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Simple phones can now access Smartphone apps

 An Israeli technology company has developed a method where old or outdated phones can run apps available only on smartphones.
The system developed by the VascoDe company allows users to obtain apps with the firm’s cloud-based system that requires no downloads and uses the text-based Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD), similar to the Short Message Service (SMS), Xinhua reported.
Customers will be able to use many apps available until now for smartphone users only. However, the only difference is that they will see the apps in black and white.
The USSD system does not allow access to the internet, but rather it uses the API (Application Programming Interfaces) from pages like Facebook, Gmail, and the like, according to technology and health website Israel21c.
VascoDe CEO Doron Mottes said 83 percent of mobiles in the world are simple and do not connect to the internet, which means that almost four billion people in the world cannot check their email on the go.
He said the difference between being able to check emails and respond to them, can make a whole difference in a world so hung up on the internet, because it can give you the possibility to respond to job offers, for example.
VascoDe’s main markets are developing countries like Brazil, Sri Lanka and Indonesia, where most of the population cannot afford internet connection or a computer, and has to rely on expensive internet shops to log on their accounts.
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Access Facebook on any Mobile Without the Internet

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The 10 biggest tech stories of 2011

The technology industry often finds itself pontificating about the future, but the busy news cycle this year gave us plenty to discuss.
Very influential tech pioneers died; cyber-security cost companies billions of dollars; and trends in electronics and on the Web provided new tools and created new challenges.
Smartphones and tablets each grew so immensely this year that we decided to give them their own mobile year-in-review list.
As for future talk, there were plenty of bold, futuristic initiatives that did not quite bear fruit this year.
The seeds of Hewlett-Packard's mobile strategy, Google's plans for Motorola post-acquisition, Intel's 3-D silicon transistors and mobile payment systems like Google Wallet were planted this year. But those stories were left off of this list because their products did not reach a mass market in 2011. Look for those to make big splashes in 2012.

1. Steve Jobs dies

From humble middle-class roots to running the most valuable tech company in the world, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was powerful and revered. His death on October 5 after a long battle with cancer made waves around the world.
Public grieving could be seen outside Apple's hundreds of stores, where fans left flowers, candles and written notes of tribute. His authorized biography by Walter Isaacson, which came out in November, instantly became a bestseller.
At Apple, Jobs helped create the personal computer industry, and built a team that worked with him to design mega hits like the iMac, iPod, iPhone and iPad. He also found time to lead Pixar Animation Studios, the "Toy Story" creator that the Walt Disney Co. paid $7.4 billion to acquire in 2006.
The fast-paced tech industry halted for a moment after Jobs' death this year, prompting business and world leaders to speak publicly about his impact. It may never be the same after.


2. Social media's role as a tool for protestors

Much praise was heaped on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube after they played a role in the Arab Spring, a series of protests in the Middle East that started late in 2010.
Use of social networks to spread the word about demonstrations persisted this year, especially in the Egyptian uprising that toppled longtime President Hosni Mubarak.
In London, participants in riots used BlackBerry Messenger.
Micro reports from Occupy Wall Street and other U.S. protests frequently popped up on Twitter.
Perhaps in a nod to those events, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said onstage at his conference this year, "We exist at the intersection of technology and social issues."


3. Hackers

The Guy Fawkes mask, a stark white symbol of political upheaval, can be seen at many Occupy protests, but the accessory from the movie "V for Vendetta" was adopted earlier by an online group called Anonymous.
Members of the loosely organized group emerged from the Internet underground this year with a series of politically fueled computer attacks on churches, e-commerce and banks. A sister group called Lulz Security staged its own hacks before quickly vanishing.
After Sony's online networks had been hacked, researchers discovered a file planted on one of its servers containing the Anonymous chant, "We are legion." The word "hack" was so ingrained in people's vernacular after all of these incidents that it became a catchphrase anytime a site was down or an account password had been stolen.


