, HTC Eris, Motorola Droid, Google Nexus One - Airnergy Charger заряжает от ... WiFi - Прошивки: кинетический скроллинг для 5800 уже доступен, Android 2.1 для HTC Hero - в феврале Подписка на MFcast: RSS
OOMA VoIP Phone (free US calls, port existing number, $250), Tech Talk in Taiwan on OHZone, Profiles in IT (Lars and Jens Rasmussen, creators of Google Wave and Gooble Maps), Website of the Week (Google Wave, wave.google.com), Article of the Week (Innovators DNA in Harvard Busines Review, five discovery skills which make up creative intelligence, www.innovatorsdna.com), and Motorola Droid (open source Android OS, great reviews, higher resolution screen than iPhone, wi-fi, touch screen not as responsive at iPhone, removable battery, low battery life, wait for Droid II). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 12, 2009, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
OOMA VoIP Phone (free US calls, port existing number, $250), Tech Talk in Taiwan on OHZone, Profiles in IT (Lars and Jens Rasmussen, creators of Google Wave and Gooble Maps), Website of the Week (Google Wave, wave.google.com), Article of the Week (Innovators DNA in Harvard Busines Review, five discovery skills which make up creative intelligence, www.innovatorsdna.com), and Motorola Droid (open source Android OS, great reviews, higher resolution screen than iPhone, wi-fi, touch screen not as responsive at iPhone, removable battery, low battery life, wait for Droid II). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 12, 2009, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Nothing is more professional than speeding through a show because the Office is coming on soon. This week we discuss the Motorola Droid's camera woes, Google's Chrome OS, Fourcast Podcast, Modern Warfare 2's single player campaign, and much more. Spoiler Alert- the first part of the Modern Warfare 2 campaign, and basically give away anything major in the first half of the game. We're going through the game chapter by chapter next week, so stay tuned if you're interested, but be aware that we may spoil it for you. Contact UsPaul: Site, Twitter, FacebookMike: Twitter, FacebookJohn: Twitter, FacebookDownload LinkContracast on iTunes
Malatesta and Phil dive deep into the HTC HD2 and what the Motorola Droid means for Windows Mobile, talk a lot more about custom ROMs and answer your e-mails and voicemails. (Oh, and Phil's battling a hurricane.) Let's go
One of the hosts was overruled and instead of Tekken 6, we're checking out Borderlands on the Xbox 360 at CC Gaming in Kennesaw, GA. Does the game translate as well to a live TV show as it's sales do to retailers? We also take a look at the Motorola Droid, released that day.
One of the hosts was overruled and instead of Tekken 6, we're checking out Borderlands on the Xbox 360 at CC Gaming in Kennesaw, GA. Does the game translate as well to a live TV show as it's sales do to retailers? We also take a look at the Motorola Droid, released that day.
Motorola Droid, AT&T sues Verizon, Los Angeles dumps Microsoft, When tech isn't cool.
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn A quick update from Northern Michigan. I play a song called “Banjo Boy” by Ryan Shupe. I'm really wanting a Motorola Droid phone! I'm going to wait a while. This Podcast is sponsored by: GotoMeeting Hold your meetings online for just $49/mo. Try GoToMeeting FREE for 30 days. I talk about the Antenna climb I did this weekend to put up the TV antenna (see photos in the last post on mikedell.com) I played a song from Deirdre Flint called Food I talk about Food an my problem with some of it Also talk about geeknewscentral.com and Geekofthenorth.com. Enjoy!
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn A quick update from Northern Michigan. I play a song called “Banjo Boy” by Ryan Shupe. I'm really wanting a Motorola Droid phone! I'm going to wait a while. This Podcast is sponsored by: GotoMeeting Hold your meetings online for just $49/mo. Try GoToMeeting FREE for 30 days. I talk about the Antenna climb I did this weekend to put up the TV antenna (see photos in the last post on mikedell.com) I played a song from Deirdre Flint called Food I talk about Food an my problem with some of it Also talk about geeknewscentral.com and Geekofthenorth.com. Enjoy!
