Pages

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Google+

So today, finally, Google+ was taken out of the field testers zone and made into a full fledged beta. This means you don't have to wait for an invite to put you into the Google+ mode. Just head over to Google Plus and sign up with your Google account!

Still not sure what is Google+ or why you would want to use it? Check out this video:


Google Wallet

In this day in age, what doesn't our smart phone do? It already fetches email, makes telephone calls, stores contacts, updates our social networks, we can buy plane tickets, access our bank accounts, and watch movies on it. If you can replace your email device, personal music player, and landline with a smartphone why can't you replace your wallet? The brilliant minds at Google have come up with a solution. Introducing Google Wallet. Google Wallet stores your bank card information and allows you to use bank cards, store cards, and coupons all within your device. When you pay at a register, using the NFC (near-Field-Communication) technology, you just tap your phone on the reader. The data is instantly sent and you automatically pay whatever it is you buy. Google Wallet also has the neat feature of being combined with Google shopper and offers, allowing you to redeem coupons at the register with the same transaction. You collect the Coupons from Google Shopper, and when you go to pay the coupons are redeemed in the transaction. You no longer have to maintain hold on physical coupons and physical cards. Everything can now be stored on the Google Wallet app. It is also password protected with a secure pin, so even if the phone is stolen thieves won't have access to your information, unlike a wallet. Check out Google Wallet and watch the video down below

Monday, September 19, 2011

Qwikster?

So this morning, I alone with countless other netflix subscribers awoke to an email from Netflix CEO Reed Hastings; something long overdue in my opinion about the recent price changes occurring with Netflix. See, starting September 1st, the Netflix streaming service and DVD by mail service was split between two separate services, meaning if you wanted both streaming and DVDs you had to pay separately for both instead of having an all in one package. The advent of this left many Netflix users upset and outraged, they were once paying 9.99 a month for the basic deal of unlimited streaming and 1 dvd a month, and now they have to pay 16.99 for both. Well, Netflix CEO emailed everyone announcing the reason they decided to separate the two services. See, Netflix has decided to change the name of the DVD service, renaming it to Qwikster. Netflix itself would remain solely for the streaming service. This means for DVD management you would have to go to the Qwikster website and manage your DVD Queue from there. Netflix's website will be used solely for streaming. Is this a good thing? Not entirely sure myself, I wasn't using the DVD service for a long time when I had both services, but when I canceled the DVD service because of the price change I found myself wishing I still had it. Certain television shows became instantly more appealing and desirable because I no longer had the service. But the new management service isn't so bad. In this case Netflix and Qwikster are both operated by the same company, but now you can have two separate charges on your account for them. And they are both operated independently. It will be interesting to see how Netflix and Qwikster operate now that they are separate entities.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Nintendo 3DS

Bought a 3DS a few days ago, review and overview shall be up soon. Generally a fun device so far!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

HTC Sensation XE?

Engadget
Engadget
Image courtesy of Engadget, take a look at HTC's new concept phone fresh from their partnership with Beats audio. Meet the HTC Sensation XE, the first concept phone made through HTC's partnership with Beats Audio. Their new device, sporting a 1.5 GHz dual core processor packed with a 1750 mph battery is a Beats audio powered device that comes coupled with a nifty pair of Beats audio ear buds. The attached ear buds have an inline remote that allows you to seamlessly change tracks or answer/end phone calls, so theoretically you can use it without having to take the phone out of your pocket. Unoriginal though because there are plenty of ear buds that come with remotes in them to help in a similar fashion. What makes this unique however is when the Beats official ear buds are plugged in, the device releases Beats technology to match the ear buds, giving you deeper bass and sharper vocals. Interesting to see how this goes with Android, as I have yet to see a particular Android marketed phone that offers something in the audio department (galaxy s PMP aside). I'm also wondering if there is  possibility of a Beats made music application to help better with the music development. The phone is promised to ship to Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East later this month, hopefully we'll see a North American release. I for one would love to get my hands on those earbuds.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Patents, Intellectual Property, and Innovation

In all due sense, patents exist for the reason of promoting innovation. When one party patents something, it motivates another party to create something better and more efficient while retaining protection of the first person to their idea and to benefit from their idea. Patents are NOT made to prohibit innovation or to be used to cripple another entity of developing or producing ideas.

