Saturday, November 26, 2011

Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet will rock Qualcomm’s Gobi 3000 technology to allow worldwide

Lenovo and Qualcomm announced that the Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet will incorporate Qualcomm’s Gobi 3000 technology, making it the first Android tablet that can be used all around the world. Qualcomm’s chip can sing along both EV-DO (CDMA) and HSPA (GSM) based networks, allowing for instance Verizon and Sprint customers to use the tablet even when travelling to Europe and Asia (where GSM networks dominate).
Personally I don’t like ThinkPad computers, but I know some folks who can’t imagine having any other PC. Those folks will be glad to know that with Lenovo’s tablet they can now freely roam around the world. Actually not “freely” since mobile data roaming can cost a small fortune, but hey – something’s gotta give if you want to have Internet access at all times.
So what do you say – do you care about ThinkPad’s global connectivity capability or Wi-Fi is good enough for you? Comments form is all yours…

Friday, November 25, 2011

EU Concerned With Apple-Samsung Patent War

European regulators investigating the Apple and Samsung patent battles believe the rivals could be using industry-standard intellectual property to stifle competition as the cases continue to mount.

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Both companies are embroiled in a patent war that involves more than 20 cases in 10 countries, but if the patents involved are deemed as standard in the industry, many of those cases may be dropped.
European Commission antitrust chief Joaquin Almunia said the agency is still waiting for Apple and Samsung to provide it with details on patents used as standards in the mobile telephone industry, and regulators are concerned the patents are being used to stifle competition.
"We need to look at this because IP rights can be used as a distortion of competition but we will need to look at the answers," Almunia said. "In particular, in the IT sector, it is obvious it is not the only case. Apple and Samsung is only one case where IP rights can be used as an instrument to restrict competition."
According to Reuters, Almunia's statements marked the first time the EU's antitrust chief publicly discussed his concern over the patent wars.
Both companies have filed competing lawsuits against each other, seeking product bans that may keep the competition's products off the shelves. Apple claims Samsung's Galaxy devices copy the iPhone and iPad too closely, while Samsung claims Apple violates several patents it owns.
Generally, courts don't ban products and the ban threat is one that companies leverage against each other to force settlements. However, Apple has rejected several settlement offers in its battle with Samsung, and Samsung products have been banned from several markets.
Samsung has already lost one crucial battle in Australia, where an injunction banned sales of its Galaxy 10.1 Tab, considered the closest competition for the iPad. The ban was ordered until the case comes to a trial early next year, but since the courts blocked the device before it was released, Samsung lost crucial pre-Christmas sales in Australia.
The South Korean smartphone maker has also been subject to product bans in the Netherlands, but was able to get around that injunction by retooling its devices, a strategy it may use to get around other bans in the future.
The worldwide fight is believed by many to be a battle-by-proxy between Apple and the Android OS, especially after the late CEO Steve Jobs vowed he would destroy the Google-owned system, saying it copied Apple's technology.
Apple is also involved in patent disputes with HTC and Motorola Mobility, both of which depend heavily on the Android OS.
The European patent cases, though, may end if officials determine the patents under dispute fall under FRAND, or free-use standards -- a decision they could reach when Apple and Samsung provide the EU Commission with the information it seeks.

Only in Japan: NTT DoCoMo SH-01D unveiled with a 4.5-inch 720p display and a pack of features

Japan is the land of weird avant-grade phones and often designs, and this here NTT DoCoMo SH-01D furthers that notion with its neat rectangular design and 720p 4.5” display. All of that beauty however is running on Android 2.3Gingerbread, with Android 4.0 being only a future possibility. The SH-01D is stuffed with the usual for Japan and very unusual stateside pack of features including a waterproof body for better protection, a 12.1-megapixel camerawith optical stabilization and an integrated TV tuner.

Only in Japan: NTT DoCoMo SH-01D unveiled with a 4.5-inch 720p display and a pack of features
Interestingly, the Sharp-made device has the company’s AQUOS screen which improves the image quality on the screen. The display also supports 3D viewing glasses free. It’s using a parallax barrier to create the 3D effect - a feature we’ve already seen stateside on handsets like the HTC EVO 3D and the LG Thrill 4G. Under the hood, a 1GHz TI OMAP 4430 dual-core processor supports the whole experience.

The NTT DoCoMo SH-01D got announced today, but will actually arrive on Japanese shelves on December 2nd. Stateside availability? It doesn’t seem likely at all, but we can still marvel at its feature pack, can’t we?

Actually, it is not only in Japan, you will get this phone on www.m2cmobile.com end of Nov. 2011


Thursday, November 24, 2011

Motorola RAZR available today at Rogers

The revitalization of the Motorola RAZR has landed in Canada! The new RAZR runs Android OS 2.3.5 (also on an upgrade path to OS 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich), sports a powerful 1.2GHz dual-coreprocessor, has a Kevlar backing and has a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Advanced display (resolution of 960×540) that’s made of scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass… and comes in at a measly 7.1mm at the thinnest point, but is top heavy where the camera is located (8MP and captures 1080p videos). As for prices, the RAZR costs $149.99 on a 3-year and ranges upward to $649.99 outright. And on www.m2cmobile.com it only $629.98.