Archive for 2012

Royal Rumble: Nexus 7 vs. the Newest iPad in Ultimate Drop Test

Drop tests. They're certainly not for the squeemish. Seeing such beautiful technology crashing into the pavement makes my heart weep a bit. Nonetheless, it is important (for scientific reasons, of course) to see which device holds up best, lest you suddenly lose control of yourself and let go of your expensive new toy. So which tablet is most durable: the Nexus 7 or the newest iPad? Let's take a look, shall we?

As you can see in the video below, the Nexus 7 holds up surprisingly well, whether it's been dropped on its face, side or back. It even continues to function after being dropped into a bathtub!

Obviously, we don't recommend you try any of these stunts on your own.Does durability factor into your decision to buy a new device? Would you pay extra for more protection against damages? Let us know below!


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

AndroidPIT’s WTF App Of The Week!

 

That’s right. It’s time for another AndroidPIT App of the Week! Our apologies for slacking on WTF apps after Google I/O ended, but now we’re back and ready to bring even more WTF than ever before! Let’s face the facts: to purposely annoy someone with an ear wrenching sound can be pretty funny in a sick, twisted, demented kind of way. Combine that excruciating sound with an Android app and an on/off button, and you’ve got yourself a devilishly fun WTF app, which is exactly what “Mosquito Sound (Ultra Sound)" is.

The purpose of the app is simple: to annoy the **ck out of people, and this is one app that really gets the job done. The app basically mimics the sound of a mosquito, which can only be heard by certain people (depending on age, hearing, ect) at certain frequencies. But the makers of this app didn’t let anything stop their mission to seriously annoy the world, and give you the option to adjust the frequency of the app between 9 and 20 kHz to ensure that everyone in the room can get a dose of this extremely high pitched buzz that emanates from your phone. Trust me guys...you have to try this out to see how annoyingly fun it actually is.

Here are some screenshots of the app:

The potential aggravation of this app is limitless: Lay the phone under your friends/colleagues/bosses jacket, turn it on, and let him/her wonder why the hell his/her ears are ringing so badly. Or you can use it to test your ears, and see who the real old timers are in the room! And to take it to an entirely different level, you can even set your ringtone or notification tone to play this agonizing sound every time you get a call, receive a message, or get an email.

I have been playing with this app for about 20 minutes now, and have already managed to piss off my boss, irritate the hell out of my colleagues, and literally make my own brain hurt. If that’s not a great WTF App, I don’t know what is!

Make sure to download this great WTF App of the Week free from the AndroidPIT App Center here, or from the Google Play Store here.

Have fun! :-D


View the original article here

Posted in | Leave a comment

Buy a Top-of-the-Line Android Now, or Wait for the iPhone 5?

 

We're ostensibly an Android blog but that doesn't mean we can't be objective when it comes to comparing Android to its competition. Perhaps the biggest question most smartphone shoppers have is whether to buy now or wait for the next big thing to be released. It makes sense; if you're going to make a big investment, you want to know it will pay off for you long term. If you're thinking of buying a new phone but are unsure whether to wait for the next iPhone or buy one of the already released top-of-the-line Android phones out there, you're going to want to read on.


(Rendering of the iPhone 5 from PCAuthority.com)

There's no doubt the iPhone 4S is a sexy device. It has a nice weight, an industrial design and it feels great in your hand. The iPhone 5, according to leaked renderings, will likely feature a significantly longer screen and a new casing, but will hew closely to the design elements of its predecessors. 

Compared to the Galaxy S3, the iPhone 5 will probably feel a bit more substantial and less plasticky. But comparing an Apple product to a phone like the One X is a bit trickier, since HTC also uses very high quality materials to construct their sleek and sexy devices. Whether you find HTC's design more or less inspiring than the iPhone 5 may simply come down to personal taste.

Apple is absolutely obsessed with display quality, as anyone who's played around with the newest iPad can attest, so I think it's safe to assume the iPhone 5 will have an improved retina display, probably on the same level as the newest Macbook Pro. The iPhone 4S already has a brighter and sharper display than, say, the Galaxy Nexus, but it's a closer call when compared to the Galaxy S3 or the HTC One X. Some even prefer the HTC One X to the iPhone 4S's screen.

At the end of the day, the amount of detail the human eye can see in such a rich display begins to diminish as screens are perfected to a ridiculous degree. Thus, for some, it will all come down to display size. While the iPhone 5 is expected to have a larger, 4" display, that might not be big enough for some. The HTC One X features a larger, 4.7-inch display, which could become a deciding factor for people who care about such things.

(Photo:CNET)

What kind of camera the iPhone 5 will sport is, at this point, anyone's guess. Apple could decide that they don't need to improve upon the iPhone 4S, or they could, as some rumors suggest, create a higher-quality front-facing camera capable of taking high resolution shots or include an interchangeable lens 'round back. Apple has already applied for a patent that would allow users to change the iPhone's camera lens by removing the back cover, but we're not sure how realistic it is to expect to see this feature on an iPhone, given the fact that iPhones have never had detachable battery cases.

Assuming Apple doesn't significantly upgrade their camera, you can expect the iPhone 5's photo-shooting abilities to compare favorably to that of its competitors in some areas, while falling short in other areas. The iPhone 4S seems especially better at dealing with shadows than the One X and the S3, but the S3 won in terms of contrast and sharpness in tests by CNET. We prefer the S3, which is currently the best camera of any smartphone on the market.

But Apple loves improving upon the iPhone's camera, so I wouldn't be surprised if the iPhone 5 blew away the competition in this regard.

I have no doubt Apple will try to one-up the Galaxy S3 when it comes to processor speed. Rumors point to an A5X chip and we expect the same quad-core graphics processor that's in the iPad 3. But the Galaxy S3 and the HTC One X are no slouches either, and will likely compare favorably the iPhone 5. Waiting for a new iPhone so you can get the fastest processor on the block is maybe not the brightest idea, though, because most apps won't benefit and above a certain threshold, the experience is buttery enough that you won't care whether your phone is the absolute fastest, unless you like to brag about that kind of thing.

(Photo: T3.com)

iOS 6 has already been announced and we were not impressed. The minor update brings a bunch of stolen Android features to the iPhone, including "quick reply," browser syncing, turn-by-turn navigation and Facebook integration. It's all but assured that this is the OS the iPhone 5 will launch on, although Apple may also introduced an improved version of Siri and – possibly – a refreshed UI. However, considering how conservative the company is about these things, we're not expecting much.

Compared to Android Jelly Bean, and the newest iOS looks puny. I highly doubt Apple will roll-out anything like resizeable widgets, Google Now or offline voice-to-text, all of which you can find on Android 4.1. The newest Google update is already available for Galaxy Nexus owners and can easily be installed on any other rooted Android running Ice Cream Sandwich. As far as innovation goes, the newest edition of Android beats iOS 6. It all comes down to whether or not Apple introduces other, more substantial features at launch. I'm guessing they will, but I doubt they'll include widgets or anything radical; that's just not Apple's style.

The Galaxy S3 and the HTC One X are currently available for $199 on contract. It's likely that the iPhone 5 will also be available for that price. But the going gets thougher for those wanting more internal memory. A 32GB iPhone 4S, for example, costs $299 across all networks, while shoppers can bag a 32GB Galaxy S3 for $249.99. Don't expect an expandable SD card; this is Apple we're talking about

(Top photo: appadvice.com)


View the original article here

Posted in , , | Leave a comment

Verizon Posts Record Revenue Growth Spurred By Android

For the first time, Android has topped iPhone sales at Verizon. The carrier sold 2.7 million iPhones in the second quarter- down 16% sequantially and far below estimates – and 2.9 million Android devices.

Verizon revenues grew 7.8% to reach $15.8 billion this past quarter, spurred along, no doubt, by the ballooning use of smartphones on the network. Smartphones now make up 50 percent of all postpaid devices on Verizon. Even more incredible is the killing Verizon is making on data. Over $6.9 billion of their revenue has been generated by data sales.That's over $1 billion more data sold than last year.

Verizon introduced new shared data plans in late June, which allow customers to pay for a pool of wireless data and share it across multiple smartphones, tablets and laptops. The new plans were initially criticized for making data even more expensive on the network, although they may help families who already spend a lot for data, text and phone service. 

AT&T quickly copied Verizon's shared data plans, as is what happens in most duopolies. It seems both companies aren't afraid of losing customers, no matter how expensive their services become. 


