Mobile Archives

Engadget reports that they have received a flood of tips stating that Verizon to offer unlimited voice, data, and messaging packages. It is reported that starting Tuesday, February 19th the following plans should be available:

  • $100 – Nationwide Unlimited (voice)
  • $120 – Nationwide Select Unlimited (voice, SMS, MMS)
  • $140 – Nationwide Premium (voice, SMS, MMS, VZNav, VCAST, email)
  • $150 – Nationwide Email and Messaging (voice, SMS, MMS, and data)
  • $170 – Nationwide Global Email and Messaging (voice, SMS, MMS, and international data)
  • $200 – Family plan with two lines, $100 per additional line

Additionally, the sources at Engadget claim that premium paying subscribers will also receive the following additional perks:

  • The 5GB cap on data will be lifted
  • The plans will be available on one or two year agreements
  • There will not be a contract extension for current customers
  • All plans include mobile Web 2.0 portal access
  • No roaming or long distance charges


Mobile phone users will now be able to project videos, photos, games, give business presentations, video conference, or anything else that they want onto a 10-20 inch surface using a mini-projector developed by Samsung. The Samsung mini-projector is expected to hit the market as early as the Q2, 2008.

Samsung mini-projector

Source: fareastgizmos.com


Mark reports that Device Profile #5 is now available for download. This update features the first Flash Lite 3.0 devices available in the market.

An important note: before downloading Update #5, you must first download and install the Flash Lite 3 Update for Device Central CS3 and for Flash CS3 Professional (2 separate updates).

New Device Profiles:
  • DocoMo Fujitsu F905i
  • DocoMo LG L704i
  • DocoMo Mitshubishi D905i
  • DocoMo NEC N905i
  • DocoMo NEC N905i?
  • DocoMo Panasonic P905i
  • DocoMo Sharp SH905i
  • DocoMo Sony Ericsson SO905i
  • KDDI Casio Hitachi W53H
  • KDDI Kyocera W44KII camera-less
  • KDDI Kyocera W53K
  • KDDI Sony Ericsson W53S
  • KDDI Toshiba A5529T
  • KDDI Toshiba W55T
  • KDDI Tottori Sanyo W55SA
  • Nokia 5310
  • Nokia 5610
  • Nokia 6120 classic
  • Nokia 6121 classic
  • Nokia 6126
  • Nokia 6136
  • Nokia 6301
  • Nokia 6500 classic
  • Nokia 6500 slide
  • Nokia 7373
  • Nokia 7500
  • Nokia 7900
  • Nokia E51
  • Nokia N82
  • Nokia N95 8GB
  • Sony Ericsson K858c
  • Sony Ericsson W908c
  • Sony Ericsson K770i
  • Sony Ericsson K630i
  • Softbank Panasonic 820P
  • Softbank Sharp 820SH
  • Softbank Sharp 821P
  • Softbank Sharp 821SH
  • Softbank Sharp 822SH
  • Softbank Sharp 920SH
  • Softbank Toshiba 920T
Expanded/Improved Device Profiles:
  • LG KS10
  • Nokia 3109
  • Nokia 3110
  • Nokia 3250
  • Nokia 3500
  • Nokia 5200
  • Nokia 5300
  • Nokia 6085
  • Nokia 6267
  • Nokia 6290
  • Nokia 6300
  • Nokia 7390
  • Nokia 8800
  • Nokia E90
  • Nokia N76
  • Nokia N95
  • Sony Ericsson K850i
  • Sony Ericsson W910i
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 16 240×320
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 16 320×240
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 16 480×640
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 16 640×480
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 32 240×320
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 32 320×240
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 32 480×640
  • Generic Flash Lite 3.0 32 640×480


I often hear people asking about ways to project the screen of a mobile phone to a PC during presentations, so I decided to compile a short list of mobile phone to PC projector options. If you have any experience with mobile to PC projectors, please post a short comment.

The four discussed here are:

mobilola.gif rs60camera.gif screenshot_s60_3rd.gif project-a-phone1.gif
Mobilola Remote S60 Screenshot Project-a-Phone

I personally use Mobilola Remote Control by Warelex ($35 USD). It’s a C++ app that works with Symbian S60v2 and S60v3 phones. I have been using it through an emulated WinXP (via Parallels on my Mac laptop) and it’s still really snappy. It also was extremely easy to set up. A few of the Mobilola Remote Control features are:

  • Shows your phone screen on your PC
  • Option to fully control your phone via PC
  • Zoom in/out
  • Full screen presentation option
  • Snapshot
  • Video recording
  • Works over Bluetooth or USB
  • Demo your phone through Skype Video and record YouTube video presentations directly to YouTube with webcam driver functionality

Remote S60 Professional ($30 USD) by MobileWays is a similar tool. I have not personally used this tool, but I hear that it works very well.

