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  • Annual Global Mobile Shipments To Reach 1.5 billion By 2011

    Annual Global Mobile Shipments To Reach 1.5 billion By 2011Global sales of handsets are set to reach 1.5 billion in five years, according to a new report by IT research firm Analysys.

    The “Evolution of Mobile Handsets to 2011 and Beyond” study forecasts that mobiles will evolve into three broad categories, comprising voice-centric, converged-function and specialist handsets.

    After imbibing deeply on a large bowl of buzzwords, report author Dr Yanli Suo-Saunders exploded into a frenzy of tech-speak, “The handset market is transforming as traditional voice-centric devices diversify with the incorporation of a range of multimedia functions.”

    “Future handsets will develop into voice-centric, converged-function and specialist categories, driven by increasingly segmented consumer demand,” he continued, as we grappled to sync up with his mindshare paradigm shift.

    The good doctor reckoned that voice-centric handsets will remain the largest single product category in emerging markets; while developed economies will see converged-function and specialist handsets taking the lead in 2011.

    Annual Global Mobile Shipments To Reach 1.5 billion By 2011Ball rubbing
    After giving their crystal ball a good rub, the report authors predicted that annual global handset shipments will reach 1.5 billion in 2011 – up from just over 800 million in 2005 – while voice-centric handsets will still make up more than half of shipments in emerging markets in 2011.

    Converged-function handsets look set to become a mainstream product in developed markets by 2011, hogging over 30% of the market, with a range of specialist handsets looking to be the biggest sellers in the majority of developed economies by the same time period.

    Analysys

  • Live Traffic Updates Added To Google Maps For Mobile

    Live Traffic Updates Added To Google Maps For MobileThe ever-expanding selection of Google features just grew by one as they announce that they’re providing Live Traffic updates to mobile phones in 30 US cities and partial information in many others.

    The traffic-concious will be able to fire their mobile phones up, look at Google Maps For Mobile (or GMM as those in the trade call it) and see the masses of traffic jams appear before their very eyes.

    The most up-to-date traffic information will be sent directly to the users’ call phone, showing the severity of the delays on commuter routes using red, yellow, and green overlays. The amount of time the travelers are likely to be delayed is also shown on the mobile.

    Live Traffic Updates Added To Google Maps For MobileGoogle are slightly playing catchup with Yahoo on this one, as they been plotting live traffic on Yahoo Maps since March 2005.

    Back in November 2005 we broke the story about the existence of GPS-using code in Google Local For Mobile, but this has yet to be officially enabled.

    Live Traffic Updates Added To Google Maps For MobileOn the back of the Mobile Maps news, Google also announced that users now have the ability to customize the content that appears on the mobile version of their Personalized Homepage, making it even easier for mobile phone users to quickly get the information they need when away from their computers.

    Google Maps For Mobile

  • Brits Love Affair With Mobiles Continues

    Brits Love Affair With Mobiles ContinuesIn the largest UK study of its kind, the Mobile Life Report has revealed our attitudes towards mobile phones and how they have impacted on our lives, with more than 90% of UK mobile users saying they can’t get through the day without using their phone.

    More than 16,500 people were surveyed for the report, which was published by The Carphone Warehouse in collaboration with the London School of Economics.

    Text-tastic
    The report revealed that the British love affair with texting is still in full flow, with people sending an average 3.6 mobile text messages a day compared with 2.8 voice calls a day.

    Not surprisingly, it’s amongst da yoot that texting is the most popular with 51% of 18-24 year-olds sending/receiving at least six text messages a day, but with only 15% troubling themselves to have six or more mobile phone conversations a day.

    Better than the tele
    In the same 18-24 years old age bracket, mobile phones were declared to be more important than television (26% to 11%), with the figure jumping to 32% for women in the same age group.

    Thievery
    Mobiles continue to be hugely popular with muggers/thieves, with nearly one in ten people (9%) reporting that they’ve had a mobile phone stolen.

    Not unexpectedly, 18 to 24 year olds were found to be at the most at risk, with 17% of women in that age group having had their phone purloined compared with 10% of men.

