Showing posts with label Smartphones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smartphones. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

ZTE bring NFC on upcoming smartphones and feature phones

Chinese phone maker ZTE will include chip NFC (Near Field Communications) into its smartphones and features, it said Wednesday at the Mobile World Congress.

The company said that some of its Android-based Smartphone will be equipped with NFC, and that its first NFC phones will be available in the second quarter. ZTE has signed an agreement with NXP Semiconductors to provide the necessary technology, he said.

Equipped with an NFC-enabled mobile phone, users will be able to make secure payments, mobile transactions and pay for public transport, according to ZTE. That is, of course, as long as someone is offering the NFC services.

There has been a growing interest in NFC lately, thanks in part to the fact that the software driver for NFC features were integrated in version 2.3 of Android.

Elsewhere at the Mobile World Congress, Samsung has announced that it will bring NFC on its new flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S II. The phone is also in a version without integrated NFC, which allow network operators to deploy SIM cards with built-in NFC, instead, if they wish. This is a model of network operator Orange is a proponent of.

This week has seen Deutsche Telekom announce plans to launch mobile wallet based on NFC. The roll-out will start this year in Germany and Poland and continue in 2012 in the USA, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic, according to a statement.

Send news tips and comments to mikael_ricknas@idg.com



Friday, February 18, 2011

Tablets and Smartphones force Cisco to rethink security

SAN FRANCISCO--Cisco has unveiled a security architecture "complicated" self-describing on FutureX & equip dubbed says provides a context-aware to safeguard networks increasingly overrun with Smartphones, tablets, and virtualization.

On FutureX & equip, outlined the RSA Conference in San Francisco, initially give Cisco firewalls--and, finally, his switches, routers and other products--the ability to dynamically scan and label data concerning the identity of a user and using application/device in order to have a real time basis for the application of a security policy based on identity.

Tom Gillis, vice president and general manager of Cisco security technology business unit, recognized on FutureX & equip architecture is complex and novel, and its evolution in terms of product implementation only slowly starts to roll out this year.

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The ability to be evident on FutureX & equip should first in the line of multi-use Cisco Adaptive firewall Security Appliance (ASA), which will be equipped with Cisco TrustSec tagging technology to identify a wide range of information about using the network to a user, such as applications, devices, location and time of day, so that security decisions can be made in a context-aware fashion.

"What context will reveal? That someone is, they are part of an organization, what applications are trying to use, they use an iPhone and iPad and is managed by it, "and are inside or outside the corporate network, says Ambika Gadre, senior director of Cisco security technology business unit.

The idea is to flag policy violations, block access or warn of security threats. On FutureX & equip is seen as increasing borderless Cisco networks strategy cycles, which is intended to support applications, processes and services that are increasingly distributed and virtualized, such as those in it environments and software-as-a-service cloud.

"Owns," Gillis recognized when asked if the architecture on FutureX & equip never stretches to embed gear safety or third-party network. But Cisco executives said they are weighing how to create a shared global ecosphere for it, probably by making available APIS or approaching a standards body with some related fundamental technology on FutureX & equip.

Cisco is a great player in the network security market, with approximately 2 billion dollars in sales last year. But the consumerization of endpoint devices such as Apple's iPad and iPhone, as well as mobile devices running Google Android and other software is required in your organization, "is causing us to rethink how security," says Gillis. The spread of virtualized systems is also a big part of that mix, he says.

Cisco provides on FutureX & equip as a way to not only give our customers a broad view of what they are doing on your network computers and users of mobile devices, but to enforce granular policies, such as access to applications on Facebook. There is also the idea that the fusion of some tag identity and device information data with the data accumulated by Security threat Intelligence operations, Cisco, a cloud-based service to analyze information about ongoing threats globally, would advance enabled the security context. Cisco will also accumulate telemetry data culled from actions of situational AnyConnect VPN client and legacy, that its customers use to apply this context-aware security more than 150 million.

