March 2008 News Posts
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"In
a world of watered-down, politically correct, pasteurised and
homogenised, lifeless and flavourless news and comment, PDA247 is a
relief, and for this reason I make a point of checking back every day."
Howard Tomlinson CEO-
Astraware
 
Recent articles: The iPhone Cometh, Toshiba PR Fiasco, Multi-Tasking, Bling Phones
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| PictureLink  |
PictureLink has been released by Toysoft and looks excellent for only $9.95- "The easist way to dial a phone number!
Picture Link is system utility to create short cut links with customized picture on the Launcher for quick launch.
Short cut link can be launched on the Launcher just like any application. There are 5 different short cuts that you can create: Dial a phone number, Compose a new email, Compose a new SMS, Get Google map and Play a PocketTunes Playlist. With short cut link you no longer have to search the Contact to dial your most dialed number.
You can even assign the short cut key to any hard button and instantly dial the person. All short cuts can be assigned to a hard key for quick launch.
If you are a PocketTunes user you can easily create short cut play list and instantly switch playlist without launching PocketTunes.
SMS and Email templates can be created. This will eliminate time consuming process to launch the SMS or Email application and then select New to compose a message. With short cut you can start typing as soon as the short cut is launched.
Picture Link is compatible with the Treo® Launcher and 3rd party Launchers."
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| Palm Centro is shipping in the UK  |
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I have a Palm Centro here for review, but had ordered one last week. I decided to cancel my order on Monday and Palm confirmed over the phone that the cancellation had been done. Imagine my surprise to find the following in my inbox today-
"Thank you for ordering at Palm Store. Please save this dispatch confirmation e-mail as it contains your order details, order number and tracking number.
Quote ID: xxxxxxx Order Number: Order Reference: xxxxxxx PO Num: Order Status: Order Shipped."
So, the Centro is now shipping in the UK, whether you want one or not? I should keep quiet because no payment has been taken from my credit card yet:)
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| QOTD: Do you now use your phone differently?  |
Has the introduction of high-end consumer phones, such as the N95 and the iPhone, made you reassess the way in which you use your smartphone? Do you find yourself not so bothered with having a hardware QWERTY keyboard anymore?
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| Why last week’s Blackberry outage was good for RIM  |
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The outage of the Blackberry service last Monday was caused by one of their recently upgraded systems failing. The loss of service affected North American customers for a few hours… and some felt as though the end of the world was nigh.
There is another way to look at this though and it is a strangely comforting thought that a simple outage for a few hours could cause so much disruption and cries of outrage on web forums and even government institutions. Without doubt, RIM’s reputation took a minor knock but it does highlight just how widespread their service is and how completely millions of people rely on it. Because of this, there is a safeguard that if the company suddenly went bankrupt tomorrow morning steps would be taken to keep the service running, and these steps would be taken at very high levels. Stock brokers, CEOs, government officials and countless other organizations would be affected and this would no doubt bring swift action from a variety of sources. When my MS Exchange server failed a couple of weeks ago, my provider spent four days fixing it and this affected many people. The problem is that no one else noticed and why should they? If a few thousand people with accounts from an ISP lose their email for a week it will cause barely a blip. I set up a back up Googlemail account for these such times, and realised that the same outcry would happen if the Google service dropped, or the Yahoo mail service and many others from the very large corporations dominating our personal communications. There is a shield when using the most popular services, because they can have a negative impact on the economy when they go wrong. The Blackberry outage served to highlight that and makes me more likely to use their service in the future than not.
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| The Smartphones Show 53  |
The Smartphones Show 53 has been released and looks like a good one- "Extended news from Mobile World Congress, plus iPhone tips, reflections on convergence progress in the last 10 years."
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| RecorderX v2.2B2  |
RecorderX v2.2B2 has been released- "RecorderX is a powerful and functional sound recording software designed for Palm Treo. You may use RecorderX to record phone conversation, make voice memo, make conference notes, or capture any sound. The outstanding and friendly UI design of RecorderX is also specially optimized for the Treo's QWERTY keyboard."
