Archive for the ‘General’ Category

More Android Powered Mobile / Smartphones from HTC, Samsung, Garmin

Wednesday, December 24th, 2008

More Android Powered Mobile / Smartphones from HTC, Samsung, Garmin
There will be more Android powered phones released very soon!

Garmin

In the second quarter of 2009 Garmin will release a new Android powered device – rumors say. Most probably it will be a device that combines mobile phone functions with Garmin’s navigation expertise.

Source Golem.

HTC

HTC will release a new physical keyboard-free G1 successor the upcoming 1st quarter 2009.

Source Golem.

Samsung

Samsung Electronics will release its first Google phone in the second quarter of the next year in North America.

The launch of Google phone by Samsung is regarded as a signal of its plan for increasing the shares in the smart phone market by releasing handsets in various operating systems.

Source etnews Korea.

That’s gonna be an awesome year 2009! 8-)

P.S.: Image by BGR.

Android T-Mobile HTC G1 Phone for Developers – SIM Lock Free

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Android T-Mobile HTC G1 Phone for Developers - SIM Lock Free
Just found this announcement in one of the news sites I follow every day. Google announced that a SIM-Lock Free HTC/T-Mobile G1 phone is now available for Android™ developers. So you need to have an Android Market developer account to be able to access the phone. Like me I guess many developers all over the world were looking for this kind of oportunity to get a phone for their testing purposes. Thanks Google!

Besides the SIM-Lock freeness this phone also has a nice artwork on the back (see photo) with our beloved Android logo. It looks slim, nice, modern and just chic. It costs only $399 and can be shipped to the following countries: Australia, Austria, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, India, Japan, Netherlands, Poland, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, United Kingdom, United States of America. Be aware if you are not located in the US. The shipping costs to Germany for example are $179 (incl. tax and customs) which is quite high compared to the actual device price. You just see this at the end of the purchase process. If you are located in Hong Kong you cannot buy it there but you can buy it here.

If you want to have one you can check out and order the phone over here: http://android.brightstarcorp.com/

Kogan Agora – 2nd Official Android OS powered mobile phone

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Kogan just announced the Agora – the second official Android OS powered mobile phone in the world. We already know where to buy the Android powered T-Mobile G1. Like the G1 more and more real devices with Android running on it will definitely push the development of Android applications and services all over the world!

Highlights

  • 2.5-inch TFT-LCD flat touch-sensitive screen.
  • Integrated QWERTY keyboard.
  • High-speed 3G network connection.
  • One-Touch Google Search ™.
  • Easy Web Browsing.
  • Easy-to-use email with attachment support for images, videos, music and documents.
  • Customisable Home Screen with instant Email, text message and IM notifications.
  • Instant access to mobile Internet services (Gmail ™, YouTube ™, Google Talk ™, Google Calendar ™, Google Maps ™).
  • Music Player.
  • Bluetooth® 2.0 with Enhanced Data Rate.
  • microSD™ expansion slot for all your storage needs.

There are two versions available:

  • Base version: $192 w/o WiFi, GPS
  • Base version: $256 w/ WiFi, GPS

That are incredible prices!

Kogan Agora - 2nd Official Android powered mobile phone

More information at Kogan.

Android on Openmoko / Neo Freerunner

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

OpenmokoOpenmoko Neo Freerunner
I just read on the German news service Golem that Koolu created git repository with Android sources and patches for Openmoko. The German article can be found here.

This allows to run the Android OS on the Openmoko phone Neo Freerunner. Openmoko itself has a similar approach compared to Android. It is also open source and is licensed under the GNU GPL. So if you are interested to check that out below are all the links you need:

Git Rep: http://git.koolu.org/
Koolu Forum: http://forum.koolu.org/
Openmoko: http://www.openmoko.com/

P.S.: If you have anything to share please feel free to drop us an comment here :)

How / Where to buy a T-Mobile G1 Google phone in Hong Kong

Friday, November 14th, 2008

The T-Mobile G1 is on sale in the US for about 3 weeks now. It seems to be a quite popular phone and there already appeared some phones on ebay in the US as well as in Europe.

Yesterday I was checking out the Hong Kong mobile phone dealers on the Google / T-Mobile G1 (aka HTC Dream). While Hong Kong is usually quite quick with new products (especially mobile phones) the G1 was not available for a while. The online shopping market is not really existing here at the moment and therefor, it is always good to check out local stores. The two best places in Hong Kong for imported gadget and high end stuff (including gadgets that are never going to be released in other markets because HK is the electronics companies’ playground) are:

So I checked nearly every shop I could find and some of them had the T-Mobile G1 in their showcases. I was even allowed to touch one! 8-)

The G1′s price range in those shops was:

  • Maximum: HK$4980 (~US$642)
  • Minimum: HK$3500 (~US$451)

As you can see there is big difference of nearly US$200 between the offers but the lower price seems to be a good deal. Here are some photos from the good priced one in the shop on Nathan Road:

How to buy a T-Mobile G1 Google phone in Hong Kong

How to buy a T-Mobile G1 Google phone in Hong Kong

As far as I remember it is near Nathan Road no. 123 but I am not that sure. Might be in Burlington House or very nearby.