Deciphering On Futurex & Equip

In trying to absorb what the heck is talking with Cisco on FutureX & equip--especially with no demonstrable product for show--analysts were somewhat divided.

Gartner analyst Neil MacDonald called on FutureX & equip and the transition to the knowledge based on context "very interesting" and applauded "the wealth of ideas".

But other analysts were skeptical about it, above all its complexity and intimidation Cisco was going on a tangent that was unlikely to benefit the rest of the security industry.

"I wish that Cisco would stop misrepresentation in the areas of security, taking the jumble of some products and mix them into a General over-branded architecture," said Richard Stiennon, analyst at IT-harvest. "Have nothing to show us," he said, adding that if the concept has some chance, the company shall give proof of something important in the next 12 months.

In the next 12 months, Cisco promises to get on FutureX & equip in his line of appliances of ASA. But when asked if this will be a software upgrade or require new hardware, Cisco executives say that they are not safe. "This is to be determined," said Fred Kost, marketing director of security solutions.

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LG impatiently is pushing 3D TV, smartphones via

LG apparently wants to play an important role in getting consumers to adopt 3D technologies. The Korean company is pushing 3D in at least two major markets: TVs, and Smartphones.

LG said it intends to sell 3D TV sets 5 million in 2011 as part of its overall objective of sales of 40 million TVs, according to Reuters. Second largest TV producer in the world, which competes with Samsung and Sony said that he was trying to control 20% of the world market for smart TVs.

Separately, LG has unveiled the first phone to mass market 3D at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The lenticular screen technology LG Optimus 3D capabilities, which means you can view images in 3D without special glasses. The phone must be held at a distance and angle in order to obtain the correct viewer experience, much like with the Nintendo 3DS, which uses a similar screen technology.

Users can play and record 3D content through the use of two cameras 5MP and also send the content to any 3D TV. The phone will ship with four 3D stereoscopic games. The electronics giant has yet to reveal details on pricing or release date for the Android-based device.



Intel-based smartphones coming this year

During a keynote at the Mobile World Congress, Intel CEO Paul Otellini said that a number of models of smartphone was launched this year by using the company's processors. The company seems to be very optimistic about his upcoming smartphone, dubbed core Medfield, but so far it remains resorted to potential partners or any additional information beyond saying that time is a "pretty exciting" for them.

Otellini sees the emergence of Tablet device and smartphone as an opportunity for Intel and not a challenge to his commanding lead in the CPU market. According to the CEO, tablets and smartphones will live alongside the PC, and this will allow them to send even more processors than the hundreds of millions that currently ships. "We don't see an environment where one machine meets all requirements. At least for the next four or five years, we are likely to see more devices and form factors more simply because people want to do things better, "he said.

Intel has been virtually absent from the fast growing smartphone market so far, but the company hopes to change that with its impending Medfield chips, which are allegedly ordered to outclass ARM in processing and saving. The company shall prove his bold claims with real products, and with the arm that currently holds close to 90% of the mobile market through licensing agreements, convince hardware vendors to embrace Medfield will not be easy.



Thursday, February 17, 2011

Smartphones driving you nuts? Industry leaders agree

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If you find your smartphone and other devices demand too much attention and drive you bonkers, industry experts agree.

At Mobile World Congress, one of the biggest smartphone and tablet exhibitions, hundreds of faster new devices and software features were unveiled this week, but several industry executives publicly dared to call for fewer devices per person -- not more -- that won't interrupt us as much.

"We're starting to live in a world of interruption technology ... Isn't anybody questioning this?" said Hampus Jakobsson, former head of TAT, a cutting edge user interface design company, and now director of strategic alliances at Blackberry maker Research in Motion. TAT (The Astonishing Tribe) was acquired by RIM in December, to help RIM develop the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet.

