Sloan Bowman

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Posts by Sloan Bowman

Does RIM have a future with you?

RIM has had a strong hold of the business market for some time now. In the recent years a surge has been made to push BlackBerry into the consumers way of life. Most would agree that email on the BlackBerry platform remains to be the standard by which all other platforms live up to. The fact is consumers, as well as business users, want more when using smartphones than just push email. Does “is there an app for that” ring a bell?

The new comers to the smartphone world including iOS (iPhone), Android, and even WebOS changed the perception of what a smartphone should look like in most users eyes. Suddenly having a small 480×360 resolution screen with a full qwerty didn’t seem so appealing anymore. When faced with the decision to purchase a personal phone would you choose based on needs or based on what you want?

In the case of RIM I have been noticing a trend of users moving away to more modern devices. When asked why the typical answer is “look at the application selection on this platform”. To me RIM is like a Ducati motorcycle, the colors change and minor fixes are introduced but the general product remains the same. Does RIM have enough dedicated users to remain a contender? In my opinion without a doubt. Your tale may vary.

What are you thoughts? The gates are open

Amplify’d from www.intomobile.com
rim features Does RIM have a future?

An article by Dan Frommer on Business Insider prompted me to write this post. In its piece, Dan argues that RIM is the next Palm, pointing out similarities between the two companies. Palm used to sell tons of Treo devices just like RIM does today, but it failed eventually (and was acquired by HP). The big difference between the two is that in addition to devices, RIM is also focused on services and has been acquiring companies left and right to further strengthen its position. However, tough times are ahead of RIM…

First, it’s important to note that RIM doesn’t own patents for GSM or CDMA communications and has to buy those licences for each product it ships. Major handset makers (Nokia, Samsung, Motorola, Sony Ericsson) do have those patents or at least take advantage of cross-licensing agreements; whereas some other companies like Apple and HTC don’t [own licences]. These two, however, are known for their high-end and mid-range devices (HTC) which bear higher margins (and higher profits).

Second, analysts (and myself) believe BlackBerry devices are slated for the mid-range of the market and that could disrupt RIM’s earning potential. We did hear some rumors about the BlackBerry tablet (which could be a higher-end product), but at the moment it’s unclear who would want such a device — though we still have to see it in action. Moreover, BlackBerry Torch isn’t selling like crazy

And, third – increased competition, not only from the iPhone but from an array of Android handset makers.

So what should RIM do to save its ass? Switching to Android is one of the options, and that’s probably their best bet. On the other hand, they invested tons of cash in their own platform, so I doubt that will happen… at least not that fast.

Read more at www.intomobile.com

Google Voice meet Gmail, now play nice

While it has not been officially announced and more than likely won’t be for a while, the folks at TechCrunch has just posted evidence of Google Voice being integrated into Gmail for your calling pleasure.

Amplify’d from techcrunch.com
It’s amazingly good – I know because I’ve been testing it for the last few days.

Just download the Google Talk plugin for your browser and you can then make calls to any U.S. or Canadian phone number directly from Gmail. And if you already use Google Voice you can make those calls anywhere else, too, for a very low per minute charge. The feature is fully integrated into Google Voice, which means you can set Google Voice to receive calls in Gmail, and use your Google Voice contact book. Dialing a phone number works just like a normal phone. Just click “Call phone” at the top of your chat list and dial a number or enter a contact’s name.

This is great news if you’ve got bad cell reception in your home or workplace, because you can make and receive calls anywhere you have Wifi reception. Some other very cool features: if you’re on Google Voice and take a call from within Gmail, you switch a call over to your mobile phone and continue it on the go without having to drop the call and reconnect.

Call quality is very, very good – comparable to Skype. See video below of test calls we performed. (Play fullscreen for best viewing, and make sure to check out the screenshots below).

Read more at techcrunch.com

 


Nokia makes the 5250 a reality

Love it or hate it a Symbian^1 phone at this price point will easily become an instant hit. At $150 unlocked you are not going to find a much better phone. What do you think, will this be a success for Nokia?

Amplify’d from www.boygeniusreport.com

Today, Nokia made the music-centric, full touch-screen 5250 handset official. The device will include a 2.8-inch TFT touchscreen with 640 x 360 resolution (16:9 aspect ratio), 512 MB of RAM, quad-band GSM, 2 megapixel camera, micro-SD card slot (expandable up to 16 GB), FM radio, and will be powered by Symbian^1. As an added bonus, your 5250 will come pre-loaded with Guitar Hero 5 Mobile. The device will be available in Q4 and will retail for 115€ (~ $150 U.S.). Hit the read link for the full press announcement.

