Archive

Archive for the ‘Mobile’ Category

Do we have to wait until July for the next BlackBerry?

March 27th, 2008

bb9000Man, RIM did quite well over the last years in establishing as THE provider of mobile enterprise services. I wish I would have invested some money into their stocks - they made 4000% in the last 5 Years.

At the moment I think it would be the wrong time to buy. Not just because the whole stock market is on fire but because it seems like RIM is having a rest on that they have achieved so far. The iPhone is entering their market and nothing really new has come along from RIM the last couple of months.

I thought we will see some new devices and features around WES in May but it seems like at least the devices are delayed until the second half of this year. So the only hope left is that we will see OS 4.5 and a couple of new features - maybe HTML rendering? Come on RIM! We CrackBerries need some new stuff!

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

“Fake Steve Jobs” and the “emperor of Austria”

March 27th, 2008

In one of its posts today Fake Steve Jobs writes about our chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer. He came across this article on Spiegel Online about the BZÖ accusing our “emperor” of breaking the law by unlocking his iPhone. And the picture of “Gusi” used in this article is really looking like “he is wearing the Dr. Evil jacket” :-D

gusi

Fun, Mobile

RIM releases JDE plugin for Eclipse

March 18th, 2008

RIMFinally RIM released a a version of its BlackBerry Java development environment as a plugin for Eclipse. It is available under http://www.blackberry.com/go/eclipse as a free download.

My download is already 90% finished and I hope that this will ease development of BlackBerry apps. As an Eclipse fan I was really frustrated about the JDE releases of RIM and I put a lot of effort into getting things to work inside of Eclipse. I will post my experiences in a week or two so check back.

Blackberry, Eclipse, Java, Mobile, RIM

iPhone for the enterprise?

March 5th, 2008

iphonevsbbWith the upcoming release of the iPhone SDK there are rumors that the iPhone will get some “enterprise capability”. This could mean that some sort of software will be released that allows to connect the iPhones email service to a Microsoft Exchange server.

Is this the only thing that is missing to make the iPhone interesting for business people? I do not think so! I tried the iPhone. I saw it in action. It is a cool device but I would not exchange my BlackBerry Curve against it. Sorry Steve!

In the following Sarah Lacy speaks out exactly what I think about the iPhone:


I would really like to have some features of the iPhone inside my Curve like the photo viewer, the cool UI of the audio player or the motion sensor but none of them could outbid the perfect communication features of the BlackBerry for me.

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

No HTML rendering in BES 4.1 SP5

March 5th, 2008

color blackberryAccording to this post on BoyGenius RIM has removed the HTML and Rich Text email rendering from their upcoming release of the BlackBerry Enterprise Server 4.1 SP5. The SP5 was delayed multiple times now and should be released on March 11.

I am disappointed. It has been a long time now since RIM presented ther current devices. The 88xx and 83xx devices were a great step forward. These devices are around now for over a year - a long time in the gadget-business.  Don’t get me wrong. These devices are great, I love my Curve. But it would be nice to get some new features by installing a new OS.

So what’s so hard about that RIM? Give your loyal users some goodies until the next generation of devices is available!

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

Touchscreen BlackBerry

February 8th, 2008

Russell Shaw add ZDNet points to a very interesting BlackBerry Patent. You can read the original patent here. Russel thinks that the very short time frame between the Patent was filed and published could mean that the implementation of it is imminent.

Could this mean we will see a touchscreen BlackBerry in the very near future? Within months?

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

Ten years of “mobility”

January 24th, 2008

Nearly ten years ago I bought my first mobile phone. I will take this anyversary as a reason to write a small sumary about all the phones I had within the last decade.

samsungAugust 1998 - Samsung SGH
My first mobile phone. I bought this one with a prepayd card called B-Free from Mobilkom Austria. In this time there were not many phones around and most of them were Nokia (the better ones) or Alcatel (the cheap ones). My Samsung was special and I liked it a lot. It was very “american” because of its flip and the telescope antenna. It was a good companion while I hat to do my military service.

nokia6150April 1999 - Nokia 6150
With buying the Nokia 6150 I signed my first mobile phone contract with A1 Mobilkom Austria. The 6150 was THE state of the art Nokia phone. It had a very long lasting battery and cool new features like T9 for text messages. I was very sad when it died because it fell into the pool while it was in my bermuda short in the summer of 1999.

nokia6110September 1999 - Nokia 6110
Because my Nokia 6150 had gone so young and unexpected I had no money to afford a new one and so I assembled a working Nokia 6110 out of two damaged 6110 and my wet 6150. I heard a about a new revolutionary phone from Nokia coming out in late 1999 and so I decided to wait for it.

