Archive for March 31st, 2008

As we quick approach zero hour for CTIA this year, let’s look at what we can expect from the massive boys in the months to come. This week’s trade show, CTIA Wireless, is the “business” head of the CTIA hydra and where most of the large handset announcements for U.S. carriers happen. Notice I italicized […]

As we quick approach zero hour for CTIA this year, let’s look at what we have the ability to expect from the large boys in the months to come. This week’s trade show, CTIA Wireless, is the “business” head of the CTIA hydra and where most of the big handset announcements for U.S. carriers happen. Notice I italicized U.S. Because of our backward and Soviet-style carrier system here in the U.S., we very rarely get cool phones. This is why, on the hole, each phone we have here pales in absolute comparison to even a nicely outfitted Nokia N95, let alone the iPhone.

That said, don’t anticipate any crazy NTT DoCoMo phones with a built-in robot dog. Instead, set your sights on something like a pink RAZR with a special Gwen Stefani charm hanging from it and you won’t be disappointed.

Here’s what else to anticipate from this show of shows.

No 3G iPhone
Steve wouldn’t blow his wad on this. I doubt he’s been to Las Vegas in the past twenty years. It ruins his chi.

Phones like work and look like the iPhone but, are in some ways, superior
The iPhone has taken up so much mindshare in the mobile phone buyer’s market that even my sainted mom wants one, and that woman can barely work the Nokia 5300 I gave her. The iPhone does lots of things well and, as is the carrier’s wont, manufacturers are copying those things either in spirit or wholesale to get at that tricky “I don’t want a shitty phone anymore” demographic.

Expect manufacturers to create phones that work much like the iPhone while leveraging things like GPS and 3G networks. The sooner these phones hit the streets the sooner everyone else can beat AT&T to a pulp after they loose iPhone exclusivity. Look for touch screens that don’t suck, scrolling UIs, cool picture browsers, and seamless web integration. Don’t look for anything like Apple’s savvy marketing prowess. This is improved hardware, not an improved mindset.

WiMAX, WiMAX, WiMAX
Business users who are in Sprint’s test markets and, slowly, the rest of the continental U.S. will soon get broadband speed wireless on their Computers. Don’t expect WiMAX in handsets anytime soon even though we do suspect there might be a wee WiMAX tablet in the pipe. Also be ready to have to explain “WiMAX” to your IT department and the guy at the Sprint store because this technology has landed so quickly that I doubt either celebration is quite up to speed.

Repeaters and femtocells will enable a new era of carriers making money at your expense
Making a wireless network is hard! You’ve to invest in towers and in computers and in wire. It’s just soooooo difficult to get coverage to those poor Americans in rural or urban areas. What’s a carrier to do? Offload the burden to the consumer and piggy-back on their World wide web connections and electricity bills to allow them the pleasure of making calls.

While my assessment of this is fairly cynical, I’m sad to report that this is just about the situation. Because of the high cost of building out network coverage, many carriers are using UMA or mini-repeaters to boost or carry calls from closed areas to the network at large. While this is a boon for some in underserved areas, it makes for a Band-Aid when offered up to unhappy customers who complain of dead spots. Carriers are simply riding on the consumer’s own network and electricity bill to supply them with service that that selfsame consumer is paying for. It would be like the cable company asking you to film some episodes of Grey’s Anatomy in your basement, at your own expense. I mean I’d love to see McDreamy near my water heater if only to smack him for screwing over Meredith so many times, but how am I expected to pay for catering for an entire film crew?

Of course if you pay for the repeater by yourself and install it without the carriers’ permission, that’s a crime, right? Right.

Android lives… next year

Say what you want about “emulators” and “small Chinese men in slacks,” but Android isn’t ready for prime time. You’ll see a few promising prototypes this year but you don’t embed and sell a phone with an untested operating system until you get a bunch of monkeys, stick their heads through some holes in a board, and make them stare at the screen for six months. FCC testing is a bear and Android is barely ready to have my CompSci professor in college play with it let alone my grandma.

More of more of the same
I’m not very bullish on the future of handsets in the US. I’ve seen too many cool phones come and go to think that Verizon or Sprint or T-Mobile or AT&T are going to try anything new and extraordinary this year or, dare I say it, any other year. Instead, look for more of the same: wonky UIs, half-assed design, and draconian lock-in stipulations. However, look for incremental improvements in network speed, more business-oriented mobile services including built-in WiMAX and WWAN in laptops, and a general trend towards more data services.

Also, ignore all “open networks” lip-service. These are lies carriers tell you to make you equate them with Google and Android. Oh, and also look for Peter Ha to gamble all night and to accidentally spend the night with a 65-year-old hooker. After all, this is Las Vegas.

Via [crunchgear]

Comments No Comments »

BlackBerry fans take heed for the BGR has learned a few things about the upcoming BlackBerry 9000. Everything we reported was true. 624MHz processor, 480×320 screen, GPS, Wi-Fi, 3G, etc. The internet browser flies. “Loads web pages in 3-4 seconds.” The BlackBerry 9000 in its current state runs OS 4.5 Early launch date was slated for a consumer AT&T […]

BlackBerry fans take heed for the BGR has learned a few things about the upcoming BlackBerry 9000.

Everything we reported was true. 624MHz processor, 480×320 screen, GPS, Wi-Fi, 3G, etc.
The web browser flies. “Loads web pages in 3-4 seconds.”
The BlackBerry 9000 in its current say runs OS 4.5
Early launch date was slated for a consumer AT&T launch on June 18th. Remember that we predicted the device was delayed. See below.
The battery lasts around 4 hours with straight phone calling. “Battery sucks, to be honest. With Wi-Fi on, I only got a little less than two hours browsing the internet,” and all testers are reporting large battery issues which could be why we’re all hearing it is delayed.
We’re not sure of the next part, but he said that the device either has 256MB of internal memory or 128MB. Don’t ask why we couldn’t tell the difference.

Via [crunchgear]

Comments No Comments »

The FCC has just leaked this image of Helio’s Ocean 2. How do we know that? Well, it’s carrying an OZ2 model and OZ was the alternative moniker of the original Helio Ocean. We can’t tell much else from the drawing, such as whether the Mark 2 Ocean will have the dual slider of its older brother, but we have the ability to see the body design will remain true to the original. However, having been overly impressed by the original, we’re sure this baby is going to kick ass whenever it does land. [FCC via Crunch Gear]


Via [Gizmodo]

Comments No Comments »

For those of you who’ve been looking for the Eee PC to check out and perhaps even buy but didn’t know where to look, we can help. Turns out Best Purchase is landing the laptop at some point in the next two weeks or so. This is the original 7-inch version running XP for $399, but […]

For those of you who’ve been looking for the Eee Computer to check out and perhaps even purchase but didn’t know where to look, we have the ability to help. Turns out Ideal Purchase is landing the laptop at some point in the next two weeks or so.

This is the original 7-inch version running XP for $399, but we have the ability to likely expect the 8.9-inch version this summer.

Via [crunchgear]

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It