Tim Conneally

Sony Ericsson's Android UI leaks

To accompany the shots purported to be Sony Ericsson's first Android phone, a powerful 1 GHz Snapdragon-equipped touchscreen device code-named "Rachael," a video claiming to be the device's custom Android UI has emerged.

Like the Sense UI debuting on HTC's Hero in Europe this month, Rachael's UI retains the three-panel "shade and drawer" Android layout, but completely overhauls the graphics and widgets.

Continue reading

Sony CEO Stringer: No PS3 price cut

Sony Corporation's Chief Executive Officer Sir Howard Stringer made statements at the Allen & Co. Conference yesterday affirming the company's pricing strategy for its PlayStation 3. If the video game console got any cheaper, Reuters quotes Stringer as saying, "[I'd] lose money on every PlayStation I make, how's that for logic?"

Last month, Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotik went on the attack against Sony, saying, "They have to cut the price [of the PS3], because if they don't, the attach rates are likely to slow...If we are being realistic, we might have to stop supporting Sony."

Continue reading

AT&T: Without a landline phone, you could die

AT&T and an associated group of telecommunications companies under the name "National Emergency Number Association" (NENA) released the results of a June survey which concludes that Americans need to have an emergency communications plan based around a landline connection.

"A big part of this is knowing about the options available for dialing 911," NENA Chief Executive Officer, Brian Fontes said in a statement. "The more choices you have to reach 911 in an emergency, the better, and a corded landline phone should be one of those options. It provides the security of a home phone line connection to 911 so that in most cases first responders know your home address."

Continue reading

Go west, young man...rerouting...Make a legal U-turn, young man

On Independence Day weekend, I was faced with a fourteen-hour drive and a long outdated, standalone GPS unit. The Garmin Nuvi GPS that I received as a gift two Christmases prior had begun to prompt me to pay for a map update every time I started it up. Consequently, I didn't use it very much, and stuck to using Telenav Navigator or Google Maps on my phone in the frequent instances when I have become truly, hopelessly lost.

As we were packing up the car, I started to wonder just how necessary the Garmin's map update actually would be. I mean, how often do roads really change, right? Presuming the poles of the Earth don't suddenly reverse, an outdated GPS is at least going to give you useful map coordinates and tell you what direction you're driving.

Continue reading

Palm unveils its European Pre rollout plan

Mobile network operators O2 and Movistar, subsidiaries of Telefonica, will be Europe's first exclusive operators to carry the Palm Pre, the device maker announced today. O2 will offer the device In the UK, Ireland, and Germany, and Movistar will offer it in Spain, with availability some time before the holidays.

Rumors of a deal between Palm and Telefonica began to stir last week, with expectations of a price and launch date this week, but neither was supplied today.

Continue reading

Sony's first netbook, the Vaio W: What goes around finally comes around

After all the noise Sony made about avoiding the term "netbook" with the release of its Vaio P ultraportable, and the statements Senior Vice President Mike Abary made about the Eee PC before that, it was beginning to look like Sony was never going to release a device in the netbook/mini-note form factor. But that has changed.

Today, Sony officially launched its first netbook. The 10.1-inch Windows XP-based Vaio W runs on a 1.66 GHz Intel Atom N280, has 1 GB of RAM, and a 160 GB SATA HDD. It's equipped with 802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth, a built-in Webcam, and offers 1366 x 768 screen resolution -- higher-than-usual for netbook screens.

Continue reading

British Telecom sacks bitterly unpopular Phorm ad platform

In an announcement this morning, British Telecom said it has decided to halt BT Webwise, its prospective targeted advertising platform, calling the move a cost-cutting measure as the company invests £1.5 billion in improved broadband deployments. As a result, shares in the BT, TalkTalk and Virgin Media joint Venture plummeted in value by some 40%.

In early 2008, BT, TalkTalk, and Virgin Media joined forces to build a single targeted ad platform for their respective subscribers. The service would provide the ISPs anonymized user search data so they could serve more appropriate advertisements. Unfortunately, after the service had been announced, BT admitted that it had already tested the service without telling users. This was naturally met with petitions and protest from angered users and privacy advocacy groups.

Continue reading

CBS is the last man standing against Hulu

Today marks the beginning of ABC's arrival on Hulu. Last April, Disney's ABC Enterprises jumped aboard NBC Universal and News Corp's increasingly popular video syndication site, and this morning, the first ABC program was rolled out for streaming.