In the past 10 years there has been a massive boost for the need of Patent and Intellectual Property lawyers. Why? Because of the rapid development in the field of mobile technology. Any reader of technology news sites such as Engadget, Gizmodo, or TechnoBuffalo know how much of a hassle the new "Patent Wars" are becoming. You can't go a day without reading about one company suing another for patent infringements, whether something as obscure and public as "slide to unlock" to mundane as the name "AppStore". The use of patents here however isn't to protect ones rights or ideas. No it's far from that.

You can say a brief history for the use of patents in the attempt to monopolize mobile technology started with the advent of the iPhone. When the original iPhone (OG iPhone) was first released, it really was YEARS ahead of it's competitors. It had a sleek design, an amazing web browser, and it was a dedicated personal music player (PMP). This was a whole year before there was any news about "Apps"; any aficionado of mobile technology can tell you that Apple did not have the "AppStore" until version 2.0, which came out the summer of 2008 (OG iPhone was released June of 07). In point, it was THE device to have. And believe me, for a whole year this device monopolized the smart phone market. Windows Mobile started seeing a decrease in revenue as more and more people started looking towards the iPhone. When the iPhone 3G came out, and the price dropped significantly for it's subsidized price ($99 on contract), Windows Mobile diminished even more. However something else came out that lit the fuse that started the desire for Apple to maintain its hegemony over the mobile market.

In October of 2008 the HTC Dream (G1 in N.A) was released. It wasn't using Windows Mobile, the common smartphone operating system at the time, nor was it using Symbian which was the "opera web browser" of mobile operating systems. No, the Dream used an operating system developed by Search Giant Google. At the time, Google had just finished phasing out Gmail to the general public, and was pretty much known only at this point for being the most used search engine in the world. Google basically came out of nowhere, in a market that was rapidly becoming dominated by Apple and their iPhone brand, and introduced a new player. All thoughts aside, the Dream was a shitty device. It was huge, the keys faulted, and was introduced to a market that was expecting Apps galore. At this point iOS' AppStore had already 100,000 apps available in the market, whereas the new Google Marketplace had about 20 starting out. Big mistake in Google's part. But this didn't stop Google.

You see, Apple monopolized the market in one way. Every year they would release an iPhone, with great features. But it was always lacking in something, something mundane that it should have already had, or something that other phones had but it didn't. That way when they released the new phone next year, with those features, they would attract new customers to it and also force existing users to update. Ingenious I know. Google could not hope to do the same. See Android was the underdog. They couldn't expect to launch a device lacking in features, to do so would be suicide in the mobile market. Instead what they did was release Android as an open source system. What does this mean? Well unlike Apple, which restricts iOS to run only on Apple manufactured phones, Android could be made to run on anything. Manufacturers hoping to tackle Apple began a lengthy process of advertisements and developments to develop their own Android powered "iPhone Killers". The most prominent at this point being Motorola, who plunged millions of dollars in advertisements backing Big Red (Verizon) to market the "Droid" series of phones. And to be honest, Motorola was immensely successful in their marketing attempts. On a side note, if you ask people what kind of Android phone they have, unless they really know the different kinds of phones, they will say a "Droid", whether its a galaxy S phone or an LG. Back on topic, Motorola single handedly brought Android to the public's eye. At this point everyone was making an Android phone. HTC, LG, Motorola, Samsung, just to name a few, are some of the prominent makers of Android powered devices.

To tackle Apple's control with their singular devices, Google enlisted an army, an army of manufactures producing phones in mass. Slowly to this point, Android has been overtaking market control and sales over Apple's devices. Apple was scared now. They knew that unless they did something, the rapidly developing under-dog would take over and leave Apple in it's dust. Apples answer to the ever-growing Android? Patents. Loads and loads of mundane patents. Although they knew the couldn't completely cripple Androids development, and knowing they can't target Google (that would be similar to Nazi Germany invading Soviet Russia during the Winter) they attempt to halt their enemies productions. To a degree it was successful for Apple. They managed to block manufacturers from producing, not in mass, but with enough time to continue spewing out iOS updates to match the competition. Does this make sense? They momentarily continue to stop manufacturers to make their own devices better, using inane lawsuits regarding "Slide to Unlock" and "iPhone 3G design" (we're in the dawn of the iPhone 5 and this is still being brought up?).

The general public has now become aware of the "Patent War" between Apple and say, the world, but now you have third party companies who just buy patents for a living (lodsys) who target manufacturers for the hell of it! I thought patents were used to defend ones ideas and promote development? To spur new ideas into the market, whilst protecting the owners ideas and allowing them to fiscally benefit. Not in these cases. Here patents are used by jealous and greedy businessmen who want to monopolize mobile technology and mobile markets.