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From: sylvester805/31/2011 12:37:53 AM
1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
Samsung Galaxy S II: "the best smartphone, period."
engadget.com 

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From: sylvester805/31/2011 12:54:19 AM
1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
Samsung Galaxy S II Poised to Make Big Splash in U.S.
Posted by Adam Mills | May 30, 2011
gottabemobile.com 

Samsung announced today that its Android superphone, the Samsung Galaxy S II, has already surpassed 1 million units sold in Korea saying that the phone has been “selling like hotcakes.” The company also revealed that the Galaxy S II has sold faster than any of its previous devices even surpassing the fast start of the Samsung Galaxy S by a whopping 40 days.

The Galaxy S II debuted in Korea on April 29th and has slowly been making its way around the world. And one place that it hasn’t been released yet is in the United States. It’s currently unknown when the device is going to be hitting shelves here in the U.S. but it appears that Samsung might be undertaking a release similar to what it did for the original Galaxy S.

Currently, no carriers are known, but it appears likely that the Galaxy S II will be arriving on AT&T, Sprint and Verizon. T-Mobile also accidentally confirmed the device back when it was announced so it’s possible that we could see a launch on all four major U.S. carriers.

If sales in Korea and around the world are any indication, the Galaxy S II surely has a chance to break more records when it’s finally in the United States.

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From: sylvester805/31/2011 1:31:30 AM
   of 6352
 
ASUS PadPhone takes Computex by storm...

Open opportunities. The modular system opens up a number of useful scenarios for consumers who buy into the method. The tablet dock Asus is demonstrated takes advantage of the hot segment of the moment, yet is also open to other docking solutions. Motorola demonstrated this with the Atrix 4G and the innovative laptop dock, and Asus could produce other docks like this to use with the Padfone. The consumer could buy into as much or as little of the entire ecosystem as needed, and have multiple devices run by the one phone.

One data plan. The beauty of the Padfone modular system is the phone is the connection. The tablet dock is just a bigger display, so the user only needs one SIM card and one data plan with a carrier to make them both work. This makes it cost effective for the owner, while providing mobile connectivity for the tablet anywhere. It’s a win-win for the consumer.

Seamless docking. As demonstrated by Asus, the Padfone owner can be working away normally with the phone and have the tablet seamlessly take over when the phone is docked. This fits the way people work and will provide a positive experience for the user. Pop the phone in the tablet and have a better experience in an instant.

Flexibility. Mobile professionals love choice, and this modular approach provides it. The user can leave the tablet dock at home when the phone is enough, or take them both.

Battery benefits. As I discovered with the Atrix 4G and the laptop dock, the benefits to battery life of the phone are enormous. The Asus tablet dock has its own large battery that takes over when the phone is docked, and it should be possible to get near all-day battery life using the combo. More importantly, Asus confirmed that like the laptop dock on the Atrix, the tablet dock charges the Padfone battery while docked. That means that when you pop the phone out of the tablet, it will usually have a fully charged battery. This is big in real usage.

Easier updates. Getting Android updates on devices is not an easy thing, given all the parties involved in the process. The modular approach makes this process much easier, simply because only the phone needs updates. When the phone gets updated all the docks get updated too.

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From: sylvester805/31/2011 4:05:03 PM
2 Recommendations   of 6352
 
Nokia's Elop: Android is killing us in China, Europe
By Larry Dignan | May 31, 2011, 12:38pm PDT
m.zdnet.com 

Nokia’s biggest profit margin killing headaches appear to be Android, China and Europe and the company doesn’t have any answers.

Speaking on a conference call, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop said that the company was getting whacked in China due to “mismanagement” and high inventory levels. Simply put, Nokia can’t move phones in China. The story in Europe didn’t revolve around mismanagement as much as competition from Android. In either case, Nokia is taking some major body blows and can’t even provide an outlook for 2011.