    Citizen journalism
    People were also found to be ready and willing to use their camera phones to record evidence of a crime (50%), or to snap a crime in progress (47%), with more than a third (36%) saying that they’d use their mobiles to grab a mugshot of a passing celebrity or newsworthy event.

    Sex and mobiles
    With a keen eye to garnering some press in the tabloids, the research bothered to ask about ‘relationships and mobiles’.

    Brits Love Affair With Mobiles ContinuesLord knows why people bothered to answer these questions, but the survey found that a quarter of people bothered to disconnect their mobiles before indulging in a bit of hanky panky, with 11% switching them to silent (writer resists cheap joke about vibra-alerts) and 14% turning their phones off altogether.

    The study also found that phones could be used to ward off unwelcome suitors, with over half of women under 25 admitting to getting out their mobiles in public situations to deter people from approaching them.

    Tribes
    For reasons best know to itself, the study also identified six tribes or groups of mobile phone users.

    These are:

    Generation Mobile – single, style conscious, 18-24 year olds who are students or working in their first jobs

    Phonatics – single, employed folks aged 18-34 who elevate their mobile into being their most important electronic possession.

    Practical Parents – young, cost-conscious families aged 18-34 who choose their mobiles for practical rather than style or function.

    Smart Connecteds – affluent families and professionals aged 25-44 who use their mobile to organise their hectic work and social lives.

    Fingers & Thumbs – married, middle-aged or retired folks with children or grandchildren.

    Silver Cynics – affluent, married with children rapidly heading for retirement.

    Mobile Life Report

  • Europe Goes Nuts For Nokias, While The US Trumpets The Treo

    Europe Goes Nuts For Nokias, While The US Trumpets The TreoAccording to figures compiled by mmetrics.com, a research firm who strut around in the exciting world of mobile market measurement, when it comes to mobile phones there’s a hefty transatlantic gulf in smartphone tastes.

    In Europe, Nokias are the reigning kings and queens of the smartphone world, enjoying total top three domination in the big French, German and UK markets, while in the US the top two slots are held by the Palm Treo 650, with the Blackberry 7530 trailing in third.

    The figures were based on a three month moving average up to the end of May 2006, with an impressively large number of subscribers surveyed (12,631 in France, 15,122 in Germany, 14,913 in UK and just under 34,000 in the States).

    Europe Goes Nuts For Nokias, While The US Trumpets The TreoFrench say “Nous aimons Nokia”
    Breaking the figures down per country, it seems that the French are keen to say ‘oui’ to the Nokia 6680, with an estimated 374,477 subscribers.

    Coming in second was the Nokia 6630 with 287,723 subscribers and the Nokia 6600 bringing up the rear with 98,122 subscribers.

    Europe Goes Nuts For Nokias, While The US Trumpets The Treo“Ja ist Nokia gut,” say Germans
    It’s also a case of Nokia Über Alles in Deutschland, with the Nokia 6630 ratcheting up 278,818 subscribers, followed by the 6600 (250,682) and the 7650 (237,449).

    Brits go waheey for the N70
    In the UK, the smartphone of choice is the N70 with 471,874 subcribers, followed by the Nokia 6680 (433,405) and the Nokia 6630 (341,718).

    Europe Goes Nuts For Nokias, While The US Trumpets The TreoAmericans go ape for Palm
    When it comes to the land of hotdogs, mad presidents and fevered flag waving, it’s an entirely different story with the trusty Palm Treo crushing all before it and ne’er a single Nokia making the top three.

    The Treo 650 CDMA smart phone is by far the most popular smartphone with over half a million subscribers (573,660), with the GSM version coming in second with 269,053 users. In third place is the trusty Blackberry 7520 with 267, 912 users.

    Mmetrics

  • Samsung P200 Releases:First Unlicensed Mobile Access Handset

    Samsung Releases P200 Unlicensed Mobile Access HandsetYeah, we know: it’s another ruddy phone from Samsung who seem to have a new mobile on the market every tea break, but this one is actually a bit different – honest!

    In fact, their shiny new SGH-P200 handset has the honour of being the world’s first commercially available UMA (Unlicensed Mobile Access) mobile phone.

