Smartphone Sales Soar

Smartphone Sales SoarSmartphone unit sales are soaring, with sales almost tripling between 2004 and 2005, and increasing a further 50% in the first half of 2006 compared to the previous year.

Figures revealed by the high-tech market research firm In-Stat reveal that the Windows Mobile operating system has now managed to grab an equal slice of the US market share with smartphone big boys, BlackBerry and Palm.

Bill Hughes, an analyst at the research firm says that much of 2005’s soaring smartphone shipment growth was down to a run on Linux-based handset shipments in Asia at the end of the year.

However, he’s a bit sniffy about calling these phones – mainly from Motorola, NEC, and Panasonic – proper smartphones because they don’t possess the same high end functionality seen in Windows Mobile, Blackberry, and Palm OS devices.

Although the Linux-based handsets are capable of running Java-powered applications added by users, Hughes reckons they should really be called ‘feature phones’ rather than smartphones.

Smartphone Sales SoarDespite the spectacular sales, Hughes advised caution, pointing out that many smartphone users continue to lug around the very devices that smartphones are supposed to replace.

“Also, users have been slow to add new applications to their devices. Most users have only downloaded a few applications,” he added.

Other research by In-Stat found that business users given work phones were three times more likely to carry a second phone for their personal calls than other users.

In-Stat

LG VX9900 Smartphone To Launch This Month

LG VX9900 Smartphone To Launch This MonthLG’s flip-open VX9900 business phone has been scheduled for a November 27th US launch date on Verizon’s network.

The phone, also called the enV, follows the same design lines as Nokia’s innovative Communicator phone, with the case flipping open to reveal a keyboard and screen.

When the phone is opened up, users can experience a full QWERTY keyboard and twin-speaker sound, although the main screen only fills a disappointingly small proportion of the lid.

LG VX9900 Smartphone To Launch This MonthWith the 262k color TFT LCD running at just QVGA (320 x 240 pixels) resolution, we reckon users would have preferred the more capacious 640×200 offered by the Communicator.

The CDMA VX9900 is a fully featured fella though, sporting a 2 megapixel camera with flash and an MP3 and video player, even if all that functionality adds up to quite a portly pocket-filler of a phone.

There’s also a microSD memory card slot onboard for storing music and video files, with support for high-speed EV-DO data networks

LG VX9900 Smartphone To Launch This MonthLG have gone to town on Bluetooth 1.2 wireless connectivity options, with the VX9900 supporting HSP (headset), HFP (hands-free), DUN (dial-up networking), A2DP (advanced audio distribution), SPP (serial port), AVRCP (audio/video remote control), BPP (printing) and HID (human interface device) profiles.

LG claim a talk-time of 4.5 hours and a standby of more than 19 days, with prices ranging from $320.00 (full price) down to US $149.99 for a two-year contract with Verizon.

LG

MySpace.com Sued By Universal Music

MySpace.com Sued By Universal MusicAs new media continues to challenge the traditional means of delivering music, video and other digital content, copyright lawyers can expect to get rich in the legal fall out.

Universal are the latest media group to get on the blower to their legal boys, filing a case against the social networking site, MySpace.com.

Universal claims that MySpace, “encourages, facilitates and participates in the unauthorised reproduction, adaptation, distribution and public performance,” and is seeking unspecified damages, including up to $150,000 for each unauthorised music song or video uploaded on to the Website.

MySpace’s botty-covering tactic of making users agree to grant the Website a license to publish uploaded content isn’t washing with the Universal legal team, who insist that they have no such authority over works they don’t own.

“A willing partner in theft”
The complaint, filed at the US District Court, claims that “MySpace is a willing partner in that theft,” observing that most of the media slapped up its pages aren’t generated by users, but purloined from copyright owners.

MySpace hit back in a statement, insisting that they are in full compliance with copyright laws:

MySpace.com Sued By Universal Music“We have been keeping UMG closely apprised of our industry-leading efforts to protect creators’ rights, and it’s unfortunate they decided to file this unnecessary and meritless litigation,” the statement said.

“We provide users with tools to share their own work – we do not induce, encourage, or condone copyright violation in any way.”

Universal were having none of it, claiming that their, “music and videos play a key role in building the communities that have created hundreds of millions of dollars of value for the owners of MySpace.”

“Our goal is not to inhibit the creation of these communities, but to ensure that our rights and those of our artists are recognised,” the statement added.

Spam Soars With Nine Out Of Ten Emails Being Junk

Spam Soars With Nine Out Of Ten Emails Being JunkJust over nine out of every 10 e-mails sent worldwide are junk, with a “spam tsunami” flooding inboxes with relentless junk advertising.

