Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

iPhone 4.0 4g HD – Apple 4.0 OS Business User Improvements

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

iPhone 4.0 4g HD – Apple 4.0 OS Business User Improvements. Apple finally released the new 4.0 OS for the iPhone and the iPod Touch. For many, this is very exciting as it will be the first time they can multi-task on their iPhones and it will also be the first time they can organize apps on the screen.

MacBook Pro 2010 Release

The new operating system comes with a few caveats, such as the iPhone 3g won’t support the new multitasking feature – only the 3gs will. Because of this, many wonder if a new iPhone 4.0 4g HD will be released.

Apple iPad Release in UK Delayed

The iPhone 4.0 OS brings the iPhone more in line with other business phones, such as Blackberry. It allows for VPN access, and will even support Lotus Notes email applications. In addition, there are a variety of features available to corporate fleets wishing to turn in their tired RIM handsets for shiny new iPhones.

There are applications you can download that allow you to read any attachment you get on your iPhone, such as a PDF or Office file. It’s a big step for computing and many in the IT industry may find themselves leaning more towards an iPhone.

Still yet, the iPhone is only available on the AT&T network. That’s rumored to change, but we have yet to see the changes thus far. Currently, the new 4.0 OS is all we have to go by, and by the looks of it, business and enterprise users are going to win big with the update.

Resource:

http://cnmnewsnetwork.com/17698/iphone-4-0-4g-hd-%E2%80%93-apple-4-0-os-business-user-improvements/

MS to launch low-cost Windows Phone 7

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

BANGALORE: The world’s largest software maker Microsoft is planning to announce a low-cost version of its Windows Phone 7 for developing markets like India next year. Windows Phone 7 is the new operating system for mobile phones by Microsoft, scheduled to be launched by December, this year.

“The low-cost version of the phone will have a different chassis than version 1 to be launched by 2010 end,” said Sudeep Bharati, director, developer tools for Microsoft India’s Visual Studio Team at Tech.Ed 2010 being held here.

The Windows Phone 7 may be priced at $500- $600, same price as Google’s Nexus One. Microsoft officials denied to give any details on pricing .

The Windows Phone 7 will come with a 5 Mega Pixel camera, a large multi-touch screen, Wi-fi , bluetooth and a minimum of 128 MB RAM.

“The new version may also have a smaller screen and will thus be priced lower to suit developing markets like India. We are in talks with OEMs to gain their feedback on a new chassis,” he said. The existing chassis of Windows Phone 7 (due to be launched in December ), carries three buttons.

One of the buttons will carry the Windows symbol and will act like the “start up” key in MS Windows for PCs. The phones to be manufactured by OEMs like HTC, Samsung and LG for Windows Phone 7 will carry a joint branding by Microsoft and the mobile phone maker, the details of which are being worked out.

Resource:

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/software/MS-to-launch-low-cost-Windows-Phone-7/articleshow/5808152.cms

Apple iAds another marketing strategy

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Soon the iPhone, and presumably the iPad, will carry advertising embedded in their applications.

For ABC fans it sounds like a nightmare, and it’s great news for the ABC itself, since its app will remain ad-free. But in fact it’s great news all round: it means high-quality commercial publishing may yet live, not die under the benign, democratic, jackboot of Google.

The true genius of the iPhone, as well as any potential the iPad might have to change the world of publishing, lies in the invention of the application – something that didn’t really become clear until well after the iPhone was released in 2007 and the new app development industry really started hitting its straps.

It’s also a demonstration of the enduring power of great distribution to foster great content. We are learning that distribution is king (not content) but content is the monarch’s prime minister.

Apple created a seamless distribution system with the iPhone and the app store and now 185,000 apps have been created and 4 billion have been downloaded.

I’m now used to reading books on the iPhone. One app has 23,000 free books that are out of copyright that can be quickly downloaded and easily read, while another, Kobo, sells new releases.

So I’m reading books and newspapers, watching TV, playing Scrabble, doing my banking, running my calendar, looking for restaurants, checking the footy scores all through apps on my iPhone. The iPhone is becoming more and more essential every day, thanks to the apps.

