Showing posts with label Windows Mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows Mobile. Show all posts
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Nokia Updates - MeeGo's First and Last Appearance and Patent Wars

Sometime around June, Nokia won a patent case against Apple.

Nokia published on their June 14 report some relevant details of their victory against the disputed patent case. Ideally this victory could give Nokia and added revenue but considering Nokia's investment on research, this could well be just a balancing item in their portfolio.

"We are very pleased to have Apple join the growing number of Nokia licensees," said Stephen Elop, president and chief executive officer of Nokia. "This settlement demonstrates Nokia's industry leading patent portfolio and enables us to focus on further licensing opportunities in the mobile communications market."

"The financial structure of the agreement consists of a one-time payment payable by Apple and on-going royalties to be paid by Apple to Nokia for the term of the agreement. The specific terms of the contract are confidential."

Could it be Nokia's strategy to go on after several smartphone makers and make bucks out of licensing agreements?

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Just recently the largest cellphone maker introduced the first Windows-Based
smartphone in an attempt to shake things up and halt the impending dominance of giant
players like Android, Samsung and iPhone.
Beating the Android first? And Why Windows?

Well, we heard Nokia's (through Nokia CEO Stephen Elop) blunt statement saying its ultimate priority is to beat Android. Further he added that Nokia's rationale behind Windows-adaptation is that the Microsoft platform has a better way to compete with Google's Android and Apple's iOS.

Why not MeeGo or Android? For MeeGo, ideally it would require Nokia a considerable amount of investment to develop the platform. It has yet to grow and needs further enhancement. While choosing Android could possibly make Nokia 'another Android phone' out there and will eventually lose it's identity.

And the fact that Elop is a former Microsoft employee so the arrangements wouldn't be that arduous at all.

In my opinion, Nokia must take this leap as an advantage and listen to the needs of the market. Windows OS is still the largest OS worldwide (although their dominant status could be diminished in some time). Nokia and Microsoft are two giant forces and they must be think revolutionary this time. Better UI, Better Synchronization Features, that's what we need.

The Future of MeeGo, looks cool but Nokia says 'NO'

It was codenamed 'Sea Ray', but the promising Nokia N9 (that runs on a MeeGo platform) has been short lived. Elop recently announced that even if N9 will succeed, MeeGo will not be used anymore. It may be a disappointing news as we are interested to see Nokia back on the smartphone arena. After all, N9 appears to be an impressive device - running on MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan, Amoled Capacitive TS...

Tuesday, October 6, 2009
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I am using Windows Mobile 6.0 and IE just makes my life more difficult.

Apparently, the new interface of Internet Explorer for Windows Mobile Smart phones will address the old IE's lack of features and slowness.

Note, however, the IE 6 is available for Windows Mobile 6.5

Press Release: [Read More]

Internet Explorer Mobile 6 clearly improves on previous versions of the browser, but apart from speed, how does it compare to the stable version of Opera Mobile, version 9.5, the other mobile browser that's commonly preloaded on Windows phones? (Opera Mobile 9.7 beta is also available for testers, as is competing browser Skyfire. We chose Opera 9.5 as a basis of comparison because of its ubiquity.) Both IE Mobile 6 and Opera Mobile can download image files and apps, copy and paste, and cursorily manage bookmarks. Opera Mobile 9.5 trumps Microsoft's mobile browser with a password manager, tabbed browsing (albeit with a two-tab limit on our test phone), a download manager, find-in-page feature, and richer context menus--for example to share links via MMS, SMS, or e-mail.
Browsing on Internet Explorer Mobile 6

Don't get lost. A helper window shows your location on the page while you browse.

(Credit: Screenshot by Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)

Internet Explorer Mobile 6 has some advantages over Opera Mobile, however. It combines the URL and search bar where Opera Mobile separates them. It nicely surfaces the search history in a drop-down arrow on the right edge of the URL/search bar. The "you are here" map (see screenshot) and ability to easily cut, copy, and clear URL text with a long press on the URL bar are nice perks. We find the navigation buttons slightly more intuitive in IE Mobile 6, too. In addition to Opera's beneficial features, we'd like to see Internet Explorer Mobile outfitted with a refresh button on-screen, not just in the More menu, and we'd like a way to navigation forward too, not just back. We'd also strongly like to reorder favorites by dragging and dropping, which would make the process of adding bookmarks to new folders much less ponderous.

The browser isn't as full-featured as we think it should be. (Microsoft says it's aiming for a browser simple enough for the average phone user.) Regardless, IE Mobile 6 is a drastic improvement over previous builds on the interface front, and it's suitable for basic users who want to browse, but who won't seek fancy customization. If Microsoft can manage to rev up the browser's speed and can deliver a robust extensions gallery, it may have a shot at developing its mobile browser more or less in step with Opera Mobile, Skyfire, and Mozilla Fennec--instead of chasing behind them.

Internet Explorer Mobile 6 is currently only available on Windows Mobile 6.5 phones.