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Chameleon: A Better Android Homescreen AndroidPIT Interview (Part 2)

If you haven’t heard about Chameleon for Android, you’re missing out on a seriously cool project. Back in March we learned that a company called Teknision (the company behind the interface on the RIM Playbook tablet) was developing a seriously impressive overlay for Android tablets (phones as well), and with a little help from Kickstarter, the team is now literally weeks away from releasing Chameleon to the public. We are extremely pleased to see how well this project has progressed, and we recently had the chance to interview Teknision President Gabor Vida, who not only shared lots of exciting details about Chameleon's Android homescreens, but answered questions on hardware requirements, compatibility, public release, and more. Lets give him a warm AndroidPIT welcome for part 2 of this interview, where he answers YOUR questions about which devices Chameleon can run on, what screen sizes are supported, and when you can get your hands on it!

If you missed part one of this interview, you can check it out here. Gabor answered lots of questions about what exactly Chameleon is, the work they have done before, and what the Android community can expect from this project. Lets continue now with YOUR questions about Chameleon:

AndroidPIT: Now I’ll start with a few questions that lots of our users (and myself) are really curious about. Exactly which tablets/processors/hardware will be supported? Are we looking at only dual core tablets being supported, or will single core, Tegra 3 and Exynos 4412 processors also get some Chameleon love?

Gabor: Tablets running Android 3.2 and up. So far we haven't ruled out any specific hardware at all.

AndroidPIT: Are there any tablets in particular that are NOT supported?

Gabor: Again I don't think we've ruled anything out specifically. Beta tests will help us figure this out a little better. We would likely not support any tablet that does not implement Android's support for hardware acceleration.

AndroidPIT: What size tablets will be supported?

Gabor: 7 inch tablets and up. HD tablets will be supported as well.

AndroidPIT: Android tablets often suffer from laggy home screen transitions when swiping if you’re using lots of widgets. From the videos I’ve seen of Chameleon, the screen transitions look very smooth, especially considering how many widgets are on the screens. How did you achieve such smooth and lag free transitions?

Gabor: Chameleon is not totally free of this problem as our widgets use Android Web Views. We have spent a lot of time coming up with smart ways to do bitmap caching to ensure the UI is as responsive as possible. We also focus on purposeful transitions. This means that the transitions are there to guide and re-enforce the user experience instead of trying to add to it though effects and 3D.

AndroidPIT: Some services integrated into Chameleon (like Netflix) have no functionality outside of the US. Will Chameleon also function for users outside of the US? If yes, what differences can users outside of the US expect to see?

Gabor: Chameleon will definitely work outside the US. I hope so! We are in Canada :) If a widget offers a service that is limited to a particular region then that widget probably won't work but it will not affect the rest of the application.

AndroidPIT: Does Chameleon seem to run faster/snappier on any tablet in particular?

Gabor: We just put it on our new Nexus 7 and it is just buttery smooth and beautiful.

AndroidPIT: Any plans for a Chameleon interface for phones?

Gabor: Definitely. It's not on the immediate roadmap as getting Chameleon selling and building the development community is top priority, but the phone version is on the roadmap.

AndroidPIT: Will Chameleon be a standard app that you can download from the Google Play Store, or will it be an apk file that needs to be manually installed?

Gabor: It will be a standard application that anyone can get on Google Play.

AndroidPIT: How big of an install file are we looking at?

Gabor: Currently many things are in flux in development, so it's hard to say exactly. Likely, the APK will be somewhere between 15-30 megs. The reason for the large size is that we pre-cache our default HTML widget set with Chameleon so that it will work offline on it's first run.

AndroidPIT: How much of a role did Kickstarter play in getting your project to where it is now?

Gabor: The value of Kickstarter is immeasurable. We raised almost $67,000 in 20 days. While that amount is large, it's only a fraction of the cost of creating Chameleon. What Kickstarter really means to us is a level of publicity and connection to the Android community that would be almost impossible through any other channel. It was really true to the name of Kickstarter - it gave our communications a kick start and it gave our team even more fuel to their fire.

AndroidPIT: When can members who have pledged 5 dollars or more plan on seeing Chameleon available for download, and when will it be available for people who didn’t pledge?

Gabor: We are hard at work to keep our August release promise. For those who missed the Kickstarter campaign, we have created a pre-order store at http://chameleon.teknision.com/. People who pre-order will get the release at the same time as the Kickstarter backers.

AndroidPIT: Gabor, thank you very much for taking the time for this interview, and we wish you the best of luck with this exciting project!

Gabor: Thank you! It has been a pleasure.

There you have it folks! Chameleon will be released in just a few weeks, and now we know which devices it will run on, what size screens will be supported, and that it will also be available for phones. 

What do you guys think? Is this something you'll be buying when it's released? Impressed by the homescreens and how they work?

Let us know how you feel about Chameleon in the comments below!

P.S - Here's a quick preview that Teknison sent over with Chameleon running on a Galaxy Nexus:


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , | Leave a comment

World's Thinnest Smartphone Subjected to Brutal Sledgehammer Test

The Oppo Finder – the world's thinnest smartphone – hasn't even reached the States yet but the device is already being subjected to some cruel and unusual punishment over in China. At a mere 6.65mm thick, you wouldn't expect this phone to be able to take a beating, but it seems to hold up quite well when used as a makeshift hammar. Just check out the video below for all the gory visuals:

Not only is the Oppo Finder unhealthily thin and supernaturally tough, it also packs a bunch of impressive specs, like a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED WVGA display, dual-core 1.5 GHz processor, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of onboard storage, an 8MP rear camera, 1.3MP up front and Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. It'll be the world's thinnest smartphone until ZTE unveils an even thinner model in the near future, also in China. 

While these sorts of brutal tests have become commonplace, we still feel compelled to say, really, don't try this at home.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , | Leave a comment

Viacom, DirecTV, And The Future Of TV Blackouts

Ryan has spent more than five years covering business, technology, and telecom-related subjects for a variety of publications based in New York and San Francisco. Ryan currently works as a writer for TechCrunch. ? Learn More

yellow_old_tv

Viacom and DirecTV ended their dispute over carriage fees on Friday, which saw the return of 17 Viacom channels on the cable satellite service. But who won, who lost, and what does the resolution mean for DirecTV, and for the rest of the industry? Given that Viacom reportedly didn’t get what it wanted in the negotiations, it probably will mean even more blackouts as time goes on.

Viacom wasn’t available to DirecTV customers for nine days over the course of the blackout, and in that time key channels like Nickelodeon saw inevitable ratings declines. Ratings at the childrens network fell some 20 percent during that time. Meanwhile, Disney, the channel DirecTV replaced Nickelodeon with, saw its ratings increase a comparable amount. According to Bernstein Research analysts Todd Juenger and Craig Moffett, that implies it was Viacom which came back to the bargaining table and attempted to end the blackout.

So what did DirecTV actually win? It’s now reportedly faced with a 20 percent increase for Viacom channels, or an additional $600 million, according to Bloomberg. But, considering that Viacom was reportedly demanding a 30-percent increase, DirecTV seems to have won this round of negotiations.

More importantly, Viacom was pushing Epix as part of its bundle of channels, asking an additional $500 million for the channel. It’s not quite the great unbundling that DirecTV CEO Mike White seemed to be talking about in last weekend’s message to subscribers. But by not being pressured into additional fees for a channel that its consumers may not even want, DirecTV’s stand against Viacom seems fairly successful.

While blackouts of this type are becoming increasingly common, usually it’s the distributor — the cable or satellite provider — who ends up capitulating and agreeing to the programmer’s terms. In a research note sent to clients, the Bernstein analysts wrote:

“The Viacom/DirecTV dispute may be remembered as a critical turning point in programmer/distributor negotiations. For the first time in memory, it was the distributor that won the public relations war.”

It’s too early to tell what the overall effect will be one DirecTV’s customer base, and how many subscribers fled to other service providers or just quit altogether. Since the blackout began in July, executives won’t have to talk about third-quarter defections on DirecTV’s second-quarter conference call. That is, unless those defections will have a material impact on the company’s forecast for this quarter.

It’s also too early to say whether or not Viacom ratings will bounce back, now that its networks have been reinstated. Summer isn’t a great time for TV anyway, with kids out of school and families going on vacation and generally getting out of the house. But Viacom was already feeling some ratings declines, specifically at Nickelodeon, even before its channels went dark for DirecTV’s 20 million subscribers.