Need an Android / Google G1 phone for testing

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

Hi folks,

today I have a request which seems to be a quite important issue to me. Unfortunately, I am not located in the US so I cannot get a Google G1 phone from T-Mobile. :(

Everyone who ever programmed for mobile devices knows best that you better have a device you can test your application on. Though there are simulators available (and I have to say the Android simulator is really good!) it is still somehow different to have a real phone. The whole process of creating the application, writing code, building the binary, installing it on the device, and finally running the program on the device needs to be tested together. This also leads me to the point that there will be perfomance differences between the device simulator on your PC or MAC and the actual “real” phone in your hand. Mobile phone CPU’s (aka processors) are mostly lower powered than your desktop computer (well compare the power G1 one to my first 8086 PC:) ) and therefor the programs we write perform different on the device.

Conclusion: A real device is necessary.

So if anyone of you has a G1 left for me please feel free to drop a comment and I will send you an email then. No worries, your email address will never go public here.

Need an Android / Google G1 phone for testing

Android Market Kicks Off!

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Android Market Kicks Off!
Attention developers! The Android market opened its doors and you can setup your apps in there now!

Android Market enables developers to easily publish and distribute their applications directly to users of Android-compatible phones including the T-Mobile G1.

Come one. Come all.
Android Market is open to all Android application developers. Once registered, developers have complete control over when and how they make their applications available to users.

Easy and simple to use.
Start using Android Market in 3 easy steps: register, upload, and publish.

Great visibility.
Developers can easily manage their application portfolio where they can view information about downloads, ratings and comments. Developers can also easily publish updates and new versions of their apps.

Android Market Publish: http://market.android.com/publish

Android invasion

Friday, October 31st, 2008

I just read this article on the Financial Times site of the FT Techblog:

Tech blog (Richard Waters): I have to confess: Google’s mobile phone platform is getting off to a much better start than I had expected.

The generally favourable reviews of the first Android phone, the G1 made by HTC for T-Mobile, showed how well Google had done from a standing start in just a year and half.

Now comes news that Motorola is about to throw its lot in with Android, using the Google software for its consumer smart-phones. Given Motorola’s slumping market share, it certainly makes sense to consolidate on three platforms.

It’s too early to declare Android a winner, though. Google still has to persuade mobile phone companies that it is friend rather than foe. The T-Mobile device works best as a delivery mechanism for Google’s own services. How many operators are ready to throw their lot in with Google to that degree?
Full text: www.ft.com/techblog

IMHO, Motorola announcing to take a deeper look to the Android platform and supporting it is a quite huge step forward for Android. Not so long ago Motorola was the second largest cell phone maker in the world and it was about to push Nokia from its throne as the world’s larget manufaturer. But since the amazing Motorola RAZR they didn’t do anything special in the market and their products just didn’t have any flair. I still have my Nokia shares in my depot and not Motorola. Nokia is still one step ahead and they have a more innovative flair.

However, I think Google and Android will kick off soon. There just need to be more devices available, more users, more developers and more interest in the platform. Until now Google did a lot of good things and making the platform and free of charge means that manufacturers can build phones with the OS without paying for the OS. This is a huge advantage in point of saving per product costs in the first place. Furthermore, they have the freedom to customize the OS to their needs (say manufacturer / carrier branding, etc.).

Regarding 3rd party applications (that is our field guys!) developers just love open source software. From my point of view not that much that it is mostly available free of charge but it provides the possibility to look into the original source code and get a clue how the heck Google made this or that. I don’t consider this stealing of code. It is just a hint to crash my mental blockade which I guess everyone of you might have experienced some time ago.

Anyhoo, it is getting more and more interesting by every day that passes by. Share your thoughts – share your code – just if you want to, of course! :)

What do you think about that?

Android is now open source

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Just saw this article on Golem. Check out the video:

Android Source: http://source.android.com/

G1 will push Android development

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

T-Mobile, Google and HTC just released the new G1 – the first ever really working Android powered mobile device.

I am pretty sure that this will boost the Android development a lot in future. Right after the announcement of G1 Google released the new Android SDK 1.0. After many changes in the past (since the first beta version I tried) this seems to be quite final. There are not that many possibilities for Google anymore to change important programming interfaces within the SDK API. We will see and check out the new capabilities of this soon!

You can download the most recent SDK at: code.google.com.