    This new fangled UMA technology lets roaming types enjoy seamless handovers between cellular networks and fixed IP networks (that’s Wi-Fi hotspots to you and me) while the user is on the move.

    This means the Samsung P200 can freely switch between GSM, GPRS, EDGE and wireless LAN networks (Wi-Fi), letting users take advantage of high-speed (and often free) voice and data communication where available.

    Compare this to the current breed of Wi-Fi-only phones where users have to stay lurking within wireless zones or risk losing their connection.

    Samsung Releases P200 Unlicensed Mobile Access HandsetThe phone itself looks much like the usual fare from the overactive designers at Samsung, featuring a familiar slide-out design and mean, all-black finish.

    It’s a fully featured handset too, with a 1.3 mega pixel camera, 1.9 inch 176 x 220px 262K colour TFT screen, picture messaging (MMS), a camcorder and 80MB of embedded memory.

    The P200 also comes with a music player for MP3 / AAC / ACC+ files, a MPEG4 / H.263 video player and file viewer functions, but, curiously enough, no Bluetooth (or IR for that matter).

    The phone is first being released in Italy with the rest of Europe to follow soon.

    Samsung Releases P200 Unlicensed Mobile Access HandsetSpecifications
    Connectivity: GSM / GRPS / EDGE; UMA, WiFi (802.11 b/g)
    Camera: 1.3-Megapixel Camera with Flash
    Display: 1.9-inch 176 x 220 px 262K-Color TFT
    Features:
    – Video Playing (MPEG4 / H.263)
    – Music Player (MP3 / AAC / ACC+)
    – Pictbridge, USB
    – Document Viewer
    Memory: 80 MB embedded
    Size: 95 x 44 x 22.5 mm
    Weight: 95g

    Samsung

  • T-Mobile Adds Microsoft Push Email To Web’n’Walk

    T-Mobile Adds Microsoft Push Email To Web'n'WalkT-Mobile is the latest UK mobile service provider to offer its mobile customers Windows Push Email.

    The Push Email service is compatible with Microsoft Windows 5.0 devices, which include the MDA Pro, MDA Vario, and MDA Compact handsets carried by T-Mobile.

    The system – as the name suggests – works by ‘pushing’ email straight to the user’s portable device from their businesses Exchange Server, and then notifying them that there’s a message in their pocket.

    Just like the cost to the little boy in the ghastly Melba Montgomery song, there will be ‘no charge’ for the new service for business users already on the web’n’walk professional tariff.

    T-Mobile Adds Microsoft Push Email To Web'n'WalkThis certainly adds extra value to the T-Mobile package, which currently costs £17 a month, or £8.50 when added to Flext, Relax, or Business 1-Plan contracts.

    The Microsoft Push Email service comes stuffed with security measures for businesses, including centrally controlled password protection, local data wipe, and a remote data wipe feature to clear devices of company-sensitive data if they get in the hands of ne’er do wells, rogues and robbers.

    T-Mobile Adds Microsoft Push Email To Web'n'WalkFor added security and convenience (in case you’re a bit forgetful/half-cut), the wipe feature lets owners decide how many incorrect logon attempts can be tried before the phone shuts up shop.

    Working over GPRS, 3G and Wi-Fi, T-Mobile’s push email service also offers integration with Microsoft Outlook, letting swivel-action besuited types synchronise tasks and search for contacts on the move.

    T Mobile

  • Spam, Spim And Splog Spins Out Of Control

    Spam, Spim And Splog Spins Out Of ControlSteeenkin’ spammers are increasingly turning their evil gaze in the direction of SMS, Web-based instant messaging, bloggers and community sites like MySpace.com, according to MessageLabs.

    The mail services company said that spammers are looking to bypass e-mail-based antispam measures by targeting spam on “age, location and other characteristics.”

    Mark Sunner, chief technical officer at MessageLabs, warned that social-networking sites offer spammers a “new level of convergence and capability to profile people.”

    The company also noted an increase in IM spam (“spim”), with spammers sending just a hyperlink, which can direct users lead to a malicious site, or a phishing site.