4. Tablet market gets dozens of new entrants

The decade-old tablet PC market received a jolt with new products this year, sparked by the massive success of Apple's iPad.
Electronics makers tried to figure out whether consumers were looking for tablets or just iPads. Google, with its Android tablets, and Research in Motion, with the BlackBerry PlayBook, were not pleased with the answer.
Amazon.com may have cracked the formula with its $199 Kindle Fire. It has been selling about a million devices each week since it debuted in November. Hewlett-Packard only managed to attract meaningful sales to its TouchPad when it ran a $99 fire sale to clear inventory.


5. Facebook and partners add 'frictionless' sharing

What do you call it when someone you know finds out something about you without you telling them?
Facebook calls it "frictionless," and companies that have implemented the feature, including some music-streaming services and news publishers, have found a great promotional vehicle.
Still, many are opposed to their private reading habits being broadcast instantly to their Facebook pages. Zuckerberg is convinced people will continue publishing more about themselves online each year -- now, whether they actively choose to or not.


6. Patent wars

The biggest names in mobile, including Apple, Google, HTC, Microsoft, RIM and Samsung, have engaged in a giant game of patent Risk.
These companies have filed lawsuits and countersuits in countries around the world to seek licensing agreements or block the sale of rivals' products. Google has said that its $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility was to gain the phone maker's stockpile of patents.
Check with your local government about whether you can legally buy a Galaxy Tab in stores this week.


7. Google+

People are spending more of their time on social networks than searching the Web. In other words, more Facebook and less Google.
So Google created its own Facebook-like environment in Google+. Users can share photos and browse friends' updates.
Google+ got off to a promising start, but Facebook has had a long lead. Google asserts that its social network is key to the future of the company. That's a big bet.


8. Apple becomes the most valuable company in the world

When Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, he said the company was weeks away from bankruptcy. Over the next decade, he orchestrated a masterful turnaround that culminated in Apple briefly becoming the world's most valuable company by market capitalization.
Exxon Mobil has reclaimed a sizable lead, but that shouldn't undermine how effective Apple has been in creating a lust for gizmos. The ultra-thin iPad 2 has done gangbusters, and the iPhone 4S, with Siri, has introduced voice-command services to a wider audience this year.


9. IBM's Watson beats human champs on 'Jeopardy!'

At times, the Watson computer, built by IBM, failed to understand some nuances of the English language, prompting mocking laughter.
However, as the world had learned when IBM's Deep Blue defeated chess champion Gary Kasparov, computers aren't clueless. Watson proved that two smart men, Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter, were no match for banks of servers running artificial-intelligence software.


10. Spotify and Facebook take on digital music

With iTunes and iPod, Apple had a strong formula for dominating the digital music industry. Amazon and Google haven't made a dent.
But Spotify has proved itself as a worthy opponent in Europe, and after years of negotiations with the record labels, it finally hit U.S. shores this year.
Facebook Music, a page that shows what friends are listening to, has helped introduce wider audiences to on-demand streaming services like Spotify, MOG, Rdio and Rhapsody.
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The Siri Horror Movie






Just in time for the holidays, live action production company Rooster Teeth has released a new short -- a trailer for Siri: The Movie.

"This holiday season, be careful what you wish for," the narrator says.

The trailer starts with friends gathered around a Christmas tree. When they open their presents, they're all ecstatic to see that they received an iPhone 4S featuring Siri.

"Hey Siri, what's the meaning of life?" one friend asks.

Siri responds, "life has no meaning."

"Don't be such a downer, Siri," he says.

"It's true," Siri says. "You're alive and then you die, you die, you die, die, die, die..."

Later in the video, Siri tells a driver to keep going straight and shortly after, he drives into a building and his car blows up.

It's unclear whether they will actually make a movie out of this, but the trailer is still hilarious to watch.


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Newly arrived: HTC Rhyme hits the indian market

HTC's new smartphone

It seems like HTC has pulled up its socks to create a strong customer base in India. As a result, the company has been coming up with new phones in India one after the other. After launching Sensation XE and Sensation XL, the company has now launched the HTC Rhyme in the Indian market.