But clearly this shows that other programmers who will soon be negotiating with DirecTV — like Viacom sister CBS — should probably expect to be met with similar resolve in the case of a dispute over fees. Juenger and Moffett write:

“More significant, perhaps, is the signal that DirecTV has sent to other programmers. By showing their willingness to take a blackout, and arguably winning the battle for the hearts and minds of their customers as a result, DirecTV may extract better terms from other programmers down the road.”

All indications are that the DirecTV-Viacom spat was seen as a positive for other cable and satellite providers as well, who might be emboldened to also take the stand against perpetual price increases and further bundling of networks that their subscribers don’t want. The fact that cable companies like Time Warner Cable actually urged subscribers not to switch providers during the most recent blackout just kind of shows how there’s at least some solidarity between distributors.

That’s bad news for programmers, who might see growth in their per-subscription fees slow… And it’s especially bad news for consumers, who can probably look forward to more blackouts, regardless of who their service provider is. But for an industry that is beginning to approach an affordability crisis, cable companies are facing an acute need to control costs.


Viacom, short for “Video & Audio Communications”, is an American media conglomerate with various worldwide interests in cable and satellite television networks (MTV Networks and BET), and movie production and distribution with Paramount Motion Pictures Group. The new Viacom conglomerate was finalized in September of 2006 is considered to be the “high-growth” side of the much larger former Viacom. The former Viacom was renamed CBS Corporation, from which this firm was split off on December 31, 2005.

Learn more IPO: August 3, 2000, NASDAQ:DTV

DIRECTV (NASDAQ: DTV) is the world’s most popular video service delivering state-of-the-art technology, unmatched programming, the most comprehensive sports packages available and industry leading customer service to its more than 25 million customers in the U.S. and Latin America. In the U.S., DIRECTV offers its 18.56 million customers more than 130 HD channels and Dolby-Digital 5.1 theater-quality sound (when available), access to exclusive sports programming such as NFL SUNDAY TICKET, award winning technology like its DIRECTV DVR Scheduler and...

Learn more jQuery(function() { jQuery("#tabs-crunchbase").tabs(); });

View the original article here

Posted in , , , | Leave a comment

Manufacturers Make a Killing Overcharging Memory to Clueless Customers

If you want to know how manufacturers keep a healthy profit from each Android device they create, the answer is lying right under your nose. The extra gigabytes in memory that manufacturers charge oodles more for are actually quite inexpensive to acquire. According to some some estimates, each extra gigabyte costs manufacturers less than $1 to buy, meaning buying a 16GB version over an 8GB version of a smartphone isn't really worth an extra $50 – more like $7. 

So why do manufacturers charge so much more for these versions? Simple: most customers don't know any better. More memory is seen as a premium feature, even though it actually doesn't cost manufacturers much of anything at all. Of all the components that make up an Android device, the display and the touchscreen cost far, far more (on the Nexus 7, for example, the combined cost of both the display and touchscreen is $55, while 16 GB of memory cost $21). 

Even bloggers don't seem to understand the bait-and-switch. Most recently, the 64GB version of the Samsung Galaxy S3 is making the rounds, causing people to foam at their mouths with excitement. But the device will probably cost an exorbinant amount of money.

I'm tempted to blame Apple for all the false promotion. After all, the 32GB version of the iPhone has always cost way more than the 16GB version. Currently, Apple is charging $199 for the 16GB iPhone, $299 for the 32GB version and $399 for the 64GB version. In reality, they're most likely keeping over $80 of those extra hundred dollars in pure profit. 

What can you do? Well, don't buy an iPhone, for one. They have no expandable memory. Right now, you can get a $16GB SD card from a reputable company on Amazon for less than $20. I would do that rather than shell out more cash for more internal memory.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Ribbit Rollercoaster: A Founder’s Story From Concept To $105M Exit

Screen shot 2012-07-21 at 6.36.16 PM

 Editor’s Note: This is a guest interview by Bernard Moon, co-founder & CEO of Vidquik, a web conferencing and sales solution platform.  He blogs at Silicon Moon.

I met entrepreneur Crick Waters last year after hearing just a portion of his story and his road toward Ribbit’s $105 million exit during an event in Silicon Valley. Soon afterward, I felt confident that I could learn from him and that his experiences building Ribbit would be valuable for Vidquik and our team.  I finally got a chance to interview Crick and hear his full story, so I thought I should share this with other entrepreneurs working to build world-class companies.

Bernard:  How did the idea for Ribbit start?

Crick:  Ribbit started out as IDP Communications in 2004, started doing business as Duality in 2005, and finally become Ribbit in 2006. It was mid-2004.  I had noticed that companies needed phone features for individual, company-specific, use cases that couldn’t easily be met with traditional telco infrastructure.  These features were inaccessible for three reasons:  they required purchase of racked equipment and telecom connections, were sold in bundles at very high per seat prices, and they could not be triggered or accessed via web services.

I realized that if the features of telephony services could be disaggregated, hosted as a cloud service, and be made accessible via web services; then these phone features would become “software” to developers making possible a whole new market of high-value applications.

The first application was conceived of late in 2004 around the idea of “never miss that [buyer’s] call.”  I put together a PowerPoint of the product idea, cold called several newspapers (this was, after all 2004 and people still used classifieds), and convinced the San Francisco Examiner to introduce “never miss the call” as a feature built into all of their classified online and offline ads. The Examiner would pay IDP Communications five dollars per ad.  They loved the idea and a contract was drafted up and sent to Philip Anschutz’s CFO in Denver for approval.

At the same time, Anschutz created a new national marketing VP position to oversee all the Examiner properties across the country.  I got a heads-up call from the consulting firm in Florida that was helping me with introductions in the newspaper and advertising industries warning me that the person who had been tapped for the job was old-school, unlikely to understand the technology, and would probably kill the deal.  Sure enough, he was and he did, and the two executives I had been working with at the SF Examiner both quit within weeks.

Bernard:  Wow. Horrible.

Crick:  It was pretty devastating, the loss of momentum was a definite setback.  Worsening the setback was that the co-founding CTO I had been working with, Bruce Young, got a killer job offer to go work for a company called LignUp.  The opportunity for him was really too great to turn down and though I understood and supported his choice, the double-whammy had me counting sheep logarithmically.  I was without customers and without a CTO.

Bruce, though, had introduced me to John Appler.  John had been helping me on business development with the Examiner.  John, in turn, introduced me to Ted Griggs, who was founder and CEO of a company called Syndeo, where John had previously worked.

Ted and his team had been funded by Redpoint and a consortium of cable industry companies to the tune of $98M.  Syndeo, at one point a 150-person company, had built and deployed a DOCSIS-based voice over IP soft switch for the cable industry.

Though Syndeo had developed award-winning technology and had international operating deployments, the market had moved on without affording Syndeo an exit. The company had trimmed down to its founding team and was looking for ways of leveraging its intellectual property with its remaining funds.

Syndeo’s technology was much more advanced than what I had anticipated having to work with to jumpstart IDP Communications, and the Examiner deal had left me free to pivot.  So when I was introduced to Syndeo, Ted and I were able to put our heads together over a potentially faster-bigger-stronger plan.  “Okay,” we thought, “let’s see if we can take the IDP Communications concepts and re-apply them with the more powerful soft switch rather than using Asterisk or LignUp (where Bruce Young was).

We spent nine months iterating on a whole set of ideas.  From April 2005 onward, we took a number of turns.  One of which was pursing an enterprise peering exchange for MCI, another was pursing a dual-mode phone strategy using intelligent call routing to seamlessly hand-off calls between mobile and fixed endpoints.  It was this idea that led us to file a dba form as “Duality” and IDP Communications became Duality Inc.

The Duality team eventually arrived at a revised business model and a product that we would call Mobi-Link.  Mobi-Link converged your cell phone number with your fixed-line number (we still had these in 2005) allowing calls to be made from and received with home or office phones, VoIP phones, instant messenger clients, and with any Internet browser.

Mobi-Link came with a networking platform, call diversion and re-direction features, a graphical UI, contact management, and a whole bunch of stuff that we take for granted in many applications today — but in 2005 were kind of radical.  In December of 2005, we started getting nibbles from the venture community.  Recurring interest.

Bernard:  You told me that you started fundraising in March of that year, and then you stopped at the end of the year?

Crick:  Right. We were working tirelessly at fundraising throughout 2005.  Toward the end of 2005, now a year since Ted and I had started talking to the finance community, we were still unfunded.  Fortunately, Ted was able to reign in some money by licensing a portion of Syndeo’s technology to another firm. Those licensing fees gave us the runway we needed to fund development of Mobi-Link.