That’s the findings of e-mail security company Postini, with vice-president Daniel Druker telling the Sunday Times that the internet is “under siege.”

“Spammers are increasingly aggressive and spam has evolved from a tool for nuisance hackers to one for criminal enterprises,” he said.

According to their figures, spam has almost trebled in the last five months, with the company detecting more than 7 billion spam e-mails worldwide in November – up a massive 2.5 billion from June and now making up 91% of all e-mails.

Chief culprit for the rise in spam is sneaky software that hijacks home PCs and then uses them to blast out spam, unbeknownst to the owner.

Spam Soars With Nine Out Of Ten Emails Being JunkBecause each hijacked PC only sends out a relatively small amount of spam, they’re not detected by anti-spam networks and thus avoid being blacklisted on industry spamlists.

Although UK regulations were introduced in 2003 to outlaw spam, they’ve been spectacularly useless, failing to make a single prosecution.

In America, there has been some success, with a court jailing serial spammer Jeremy Jaynes for nine years in September after he despatched hundreds of thousands of junk e-mails daily from his North Carolina home.

The Top Ten Spammers
Last week, anti-spam firm Spamhaus released their list of the top ten networks responsible for delivering spam:
1. verizonbusiness.com
2. serverflo.com
3. sbc.com
4. xo.com
5. proxad.net
6. rr.com
7. tpnet.pl
8. edu.tw
9. hinet.net
10. ttnet.net.tr

Spam Soars With Nine Out Of Ten Emails Being JunkSpamhaus blames much of the problem on ISP’s who either fail to stop the spammers or do nothing to stop them through mismanagement or good old fashioned corporate greed.

The company also noted that around 80 percent of spam is generated by no more than 200 professional spam gangs, with the top ten spam bad boys including four Russians, two Americans and one each from Canada, Hong Kong, Israel and Ukraine.

Spam, spam, spam, spam… you’ve got mail [Suday Times]
Spamhaus
Postini

UK Web-rage Man Gets 2 Years Jail

UK Web-rage Man Gets 2 Years JailThe UK first case of Web-rage to go through the courts has reached sentencing.

Paul Gibbons, 47, of Bermondsey, south-east London has been handed a two year jail stretch.

It all started when Gibbons took an extreme dislike (to put it lightly) to some of the online discussion comments put forward to John Jones, 43, who lived in Essex. This grew to the point where Jones taunted Gibbons.

The normal course of events in this type of occasion, would be a flame war as the various parties attack each other over a series of posts – then, eventually it would fizzle out.

Not this time. Gibbons took such affront, that he gathered details online about John Jones’ address and went to pay him a visit, complete with a pickaxe handle and a friend with a machete.

UK Web-rage Man Gets 2 Years JailWhen Jones opened the door of his house – with a knife of his own, he was severely attacked.

There have been previous examples of people being attacked for online conflict. In China, one player of online game “Legend of Mir 3” killed another over a dispute over ownership of a virtual sword.

As Investigating Officer Det Sgt Jean-Marc Bazzoni of Essex Police said, “The dangers of giving personal information out in a chatroom environment must never be underestimated.”

(via)

CDex 1.70 Freeware CD To MP3 Conversion Software (80%)

CDex 1.70 Freeware CD To MP3 Conversion Software (80%)Although many media players offer the facility to burn MP3 music tracks, the job is often made unnecessarily complex by fiddly menus or hard to find options.

A compact 2.3MB download, the freeware CD Ripper looks to simplify the process of converting music CDs into MP3 tracks.

Although the interface isn’t the most intuitive we’ve ever some across, there’s some real power lurking underneath the no-nonsense program.

Running along the top of the program are a set of CD player controls underneath the usual drop down menus giving access to various settings and preferences.

CDex 1.70 Freeware CD To MP3 Conversion Software (80%)The configuration tab lets you can customise output file name formats, add files to playlists (PLS or MPU), change output file directories, choose your CD-ROM source drive, change the rip offsets and turn jitter correction on/off.

Under the encoder tab, you can set your preferred encoder, select the encoding bitrate, and set the mode to Stereo, Joint Stereo, Forced Stereo or Mono, with encoder options including Yamaha VQ, Microsoft WMA, Ogg Vorbis and a host of others we’d never heard of.

The main window is used to list the tracks to be burnt, with a set of icons running vertically along the right hand side of the program offering CD to WAV, CD to MPEG, Partial CD track to MPEG, WAV to MPEG and MPEG to WAV conversion options.

It has to be said that these icons aren’t the easiest to understand but at least hovering your mouse over them produces an explanatory text pop up.

