Oct 06
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Devices, News

Emblaze Mobile (formerly Alphacell) was the developer of the M5.
If you do not know it, that is ok, you can also search google for it and see there are not too many results.
In 2006 Emblaze declared the M5 as one of the most technologically advanced phones.
The reality was very different with return rates that can compete with the first Motorola ROKR.

I talked once with a VC guy who told me that he prefers to invest in people with a record of a company which failed than to invest in an entrepreneur with no record at all.
I guess that is the case with Emblaze Mobile.
They were there already, they did not do good but earned a lot of experience that can be used and applied in its new challenge.

After a long period of time it seems that Emblaze Mobile is back, big time.
Now two new devices are on the chapter the Edelweiss and Monolith.
The Edelweiss is going to hit the market next month in Russia.

Edelweiss will feature a 3.5 inch touchscreen at 854×480 resolution, GPS and 8GB/16GB of memory chip.
Edelweiss form factor is… of course iPhone-alike.
The second and more ambitious device is the Monolith project.
Emblaze formed an alliance with more than 20 companies including: Sharp, Access, Redbend, Sanyo, Pioneer, Panasonic, Samsung and more.
On the paper they look like a much needed breeze to Emblaze Mobile.
Such devices can make Emblaze Mobile relevant again in the mobile devices market.
More on the Monolith project

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Sep 01

Applications Stores True Game Changers |

By Harel Shattenstein
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The content game heats up and there are some new players declaring a new game. Obviously, the players are Apple with the “1 billion dollars” AppStore and Google’s market running on its Android OS.

Today, the mobile operators dominate the content market by controlling the mobile portals that are pre-configured to the devices they sell.
There is a shift to “off-portal” content consumption where users buy and download mobile content from sources other than the mobile operator.
There are two main problems with off-portals; The major one is the billing problem because off-portals cannot use the mobile account in order to charge the consumer (unless they use different solutions that the operators offer).
The second problem is the marketing, how do you move a crowd of consumers who are used to consume their content easily from the operator’s portal to use other portals where most users do not enter web addresses that are not precompiled on the phone.
These factors held back some of the progress and explosion of the mobile content market.

Now come Steve Jobs, with the AppStore and forces operators to use Apple’s content store for their iPhone. Of course this is something the mobile operators should not like as they need to get a smaller share of the revenues from the content. The secret is that it is not too bad for the operators. Apples marketing machine wants you to think that every new mobile purchased is an iPhone but the numbers show a different thing. More than everything, the iPhone is a hyped device. And as such a device, they know that the losses from the content are limited to the small market of iPhone users. This comes with the fact that when you launch an iPhone you get all the benefits of launching the hyped device which position you as an operator as a trendy operator with “cool” devices.
So you lose some revenues but you gain some publicity and branding points… when these elements are weighed in some cases they bring more benefit than losses to the operator.
AppStore benefits a standardized way to bill the customer using the operator, marketed by the operator and using inherent tools in the device.  So the AppStore is actually a crack in the dam of the operators’ supremacy in mobile content. Somehow device manufacturers succeeded in penetrating the closed garden of the operators.
Still, operators do have control over the devices and the network and they can limit the move if they realize it is an imminent risk.
Google with its  Android Market tries to follow Apple’s footsteps and if they succeed their potential is much greater than the AppStore. Android is an OS for licensing and many manufacturers plan to have Android-based devices while AppStore leans on the iPhone alone.

The long tail of mobile developers suffered a lot when working with the operators who requested support for usually over 20 different devices and a developer needed to negotiate and work directy with different operators in order to distribute his or her software.
In a single OS and detailed specification, like in the case of the iPhone and the Android phones the headache of cumbersome porting is spared.
Developers only need to have an account in the store and declare their requests in terms of revenues per item.

Now, Symbian, the dominant mobile OS company needs to somehow fight back and provide its developers with the right platform to distribute their content directly to the end-users. With over 100 Million devices in the market, if Symbian gets to offer the same offer, we do expect to see major changes in the content market.

Update: It seems that Microsoft “App store” named Skymarket will be launched  with the new Windows Mobile 7 OS.

Android Market pictures:


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Aug 27

The Weekly Mobile Phones Coverage 27.8 |

By Harel Shattenstein & Jeb Brilliant
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Two new Nokia N-series phones N79 & N85

Nokia announce today on the new N-series phones to its multimedia phones portfolio.
The first is the Nokia N85, The device share the same design factors as the N81 which was the first to include the Navi-Wheel.
The Nokia N85 is a 5 megapixel shooter with A-GPS, Wi-Fi and FM receivers.
It runs on Symbian OS S60 FP 2 which is displayed on a 2.6 inch AMOLED screen with 16 millions colors and an accelerometer.
As a High-End multimedia device the N85 will support all of Nokia OVI services.
The N85 will be on sale on October and will cost 660 US dollars.

Full specification

The second device is the successor of the N78 The new Nokia N79.
The N79 has a smaller screen than the N85, A 2.4 TFT screen.
More or less the N79 share the same features like the N85: 5 megapixel camera, A-GPS and Wi-Fi.
Again all OVI services can run on the device.
More interesting is the come-back of the XperssOn covers the N79 comes with two additional covers in retail.
The N79 will be on sale from October at the price of 515 US dollars.

Full specification

HTC dual keyboard smartphone

While HTC is getting the EISA (European Imaging and Sound Association) award for its iPhone rival, the HTC diamond, HTC is introducing The S740.

The dual keyboard smartphone design inspired by the diamond and touch diamond devices.
It runs Windows Mobile 6.1 and has Wi-Fi and A-GPS.
The devices will start to be sold the next month in Europe.



Full specification

HTC “Dream” is FCC approved

The FCC approved the HTC Dream the first Andorid based mobile phone that will launch on T-Mobile this year.

The full specification (Not confirmed) By AndroidGuys

  • 528Mhz Qualcomm 7201 processor
  • Data kit for USB connectivity in the box
  • 64MB Internal RAM
  • 128MB Internal ROM
  • 1GB MicroSD card
  • 5 Row QWERTY keypad
  • Trackball
  • Dedicated camera button
  • 3.1MP camera (no flash) 2048 x 1536
  • Video playback files – H.264, streaming, 3GPP, MPEG4, and Codec 3GP
  • Dedicated YouTube Player
  • Audio playback files – MP3, AAC, AAC+, WMA, MPEG4, WAV, MIDI, REAL AUDIO, OGG
  • Wallpaper supports JPG, BMP, PNG, and GIF
  • Speakerphone (mono, natch)
  • Ringtones (MP3, AAC, AAC+, WMA)
  • HTTP, WAP Push, xHTML
  • Bluetooth (class 1)
  • Picture Caller ID
  • SMS and MMS support (Take that Apple!)
  • POP, IMAP, and SMTP, AOL, and GMAIL email
  • AIM, MSN, YAHOO, and GTALK messaging
  • Quad Band (850, 900, 1800, 1900)
  • 3G
  • 802.11b & 802.11g
  • UMTS (1,4), HSDPA, SUPL
  • 1150mAh battery
  • Screen size is 3.17″ with HVGA (480 x 320)
  • Handset 117 x 55 x 16mm
  • 5.6 oz weight
  • Sync capable with Google Calendar
  • Downloadable content via Android Marketplace
  • Google Streetview with built-in compass
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