In comments delivered before a standing-room-only-crowd gathered to hear about visions for mobile innovations in 2020, Jakobsson intoned: "We're not talking to each other, but talking to devices. That's something we have to think about ... Do we want a future where people stare at screens or a future where people talk to each other?"

Referring to short and quick Twitter communications, Jakobbson added, "Suddenly people are communicating through 140 characters, but we're compressing through machines instead of talking about how we feel."

He concluded his talk on a note of warning: "Tools need to give us more time with each other and less with machines. Technology will be the fats and sugars of 2020: Everybody knows you should avoid it, but everybody is doing it."

In answering a question from the audience about what RIM was planning to do about device interruptions, Jakobsson suggested that RIM might want to prevent games from running on its BlackBerry smartphones to cut back on the crush of inputs users receive that keep them from interacting with one another.

"Maybe BlackBerry shouldn't have games," he said. "Maybe there should be no games at all on BlackBerry. Actually, I'm not sure my [new] company is brave enough to do that." (Jakobbson also said earlier that he was "extremely impressed" after two months at the company with RIM's focus on efficiency, security and quality in its corporate operations and devices.)

Another member on the "Mobile Innovation: A Vision of 2020" panel, AT&T CTO John Donovan, interrupted Jakobsson's comments saying, "Keep downloading games on BlackBerry!" drawing loud laughter from the audience. AT&T and ever other major wireless carrier encourages its customers to download games and play them over their networks.

However, Donovan and others on the panel somewhat agreed with Jakobsson's view that smartphones and tablets should be designed to enrich lives and communities and not draw us into them.

Donovan predicted that mobile devices will continue to proliferate in the next few years, but said they should "disintegrate" down to fewer devices per person.

AT&T's vision, he explained, calls for personal data stored in the cloud, accessible by a variety of form factors, such as TVs, and requiring mobile workers and consumers to carry fewer devices. Donovan said he's been known to carry several devices to work, including a laptop, cell phone and e-reader but he wants fewer.

"We will have eight devices [each] in a couple of years and that's ridiculous," Jakobsson said.

Jan Uddenfeldt, CTO for Sony Ericsson, argued in favor of reducing the number of personal devices that users carry in coming years to one. Ironically, he made the comment just minutes after showing a slide of several new Xperia handheld devices that Sony Ericsson makes, including the Xperia Play smartphone, which doubles as a gaming console.

Rich Green, CTO at Nokia, said he disagreed with the others on the panel, saying "You'll just see more and more functions served in a compelling manner on devices and that will be an osmotic pressure going forward." Even though he said he disagreed with the others, Green still called for phones that work better, such reducing the power drain phones have on their batteries.

Green's presentation included a video first shown in March 2008 of lab research Nokia is doing with nanotechnology called Morph that Nokia hopes to use in materials for making phones. The video shows how Morph can allow a user to bend a phone to make it into a bracelet or watch. Nanoscale "grass" could also be used on the phone's skin to absorb light to power the phone. Morph will also resist water and is stretchable, the video explains.

In an interview, Green said all the technology in the video is being developed in the lab by Nokia and University of Cambridge researchers. Some of the technology will be available commercially in two or more years, while other portions will be many years off.

A phone design that show's what possible

While Jakobsson's warnings about the need for technology to cut down on interruptions tended to subdue crowd, there was delight when Kristian Ulrich Larsen, a 25-year-old designer, showed off realistic renderings of a tri-fold smartphone design called the Flip.

The Flip phone would run the Android operating system and feature three slightly curved 4-inch screens hinged together by a fine metal mesh that would allow the screens to function together when laid out to present information and play videos. Or it could work with one screen when folded into a triangle, or two screens in another permutation.

Larsen said the design renderings, created at virtually no cost on a laptop with three other students, were part of a master's degree design project. The rendering hasn't resulted in a prototype or any offers by manufacturers. One feature of the Flip allows it to be closed to turn off the phone, recalling the feeling of turning off conventional flip phones by snapping them closed, Larsen said.