If all you need is a single frame capture solution, then you should give Screenshot a try (if the link fails, then refresh your browser—I have noticed a problem with their servers). Screenshot for Symbian OS is a FREE program to take screenshot on your Symbian OS mobile phones (UIQ or S60). You can capture screenshot and save it to a file in JPEG, PNG, BMP or MBM format. The screenshot can be sent directly to a PC via Bluetooth or infrared and another mobile phone. It also supports continuous mode that allows you to capture screenshot every a few seconds.

If your looking for a hardware option, I have heard great things about Project-a-Phone ($295 USD).


World's Largest PDA DatabaseI stumbled across the self-proclaimed “World’s Largest PDA Database,” and as soon as I did I thought, “I can finally get a tally of how many Windows Mobile 2002, 2003 or 5.0 devices are on the market!” In total I found 584 devices. Unfortunately, however, there is no data on the penetration of these devices.

Why is this important? Adobe offers installers for Flash Lite 2.1 for Windows Mobile 5.0, Flash Player 7 for Pocket PC 2003, and the Flash Player 6 for Windows Mobile 2002. Although this does not have the mass market appeal of Verizon Wireless, it is certainly notable.

Flash is pre-installed on:

  • 70 Nokia Phones (includes N96)
  • 58 Sony Ericsson Phones
  • 13 BREW Phones
  • 6 Sony CLIE PDAs
  • All NTT Docomo handsets
  • All KDDI handsets

Flash can be installed on:

  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Phone Edition (166)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Premium Edition (52)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Professional Edition (10)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 for Smartphone (61)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition (25)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Premium Edition (54)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Professional Edition (6)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone (11)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC Phone Edition (57)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC Premium Edition (41)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC Professional Edition (4)
  • Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Smartphone (35)
  • Microsoft Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition (20)
  • Microsoft Pocket PC 2002 Premium Edition (33)
  • Microsoft Pocket PC 2002 Professional Edition (2)
  • Microsoft Smartphone 2002 (7)

Note from Adobe.com:

Note: This version of Flash Player is for the individual use of developers of Pocket PC devices. For more information about Adobe’s Flash Player distribution policy read the FAQ.

When you download the free player, it is provided “as-is”—which means that Adobe will support it only for Windows Mobile 5 and Pocket PC 2003 OS devices through available online resources on our website. If you experience any problems for non-certified devices, you should discuss them with other developers in various forums.

The World’s Largest Handheld Database


Nokia Germany has posted the N96 specs. There are still no official images, but I imagine that it will be similar to the N95. The most notable visual changes will be the size; the N96 is slightly longer and wider, but .7 inches thinner than the N95. No official release date as of yet.

Nokia N96

  • Quadband EDGE
  • Dualband HSDPA 850/2100 MHz
  • DVB-H Class C
  • 92 cc volume
  • 125 gram weight
  • 103 x 55 x 18 mm
  • 16 GB internal memory AND a microSD slot; 24 GB total if you spend an extra $80
  • 950 mAh battery
  • 6.1 cm (2.8 inch) 320×240 display with 16 million colors
  • 3.5 mm headphone jack
  • WiFi (802.11b/g)
  • AGPS
  • 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss lens that also does VGA video recording at 30 FPS
  • Dual LED flash that can also be used when video recording
  • S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 (Flash Lite 3 enabled web browser included)
  • microUSB

Via [IntoMobile] and [Nokia]


As a resident of the United States, I’ve longed for the latest mobile phones from Japan, Korea, and other more “tech-fortunate” countries throughout APAC and Europe. I live in arguably the most powerful industrialized nation on the planet, and yet I still can’t video chat from mobile to mobile like they do in Japan. My free-phone-with-a-two-year-commitment doesn’t come with a QR Code™ reader pre-installed. And, let’s be honest, most entry level phones in the States don’t even include Bluetooth or a 1.3 megapixel camera. Until recently, I was convinced that the U.S. mobile market is behind the times.

So what gives?

Very recently, a number of studies have surfaced leading me to think that maybe, just maybe, things aren’t so bad on this side of the pond. For example, according to the CTIA in Wireless Wave Fall 2007 – A Continental Idea:

[..] earlier this year Merrill Lynch reported that Europeans still pay an average of 19¢ per minute for an average of 153 minutes a month, compared to 5¢ per minute for 834 minutes a month for customers in the U.S. The U.S. is the leader in offering bucket plans, driven by competitive market forces to offer more minutes at a lower effective rate.