    “We expect more cross-fertilisation of (malicious software) as Yahoo, MSN and Google become one big blob, from an IM standpoint,” Sunner added.

    Spam, Spim And Splog Spins Out Of ControlMessageLabs reported that spam mail soared a hefty 6.9% in June to make up a massive 64.8% of all global emails sent that month.

    Geographically, Israel continues to be the world’s number one spam target, with spam making up a colossal 75.9% of the country’s email traffic, up 11.9% since May.

    Ireland was hit by the greatest monthly rise, with spam increasing by 14.1% to make up a spam rate of 59.4%, while Spain saw the sharpest fall, with lucky Spaniards only suffering spam at 24.8% of all emails.

    Jargon watch
    Splog: Blogging spam
    Spim: Instant Messaging spam

    MessageLabs

  • Virgin First With Mobile TV

    Virgin First With Mobile TVVirgin Mobile looks set to launch the UK’s first true mobile broadcast TV service in the autumn, with the beardy one’s empire releasing a rebadged version of BT’s Movio product.

    A recent big pilot of BT’s broadcast digital TV to mobile service revealed that punters *hearted* the service with two thirds willing to fork out up to £8 per month to have the service on their network.

    BT Movio – formerly known as BT Livetime – broadcasts on the same frequencies as the digital audio broadcasting (DAB) network radio, but does a bit of techie jiggery-pokery to let multiple users access the service simultaneously without a reduction in quality.

    Earlier offerings of mobile TV in the UK streamed the signal as Internet protocol (IP) packets, a method which burnt up bandwidth like it was going out of fashion, leaving users with fat bills or having to put up with a capped service.

    Virgin First With Mobile TVMovio uses a system known as DAB-IP, which has emerged ahead of the rival technology, DVB-H, because the required radio spectrum is already available.

    Although DVB-H should be able to offer more channels than DAB-IP, there are question marks over a timetable for its availability in the UK.

    Virgin First With Mobile TVExclusive
    Virgin’s new deal with BT is expected to include a three month period of exclusivity, with Movio content providers announced within the next four weeks.

    Hipsters wanting to be the first in town to use the service will have to fork out for a new WM5 phone based on HTC’s Trilogy design.

    The curious looking phone has been co-designed by BT and UK company The Technology Partnership and will form part of Virgin’s Lobster range of mobiles.

  • Why We Still Love The Palm Treo (Pt 2)

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2Following on from Part One, published last week.

    The design
    As its rivals continue their crash diets and squeeze into ever-smaller designs, there’s no doubt that the Treo’s beginning to look like a bit of a lardy boy these days (although it’s by no means the biggest smartphone out there).

    Of course, one of the problems with smartphones is that if you try and shrink them too much, usability flies out of the window.

    Smartphones, by definition, need a big bright screen to fit all the information in (and at 320 x 320 pixels, the Treo’s got one of the largest displays around) and there’s a human limit to how small you can make a keyboard.

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2Keyboards. Soft vs hard (ooo-er)
    Some smartphone makers have tried to get around this limitation by getting rid of the keyboard altogether and using an onscreen ‘soft’ keyboard instead.

    Although this allows designers to make super-small smartphones, the lack of a proper keyboard is – to quote Clint Eastwood – some price to pay for being stylish.

    Soft keyboards are absolutely horrible to use. Apart from the fact that your screen rapidly turns into a smudgy mess, they’re simply not as effective as a proper hardware keyboard, and after using both, we’d certainly never again invest in a smartphone without a proper keypad.

    Other features
    Despite its ‘built for comfort’ shape, the Treo still feels pretty good in the hand, with some of the best ergonomics around – changing the SIM card, for example is an absolute breeze compared to most phones (just use the slide out tray, accessible from the top of the phone), and it’s the same story for the SD card.

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2Volume controls are where they should be – on the side of the phone – and muting the phone entirely is simply a case of sliding a switch in the top of the phone, a feature that is inexcusably absent in almost every other phone.

    It’s not all good though, with the Palm designers needlessly forcing users to take off the back of the phone whenever a reset is needed.