А еще много-много дешевый "моторол", очередной сенсорный Samsung, новая версия Android и закрытие Nokia N-Gage. В традиционном разговорном шоу от MForum Ольга и Рахим обсуждают свежие мобильные новинки и слухи. Узнавайте о самых интересных новостях прошлой недели, высказывайтесь в комментариях!Темы выпуска: - Constellation Ayxta: первая Vertu-раскладушка - Huawei G6600: Android по-китайски - Samsung S5560: вторичный дизайн, с WiFi, но без 3G - Motorola WX: серия сверхдешевых трубок (все подробности и фото тут) - Symbian Foundation запустила собственный "типа магазин приложений" - Официальный релиз Android 2.0 Eclair: что новенького - Невероятно прекрасный Motorola Droid (Milestone в GSM-версии) - Nokia закрывает N-Gage - Rally Master Pro для iPhone: 95% пиратских закачек за один день Если вам нравится наш подкаст, не забывайте на него подписываться! Эту ссылку можно "скормить" плееру (например, iTunes или Juice), который каждую неделю будет скачивать для вас новый MFcast. А еще ссылку на наш RSS можно добавить в ваш ридер и каждый день читать наши интересные новости, а по понедельникам-вторникам "ловить" свежие подкасты.
Malatesta and Phil do some serious work on custom ROMs for Windows Mobile, more HTC HD2 news, plenty on Windows Mobile 6.5. and what the Motorola Droid and Android 2.0 mean for Microsoft. Join us!
We talk about a new bigger screen Nintendo DS, an Uncharted Prequel, Motion Comics, the Motorola Droid, Netflix Streaming coming to PS3, and more.
I present for you another one of my annual gadgets and gizmos review shows for some ideas on running gear and Apparatus that you might give your fellow runners for the holidays. But I also ask you to think about the idea of giving the gift of yourself this holiday season. Maybe, instead of heading to the shopping malls this year, you should head to your calendar and start picking out a day or two a week where you’ll make a point of going out to dinner or have a few beers or cup of coffee with a friend you haven’t spent enough time with this year. Better yet, why not plan to go for a run with a friend? Life is short fellow runners…you know this; and one of the main obstacles to enjoying this life is all the stuff that we clutter ourselves up with: physical things like geeky Motorola Droid cell-phones, mp3 players, laptops, big screen TV’s and electronic game consoles….I’m not saying that those things aren’t cool: they are; but they pale in comparison to friendship; all we really have to spend here on this planet is time….we convert some of that time into money though employment in order to support our families and live a life with more and better stuff; but the STUFF should not be the purpose of our work...because all we have is time; and we need to use that time in a way that brings joy to ourselves and others. Show Links: The song “Gift of Love” was by Joe Colledge
Since this episode is late, and has no intro music (the mixing software I use got updated for Windows 7, and now works better in some areas, and WAY WORSE in others), I present the annotated show notes. No "We talked about things and stuff" this week, friends, this week we talked about THESE things and THAT stuff. See for yourself below.News: Some talk about "Lie to Me", Gizmodo reviews the Apple "Magic Mouse", Blackberry Storm 2 units begin to arrive at stores, 10 Things you should know about Apple's new productsLink: Ikea HackerApp: Dungeon Hunter Review by Touch Arcade, and "A Pocket full of Diablo"- Dungeon Hunter review by KotakuTopics: Call of Duty Matchmaking service will reshape the industry, An improvement over dedicated servers says IW. Motorola Droid impressions, Motorola Calgary is cheap and "Blur(ry)". Also Bluetooth headsets. They're annoying. Contact UsPaul: Site, Twitter, FacebookMike: Twitter, FacebookJohn: Twitter, FacebookDownload LinkContracast on iTunes