Read more at www.boygeniusreport.com

At what point will dumb-phones no longer be considered dumb

Every day more and more consumers are upgrading to “smartphones”. Some knowingly, others because their friend’s friend has one just like it and they feel compelled to fit in. Will the time come when dumb-phones no longer exist? Even today if we evaluated the usage of the so called feature phones you would easily see that the majority of them can handle social feeds, email and more. So one has to question where is the line drawn when it comes to defining the categorization of mobile phones.

In the past these notions were always based on what operating system the phone was running. Now that this line has been blurred is there really a difference?

Where technology meets responsibility

Driving down the road your phone buzzes alerting you that you have received a text message. You reach into your pocket to pull out your phone, it doesn’t budge. The phone buzzes again leaving you anxious to see who or what is wanting you. Reaching deeper into your pocket you glance down to see why it won’t come out, suddenly the car in front of you slams on its brakes. One second too late the brakes on your car screech down the road, not having enough friction between you and the pavement to slow you down in time. Two cars collide with such force that the car in front ejects two passengers into the street killing them instantly.

Was this the carriers fault? Did the cell phone cause the accident?

Amplify’d from www.intomobile.com

We have no quarrel with Isa Saharkhiz and his son; indeed Nokia Siemens Networks condemns human rights violations around the world. But the Saharkhiz lawsuit is brought in the wrong place, against the wrong party, and on the wrong premise.

It’s an open and shut case really. I’ll repeat what I said in my previous article, that as much as I sympathize with Mehdi and the hell his father is going through right now, it feels like the lawsuit they brought against NSN was nothing more than a media stunt to garner attention towards their terrible situation.

Read more at www.intomobile.com

Do you post to boost your own self esteem?

Each morning we wake up, post about what we eat for breakfast, define the morning in our favorite phrases. As the day passes we express the moments of our lives to complete strangers under the assumption that people actually care what we have to say. After reading Leo Laporte’s rather childish post, I realized how much people truly believe they are what their follower count is.

Social media is a but a slice of the human pie. If you like how it makes you feel look inside to to learn about the true ingredients. People are more than a number.

Amplify’d from leoville.com

Then last night I noticed that my Buzzes were no longer showing up on Twitter (I use a service called Buzz Can Tweet that has been pretty reliably rebroadcasting my Buzz posts to Twitter.) I looked more closely at my Buzz feed and noticed that there had been considerably less engagement over the past few weeks. Then I noticed that I wasn’t seeing my posts in my Buzz timeline at all. A little deeper investigation showed that nothing I had posted on Buzz had gone public since August 6. Nothing. Fifteen posts buried, including show notes from a week’s worth of TWiT podcasts.

Maybe I did something wrong to my Google settings. Maybe I flipped some obscure switch. I am completely willing to take the blame here. But I am also taking away a hugely important lesson.

No one noticed.

Not even me.

It makes me feel like everything I’ve posted over the past four years on Twitter, Jaiku, Friendfeed, Plurk, Pownce, and, yes, Google Buzz, has been an immense waste of time. I was shouting into a vast echo chamber where no one could hear me because they were too busy shouting themselves. All this time I’ve been pumping content into the void like some chatterbox Onan. How humiliating. How demoralizing.

Social media, I gave you the best years of my life, but never again. I know where I am wanted. Screw you Google Buzz. You broke my heart.

Read more at leoville.com

When push becomes too much

The first to raise his hand in class when the question is asked, “would you be willing to try this new feature?”, was always followed by a young man that looks identical to me. Alright I confess it was me and this comes as no surprise to you if you know me. Technology, especially communications, shares the limited space in my body readily flowing through my veins. When the idea of having notifications pushed to me in realtime was introduced I was one of the first on block to get in line to sign my life away.

As the years have passed by the notion of realtime seems far less important to me. After reading the article regarding Google adding new push notifications to their iPhone app written by the wonderful folks at ReadWriteWeb I realized how unimportant realtime notifications are 99% of the time. Sure, we live in the digital age but if someone or something requires my immediate attention the best way to get in touch is and will always be a phone call or face to face meeting.

Ask yourself this question. How many hours a week do you waste staring at your device waiting for the next notification? The anticipation alone causes us to become more stressed and less focused on the real task at hand. When is push too much?

The gates are open.

Amplify’d from www.readwriteweb.com

You’ve got a new email! Holy smokes am I going to get pinged a lot if I turn on the newly announced Gmail and Google Calendar push notifications on the Google Mobile iPhone app. Google just announced the new feature and it’s a logical one, but it also seems like a throw-back to a simpler time when push notification for any and every email made sense.