Regarding China, Elop said:

As it relates to competitive challenges, it is the case that certain competitive forces, particularly Android, are really gaining momentum in certain regions. For example in China, there’s an indication of some very substantial movement in the growth of market share for Android, particularly in some technology areas where Nokia today with our current portfolio doesn’t compete.

A good example of this is the CDMA technology in China, where that technology has seen quite an increase in market share in China. And as you know, we don’t currently have CDMA products, but clearly, that’s something that we’d be considering in the future. So there’s some dynamics like that that we have to deal with.

And in Europe, Android was also routing Nokia. Elop noted:

In Europe, that’s not the case on the management perspective. It’s very much about competitive pressures. We’re seeing, for example, a large volume of Android devices really coming into the market. They’re largely undifferentiated from one another, which is putting pricing pressure thereupon, which in turn affects the overall ranging decisions of the operators; so there’s definitely pricing pressure going on.

Meanwhile, the problems in China revolve around smartphones primarily. However, Nokia is getting whacked on feature phones too. Elop said:

Overall, it is worth noting that the impact here is both smartphone and feature phone. So this is — even though a lot of the news has been about Symbian and so forth, we face very specific competitive pressures on the feature phone side as well, and face some of the same portfolio challenges here.

Now that being said, on the feature phone side we are just in the last couple of days beginning to ship in our dual-SIM products into emerging markets, which we have great hopes for. So there’s a lot of positive things happening there, but there’s definitely a situation here where it’s not only the Symbian range of devices but also feature phone devices that are under competitive pressure.

Given those problems, Nokia has a rough road ahead before it gets to Windows Phone 7 devices. The big question is where Nokia’s market share will sit once the Android onslaught subsides.

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From: sylvester805/31/2011 11:55:17 PM
1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
NIELSEN: Android Still Clobbering Apple's iPhone, RIM's BlackBerry
Henry Blodget | May 31, 2011, 1:24 PM | 2,830 | 15
businessinsider.com 

Nielsen has released its latest US smartphone platform market share survey. This one covers the three-month period from February through April, 2011.

As in prior surveys, Android was the big winner, with 36% of the market.

Apple's iPhone had 26% of the market.

And Research in Motion's BlackBerry brought up the rear (among the major platforms), with 22%.


Image: Niesen

The good news for Android and Apple is that they have both gained a modest amount of share since the last three-month survey (which was done by Comscore and covered the November-February period). Android's gains were far more rapid: Apple gained 1 point of share, while Android gained 3 points. RIM's share, meanwhile, plummeted 6 points, from 29% to 23%

These surveys were not performed by the same company, so we would not read too much into the changes. But the findings aren't surprising.

On Twitter, folks have been comparing this Nielsen survey with a prior Nielsen survey and citing it as evidence that Android's market share has peaked. Based on what we've seen, they're comparing apples and oranges. The prior Nielsen survey covered one month: March. This one covers a three-month period: February through April (and it includes March). So the difference between the prior survey and this one can't be used to assess a rate of change.

The survey also showed that Android users are now consuming more data than iPhone users.


Image: Niesen

Read more: businessinsider.com 

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From: sylvester806/1/2011 12:18:35 AM
1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
Samsung Opens New AMOLED Production to Alleviate Supply Strain
by Kevin Krause on May 31st, 2011 at 9:51 am
phandroid.com 

AMOLED technology provides some of the most gorgeous displays we have seen to date, but their primary manufacturer, Samsung Mobile Display, has had a hard time meeting demand. Supply shortages have resulted in several instances of handsets downgrading display technology for later production runs, but Samsung is hoping to make that a thing of the past. A new 5.5th generation production line has just opened two months ahead of schedule. The line is capable of using larger glass substrates than could be handled before, which has a twofold result of lower costs and increased production.

The new factory line can pump out three million screens per month, and is currently focused on mobile display production to meet demand for the Samsung Galaxy S II. At full capacity the factory will be outputting 30 million per month.