Bernard:  Did that work?  Did you actually use this Mobi-Link beta product to attract funding or did you find funding through some other means?

Mobi-Link was a functional demo and was a very useful proof of capability and concept, but it wasn’t the driver behind our first funding.  We had never really released Mobi-Link into the wild.  Yes, we had a website up and one could register for the service, but we’d done no marketing or launch activity.  We were pretty much in private beta mode.  A few investors were following our progress, but none stepped up to the plate based on Mobi-Link.

It was social networking and serendipity that were the origins of Ribbit’s funding. Even serendipity has a path and the path to Ribbit’s first round of funding started when my son was a year old.  My wife made plans for our family of three to have breakfast with a friend of hers with whom she had worked at Excite @Home.  Her friend, who also had a one-year-old son, would be bringing her husband, Gilman Louie.

I asked, “Do I have to go?” and my wife said, “Yes, you have to go.”  Gillman, who was the CEO of In-Q-Tel (CIA’s venture capital arm) at the time, is rumored to have asked his wife the same “Do I have to go?” question.   Neither of us, apparently, saw the latent potential of the pancake breakfast.

We met at the Millbrae Pancake House sometime in late 2003 or early 2004 for an uneventful breakfast of one-year-olds and their parents.  It wasn’t until halfway through 2006 before the pancake potential started to play out.

In 2006, Gillman left In-Q-Tel and together with Stewart Alsop who left NEA, formed a new firm called Alsop-Louie Partners (ALP).  As the two of them were starting up ALP, Stewart, whom I didn’t know, blogged about how he couldn’t find a phone system that met the needs of small businesses.  Stewart had been with NEA.  He knew technology and he knew the Vonage guys.  So if he couldn’t figure out how to get a phone system that would work for him then he was a guy I needed to talk to.

So I wrote to Gillman reminding him of our pancake breakfast of two years prior and asked if he and Stewart would meet with me about Stewart’s blog.  Gilman and Stewart were game, so I set up a meeting at Gilman’s brand new office in Levi Plaza.  Ted was focused on code writing and asked, “Do I have to go?” I said, “Yes you have to go.  Even though this is a market research thing, who knows?  Maybe they’ll raise a round and fund us some day.”

So we drive up from Mountain View and snagged a clutch parking space right along Levi Plaza.   It’s all metered street parking up there with aggressive parking police driving around all the time.  So we waited until just before our meeting start time to go in so that the maximum one-hour of parking time would cover our hour with Stewart and Gilman.  We went in entirely focused on what Stewart saw as the problem needing to be solved in small office phone systems.  ALP, remember, had just formed and had no fund yet.  They barely had furniture back then.

So we interviewed Stewart and debated Vonage as an investment.  Before long, Stewart and Gilman turned the table on us – challenging us with “are you good entrepreneurs?”  They’re both smart, connected, and were pretty aggressive with us.  Even though they had no funds to invest, we told them what we were up to and showed them Mobile-Link.  A few minutes before the end of the hour, I started packing up since our parking meter was about to run out.  Getting a parking ticket wasn’t something I could go for – my second child had just been born and neither my wife nor I had an income – and since APL hadn’t yet any funds to invest…  So I thanked Stewart and started to make a polite exit.

Stewart said, “You can’t leave yet.

I’m like, “My meter’s running out – and you know how aggressive the parking police are here.  I’ve got to go.”

Stewart, reaching into his pocket and pulling out a handful of quarters said, “You can’t go yet.  Here.  Go put money in the meter, and come back.  We haven’t talked about the terms yet.”

“The terms?” I asked (politely laughing), “Don’t you need a fund first?”

He says, “Don’t worry about that, we’ll get a fund.”

True to his word, Stewart wrote up a term sheet for funding contingent on a partial close of ALP’s first fund. There were a lot of things that happened between then and funding, but in the end, Ribbit helped ALP close their first fund and ALP helped Ribbit by leading our series-A.

So it wasn’t until August 2006 that Ribbit was actually first funded.

Bernard:  August 2006?  So how long had it been?  When did you actually leave AT&T to go on this whole journey?

Crick: The end of 2004.

Bernard:  So it was a two-year journey until you got funded.  Were there hesitations to throw down the whole entrepreneur bag and just go corporate?

Crick:  Yeah.  I had a one-year-old at the time and my wife was pregnant – I was a working stiff like everyone else.  Even though I had always wanted to do my own thing, I agonized over whether to start Ribbit or not.  David Krantz was very helpful and introduced me to a fellow named Dennis Haar, who was then CEO of Go Digital.  I drove out to Go Digital and I met with him as a potential mentor.

It was Dennis that told me, “There are two good times to start a company. The first is when you’re young and have no family, you live off your family at home, and you can basically work twenty hours a day because you’re nineteen.  That’s a great time to start a company.  The second is when you’ve finished the corporate career path, you’ve got money in the bank, and your kids are grown and gone.  You can downsize your property and afford to basically give all your time and wisdom to a company.  Everything in between is a nightmare.”

Bernard: (Laughs)

Crick:  These words weigh heavily on you right?  They did me too.  I was in the nightmare phase of life (and still am for that matter!).  I wasn’t able to sleep for worrying about what I was going to do.  I kept thinking about what Dennis (and so many other wise folks advised) and agonized over whether to go for it or to pull the plug.

It was my wife that tipped the scale.  She is awesome.  She said, “You were miserable at AT&T.  It is not you, so I don’t quite understand what all this worry is.  You MAY NOT stay at AT&T.  Let me ask you a question. Let’s say we go through this, and things don’t go right.  What does it mean ‘they don’t go right?’”

I said, “Well, you know, you’re out of work, we have two babies, we’re paying for Cobra, we have a mortgage, and we have limited savings.  If things don’t go right, we’ll run out of savings.”

She said, “What happens if we run out of savings?”

I said, “Well, we basically sell the house, get the equity out of it and live off of that for a while in an apartment somewhere until I get a regular job.  We’d have no house and no savings.”

She said, “You mean like where we were three years ago?”

And I said, “Uh, yeah.”

And she said, “Well, that’s not so bad. I don’t know what you’re worried about.”

Bernard:  Really? That’s awesome! What a supportive wife.

Crick:  She said, “All I want to tell you is that I don’t want to be with you if you don’t do this because you’re not going to be happy unless you pursue your dream. The worst case scenario is not a bad scenario.”

Bernard:  Right.

Crick:  So that emboldened me, and I took the early exit from AT&T.  Of course there were endless follow-on periods of anxiety.  The turns and tumbles – like when the contract with the Examiner fell through and my CTO resigned.  Endless challenges.  What do I do?  How do I resolve that?  Where do I go for technology?  How do I find people?  And there was investor on every corner telling me my idea was stupid.  The good news is that it only takes one investor to like and fund your vision. (laughs)

Bernard:  That’s so true.

Bernard:  Okay.  So you got some money in 2006, you’re building your product, so what happens next?

Crick:  So we’re building what became Ribbit Mobile.  In February of ‘07, I realized that Salesforce.com was the perfect application for our solution.  So we built, between February and September of ‘07, Ribbit for Salesforce.com that we announced at Dreamforce 2007.  It was really exciting because we basically had a two-foot by two-foot pedestal in the farthest reaches of the Moscone center – at the back of everything.  I mean we were literally the third-to-last exhibit in the farthest corner.  We were tiny little guys, tiny little money, BUT we had a line at our table all day, all three days.  People loved it.  We actually won an unexpected app of the year award at the show.

In December 2007, we launched Ribbit.  We flew around the country briefing the press and on December 17th, lifted the press embargo and pushed out our new web page.  Don Thorson did a great job for us – we were even in the Financial Times – and still, Ribbit Mobile had not been launched.  It was at DEMO 2008 on February 24th or something like it that we exposed Ribbit Mobile.  There’s videotape of me on stage at DEMO.  I look really serious, like a Borg, with my headset on and eyes squinting in the lights.  It’s impossible to realize how hard it is to be relaxed on stage until you’re on stage and realize it’s impossible to be relaxed on stage (laughing).

Bernard:  I’ve seen it.  I was thinking Max Headroom.

Crick:  So now we’re going to start getting into how the company was sold.  Frist we need to roll the clock back and talk about how networking in 2004 led us to BT in 2008.

Bernard: Okay.