Larsen and his fellow designers also made a video to connect the Flip with ideas on how creativity involves taking risks, straying from the conventional path and being willing to make mistakes. "From mistakes, really interesting things can happen," the video says.

Larsen's phone design and video drew rousing applause, suggesting showing the audience was probably more interested in cool new devices that challenge a person to be creative than it was in hearing warnings about the downside of technology that interrupts our lives.

Jakobsson also criticized the trend at the MWC of phones designed with even bigger screens -- above 4-inches in diagonal. "We're moving into a time where not just bigger, faster and stronger counts," he said.

"Have our hands gotten bigger? Personally, I can't handle a four-inch phone in one hand ... A four-inch screen is great for video and browsing, but those are pretty much the only use cases."

But he wasn't only concerned with hardware, arguing that hyperlinks within text, which are commonly used on the Computerworld Web site and elsewhere, interrupt a person from reading a story carefully. Citing brain studies showing that viewers of hyperlinks were interrupted and delayed from the main task of reading and retaining the original material they are in, he added, "Do we think we save information better when we're not focused on saving it?"

AT&T's Donovan concluded the visionary session, noting that mobile devices have become the "serial interrupters" of modern life. "We owe it to the industry to restore simplicity where interactions and productivity are balanced," he said.

Matt Hamblen covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handhelds, and wireless networking for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter at @matthamblen or subscribe to Matt's RSS feed. His e-mail address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.


For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2010 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.


Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Flash will dominate Smartphones, Adobe says

BARCELONA--while Apple rejects the value of Flash Player for its smartphones and tablets, which Apple mobile products do not support, the creators of Flash by Adobe Systems are pounding their chests about his promise.

Opera: TaylorAdobe Chip predicts 600% growth in the number of smartphones with the 10.1 Flash Player installed in 2011, reaching Smartphone 132 million and more than 50 models of Tablet PC with installed both the reader and available for download, the company said Monday. For the six months following the launch of Flash 10.1, more than 20 million smartphones were shipped or updated with it.

Platforms that support Flash in 2011 will include Android, BlackBerry Tablet OS and Hewlett Packard WebOS, among others, Adobe said at the Mobile World Congress, which began Monday. Adobe Flash Player 10, which offers new features such as Video Stage to offer better video performance on mobile devices, desktops and TVs on show too.

"Flash is hardly going away," said Anup Murarka, Director of product marketing at Adobe Systems ' Flash, in an interview. "Using points to continued growth."

The first 40 Smartphones with Flash, the most popular in the United States were in the Droid family, such as the x and the droid, Evo, HTC said.

"Apple's View is that users don't need Flash and can get on the Web without it," he said. "But we get comments that users can enjoy more of the Web with Flash".

Murarka does not make the case that customers buy specifically Smartphone for the Flash player, but he added, "is certainly something consumers have shown for the question."

Adobe provides the Adobe Air, a development tool that enables the delivery of applications for the Apple platform for iOS as well as Android, BlackBerry, Tablet OS and applications Air televisions. are available on Smartphones and tablets over 84 million already, Adobe said. More than 200 million smartphones and tablets will support air before the end of 2011, Adobe predicted.

Adobe also announced that its Digital Publishing Suite tools can now be used to create and distribute magazines for Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablets through software called Content Viewer for Android. One of the tablets concerned Honeycomb coming to market is the Motorola Xoom.

Publisher Conde Nast magazines, Dennis Publishing, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and National Geographic already use the Digital Publishing Suite.

In a statement, Joe Simon, CTO at Conde Nastezh, said that the suite is already used to produce digital editions of Wired and The New Yorker. "We are pleased to bring you some of the most loved magazines and the world's most influential for the Android platform," he said.

Matt Hamblen covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handheld and wireless networks for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter at @ matthamblen or Subscribe to the RSS feed of Matt. His e-mail address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.

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