Posts Tagged ‘Mobile Application’

Android, BlackBerry apps drive Ford’s Sync AppLink

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Ford Motor Company announced the launch of Sync AppLink, a downloadable software program enabling auto owners to access Android and BlackBerry smartphone applications via voice commands and vehicle controls. Debuting in association with the 2011 Ford Fiesta, Sync AppLink promises to seamlessly integrate apps with the driver experience, improving eyes-on-the-road and hands-on-the-wheel time; the first wave of Sync-enabled apps, available later this year, includes Pandora web radio, Stitcher “smart radio” and Orangatame’s OpenBeak app for Twitter. Android Market and BlackBerry App World will offer updated versions of each app incorporating the Sync API; in addition, Ford will introduce the Sync Mobile Application Developer Network, offering developer tools and resources to collaborate with the automaker on new apps.

The Sync in-car communications and infotainment system is currently standard on all 2010 Lincoln models and available on select 2010 Ford and Mercury models. The service allows drivers to operate most MP3 players, Bluetooth-enabled phones and USB drives using voice commands–additional features include turn-by-turn navigation, realtime traffic updates and business search tools

Resource:

http://www.fiercemobilecontent.com/story/android-blackberry-apps-drive-fords-sync-applink/2010-04-20

ANZ Bank trials mobile ePOS for iPhones

Friday, April 16th, 2010

PAYING for a fixed dishwasher or fridge on-site has become a step easier thanks to a free iPhone application by ANZ Bank.

The bank is aiming the application at merchants with iPhones who are highly mobile and want to take payments quickly and securely, instead of lugging around portable EFTPOS machines.

Dubbed ANZ ePOS Mobile, the application can process on-the-spot credit and debit card transactions at a customer location.

Credit card details such as expiry date and card verification code are encrypted and no customer data is stored on the iPhone.

Authorisation does not require a signature or PIN as it is treated as a “card not present activity” — a form predominantly used to buy goods and services on the internet.

After payment is made an email bearing the receipt will be sent to the customer, who doesn’t incur any fees. Merchants, however, pay their standard rates to ANZ.

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Three merchants, including Fisher & Paykel Australia, are currently involved in a pilot to trial the software, ANZ head of innovation Peter Dalton told reporters in Sydney.

ePOS Mobile accepts credit cards from all financial institutions but during the trials a limit of $1000 was set, Mr Dalton said.

Spruiking the security features of the application Mr Dalton said if an iPhone is stolen the bank can remotely cancel a transaction.

The pilot, which commenced in mid-March, will scale to 20 merchants until May, he said. The bank hopes to make ePOS Mobile available on iTunes in Australia by June, Mr Dalton said.

“We’re trying to deliver banking solutions that make things faster and simpler for our customers,” he said.

According to Fisher & Paykel customer care financial controller Rudolph Khoury, the application was easy to use and convenient. “I haven’t had to call anyone from ANZ about this during the trial.”

A mobile suit tailor and mobile car detailer are also testing ePOS Mobile .

The idea for the solution was conceived in August 2009 by Mr Dalton’s team and developed with help from Deloitte Digital. The total project cost was “in the vicinity of a couple of hundred thousand dollars”, he said.

“We chose to do this on the iPhone because of its growing market share. Also, the (iTunes) apps store makes it easy for people to download the application,” Mr Dalton said.

Mr Dalton’s 22-person team is also working to enhance products for internet banking and other platforms such as the Apple iPad.

Resource:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/anz-bank-trials-mobile-pos/story-e6frgakx-1225854534900

Sprint Announces HTC Evo 4G, Emphasizing Multimedia

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Sprint Nextel CEO Dan Hesse introduced the HTC Evo 4G, which he called the country’s 4G smartphone, during a high-profile presentation at the CTIA Wireless 2010 conference in Las Vegas on March 23. Running Google Android 2.1, and boasting a 1GHz Snapdragon processor and 4.3-inch capacitive touch-screen, Sprint is betting that users interested in using their smartphone for intensive multimedia will be attracted to the device. Having recorded fairly substantial customer erosion and financial losses over the past few quarters, Sprint is investing heavily in a 4G network that it sees as the way of the future.