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| AT&T Palm Centro Now Available  |
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PIC has posted a photo set of the AT&T Palm Centro which is now available. Must admit to kind of liking the green digit keys- "Palm has made the Centro smartphone available on the AT&T network today. The AT&T Centro debuts in Glacier white with a green accented thumboard. It is available online now at Palm.com and at AT&T retail stores for $99 with a 2-year service agreement and mail-in rebate. An "Obsidian" black version will be available in a month.
The AT&T Centro is a quad-band GSM/EDGE smartphone running Palm OS Garnet v5.4.9. It has a 320x320 pixel touchscreen display, Bluetooth v1.2, a 1.3 megapixel digital camera with video capture and 64MB of memory. For memory expansion it has a microSD slot."
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| How to prolong lithium-based batteries  |
How to prolong lithium-based batteries is an old article but still relevant today- "Battery research is focusing heavily on lithium chemistries, so much so that one could presume that all portable devices will be powered with lithium-ion batteries in the future. In many ways, lithium-ion is superior to nickel and lead-based chemistries and the applications for lithium-ion batteries are growing as a result. Lithium-ion has not yet fully matured and is being improved continuously. New metal and chemical combinations are being tried every six months to increase energy density and prolong service life. The improvements in longevity after each change will not be known for a few years. A lithium-ion battery provides 300-500 discharge/charge cycles. The battery prefers a partial rather than a full discharge. Frequent full discharges should be avoided when possible. Instead, charge the battery more often or use a larger battery. There is no concern of memory when applying unscheduled charges. Although lithium-ion is memory-free in terms of performance deterioration, batteries with fuel gauges exhibit what engineers refer to as "digital memory". Here is the reason: Short discharges with subsequent recharges do not provide the periodic calibration needed to synchronize the fuel gauge with the battery's state-of-charge. A deliberate full discharge and recharge every 30 charges corrects this problem. Letting the battery run down to the cut-off point in the equipment will do this. If ignored, the fuel gauge will become increasingly less accurate. (Read more in 'Choosing the right battery for portable computing', Part Two.)"
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| 2 phones for everyone— if industry can't get its act together  |
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2 phones for everyone— if industry can't get its act together is a superb new article at ars technica- "It's not enough for everyone on earth to have a single mobile phone—Real Networks CEO Rob Glaser thinks that everyone will eventually have at least two. Glaser spoke at this week's Mobile World Congress Conference in Barcelona, insisting that it wasn't possible for a "do everything, no compromise" device to exist and serve people's every mobile need.
Glaser explained that his belief was fueled by differences in input methods, size, and functionality between devices. No single phone can do everything easily, he said, which is why the public will be driven to carry multiple devices. "Mobile penetration won't stop at 100 percent," he told the crowd. "It will go to 200 percent because the notion of a single device that does it all isn't the way (the market is) going to go." Do most people really need two phones? Yes, the mobile landscape isn't perfect, even with the continued introduction of increasingly capable devices. And it's true that there are some people who do already carry around more than one mobile device because they need different functionalities from each one, but those people are still a minority..." Thanks to Luca.
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| Free eBook of the day: Show of Hands by David Prill  |
Today's free eBook is Show of Hands by David Prill- "It was a fair, moonless August night, and in a farm field in southern Minnesota a bonfire blazed steadily. Apart from a handful of fireflies engaged in a courtship dance in the garden, all else was dark, you couldn’t make out County Road 249 or St. John’s steeple or even much of the corn and bean fields. All you could see were the bonfire lights, dotting the countryside, along the railroad tracks. There were bonfires, rustic pyres, spanning the entire township. It was an event, a ritual, the coming of the circus train, an unforgettable show, only the show didn’t stop here. They usually didn’t stop at all, just slowed down long enough for the performers to wave and give something back to the farmers who left their white farm houses with their women inside, who had gathered by their bonfires to see something out of the ordinary. The town of Goatfield was too small for the circus train to stop and give a performance. This circus was too high class. Elton Hudnall remembered a circus of lesser renown that had visited Goatfield once, setting up tents in Misery Field on the edge of town. The ringmaster looked like a fella Elton had seen on the post office wall. The tiger wore a shabby coat, and the elephant paced anxiously, one giant foot chained to..."
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