Crick:  While I was still at AT&T in 2004, I was invited to an industry networking event by a company called Light Reading.  Light Reading was a market research and publication firm.  They invited a bunch of people to a Light Reading golf tournament down in Half Moon Bay in 2004 – which I attended with an AT&T badge, and made good connections with the  Light Reading team.  In 2005, I was again invited, but this time I was unemployed with Duality Inc. and the event was in southern California – not a simple drive over to Half Moon Bay funded by AT&T, but a personal investment in airfare, rental car, and hotel accommodations.  This was a big commitment for me – and I struggled with the question of whether or not to go.  One thing that tipped my decision was following through on an introduction to Tom Marcin who was Global Director of Telecommunications at DuPont.  Tom had been supportive of Duality in many phone and e-mail conversations and would be attending the Light Reading event, so I decided to go to meet Tom in person and while making the most of the event.

The conference itself was good, though uneventful.  Afterward, some of us found ourselves together at the Santa Barbara airport waiting for our flights home.  Santa Barbara airport has a little bar upstairs and I went on up to find a boisterous, red-faced, Brit talking loudly and inviting me to join the table for a beer.  I sat down, introduced myself, and discovered him to be a technology scout, Rob Hull, working out of the Bay area for British Telecom.

I eventually told him what we were working on and that we’d been funded.  He took some notes and we went on about our businesses.  When we released Ribbit for Salesforce a year later in September of 2007, I thought of Rob and called him again to meet for a coffee – something like, “Hey, I want to show you this thing.  We’re going to need a distribution partner for Ribbit for Salesforce in Europe sometime and maybe BT would be a good partner.”  We didn’t talk about telephony APIs at all.

In the meantime, BT had started a skunk works project building telephony APIs.  By the time Ribbit announced its telephony API strategy at our coming out in December 2007, BT’s scouting team already knew about Ribbit, so this was only incremental news to them.  What really got BT’s attention was when the BT API team started meeting with potential customers.

Joe Black was the business development lead for BT’s API group.  As Joe described to me later, he would go to Salesforce, Oracle, and others to introduce BT’s API business.  When he did, these prospects would say things like, “Oh, you’re kind of like Ribbit.”  Joe was irritated to no end as you can imagine.  Who and what is this Ribbit thing?  So the BT API guys talked to their technology scouting team asking if they knew about Ribbit.  And of course Rob Hull did.

So Rob set up a meeting.  BT came to our offices, saw what we were doing, and grilled us.  They sent architects and product folks to our offices over a period of weeks.  We even met with the then CEO of BT Retail (now CEO of BT) and his direct reports – all of us thinking we were working toward a distribution agreement.  At the end of one meeting with the API team, BT said, “We are either going to buy you or partner with you.”  We thought, “Sure,” but didn’t believe that buying Ribbit was a BT-like thing to do.

We were wrong.  Sure enough, BT came through with an offer to buy us – I think it was March or early April of 2008 – so only a couple of months later.

Bernard:  Sounds like there were some difficult decisions to be made.

Crick:  Right. There were: to sell or to grow the business.  So now we do some math.  We had $11M invested on a post-money valuation of $30M with ~$6M in the bank when BT came to us with an offer.  We had no plans to sell the company.

British Telecom flew in to San Francisco and we met at the Starbucks in the lobby of the Westin St. Francis.  They offered us $50M.  The terms of the proposal were a little non-standard and amounted to essentially buying out the VCs and leaving the Ribbit team members as employees of BT with the potential of a bonus payout of some form, after three years, for those employees remaining.

Bernard: Amusing.

Crick:  The offer intent was heartfelt even though we knew that it wasn’t really going to work for our venture team. We also knew it wasn’t going to work for Ribbit employees who have a Silicon Valley view of employment and rewards.  We told BT this and they took our feedback back to the UK.  When we told our board that BT had made an offer to purchase us, the board wasn’t thrilled.  They were, in some ways, very angry that we’d even consider an offer of purchase since we’d just closed our B-round and were on a valuable track.  Expectations were rather high…

Bernard:  Wait. They were angry that you were even considering…?

Crick:  Yeah.  Put it into perspective.  They’d just funded us and we were doing all the right stuff.  From their perspective, we should be aiming for multi-hundred million or billion-dollar valuations.  But an offer is an offer. You have to entertain all offers.

We did some math on what I called the “buy it now” price.  In other words, what would be a minimally acceptable and expected return to a limited partner (LP)?  Typically an LP needs two and one half times their investment – minimum. With our recent $30M post-money close, that would mean $75M over our post-money value.  So a minimum acceptable valuation of $105M was the threshold exit given where we were.

Meanwhile, our board was like, “No you’re crazy. You’re going to be a billion dollar company, why would you do this?”  Ted Griggs managed all the stress of this sell-build dilemma.  There was high stress on all three sides of the conversation – BT, Ribbit, and VCs.  The only way this could work was if our board agreed to the buy-it-now price of $105M and BT met this price with an all-cash offer.  There could be no monkey-business in any quarter of the deal.

The economy, in the mean time, was going kind of wonky. So we talked to the board and said, “If BT comes back at a hundred and five, we think we should take the offer given what it would take us to attain that same outcome, on a dollar basis, with subsequent rounds of funding.”

Our B-round funds were only going to take us through the fall of 2008.  We knew that we needed to start raising a $20M C-round, including a global strategic investment partner, by the end of the year.  And even with a C-round, we would still have to overcome all the execution and market risk to build a company valuation at hundreds of millions of dollars – and then again find an exit opportunity.

So we told BT, okay, our buy-it-now price was one hundred five million dollars.  Al-noor Ramji, then CTO of BT Design, basically the second in command of BT, flew out with JP Rangaswami and met with me and Ted for a couple of hours up in San Francisco.  Al-noor interviewed us on a very personal level.  He wanted to know who we were; what drove us; what were our visions and personal passions.  In the end he said, “I’m authorized to offer up to one hundred million and I’m not going to play games.  I’m offering you the whole one hundred.  We can work out the terms together or you can go to lunch and write them yourselves.”

So Ted and I went for lunch to talk over our dilemma.  $100M was very close to $105 – but not $105.  We’d worked hard to get our board to agree to the $105 price and were uncomfortable considering something just 5% short of threshold from BT – a company with nearly $40B in annual revenue.  We had a long conversation and concluded that fundamentally, we couldn’t accept a one hundred million dollar offer because we, our venture partners, and our board, had been very clear that they didn’t want to sell the company and would only consider an offer meeting the hundred and five million dollar buy-it-now price.

After lunch, Ted and I went back and told Al-noor, “We really like BT, your vision, and we love the idea of being part of it, but we need a hundred and five.  If you get to a hundred and five, here are our deal terms.”  We went over our proposed terms.  Al-noor listened, said he was very disappointed, then got up, picked up his brief case, and walked out.

I thought, “Oh no this is terrible.”  Ted and I thought we’d blown it.  We were worried we’d left the wrong message somehow and as we drove back down the Peninsula, called Al-noor while he was still at the SF airport and reaffirmed our desire to work with BT, asked him to consider our request, and assured him and that we would talk to the board about his offer.”

Long story short, Al-noor was able to get BT to authorize the additional five million.  When he came back with an offer of $105M, we accepted. By May 10th, we had accepted an offer and closed on July 29, 2008.

Bernard:  Okay. And this is a little bit more for the benefit of entrepreneur’s reading this… So the size of that deal did it warrant any financial advisers?

Crick:  Only as an insurance policy.  We were being approached by other suitors at the same time that BT was talking to us.  AT&T was literally in my office as the BT offer was being accepted.. At ten o’clock in the morning on this same day, we were going to sign the “no shop” agreement with BT.  So I’m looking at my watch as the meeting progressed with the AT&T guys knowing that we had about fifteen minutes before we were supposed to sign the no shop.  Of course, anything can happen – and there was still risk that the no shop wouldn’t be signed… so I waited out the hour.

Now the AT&T guy says, “So, we’re all set.  You’re going to come to San Antonio on June 6th to meet with Randall Stephenson (AT&T CEO), his Vice President of M&A, and a few other execs.  We’re either going to make an investment or buy you outright.  You’ll fly out on June 5th for the meeting.”  He senses my quiet and looks up at me for a response.  I’m not responding because I can’t.  The clock is ticking.  Only minutes to go.

And he said, “So you’re going to be there right?”

I said, “I can’t come.”

There’s just this pause, this huge pause.  He says, “I don’t think you understood me.  You have a meeting with Randall Stephenson and his executive team and they are either going to buy your company or make a huge investment in you.”

He pauses and I say, “I can’t go to San Antonio to meet with your team.”