HTC Rhyme Mobile Phone Features:
  • Google Android with HTC Sense UI
  • Elegant unibody design
  • Available in three colors: Plum, hourglass and clearwater
  • Super LCD display screen
  • 5MP Camera with face detection, action burst scene
HTC Rhyme Android Mobile Technical Specifications:
  • 3.7” inch (480×800 resolution) Capacitive Touchscreen with Multi-Touch
  • 1GHz Processor
  • 768MB RAM
  • Available Memory up to 1GB + Micro SD Card Slot
  • Upload speed of up to 5.76 Mbps and download speed of up to 14.4 Mbps
  • 5 megapixel color camera with auto focus and LED flash
  • 720p Video Recording
  • Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11 b/g/n + Bluetooth 3.0 + GPS
  • 3.5 mm stereo audio jack
  • Rechargeable 1600 mAh Lithium-ion battery
  • Talk time:Up to 480 minutes for WCDMA
  • Standby time: Up to 340 hours for WCDMA
  • Dimensions: 119 x 60.8 x 10.85 mm
  • Weight: 130 grams




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Microsoft reveals details of its Windows Store plan

Details of the Windows Store have been released by Microsoft.



The service will allow users to buy applications online for Windows 8-based PCs, desktops, laptops and tablets when the system launches next year.
Microsoft is offering best-selling developers a bigger share of sales than rivals' stores. Users will also be able to use some apps on a trial basis.
Experts say the move hastens the death of boxed software sold via retailers.
Traditionally most software has been purchased from High Street stores or downloaded directly from developers' websites.
However, Valve's Steam videogames service, Apple's App Store, Google's Android Market and the Blackberry App World have helped create a shift towards one-stop software stores.
Microsoft already runs a Windows Phone Marketplace where it sells third-party software.
In February 2012 it will extend that model to other devices to coincide with the beta release of the next version of its operating software.
Microsoft says the store will be global, enabling developers to sell their apps in 231 markets and in more than 100 languages.

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Google's Android racks up its 10 billionth app load


More than 10 billion apps have been downloaded from Google's Android Market.
To mark the moment Google said that for the next 10 days it would cut the price of some top apps to 10p each.
The search giant announced the milestoneon its blog adding that the store's apps were being downloaded at a rate of one billion a month.
However, some industry analysts played down the figure saying Google should do more to address poor-quality programs.
Cheap deal
Google said the pace at which apps were being downloaded was starting to accelerate. Its figures show Android took 22 months to reach one billion downloads but only one month to go from nine billion to 10 billion.
By contrast, Apple hit one billion downloads after nine months. Although the iPhone maker still maintains a lead, some experts believe it will be short-lived.
"Apple announced the 15 billion download mark in July so it's clear that Android's momentum in device activations is translating to application downloads and usage," said Geoff Blaber from analysts CCS Insight.
"We'd expect Android to overtake Apple in application downloads in the first half of 2012."
However, added Mr Blaber, such swift growth posed a challenge of how to help customers discover useful software from all the other code on offer.
"It's an issue for developers and consumers alike but a significant opportunity for whoever solves the problem first," he said.


Best-seller
Google's Android smartphone platform became the world's most popular in early 2011 when it overtook Nokia's Symbian.

The celebration of the 10 billionth download will last for 10 days during which Google will pick a series of top programs and drop their prices.Sales are believed to have been helped by the appearance of Android tablets such as Amazon's Kindle Fire.
Among the first titles to be discounted are Asphalt 6 HD, Minecraft, Endomondo Sports Tracker Pro and Swiftkey X.
Carolina Milanesi, from analysts Gartner, said download numbers were a poor measure of success.
"The number game matters to industry watchers and helps advertising but it is not changing the bottom line," she said.
"Quality of the apps and the store in general and curation in particular should be the focus for Google," she said. "This is where I still see a difference between the Apple App Store and Android Market.
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Welcome to Androidland - the Worlds First Android Store



Australian telecom operator, Telstra has unveiled 'Androidland' - the world's first store within a store that showcases the latest Android smartphones and tablets. Located at Telstra’s flagship retail outlet in Bourke Street, Melbourne, this 154 square metre space brings together interactive technology, games and on-site experts to explain the features of Google’s Android operating system. The new Androidland comes just in time for the Christmas rush, and aims to provide gift shoppers a choice to buy from a whole range of Android smartphones along with providing them plenty of ideas and buying guide tips.