nokia7110January 2000 - Nokia 7110
I did a lot for getting this phone: searching web sites, forums and shops, phoning around, writing mails. Finally I found a vendor only some kilometers away. I jumped into my car and bought the phone for 7500 Austrian Schilling (which was quite a lot of money for a student like me). The phone was worth it: The cool slider that snapped open when clicking the button on the back of the phone, the big display, the WAP browser …

nokia6210August 2001 - Nokia 6210
My 7110 was getting old and my service provider A1 made me a nice offer - so I switched to this one. I was a lot smaller and it had no antenna so the form factor was a lot better. The display was a bit smaller and there were no new features - at least none I remember.

nokia7650November 2002 - Nokia 7650
Compared to my last phone, the 6210, this one was a huge step into the future. It was the first Nokia phone with a built in camera and Symbian OS. I remember installing a lot of applications on it and using it as phone and PDA. I sold my Sony Clie. The phone was able to run Doom and a lot other games. The only disadvantage this phone had was the short battery lifetime.

p800Mai 2003 - SonyEricsson P800
After being convinced of the Symbian OS this phone was the clear successor of the 7650 for me. It was equipped with a touch screen, a removable flip, a camera and huge 208 x 320 pixel screen. It even was able to load a MemoryStick Duo for storing music, pictures and even videos. It was the first phone I had that was able to play not only polyphone ringtones but real music from mp3 files. There was no mobile phone on the market at that time that could do more. The P800 was my ultimate swiss army knife for a long time. I could do all the PIM tasks and even send and receive emails.

p910September 2004 - SonyEricsson P910
I was very happy with my P800 but got a good chance to switch to its successor model the P910 so I did it after using the P800 for over 15 months (quite a long time if you consider the rest of my list). The P910 was a big improvement of the P800 in terms of operating system and hardware. It had just a few features but it was manufactured a lot better.

bb7290February 2005 - BlackBerry 7290
I remember the day my company gave me my first BlackBerry very well. At first I did not want to exchange my P910 for this strange looking calculator. I tried a long time to get the BlackBerry connect software running on my P910 but it was not possible. After some frustrating weeks I gave the 7290 a try - and started to love the BlackBerry. It just worked. I soon realized the advantage of not having to synchronize your device every day - because it is in sync. Reading and writing emails on a BlackBerry could not be better. The 7290 was the ultimate productivity tool.

bb8700October 2006 - BlackBerry 8700
With the 8700 the BlackBerry experience even got better. The device was a lot faster than the 7290 and a lot of third party applications started to spread. It looked a lot less like a business tool and the usability was improved a bit. What still amazes me about the BlackBerry is how perfect the system works. If my administrator would not change the enterprise solution system that often I would have no troubles with the device.

bb8300June 2007 - BlackBerry 8300
The BlackBerry started to beat the P800 and P910 devices in all areas. With the built in 2 megapixel camera and the multimedia player it is my favorite gadget at the moment. A 4 gigabyte micro SD card provides enough space for music, photos and videos. I got a lot of additional applications installed on it: Google Maps, Instant Messengers, Opera Mini, Games, Password Safe, … I would not even exchange it against an iPhone.

For the moment I am definitively hooked to the BlackBerry. I just can not wait for the next generation and what new features they will introduce.

Blackberry, Mobile

New BlackBerry 8xxx series device

January 6th, 2008

It turns out that the pictures leaked this week were pictures of a new BlackBerry 8xxx series model. BoyGenius has all the details about this new device:

624MHz processor built on the new Tavor chipset, full HSDPA with tri-band UMTS (850/1900/2100), a “half VGA” screen (480 x 320), a frickin’ 1500mAh battery, GPS, Wi-Fi, a 2 megapixel camera, and will be targeted to the high-end BlackBerry users.

bb8xxx

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

First BlackBerry 9000 prototype pics leaked

January 1st, 2008

They are all around the web: BlackBerryForums, BoyGenius and others. Could these be the first pictures of the an early BlackBerry 9000:

BB9000

I am not convinced. I can not tell what makes me doubt - it just looks somehow fake. We will see …

Blackberry, Mobile, RIM

Drive safely

November 18th, 2007

Last week I got my Parrot CK3200 hands-free car kit. After 40 minutes of work I had it installed in my car. It was very easy using the existing ISO connectors. The Parrot CK3200 allows to connect up to five different bluetooth phones. It synchronizes the address book an call lists. The voice dial commands work very good. It supports telephone mute. If you want to leave you car while doing a call you can transfer the call to your mobile. All in all I think it is the perfect solution!

Parrot

Another nice feature for geeks like me: It is possible to install software updated over bluetooth for future mobile phones.

General, Mobile