Recognition and awareness fill his eyes.  He leans back on the legs of his chair and says, “No! Don’t tell me! (he was steaming) Don’t tell me it was the ‘G’ company!”

“All I can say, is that I can’t come meet with Randall and his team.”

Bernard: The “G” company?

Crick: Yeah, the “G” company was Google.  Because Google had been on a buying spree and previously bought what became Google Voice.

Bernard:  Grand Central.  I see.  And AT&T saw Google as a threat in 2008?

Crick:  Yeah.  There was enormous speculation in telecom that Google was going to enter the voice market and undercut the incumbents.  Ribbit’s API model was a piece that Google didn’t have and AT&T thought Google was going to buy us up.

Bernard:  Oh I see, interesting.

Crick:  So when you add up that we had just closed a B-round, were still well ahead of the value creation curve for Ribbit, had one or more telco’s as potential acquirers, and that our eye had to be taken off of the ball to entertain the offer from BT, our board wisely insisted we hire an investment banking firm.

Bernard:  Because you had so many people in play.

Crick:  Yes.  Because if something fell through with BT… You know if we were to set off one of the basic deal trip wires like failing to meet certain deadlines, not finishing due diligence on time, etc. we’d have already exposed ourselves and would have to act quickly on the momentum of the moment.  The investment bankers were brought in to pick up the ball and go into motion if the BT deal faltered.  If that happened, the “no shop” would be lifted and the I-bankers would be poised to shop the company.

Bernard:  You had them on retainer?

Crick:  Yeah. That’s how it worked.  We paid an up-front retainer for them to be prepared and ready for a deal falter.

Bernard:  And then they took what, five percent of the deal?

Crick:  No they weren’t part of the BT deal economics.

Bernard:  Really? They didn’t ask you for that?

Crick:  To be part of the BT deal?  No, because they weren’t involved with the BT deal in any way.  They were in waiting, sort of guarding the door.  They were basically back-up.  Part of our strategy with BT was to be open about having I-bankers in the wings: that we were ready to take this deal to the market if anything didn’t work.  The idea was to make sure all parties were focused on getting the deal done.

Bernard:  I see.  So if BT didn’t work then the I-bankers would…

Crick:  Yes, so effectively an insurance policy.

Bernard:  That’s great for fellow entrepreneurs to know.  Inspiring and insightful story, Crick.  Definitely appreciate your time.

Crick.  My pleasure Bernard.  I hope there are some nuggets here that help others as they create their own start-up stories.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

1 App, 3 Opinions: What Do Our Experts Think of Foursquare?

Every week, a team of AndroidPIT experts will be testing one very special, well-known app. Having thoroughly tested said app for several days, these app experts will give you their professional list of pros and cons. This week, we're writing about one of the most popular apps in Google Play, Foursquare.

Foursquare: it's ubiquitous. But does it deserve to be? With over 20 million members worldwide, Foursquare is one of the most social ways to explore a new city, or re-discover your own. You can share and save personal experiences wherever you go, get persnaliyed recommendations and search for anything you want. How well did the app do in our expert test? Read on to find out!

Editor of AndroidPIT.fr (our French Site). Other occupation: globe-trotter. App-wise, obsessed with cameras, zombie games and weather widgets. Refused a second date with someone because of their ridiculous ringtone. Has a Galaxy S2 with lots of fingerprints on it. Hates applications that send notifications. Can spend hours playing sudoku games. Rotten apps can be saved by good design. Loves giraffes and tiramisu; is allergic to the sun.

Pros:

I've used Foursquare off-and-on since its inception in 2010 but I rediscovered it today. I must say the application has had a significant makeover. The design is neat, minimal and clar.

Foursquare is one of the best applications to find recommended things to do, eat and see. It primarly targets urban 18-35 year-olds, with an emphasis on cafes, bars, places to brunch and upscale eaterie; all of which I fervently enjoy. Each address is presented neatly, with photos from users and helpful, concise comments as well. You can find anything from recommended dishes to reservation tips. 

I enjoyed the opportunity to make a list of all the places I want to check out but always forget about. If, on the other hand, you're traveling in a new city, the app is even more enjoyable. It's like a portable lonely planet guide with walking directions and local commentary.

Cons:

This is personal, but I kind of hate the social aspect of this app. It gives me the unpleasant feeling that it's trying to hard to be young and cool, like those 40-year-old dudes in suits who drive scooters (Editor's note: must be a French thing).

I also don't find the application particularly well-organized; there are definitely too many elements fighting for space in each screen. A drop-down menu would be preferrable to slide-based navigation.

The list of recommendations seems a bit random. Sometimes it recommended amazing things I never would have found on my own while other times it recommends the exact same thing every single day for six months. Other times, very nice and popular places are nowhere to be found because the algorythm decided so.

I'm already way too connected. Beyond Facebook, Instagram and Twitter I don't need another app to broadcast my whereabouts. I'd prefer a more traditional app that displays recommendations. 

A literature grad student with some weird tendencies. Got into Android having become addicted to Google, having fallen in love with the Internet before that. Discovered the wonders of the worldwide web at age 13 when her father, a computer programmer, brought home a computer and rusty dial-up modem from work one night.

Pros:

For me, Fourquare will always be a friendly, timeless and highly detailed guide to my city. For example, what other guide can tell you about current art exhibitions located mere miles from my location? Or where to take a break and have lunch after a long hour of walking? Or finding a good coffee joint with a pleasant, shady terrace – all with commentary, photos and even WiFi passwords?

I've lived in Berlin for a relatively short period of time and still don't know the ins-and-outs as well as I'd like. Foursquare is a big help in that regard. From the recommendations and comments, I've already discovered a number of interesting places.

It also doesn't hurt that the app is also available in Russian. 

Cons:

I had to get used to the design of this application, which – in my opinion – is far from ideal. It takes a bit of time to realize how to use the app to its fullest. I guess I'm also not big on the idea of crowning mayors of certain locations via check- ins if those check-ins are able to be accomplished from other locations. How is that supposed to work, exactly? Maybe I'm just a tech grump, but I see these meaningless titles as superflous when compared to the app's other, more commendable features. Why are we competing over who's been to places the most anyway? Isn't variety the spice of life?

Editor of AndroidPIT's Spanish site. Has an Evo 3D but really wants the Galaxy Note 2. Most used apps? Facebook and WhatsApp, naturally. Loves mash-ups and reality TV shows – especially "Flavor of Love". Hates olives.

Pros:

I really succumbed to the competitive aspect of this app. I love a good challenge and this app made me want to explore all over the city so I could rack up a bunch of points and show off how street smart I really am. With every point I acquired, I felt like I'd become a tiny bit more knowledgeable about all the fun things to do in my favorite city, Berlin. It was also awesome to find WiFi passwords to new coffeeshops before I had even stepped foot in them. Bravo!

Cons:

While you can check in from across the city, you can't check in from across the world. This could be an issue if you're traveling and don't want to use mobile data to check in to various places but would like to check-in after your trip is over. I don't understand why Foursquare won't improve upon this; it seems it would be simple enough. It would also be nice if the app could translate reviews easily so you can know where to go when traveling outside your own country. 


View the original article here

Posted in , , , | Leave a comment

HTC Confirms Worldwide Jelly Bean Update For One X, One S, and One XL

 

Australian network Telstra stated earlier this week that Android Jelly Bean updates for the HTC One S and One XL were currently being submitted for testing, but made no mention of which regions, carriers, or of HTC’s flagship One X device. Today however, HTC has directly confirmed that a worldwide Android Jelly Bean update for the One X, One S, and One XL (no One V love?) is in the works, which will also include carrier specific versions for the United States.

HTC did not provide a date for when the updates would begin rolling out, and initially informed Slashgear that consumers should “Please stay tuned for more updates regarding device upgrades, timing and other details about HTC and Jelly Bean”. They later confirmed that the update would be on a worldwide scale, but did not provide additional details as of yet. 

HTC getting Jelly Bean out the door for their flagship phones would certainly be a step in the right direction, and it’s great knowing that HTC is already in the process of preparing the updates. Hopefully, owners of these devices won’t have to wait very long to see Android 4.1.

So with the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Nexus S, Motorola Xoom, and HTC One series getting the JB love, what about Motorola, LG, and Sony?

More details to come as we receive them.

Picture credits: XDA Develpers


View the original article here

Posted in , , , | Leave a comment

HTC One S & One XL Being Prepped For Android Jelly Bean Update

HTC has never had the best reputation for promptly providing Android updates, and with Jelly Bean rollouts getting underway, a lot of eyes are on HTC and their popular One series. The good news is that if the following report is accurate, HTC customers might not have to wait that long before getting a taste of Jelly Bean. Australian network Telstra is reporting that HTC is currently prepping the HTC One S and One XL for Jelly Bean, raising hopes of seeing a timely update to Android 4.1 for some HTC customers.