Read more at www.readwriteweb.com

Read more at www.readwriteweb.com

Updating your firmware on Vodafone can potentially void your warranty

If you want to upset several of your account holders the best way to do it is to hold them back from something that people on other services can freely have. There are of course two sides of every story, this instance is no different.

Android in many carriers eyes is a cash cow. Users are standing in line to purchase the new handsets because of the new flashy operating system. The problem is that with the growth of the mobile market carriers are having a hard time keeping up with the massive growth in required resources. To help manage this carriers typically have their own “approved” versions of firmware for each device on their network. By doing so they can limit the impact an open firmware might have on their network. Wrong or right they have every legal right to do this. Sure, you might have to wait out a firmware update but this is the price you pay for a locked phone.

What are your thoughts? The gates are open

Amplify’d from www.unwiredview.com
Samsung Galaxy S official firmware update can void your Vodafone warrantyRead more at www.unwiredview.com

Being a Vodafone customer sometimes sucks. After delaying the Android 2.2 Froyo update for the HTC Desire (the update should finally arrive today), Vodafone UK is now doing another thing that upsets some users.

Talking about a recent Galaxy S firmware update, the carrier says, on its official forum, that “any firmware that hasn’t been released by us does invalidate the warranty directly with Vodafone.”

Read more at www.unwiredview.com

My first Coffee Press

Looking for an affordable way to make great coffee I was suggested to try a coffee press. Based on my recommendations this is what I went with.

AT&T Announces new data plans

In effort to lower data pricing AT&T has announced new lower data plan rates. Along with the lower pricing model comes choice, which for many will be a relief. In the past if you wanted a smartphone data plan you had one option. With the newly tiered structure you have a choice of 2 tiers with a option to use as much as you want, for a fee of course.

Plan Price Overage Options
DataPlus $15 $15 per 200MB Unlimited WiFi
DataPro $25 $10 per 1GB Unlimited WiFi
Tethering {Plan} + $20 Not disclosed Unlimited WiFi

Now that we have the numbers in front us let us do a little math to see if we are actually saving money with these new data plans. Each equation will be calculated based on average users, which AT&T claims is 98% of its user base.

Average Joe with smartphone

Imagine you are an average person that currently uses their phone for email and to browses occasionally to look for movie show times, Facebook, Twitter etc. . With normal usage you would typically stay well under 200 MB of data. Even with a couple of attachments via email you would easily stay safely in this threshold. With the new data plans you you would save an estimated $15 a month, before tax and fees of course.

Now let’s take into account that you go on vacation and snap pictures left and right. You are excited and want to start posting them to your favorite publishing services. During this trip you also find yourself browsing and using Geo applications more often to find out what is going on around you in this unfamiliar territory. Before you know it you have reached that 200 MB threshold and an additional $15 is appended to the end of your bill. You are now looking at $30 worth of data fees for the month versus $15.

In this instance you pay slightly more for the month you need it but once you get back home you return to your lower tier at $15 a month. Sounds like a great deal to me.

Plan Estimated Yearly Cost Usage in MB
DataPlus $180.00 + tax 2400 MB

Social Network Junky/Road Warrior/Business User

The first thing this user will scoff at is the fact that they go through 200 MB during breakfast while streaming video, music, and uploading the picture of their breakfast to their favorite sites. In reality they aren’t using near as much data as they think they are. Last month with T-Mobile and AT&T combined I used under 1GB of data. I consider myself in the above category yet look at my numbers. I stream Last.FM while I walk and upload pictures almost daily. My twitter and Facebook feeds are running 24/7 and I get well over 200+ emails daily. Still think you need unlimited data?

Lets assume you average 1.5 GB a month which is heavy usage by most standards. With the new DataPro data plan you would be paying $25 a month versus the current $30 a month. I admit the savings are modest and you lose over 3GB of usage however with this new model you pay for what you need. With the new data plans you will have to be more responsible with how you use and monitor your usage. To me this isn’t a bad thing. The trouble comes in when you do a direct comparison to what your accustomed to having available. If you are a user that uses every last MB of their current 5GB capped “unlimited” plan you would be looking at the following: $25 base price + $10 (1GB) + $10 (1GB) + $10 (1GB) = $55 a month in data charges. Suddenly the feeling of saving money is a thing of the past.

For a user that typically uses less than $2GB a month the overall savings a year will be a $60 ($5 *12 months). If you use on average more than 2GB a month you are going to significantly raise your data cost per year with these news plans.

Plan Estimated Yearly Cost Usage in MB
DataPro $300 24576

AT&T- News Room.