Burn it up
Using CDex at the default settings is dead simple – shove a CD into your PC, load up CDex, select the tracks you want converted to MP3s, click on the “Extract CD Tracks To Compressed Audio files” button and sit back and let it do its stuff. Job done!

For those who like to have a little more control over the process, things can get a tad more complicated, with some of the menu options being a little vague.

For example, if you want to download individual track information for your CD tracks, you have to click on the ‘remote CDDB’ button (last but one button on the right hand menu) and so long as you’re connected to the internet, it’ll try and find the data from the freedb server.

CDex 1.70 Freeware CD To MP3 Conversion Software (80%)It’s a shame that the program makes no attempt to tell people what the chuffin’ heck ‘CDDB’ means (it stands for ‘CD Data Base’ ), and it took us a while to figure out how to set CDex up to automatically download the information (Options > Settings > Remote CDDB, select “Auto connect to remote CDDB” and include an email address).

You can also record sound files using your sound card via the Tools / Record Files menu, specifying where you want MP3 files stored on your PC, with a host of options letting you set folder naming conventions.

Conclusion
CDex is a simple, no-frills program for converting CDs to mp3s and vice versa, and it does the job with the minimum of fuss.

For users who just want to convert their CDs to MP3s without wading knee deep in menu options, it’s a great tool, and power users will appreciate the hands-on control that’s available in the advanced preferences.

However, complete newbies looking for big cartoon-like graphics and hand-holding wizards may find this program a little too fiddly for their tastes.

Despite its foibles, it’s long been our first choice for converting CDs to MP3 files – after all, it’s small, fast, simple and – best of all – it’s free! Why not give it a go too?

Features: 80%
Ease of use: 70%
Value For Money: 90%
Overall: 80%

CDexr

Aces Texas Hold’em – No Limit Poker Review (85%)

Aces Texas Hold'em - No Limit Review 85%If you fancy yourself as a bit of a Cool Hand Luke kind of character when it comes to gambling, then Texas Hold’Em No Limit poker is a great way to practice your skills when you’re on the move.

Available for the Palm OS, Blackberry, Pocket PC, Microsoft Smartphones and Java enabled mobiles, the game lets you take on up to 22 computerised opponents.

It’s played to the same rules as poker, except each player only gets two cards each, with five cards shared between all the players.

The artificial intelligence of the computer players is said to one of the best available on mobile gaming platforms, and we certainly came across some tough opponents (although we expect that our miserable poker skills wouldn’t challenge a BBC Micro version of the game, if such a thing existed).

Aces Texas Hold'em - No Limit Review 85%Interface
We tested the game on a Palm Treo 650, and it was easy to play the game one-handed, with all options available via the 5-way controller.

The animated, well polished interface showed three opponents at a time, scrolling left to right to show other players (there’s full support for all Palm screen sizes, from 160×160 up to 480×320 with horizontal display options).

Other players are represented by faces and names, and it’s simple to get stuck in with the betting action, with the interface making it easy to call, raise, fold or go ‘all in.’

Customising options
There’s plenty of customisation options on offer too, letting you set your cash levels and fine-tune your opponents’ names, faces, and skill levels, from ‘Dead Money’ through to ‘Hold ‘Em Pro.’

Fact fans will enjoy the Statistics screen showing details of hands played, hands won, folds, raises, tournament wins or, in our case, how many times we’d left the table without the shirt on our back.

Aces Texas Hold'em - No Limit Review 85%For the asking price of $20, this a great little game for passing away spare hours on the train (or perhaps wasting time at the office) and for poker fans it could prove a nifty way to hone your bluffing skills.

Despite our lamentable skills, we found it to be an entertaining, addictive and fun game and – dare we say it – we actually seemed to be getting better after a few hours play.

But perhaps we won’t be booking that plane to Las Vegas quite yet.

Features: 85%
Interface: 80%
Ease of use: 85%
Value For Money: 80%
Overall: 85%

Concrete Software

3 X-Series Launch: Analysis

3 X-Series Launch: Analysis3 has seriously stepped up the offerings for providing services to mobile handsets. Their new service, X-Series, offers viewing of your own TV using Orb and free voice calls using Skype.

The general data use will be flat-fee, or “all X-Series services will be free at the point of use, subject only to fair usage limits,” as Three puts it. Initially there will be an additional fee for the use of Slingbox and Orb.

Hutchison Whampoa, the owners of 3, haven’t been doing this all by themselves. The partner list is extensive including Skype, Sling Media, Yahoo, Nokia, Google, EBay, Microsoft’s MSN, Orb and Sony Ericsson.

The service is launching in the UK on 1st December, with Three’s other markets (Italy, Australia, Austria, Denmark, Hong Kong, Israel, Ireland and Sweden) during 2007.