Keep in mind that Telstra hasn’t always made good on every promise when it comes to Android updates. So until we receive official confirmation directly from HTC regarding the updates, you’re probably better off taking the report with a grain of salt. That being said, they did post this update information on their website recently:

We are crossing our fingers for owners of these devices, and hope to see an update rolling out from HTC sooner than later. We haven’t received word in regards to the quad core packing HTC One X 4.1 update, but we will keep you up to date as soon as we receive word from HTC.

Picture credits: ultimate10.net, androidguys.com, and Telstra


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

The Patent Wars Are a Crazy Circus That Just Won't Leave Town

Today, there are so many lawsuits taking place in the smartphone industry that it's impossible to keep track. Every day we see a story about some judge who just decided that such-and-such Android smartphone or tablet has or has not infringed an Apple product. The ruling itself varies depending on the judge presiding, the patent in question and, it seems, how gassy the judge felt on that day after lunch.

There's no method to the madness; recently, a UK judge ruled that Samsung hadn't copied Apple's tablet design because the Galaxy Tab wasn't as "cool" as the iPad. “They do not have the same understated and extreme simplicity which is possessed by the Apple design,” Judge Colin Birss said of the Galaxy Tabs, and “they are not as cool." So now judges of these epic court battles seem to have the eloquence of the average employee at Best Buy.

After making such a ruling, this same judge is ordering Apple to display a notice on its website for six months and in U.K. newspapers that Samsung actually didn't copy Apple's iPad – a ruling sure to please Android fans, but which just pours flames on an already out-of-control patent wildfire.

So, that's basically where we're at. We're at a point where judges are making decisions on patent rulings based on "coolness" and then forcing the losing party to make a public apology. But even that decision is just a slap on the wrist, because no matter what, the broken patent system will continue to support legal action by any party for any means. Just as Judge Posner, the U.S. judge who ruled against Apple in their injunction against Motorola, said last week, "As in any jungle, the animals will use all the means at their disposal, all their teeth and claws that are permitted by the ecosystem."

Clearly, it's time to admit that the patent system is broke and the legal system has no idea how to regulate the smartphone industry – and probably shouldn't even try – but for now there's no foreseeable end to the madness. We've talked a lot about the uselessness of tech patents in the past – how they're so broad as to be unenforceable, so vague as to be easily abusable – and today's crop of news stories simply continues to support this assumption. Not only do we have judges making rulings based on "coolness," but we have a U.S. patent office so clueless and -out-of-touch with the real world that they're granting patents to Apple that could allow these crippling lawsuits to continue into eternity. Today, for example, the USPTO allowed Apple to patent "an interface for displaying documents, lists, text messages, emails, and more on a smartphone screen."

Can you get any more maddeningly broad than that? It's as if the entire idea of the smartphone has just been patented by Apple. While I'm sure this patent will be debated for months – possibly years – to come, it still offers Apple a platform from which to launch a lawsuit against any company it sees fit. The patent specifically covers the scroll bar that appears on the side of your smartphone but could easily be used to cover a whole lot more.

Barring an astroid falling on the U.S. patent office, I don't see these lawsuits ending anytime soon. While we can hope for reasonable judges like Posner to preside over them, that's unrealistic to expect. The U.S. court system seems to be becoming wary of these lawsuits, but that won't diminish their frequency. Until the madness ends, we can look forward to the dubious pleasure of reading almost constant back-and-forth opinions regarding the legality of certain smartphones. It's a big circus that just won't leave town – and not the Cirque Du Soleil kind, but the dreary, depressing kind filled with abused elephants and creepy jesters – and we're all forced to stay in the audience forever.

This isn't what innovation is supposed to mean. It's not supposed to mean that you improve one aspect of technology and then get to dominate an entire field forever and fight your competitors at every step along the way. It isn't supposed to be like this, but until there is systematic change, the sideshow will continue.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , | Leave a comment

AndroidPIT Hands On Review Of The Samsung Galaxy Beam

One of the many things I love about working at AndroidPIT is having the chance to play with devices that take innovation to the next level. Now naturally, not every idea will be a hit with consumers, but when I heard about Samsung announcing a new dual core device with an integrated PROJECTOR inside, I had my doubts on how practical such a device could be. I must admit, that I was pleasantly surprised how well it actually works! In this hands on review of the Samsung Galaxy Beam, I’ll show you how well the projector performs in high and low level lighting conditions, picture quality, a few ways of using the beamer, and me taking out a colleague who attempted to interrupt me while I was shooting the video.

Before getting into the hands on, here’s a quick spec rundown of the Samsung I8530 Galaxy Beam with a few photos of the front and back:

124 x 62 x 12.5mm145.3 gramsTFT 4’ inch capacitive touchscreenBuilt in HD ProjectorAndroid Gingerbread 2.3.6 with TouchWiz US v4.0microSD for up to 32GB storage8GB internal storage768MB RAM5MP camera with 2592 x 1944 pixelsDual core 1GHz Cortex A9 processorComes with 2 batteries (2000 mAh battery)

And here is our hands on review (Youtube link here):

I honestly find the concept interesting, but I personally feel it’s way too expensive, bulky, and outdated software wise. That being said, I could imagine every phone having an integrated projector in 5 years time, especially considering how well the Galaxy Beam performed as a projector in the video.

So what do you think guys? Is this something you could imagine yourself buying anytime soon, or is it just a marketing gimmick? Perhaps it could become the new standard later?

Let us know what you think of the Samsung Galaxy Beam in the comments below! And if you're interested in picking one up, it can be purchased on Amazon Germany here. 


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

[Infographic] iPhone 4S Emits 3x More Radiation Than the Galaxy S3

The app Tawkon, which monitors cell phone radiation, has created an infographic that suggests the iPhone 4S emits far more radiation than a  number of Android phones. The graph, which is currently making the rounds on Android blogs, measures the specific absorption rate (or SAR) of phones, or how much radiation your body absorbs from the phone. 

At the top of the graph, the Blackberry Bold 9700 emits the most radiation at 1.37 w/kg, followed by the iPhone 4S at 1.11 w/kg, the HTC Evo 4G at 1.03 w/ kg, the Motorola Droid at 0.7 w/kg and the Samsung Galaxy S3 at 0.34 w/kg. The maximum radiation that is recommended is 1.6 w/kg, according to the FCC.

While it's still debatable whether or not increased radiation can actually cause brain cancer, it is a bit worrisome when such a popular phone emits so much radiation. Tawkon also offers an app for monitoring your own cell phone's radiation, and it may be helpful if this is something you're concerned about. Basically, whenever your phone is far away from a cell phone tower and straining to find a signal, Tawkon will recommend you plug in an earpiece and talk from a distance. At the end of the month, the app tallies up how much time you've spent talking on the phone during times of high radiation.

For more about the debate surrounding cell phone radiation, click here.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

Malware Alert: Microsoft Warning Users Of Fake Skype App On App Stores

 

Last week we reported on a piece of malware called MMarketPay that was purchasing paid apps on Android devices without notifying the user. This time, a new piece of malware is making its rounds, and what makes this one dangerous is the fact that it pretends to be an app that many users know and love: Skype. Not only does it pretend to be this very popular instant messenger/calling app, but goes as far as to send SMS messages to specific phone numbers without the consent of the user. But that’s not all. What’s really dirty is that the money you have to pay for those unapproved messages goes straight to the pockets of the rogue apps developers.

It basically works like this: The app presents itself as the standard Skype app, and once downloaded, it immediately begins sending messages to those premium rate numbers, which in turn costs the user money, and then goes directly to the malware makers. The biggest issue is that you’ll most likely only see the the charges for the messages when your next bill arrives. Even if the victim realizes that it’s a fake version of Skype and uninstalls it, many will most likely forget that they accidentally downloaded the fake app, making it very confusing to track down where the extra charges came from.

The fact that the malware hides itself as an insanely popular app is what makes it so dangerous. Skype is an established and trusted brand with over 663 MILLION users, and most smartphone users won’t think twice about hitting the download button for it. Since the app can also make telephone calls, the rogue apps request for SMS permission would also seem logical, making this particular piece of malware a pretty dangerous one.