3G penetration stats are looking up, too. According to industry analyst Chetan Sharma, President of Chetan Sharma Consulting, “Because of the heavy penetration of the Internet over the desktop, as well as the late advent of 3G in the market, there was not a big driver for mobile Internet until the last one or two years. As 3G penetration has been increasing[,] now we’re up to 15 to 16 percent penetration (in the U.S.).”

M:Metrics — which conducts an on-going survey of thousands of wireless customers in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the UK, and the U.S. — recently found that a slightly higher percentage of U.S. consumers browse wirelessly for news and information than their European counterparts.

The study also shows that the U.S. is at the top in average number of minutes used per month at 832 (Canada, the number two country, averages 429 minutes). The country with the lowest average revenue per minute — a measure of the effective price per voice minute — is again the U.S. at $0.04 USD (South Korea and Mexico are tied for the number two spot at $0.11 USD). And finally, the number of wireless carriers with over one million subscribers is the largest in the U.S. at 10 companies. The country with the next highest number is the England.

My conclusion? Maybe it’s true that the grass is always greener on the other side.


Bill Perry (Mobile evangelist for Adobe) has just posted the Flash Lite install base forecasts for 2008 from the Strategy Analytics Flash-Enabled Handset Forecast from January 4, 2008. The forecast includes the installed base of Flash Lite devices by Region, Country and Version. Bill’s PDF highlighting the 91% Global Growth of Flash Lite in 2007 can be downloaded here.

Worldwide, the totals for 2008 add up to: 461,733,000 mobile devices with Flash Lite pre-installed.

blog_flforecast.jpg

The score card for 2008 reads:
1. APAC – 154,761,000
2. Western Europe – 107,832,000
3. Japan – 77,603,000
4. Americas – 64,561,000
5. CALA – 32,024,000
6. Central Europe – 24,952,000

What are the biggest surprises?
I truly did not expect the Flash Lite 2.x numbers to be so high. Adobe is forecasting that in 2008 the Americas and Western Europe will have higher Flash Lite 2.0 or 2.1 adoption than 1.1! Despite this, Flash Lite 1.1 will still most likely stay the obvious standard.

I am very excited to see that the Americas are so close in numbers to Japan. Additionally, they have more than double the numbers of Central America, Latin America, and Central Europe. It’s no surprise that Western Europe and APAC still top the charts.

What does this all mean?
As companies like Verizon continue to grow with Flash Lite, consumer adoption rates will no doubt go up as well. As a full service mobile marketing firm that is passionate about mobile and pushing the medium forward, we can continue to pursue Flash Lite development with our clients—knowing that one day in the near future it will become the mobile standard of third party development.

We have been working commercially with Flash Lite for some time. Our projects have ranged from oem user interface development, to consumer content such as custom applications and games. We couldn’t be happier about the news.

blog_fldevicesall.jpg


Cameron Moll has just finished and released his book, Mobile Web Design.

Much has been written about mobile devices. Plenty has been written about developing websites for the so-called “standards era” of the web. However, little has been written about the two colliding. This resource aims to fill that void.

As a reviewer of the book, and more specifically the Flash Lite section, I have had a chance to read through the entire book and it is really a great piece of writing. It is certainly not written for the mobile Web expert, but rather, it speaks perfectly to anyone in a position to develop for, manage, or give advice regarding your organizations foray into a web strategy for mobile devices.

PDF copies can be purchased for $19. Well worth it for anyone interested in the mobile space. You can also download a preview sample.
Mobile Web Design


Via the Associated Press:

AP—— The teenage hacker who found a way to unlock the iPhone so that the device would not be restricted to use solely on AT&T Inc.’s cellular networks will be trading his reworked gadget for a new car.

George Hotz, of Glen Rock, N.J., said he had reached the deal with CertiCell, a Louisville, Ky.-based mobile phone repair company.

Hotz posted on his blog that he traded his modified iPhone for a “sweet Nissan 350Z and (three) iPhones.”

Full story
George Hotz
CertiCell

Learn more about Punchkick Interactive’s iPhone software development capabilities.


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Apple Updates Apple Store App…Lets Store Customers Check-In
—October 26, 2010,

This new update allows Apple Store customers the ability to check in for reservations and request help within stores. Link to Apple Store app: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/apple-store/id375380948?mt=8

Punchkick Interactive to Launch Mobile-Web Initiative for ASPCA
—August 4, 2009,

Punchkick Interactive®, a Chicago-based mobile marketing company, today announced the signing of its newest client, the ASPCA® (The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals®), the oldest animal welfare organization in the United States.

Junior Interactive Designer
—June 30, 2011,

General Qualifications: Represent the company while interfacing with clients, vendors, and colleagues. Demonstrate raw talent, willingness to take initiative, act independently, and work effectively within a professional environment with a polished and intellectually strong presence. Exercise good judgment, have superior people skills and excellent oral and written communication abilities.