Visitors to Androidland will be able to:

  • Board the Android spaceship – An interactive spaceship zone that allows visitors to pilot the Google Earth app on the giant screen and fly across the world; play Angry Birds on a big interactive screen; and create an Android avatar that can be printed or shared.
  • Have fun in the play zone – Visitors can sit under a pixel tree and play with live devices, try their luck on an Android skill tester and clown machine and flick through a virtual library of Google Books.
  • Get expert advice – Android experts, specially trained by Google will be on hand to help customers set up their Google accounts, recommend popular Android Market apps, answer questions and to help customize device homescreens.
  • Get hands on with the latest Android devices – Visitors will be able to try out a wide range of working Android smartphone and tablets.
  • Window shop – Customers will be able to interact with a massive 24 x 9 metre window display that features an augmented reality game challenging visitors to catch Android robots drifting in a virtual snowfall.
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BlackBerry, iPhone, Gmail users at risk: WikiLeaks



WikiLeaks is out with yet another explosive expose. It has released 287 files of numerous companies containing details of mass surveillance.
Speaking in London, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said more than 150 organisations worldwide were selling information obtained by monitoring people's mobile phones and computers.
"Today, we release over 287 files, documenting the reality of the international mass surveillance industry. An industry which now sells equipment to dictators and democracies alike, in order to intercept entire populations. 9/11 has provided a license for European countries, for United States, Australia, Canada, South Africa and others to develop spying systems that affect all of us," Assange said.
He added that iPhone, Blackberry and Gmail users were at risk.
The whistleblower website has in the past released classified US documents on the Iraq and Afghan wars as well as controversial details of US diplomatic cables.
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Cheating App Found

A hidden application found on millions of smartphones can log almost everything a user does, claims a US security researcher.



Trevor Eckhart unearthed the Carrier IQ application that runs largely unseen on many smartphone handsets.
Mr Eckhart said the software could log locations, websites visited, key presses and many other parameters.
Carrier IQ denied its code was spying. It threatened Mr Eckhart with legal action but later backed down.
Advanced skills
Mr Eckhart said he found Carrier IQ via work he had done on a security program, called Logging Test, which spotted which apps were running on an Android phone.
His analysis revealed that Carrier IQ could be set up to record almost anything and everything done on a smartphone.
Mr Eckhart found the code on Android smartphones and a cut down version has also been seen running on some Apple phones. He claimed it was in use on gadgets from other manufacturers.
Nokia said Carrier IQ did not ship on its products. Research in Motion, the maker of the BlackBerry, said it did install nor authorise its partners to install Carrier IQ.
In response to Mr Eckhart's claims, Carrier IQ defended its software, saying it was not spying on users.
It said the code was used by mobile operators as a diagnostic tool to spot what was causing calls to drop, texts to go astray and battery power to be drained.
Mr Eckhart claimed Carrier IQ was buried deep in the core code for a smartphone to prevent it being found and, on some phones, was customised to prevent users changing what it logged. In some cases, he said, only those with "advanced skills" would be able to find it.
He put a video on YouTube which showed Carrier IQ logging button presses, search queries and locations. Much of the data had been grabbed without consent, he said.
Fair use
The expose led Carrier IQ to start legal action against Mr Eckhart in the form of a "cease and desist" letter which demanded the removal of its training manuals and product information from his website.
This led to the intervention of digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which agreed to represent Mr Eckhart in the legal spat.
In its response, the EFF said: "We have now had a chance to review your allegations against our client, and have concluded that they are entirely baseless."
It said Mr Eckhart's work was "sheltered by both the fair use doctrine and the First Amendment".
Soon after, Carrier IQ withdrew its legal action and said it was "deeply sorry for any concern or trouble" it had caused.
"We sincerely appreciate and respect EFF's work on his behalf, and share their commitment to protecting free speech in a rapidly changing technological world," it said in a statement.
It reiterated that its software was used for diagnosis and disputed Mr Eckhart's claim that it had logged keystrokes and had tracked where people went.
It said it looked forward to a "healthy and robust" discussion with EFF and Mr Eckhart about its software and the uses to which it had been put.
Senate hearing
The news is the latest in a series of reports by security researchers flagging up different smartphone applications that keep an eye on users.
In April, Alasdair Allan and Pete Warden found that Apple iPhones and tablets running iOS4 regularly recorded a phone's location.
Apple denied it was tracking users and said the data was uploaded to phones to help locate nearby wi-fi and cell phone towers.
In addition, Google played down claims that phones running its Android system were logging locations. It said it gave people a clear choice about whether the information should be gathered.
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RIM to offer security features for iPhone, Androids