    And then there’s that great, chunky monolith of an antenna that’s bolted on to the phone. Funnily enough, it seems that most Americans actually like antennas on their handsets, but we can’t say we’re too keen.

    The phone bit
    Of course, pretty looks and bright screens are one thing, but it’s how the thing works as a phone that matters most and here’s where the Treo excels.

    When someone new calls you up, a great big button comes onscreen at the end of the call asking you if you want to add the number in your phonebook. Simple. Straightforward. Obvious.

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2If you want to switch to the speakerphone during a call, just press the ruddy great onscreen ‘speakerphone’ icon. No holding down keys, no shuffling about in sub-menus or fiddling about with switches like a Windows phone.

    If you want to see who’s called you, just press the green call button twice and a list of calls comes up.

    As you scroll down the list, context sensitive buttons appear, asking if you’d like to add the unknown numbers to your contacts, or if you’d like to send a SMS message to known contacts.

    Click on a name and it calls them. Click on ‘call log’ and you’ll get a comprehensive listing of every phone call you’ve made, categorised into ‘incoming,’ ‘missed’ and ‘outgoing.’

    If you want to find out more, click on ‘details’ and you’ll get the exact time and duration of the call.

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2Looking someone up in the address book is just as simple – just type in their initials and you’ll go straight to their entry.

    The whole phone is designed for effortless one handed operation, meaning you can use the phone on the move while most Windows Mobile users will be left reaching for their itty-bitty stylus or fiddling about with slide-out keyboards or ‘soft’ onscreen keyboards.

    Get ’em quick before they go!
    Note: since we started this piece, Palm have announced that there will be no further European shipments of Treo 650s as the phone breaches new EU regulations.

    However, the company claims that it has already sent enough Treo 650s to meet demand for now, although US users can already indulge themselves with the newly released Treo 700p offering EVDO.

    Why We Still Love The Palm Treo, Pt 2Palm has said that its next Treo smartphone will be targeted at European markets, although it appears that it won’t be a GSM/UTMS version of the 700p.

    Instead, Palm are rumoured to be developing an antenna-less Treo for the European market, possibly to be called the Treo Nitro (thanks to the valued reader who pointed this out to us – you know who you are).

    Palm CEO Ed Colligan has suggested that the new model is unlikely to become available until Palm’s 2nd Quarter in FY 2007 (around October – December 2006).

    Readers sufficiently enthused by our comments should look on eBay where there are ample new and reconditioned Treo 650’s available for between £170-£280 (that’s where we got ours from!).

    Coming up in part three: Palm Treo multimedia and office apps.

  • KTF SPH-V9900 Ultra Slim Mobile Is World’s Thinnest

    KTF SPH-V9900 Ultra Slim Mobile Is World's ThinnestThinner than a very thin thing on a crash diet, KTF’s new ultra-slim SPH-V9900 looks set to grab the crown as the World’s Thinnest Mobile.

    Measuring a pencil-thin 6.9mm wide, this really is a tiny puppy and it looks pretty desirable – and practical too.

    Unlike the lipstick-sized KTF EV-K130 phone we featured earlier this week, this phone actually looks like it can be used by people with fingers bigger than chop sticks.

    Styled like a conventional phone from the front, the V9900 measures up at 113 x 50 x 6.9mm and weighs just 63g.

    KTF SPH-V9900 Ultra Slim Mobile Is World's ThinnestThe front of the phone is dominated by a sizeable 1.9″ 262k TFT LCD display, with a familiar keypad design below.

    Flipping the camera over, there’s a 2.0 megapixel camera module at the top, with a teensy lens lurking in a raised piece of casing.

    There’s also an MP3 player wedged into its super lithe frame, with 128MB of onboard memory for storing tunes and photos.

    KTF SPH-V9900 Ultra Slim Mobile Is World's ThinnestWe’re still battling with the Korean translation, but we don’t think there’s any kind of memory expansion on board, which is a bit of a shame (but we guess you can’t have it all with a phone this slim!).

    We’ve no idea about pricing on European availability yet, but this phone looks like an absolute winner to our eyes – so long as you don’t sit on the thing, of course.

    V9900