The first ABC show available on Hulu is the drama "Grey's Anatomy," of which five episodes have been posted. For the next two weeks, more content will be added, including episodes of the network's biggest hits like "Desperate Housewives" and "Scrubs." A month before Disney and ABC arrived at a deal with Hulu, the network agreed to first bring its content to YouTube, where it would supply clips of popular shows and short-form episodic content equipped with "different monetization options" than standard YouTube videos.

Continue reading

Bolt: the dark horse mobile browser

In the roughly six months since Bitstream's Bolt mobile browser debuted in beta at Mobile World Congress, it has been installed more than a million times, its developers said today. Like Skyfire, which also reached a million installs before RTM, this cross-platform mobile browser is designed to accelerate the browsing experience on resource-constrained devices.

Bolt is compatible with any mobile handset that supports the Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP) 2.0, the Java spec for embedded devices. Page rendering takes place outside of the phone on Bolt's servers, and content is heavily compressed for consumption, so even 2G freebie phones can handle full Web browsing. The app itself is only 140 Kb in size. Included in the huge list of supported devices are handsets from Research in Motion, LG, Nokia, Motorola, Samsung, and Sony Ericsson. There are versions specifically designed for BlackBerry and for entry-level phones.

Continue reading

Symantec goes live with Norton 2010 betas

Download Norton Internet Security 2010 beta from Fileforum now.

Download Norton Antivirus 2010 Beta from FileForum now.

Continue reading

Nokia: Android? Are you crazy?

Adding to the swollen category of "rumored Android device makers," Nokia was briefly rumored to be readying a touchscreen smartphone based on the Android mobile OS for Nokia World in September.

But rather than say it doesn't comment on rumors as companies often do, Nokia flatly denied the rumor, citing the "well known fact" that Symbian is its platform of choice.

Continue reading

Hybrid satellite cell phones aren't far off

The largest commercial communications satellite ever has been launched. The Terrestar-1 from Terrestar Networks lifted off from the ESA (Europe's equivalent of NASA) aerospace center in French Guiana on the northern coast of South America.

The satellite's network will operate in two 10 MHz blocks of contiguous MSS spectrum in the 2 GHz band throughout the United States and Canada with a footprint that covers a population of nearly 330 million. The company will offer both wireless broadband and voice services which will improve inconsistent rural coverage and dead zones throughout North America. Connection to the satellite, however, requires a clear line of sight with the southern sky.

Continue reading

SMS could be a critical iPhone vulnerability, says white-hat hacker

In his SyScan presentation in Singapore today, Mac security expert and Pwn2Own 2009 champ Charlie Miller discussed a vulnerability on the iPhone that allows remote code execution through SMS, which can tap into an iPhone's GPS or microphone, to divulge the phone owner's location or eavesdrop on them. Phones that have been compromised can also be used in a botnet or DDOS attack.

Miller is reportedly working with Apple to patch the vulnerability, so he did not go into great detail about the methods of exploitation. However, Miller did say, "SMS is a great vector to attack the iPhone...The iPhone is more secure than OS X, but SMS could be a critical vulnerability."

Continue reading

Will Oracle's Java-based Fusion middleware 'fuse' with Java?

After nearly three years in development, Oracle yesterday officially launched Fusion Middleware 11g, its vast enterprise middleware suite, and kicked off the related "100 Days of Innovation" campaign, where the company will travel the world to show off the massive amount of new services contained in this release.

In the course of Fusion 11g's development, Oracle acquired more than 50 companies, and pulled in some 2,000 individual software improvements as a result. When you have a middleware platform as all-encompassing as that, unity among the platform's different services is critical to success.

Continue reading

All together now: iPhone and Palm Pre, likely to both grace O2's UK portfolio

European wireless network operator O2 has reportedly reached a deal to exclusively carry the Palm Pre in the UK. O2, a subsidiary of Telefónica, is Britain's largest wireless carrier, and has a similar exclusivity agreement with Apple for the iPhone.

UK paper The Guardian reported last May that O2 was vying for an exclusive agreement with Palm for the Pre, and that competition with rival carrier Orange was fierce.

Continue reading

© 1998-2025 BetaNews, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy - Cookie Policy.