So please guys...make sure that you’re downloading your apps from legitimate sources before pressing that download button. A member of Microsoft’s Malware Protection Center summed it up perfectly by saying:

“Just as you would when taking care of any valuable property, mobile users need to take appropriate security measures and precautions”.

Stay safe out there guys, and always double check before pressing that download button!

Picture credits: proaudioboutique.com, twiv.tv, spkcomputing.com, and wallpapers.free-review.net (edited by myself)


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Facebook Begins Testing Sponsored Results, Its First Search Typeahead Ads

Josh Constine is a technology journalist who specializes in deep analysis of social products. He is currently a writer for TechCrunch. Previously, Constine was the Lead Writer of Inside Facebook, where he covered Facebook product changes, privacy, the Ads API, Page management, ecommerce, virtual currency, and music technology. Prior to writing for Inside Facebook, Constine graduated from Stanford University... ? Learn More

Facebook Sponsored Results TC

Heads up, Google. Facebook is testing a new format of search ads called Sponsored Results that lets advertisers show ads in the Facebook search typeahead to users looking for a particular Page, app, or Place. It basically will let businesses divert traffic from each other.

For example, a competing game company could target Zynga’s CityVille so anyone searching for “CityVille” would see an ad leading to their game alongside the organic search result leading to Zynga’s game. Sponsored Results could be big for Facebook’s bottom line, pulling in ad dollars from direct advertisers with something to sell.

The Sponsored Results will look just like organic results in the typeahead search box atop every page, except for being marked with a tiny word “Sponsored”. Facebook tells me they’ll be sold on a cost per click basis, can be targeted to people searching for any Page, app, Place, (and possibly event) without that business’ permission, and the tests begin tonight.

Sponsored Results are not keyword ads. Advertisers can’t target something broad like “beach”, “games”, or “cameras”. They have to target a specific entity on Facebook, similar to how brands can currently target users with sidebar and Sponsored Story ads based on a user’s interests. For example, Sponsored Results could be targeted to people searching for “Sandals Resort Hawaii”, “CityVille”, or “Nikon Camera”.

The Sponsored Results will not appear on the full Facebook Search results page, only in the typeahead. Facebook struck a deal years ago with Microsoft to let it place ads at the bottom of the search results page, but now Facebook is taking control and offering a fully-owned platform for search ads.

This new ad format can only direct users to on-Facebook properties, but that includes an on-Page application or a specific Page post. That could let advertisers send users to a Facebook Offer coupon they’re distributing, a contest app they’ve launched, or an email or phone number sign-up widget. It could also help brands team up, to run ads pointing traffic from people searching for them to a joint promotion run with another business they’re partnering with.

Advertisers can target multiple entities that people are searching for at a time. They can also layer on Facebook’s other ads targeting criteria so a news website targeting Sponsored Results to people searching for the “CNN” Page could refine their ads to only be shown to 30-50 year old women in San Francisco who Like Barack Obama.

Sponsored Results will appeal to a class of advertisers Facebook doesn’t serve well right now — direct marketers who sell products online or games trying to gain traction. Until now, Facebook was better for less urgent brand advertising because it didn’t offer many ways to reach users after they’ve shown purchase intent — when potential return on investment is highest and most easily measured.

Ads on Facebook’s sidebar for shoes or your company’s latest puzzle game might be ignored because users aren’t interested at the time. Sponsored Results could hit them when they are, just as they’re searching for another shoe brand or game.

Sponsored Results, as well the recently announced but just starting to roll out Facebook Exchange cookie-based retargeted ads, could let Facebook compete with Google sponsored search results and offsite ad networks for dollars. Some might say users on Facebook generally aren’t in the mood to buy things

The ads have the potential to reduce the relevance of results in Facebook’s search typeahead, similar to how Google Sponsored Results ads push down organic results a searcher might actually be looking for. Honestly, I often find out about cool products and events from Facebook’s standard ads because I’ve given the site so much data to target with, but Sponsored Results seem like they could get in the way.

Facebook tells me it will be watching for feedback, though, and stresses that this is just an early test. It’s also difficult to gauge the total presence of these ads, as Facebook doesn’t share the volume of on-site searches users run.

If rolled out, Sponsored Results could open up a huge new revenue stream for Facebook, and make its currently slumping stock price look like more of a bargain. Sponsored Results won’t have generated any significant revenue that impact Facebook’s first earnings report since becoming a public company though, which TechCrunch will be thoroughly covering on July 26th.


View the original article here

Posted in , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Electronic Arts Comes Out Against Defense Of Marriage Act

Jordan Crook studied English Literature at New York University before entering the tech space. Prior to joining TechCrunch, Crook dabbled in mobile marketing and mobile apps as well as doing device reviews for MobileMarketer and MobileBurn. Crook is fascinated with alternative energy production and greentech. She is now a writer for CrunchGear. ? Learn More

Screen shot 2012-07-19 at 10.51.00 PM

Electronic Arts today announced that they are joining a group of businesses opposing DOMA (Defense of Marriage Act).

In case you aren’t familiar with it, the Defense of Marriage Act is a federal law that defines marriage as the union of one man and one woman. The law also states that no U.S. state or political subdivision is required to recognize a same-sex marriage treated as a marriage in another state, and that no same-sex marriage need be recognized for federal purposes, such as insurance benefits or the filing of joint tax returns.

By standing up against the law, EA is joining dozens of other companies in signing an amicus brief with the Ninth Circuit of Appeals to find portions of the act unconstitutional.

Here’s the company’s official word on the matter:

DOMA presents a number of problems for businesses like EA, as it creates regulatory, tax, and discrimination complications for employers, and that’s why we’re standing against it. The underlying lawsuit impacts all employers no matter how big or small, and no matter the industry, and we encourage other business to join these efforts.

We’re glad to see EA step up to the plate on this matter, as the tech industry continues to hold more and more weight not only in our economy but in the country’s general well-being.

[via SlashGear]


jQuery(function() { jQuery("#tabs-crunchbase").tabs(); });

View the original article here

Posted in , , , , | Leave a comment

4 Ways Dell Is Becoming An Open Source Company

dell

Is Dell becoming an open source company?

Yes, but it is not exactly being planned that way. It is bubbling up like most open source projects do. But in many respects the move to open source is also by design. Dell does not want to be a box maker anymore. That makes open source a desirable option. With open source, Dell can leverage an ecosystem of partners and developers.

Here are four examples that show the shift and why it matters to the company’s future.

PCs (Laptops): Dell turned some heads this week at OSCON with the news that it would be selling a Linux laptop made for developers. Klint Finley writes that Dell will sell a special “developer edition” of its XPS13 Ultrabook starting this fall. Code names Project Sputnik, the laptop will come pre-loaded with Ubuntu, a user friendly distribution of the open source operating system Linux (or GNU/Linux to purists). Canonical, which manages Ubuntu, worked closely with Dell in the development of the laptop. The laptop gives Dell credibility in the open source developer community. With that support, Dell can partner with a company like Canonical to build a community that can help it grow a new sector of the hardware market.

Cloud: Dell is investing heavily in OpenStack, the open source cloud effort. It is a platinum supporter which gives the company a board seat on the new OpenStack foundation. OpenStack is one of the fastest growing open source efforts in recent history. OpenStack gives Dell an opportunity to compete against Amazon Web Services and other major cloud services providers such as Windows Azure.

Software: Crowbar is an open source deployment tool developed by Dell as part OpenStack. It started as a tool for installing Open Stack, but can deploy other software through the use of plug-in modules called “barclamps.” Dell released the source code for its Apache Hadoop barclamp on Github. Software is a new game for Dell. The comlany can build greenfield apps without the drag of legacy technology. Open sourcing its software means Dell can then leverage developers and partners in the vast open source ecosystem.

Servers: Dell joined OpenCompute,a project led by Facebook. It is of the more interesting projects intended to open source the data center. Dell made much of its fortune in the server business. To see it start opening its server technology is evident that Dell recognizes the importance of opening its hardware.

Dell’s open source slant is tied to its deeper effort to focus on developers. In an interview yesterday at the OSCON event in Portland, Dell’s Barton George said it is that focus which helped Project Sputnik go from skunk works to real product.

Dell is differentiating its server technology by adding technology layers that can be packaged for services providers. That may include enterprise companies that see the importance of embracing data and turning it into the “digital oil” that increasingly drives business.

It is difficult to change the DNA of a company. For a big company like Dell, it is almost impossible to go it alone. It’s unaffordable. Open source gives Dell a chance to remake itself.


View the original article here

Posted in , , | Leave a comment