LAS VEGAS—Sprint Nextel CEO Dan Hesse announced a 4G-capable smartphone, the HTC Evo 4G, during a high-profile presentation at the CTIA Wireless 2010 conference on March 23. Boasting that it would take multimedia to “a whole new level,” Hesse demonstrated the device, which boasts a 4.3-inch capacitive touch-screen and the Google Android 2.1 operating system, for media and analysts.

The HTC Evo 4G will apparently make its debut during the summer. “It’s a fast device with a 1GHz Snapdragon processor,” Hesse told the audience. “It’s a terrific smartphone, even in 3G markets.” The device incorporates two cameras: an 8-megapixel module with auto-focus and an HD-capable camcorder, and a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera.

Hesse then introduced Peter Chou, CEO of HTC, who explained that HTC and Sprint had been working on the project hand-in-hand with Google since May 2008 to deliver what he described as “the world’s first fully integrated 4G consumer handset.”

Chou continued: “I think the Evo 4G gives a clear indicator of how mobile broadband experience is starting to move beyond the fixed-line broadband experience by what it offers in terms of local and personal relevance.” The HTC Evo 4G plays into that as a “holistic video and multimedia experience. As you know, the mobile video experience hasn’t been really embraced yet due to network speed limitations.”

As with other smartphones making their debut at CTIA, including the Samsung Galaxy S, the HTC Evo 4G will include a substantial social-networking element, aggregating content from a variety of services such as Twitter, Facebook and Flickr into a continually updated “flow.” Unlike some smartphones being shown at the conference, including Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 Series devices, the HTC Evo 4G will apparently provide Adobe Flash support.

Sprint made a limited number of HTC Evo 4G devices available to analysts and members of the press following the executive presentations. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the smartphones feel and operate very much like the Nexus One and HTC Droid Eris.

Sprint 4G capability is currently available in 27 markets, with plans to expand into Houston, Boston, Washington, D.C., New York City and San Francisco by the end of 2010.

Sprint has been working to ease its subscriber loss over the past few quarters, an effort helped by its recent acquisition of Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile USA. On Feb. 10, the company reported that it had lost a net 148,000 subscribers during the fourth quarter of 2009, better than the 545,000 who apparently left the network during the third quarter.

At the same time, the company has also been working to narrow its financial losses, which totaled $980 million for the fourth quarter—an improvement, nonetheless, over the $1.6 billion that had been lost during the same quarter a year earlier.

With that sort of financial pressure bearing down, Sprint has been gambling that users will be drawn to the prospect of a 4G network, with plans to invest an addition $1 billion into Clearwire’s WiMax 4G technology. Intel, Comcast, Time Warner and Bright House Networks have plans to contribute another $500 million to that effort.

Resource:

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Mobile-and-Wireless/Sprint-Announces-HTC-Evo-4G-Emphasizing-Multimedia-735848/

Android-Based Motorola i1 Unveiled for Sprint Nextel

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Sprint Nextel on Monday announced the Motorola i1, its first Android smartphone specifically for Nextel’s iDEN network. The device will also be available for SouthernLINC Wireless, a regional iDEN carrier that serves many areas of the Southeast U.S.

Since this is a Nextel iDEN phone, it comes with lots of Nextel Direct Connect extras, including one-to-one push-to-talk with any other Nextel subscriber – the first time an Android phone has taken advantage of this feature. It also includes Group Connect, International Direct Connect, Direct Talk, Direct Send and Group Messaging — features Nextel likes to push front and center with its phones.

The Motorola i1 will run Android 1.5 and has a 3.1-inch, 320-by-480 TFT touch screen, a 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi, and Opera Mini 5 Web browsing. It appears to share many build similarities with the Motorola CLIQ XT, another slab-style Android phone with mostly equal specs.

That said, the i1 will not run on 3G because it is Nextel’s network, and there’s no word if the phone will run MotoBlur, the social-networking oriented build of Android 1.5. If it doesn’t run MotoBlur, there will be questions about why the phone doesn’t have a newer version of stock Android.

The device is also the first truly rugged Android phone we’ve seen. Like several earlier “rugged” products from Motorola, the i1 meets military specification 810F, which means it should be able to tolerate dust, shock, vibration, extreme temperatures, humidity, and more. It will support up to a 32GB microSD card and claims about three and a half hours of talk time. The phone will be available for Nextel and SouthernLINC some time this summer.

Resource:

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2361660,00.asp