The price range of the apps is huge – from zero to $70 (that I know of, for a GPS navigation system) – and some apps are asking for a monthly subscription (not very successfully I suspect).

In a couple of months Apple will launch a series of changes to the iPhone system that will take this system to the next stage, including embedded advertising.

When Apple’s new operating system for the iPhone, OS4, is released soon, it will contain what Apple calls iAd – an advertising platform that will allow app developers to put ads into their applications.

The most popular apps are free, or very cheap, which means no-one is making much money. But it turns it was a kind of Trojan horse strategy – either deliberate or not.

As Apple chief Steve Jobs said when he announced iAd a week ago: “The average iPhone user spends around 30 minutes a day using apps. Now, if we said we wanted to put an ad up every three minutes, that would be 10 ads per device per day. We’re going to soon have 100 million devices [running the iPhone OS]. That’s a billion ad opportunities per day in the iPhone and iPod touch community.”

Publishers thought the internet would be a Trojan horse as well – that they would give the content away for a while and then when everyone was hooked, start charging. But that didn’t work because, as I wrote on Friday in Business Spectator, content is not king, as they thought.

Presumably iAd will work on Apple’s new tablet machines as well, so publishers will be able to replicate and then enhance their traditional business model – charging for the content and putting advertising with it – on two devices, one large and one small.

Consumers will take their pick: one device that includes a phone and goes in your pocket, but has a small screen, or carrying an extra device with a big screen that’s easier to read. Maybe the iPad will eventually be a phone as well, so you just need that.

iAd is a direct assault on Google, or rather it completes the assault that began with the invention of the iPhone and continues with the iPad. Apps are simply a better and more reliable way to get content than the internet browsers on which Google relies.

More importantly, it turned out to be very difficult for a content vendor to make a living selling material of any value in a browser on the internet, distributed by Google.

Rupert Murdoch complains that Google “steals” the content, which is silly, but the effect is the same: content is being distributed for free.

The app store is now becoming much more analogous to the print distribution system that Murdoch grew up with, except for one thing: the barrier to entry into the system is very low, which means prices will be lower.

But at least they won’t have to be zero, and the publishing market will be able to find a new equilibrium that will support decent content.

Apple is taking a big risk, however, in making it a closed system. The new OS4 tightens controls so application developers can use no third party tools and software – mainly designed to prevent them using Adobe’s Flash system.

Jobs is once again betting that his fully integrated product design will prevail against an open platform.

It’s a repeat of the battle that Apple and Microsoft waged in the 1980s, which Microsoft won. This time Google’s Android smart phone operating system and Adobe’s Flash are taking the role of Microsoft.

Jobs is betting that, this time, his devices, the apps and the app store are a sufficiently unique distribution system to give Apple a decisive advantage. With iAd as well, he could be right.

The battle between Google and Adobe’s open system and Apple’s closed one will be a king War of the Worlds. At this stage Apple has the advantage, but that’s how it seemed earlier in the fight between it and Microsoft, until the cheap manufacturers of Asia drove down the prices of clone PCs.

This time manufacturing cost is not an issue – it’s all about distribution of content. And Google doesn’t have iTunes or an app store that channels money to those who make the content.

Resource:

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/04/12/2869846.htm

New data suggests new MacBooks coming soon

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Against a backdrop of rampant rumors about new MacBook Pros, the latest rumor is getting a lot of attention.

Rumors are coming fast and furious because MacBook Pros are due to be updated with new Intel silicon–that is, new mobile Core i5 and/or Core i7 processors. PC makers like Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba, Dell, and Sony have already moved en masse to the Intel chips, which came out in January.

This time the speculation seems more legit because blogs are citing new MacBook part numbers that Macrumors says it has independently confirmed as real. Others also seem to be taking the new data seriously.

Though timing is not certain, the emergence of part numbers may indicate the update will happen sooner rather than later.

9to5Mac speculates that the updates are 15- and 17-inch MacBook Pros.

And that’s not all. Best Buy is showing no stock for certain MacBook Pro 15.4-inch models, both online and in-store at many locations. Whether this is indicative of an imminent MacBook update is not clear, however.

Resource:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20002216-64.html