The service will launch with two handsets supporting all of the features, the Nokia N73 and the Sony Ericsson W950i

3 X-Series Launch: AnalysisComment
Three are playing to their strengths. They and their network know how to shift data around – they’ve been pushing video (the most dense use of data) on their networks commercially for over two years. As Frank Sixt, Group Finance Director of Hutchison Whampoa, said, “This is why we created 3, and what our network was designed to deliver.”

3 have taken a number of applications that have been available to the technically aware for some time, but cleverly brought them together into a single package that all consumers should be able to understand.

It’s companies like Hutchison Whampoa that start moving industries. Significant innovation within the mobile business has been static for a long time, with only small changes to their offerings. There’s been a near unanimous ignoring of VoIP services running over networks – not surprising really when it would remove a significant source of income for them.

3 X-Series Launch: AnalysisThere will be repercussions – not least from the TV companies who really don’t like the idea that people can watch their TV when they’re on the move. To be precise it’s the fact that they don’t make any money out of it, is the bit they don’t like.

Phrase Spotting – Mobile broadband – the second time we’ve heard that phrase in as many days. We wonder if Orange had heard what 3 would be announcing and decided to scoop them on the first usage.

Three X-Series

Orange Expand Mobile BBC World Deal To 8 Countries

The BBC is expanding its distribution with Orange to take its international news service, BBC World, to Orange mobile phones in eight countries.

The live stream of BBC World has been available on Orange mobiles in France for the past two years, so given this background it make sense for Orange to want to expand the coverage. They’re taking it to quite an assortment of countries – Belgium, Poland, the Netherlands, Romania, Portugal, Jordan, Egypt and the Dominican Republic.

The live streams will be distributed over either 3G or EDGE to what they’re calling “mobile broadband customers,” (first time we’ve heard Orange use the term before).

We spoke to Gerry Ritchie, BBC World’s Regional Director and Business Development, Europe, Middle East, South Asia, Americas (A title that would at one time have been an anathema – BizDev … at the BBC!) about the deal.

Gerry said that in the time that they’ve been doing video to mobiles, they’ve come to realise that ‘made for’ packages (edited summaries) don’t really work. When people hear about an event, they “turn to BBC World for immediate coverage, so even a 10 minute editing delay won’t work. People place trust in the BBC brand, as it is known for the quality of its reporting, not just getting the news there first, but making sure it’s accurate.”

BBC World is held within the commercial arm of the BBC, so Orange are paying the BBC for the privilege of showing it to their subscribers. Gerry wouldn’t give specific details of deal, but we did learn that they don’t do deals on the number of streams that are watched.

The deal isn’t on an exclusive basis, as the BBC want to get their content distributed as widely as they can, but clearly Orange will have a major advantage in being the first mover.

BBC World has already been highly successful in getting its content distributed around the world, including 46 cruise liners, 36 airlines and 26 mobile phone platforms.

BBC World

Handmark Announces Zagat To Go v5.0

Handmark Announces Zagat To Go v5.0Handmark have released the latest version of their consumer survey-based dining, travel and leisure information program, Zagat To Go v5.0.

Included in the new version are hotel, resort and spa guide listings as well as a guide to America’s top golf courses, along with updated restaurant listings for smartphones.

Offering automated wireless content and rating updates, Zagat comes with detailed street-level maps, and can provide turn-by-turn driving directions on the user’s handheld.

Clearly going for the caddy-dragging, business travelling set, Zagat are making a big ho-hah about their Top Golf Course guide, which is based on the opinions of nearly 6,000 ditchwater-dull golf bores keen sportsmen..

Handmark Announces Zagat To Go v5.0The program now carries survey rankings for over 25,000 restaurants and nightspots in 70+ cities, with automatic free content updates.

“Zagat To Go v5.0 will help travellers find hotels, restaurants, golf courses and other entertainment destinations – along with qualified recommendations – while on the move,” enthused Tim Zagat, co-founder of Zagat Survey.

“Today’s consumers rely more than ever on their mobile phones for restaurant and hotel information. Handmark is proud to continue our long-standing relationship with Zagat to provide the latest survey findings on the Treo, BlackBerry, motorola Q and other Windows Mobile handhelds,” bubbled Douglas Edwards, Handmark co-founder and executive vice president.

Handmark Announces Zagat To Go v5.0Zagat To Go v5.0 is available for the Palm OS, BlackBerry, motorola Q and other Windows Mobile Pocket PCs and Smartphone platforms and comes as free upgrade for existing customers forking out the $29.95 yearly subscription fee.

mobile.zagat.com.