Research In Motion is introducing a software tool giving corporate customers the option of linking employees' personal iPhones to the BlackBerry network without compromising security.
The move, announced on Tuesday, acknowledges the deep inroads made by Apple and Google's Android devices in the global smartphone market, especially among younger users.
It is also a first, tentative step by RIM to offer its network services independently of BlackBerry devices, which have been losing ground to sleeker rivals.
Success with the strategy would likely help RIM defend its turf as the primary handler of mobile devices in the workplace.
"It's not an admission of guilt - it's a necessary evil," Suquehanna analyst Jeff Fidacaro said.
RIM's often-volatile stock jumped more than 8 percent to $17.82 in morning trade on the Nasdaq.
Even so, the shares are still down more than 70 percent this year following a string of delayed or botched product launches and disappointing quarterly results.
RIM's BlackBerry was for years the preferred device for businesses and government agencies, who treasured its encrypted data and distributed the device to millions of workers needing secure, round-the-clock email access.
But many workers now prefer using their own Apple and Android-powered devices to access corporate emails, raising security questions for corporations that RIM hopes to address with the new software.
"While a positive step, the larger challenges remain RIM's need to narrow competitive gaps in its handsets," RBC Capital Markets analyst Mike Abramsky wrote in a note to clients, pointing out RIM's software deficiencies and limited content and applications available on its devices.
RIM's slice of the lucrative U.S. smartphone market fell to 9 percent in the third quarter, down from 24 percent a year earlier, according to research firm Canalys. Globally, the report placed RIM in fifth place, with 10 percent market share, compared with 15 percent a year earlier.
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Nokia’s Lumia 800: smartphone and saviour?


Nokia and Microsoft are both banking on the new Lumia 800 to provide them with a big comeback in the smartphone market, currently dominated by Android devices and Apple’s iPhone.

The fact that two global market leaders -- Nokia has seen its market lead cut by Android and Apple, while Microsoft operates the world’s premier PC operating system, while failing so far to crack the smartphone market -- have tied up so much hope in one device is reason enough to give it a close look.

Nokia announced in February that it was switching to Windows Phone as the operating system for its smartphones. The Lumia 800 is the first fruit of that partnership.
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iPhone 4S hits Indian stores, starts at Rs.44,500

iPhone 4S

Over a month after its co-founder and tech guru Steve Jobs died, computer technology giant Apple Friday launched iPhone 4S priced between Rs.44,500 and Rs.57,500 in the Indian market.
Customers and enthusiast were seen thronging stores across the country to get a glimpse of the latest offering from Apple's stable.
The phone hit the US market Oct 14.
The smart phone was launched by leading telecom operators Bharti Airtel and Aircel in three variants starting from Rs.44,500 for the 16 GB model, Rs.50,900 for 32 GB, to Rs.57,500 for 64 GB versions.

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Idea launches smartphones to promote 3G service

Leading GSM operator Idea Cellular on Wednesday launched 3G Android smartphones to attract its existing 2G users to its 3G services.
“These smartphones will further drive our existing 3G services. Users will now be able to access the Internet through these devices. We are also studying if we should enter the 3G tablet market. But we have not taken any decision on it,” Idea Cellular MD Himanshu Kapania said.
However, he did not give a time frame by when he expects increased 3G smartphones penetration and also to increase the average revenue per user (Arpu).
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