[via Engadget]

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From: sylvester806/1/2011 12:24:37 AM
   of 6352
 
Evernote comes to Honeycomb Tablets
by Quentyn Kennemer on May 30th, 2011 at 1:18 pm
phandroid.com 

More Honeycomb apps, you say? Why, of course! Evernote, who received honors of being Phandroid’s highest-ranked note taking application, has gotten a tablet version and is now in public beta. While the phone-specific application was still great on tablets, we always appreciate developers taking the time and effort to further refine the user experience and adapt their applications to tablets. There won’t be much different outside of the obvious user interface changes compared to the application on Android phones, but it’s always nice to have a native option. Click here to get
started. [via Droid-Life]

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From: sylvester806/1/2011 12:27:46 AM
   of 6352
 
BREAKING..MIPS enters Android Honeycomb tablet race
ARM and Intel face potent Chinese competitor
By Rik Myslewski in San Francisco • Get more from this author
Posted in PCs & Chips, 31st May 2011 17:59 GMT
theregister.co.uk 

Amid all the brouhaha about the low power–chip tussle between Intel and ARM, another processor architecture has been quietly advancing into the same tablet and smartphone battleground: MIPS Technologies, which has announced a partnership with Beijing's Ingenic Semiconductor to port Android 3.0, aka Honeycomb, to the Chinese chipmaker's upcoming ultra–low power system-on-chip.

"With its new chip, Ingenic is bringing a new level of MIPS applications processing to the mobile market," MIPS marketing and biz-dev vice president Art Swift said in the companies' announcement on Tuesday.

The SoC in question, Ingenic's 1GHz JZ4770, includes the company's XBurst CPU core, an 1080p video processing unit and OpenGL ES 2.0 3D-capable GPU, plus Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth, TV, USB, camera, GPS, and other connectivity options.

The JZ4770 requires only about 250 milliwatts of power when running at at 1GHz, with the XBurst core and its L1 cache consuming around 100 of those milliwatts. The 65nm chip is sceduled to be released in the third quarter of this year.

MIPS and Ingenic announced that the Chinese chipmaker had licensed the MIPS32 architecture this January at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. At that time, they said that MIPS-based Ingenic chips would be "targeting a broad range of mobile products including e-readers, tablets and smartphones leveraging the Android platform."

MIPS work on Honeycomb is not the first MIPS Android port. Over two years ago, Embedded Alley announced that it was preparing an Android port for MIPS-based processors, targeting a veritable laundry list of applications: "personal multimedia and Mobile Internet Devices digital video and home entertainment (STB/DTV/HDTV), automotive (GPS and infotainment), medical devices, home automation, SOHO networking, instrumentation and industrial control."

Last January, MIPS partnered with DTV-builder Western Mediabridge and SoC-maker Sigma Designs to create set-top boxes based on the Android port it had open sourced the previous August.

Android 3.0 is not yet open source. Google has said that the Honeycomb code will not be open sourced before the end of the year. But the company is sharing the Honeycomb source code with certain partners. Tuesday's announcement that MIPS and Ingneic would partner to port the tablet-specific Android 3.0 to the JZ4770 adds a third SoC competitor in the tablet market in addition to ARM and Intel.

In January, Ingenic said that its chips were powering "over 25 million products" in the Chinese market. In the companies' announcement on Tuesday, Ingenic chairman and CEO Qiang Liu said that he was expanding his target to "the China market and beyond." ®

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From: sylvester806/1/2011 12:41:40 AM
1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
Honeycomb Tablet apps now up to 4,687....

market.android.com 

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To: sylvester80 who wrote (4252)6/1/2011 1:19:30 AM
From: clochard1 Recommendation   of 6352
 
Nokia is doomed if they don't ship Android devices. Since Microsoft bribed them not to, their only lifeline is if Softy buys them. A marriage made in hell for their investors!

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