Archive for December, 2009

LEAKED: New Details and the Price of Google’s Nexus One

// December 30th, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

The Nexus One, also known as the Google Phone, has been causing a stir this month after details began to emerge about the project. Earlier today, we learned that the phone will likely be revealed on January 5 at a Google press conference (which we will be covering).

Information on the phone’s already starting to leak through the GoogleGoogleGoogle

gates, though. Screenshots obtained by gadget blog Gizmodo reveal one of the most important details about the device: its price.

The screenshots seem to be the future landing pages for the Google phone. It will apparently go live soon at google.com/phone and be the sole portal for purchasing your very own Nexus One. And while we cannot verify the accuracy of these screenshots, the information presented makes sense.


Here are some of the key details you should know:

- Price: $530 unsubsidized and unlocked (ouch!), $180 subsidized on the T-Mobile network with a 2 year contract.

- Rate Plan: $79.99 per month on T-Mobile, which includes unlimited texting/MMS and web data, along with 500 minutes. This seems to be the only plan available, even if you’re already on another plan with T-Mobile

- Purchasing: You can buy up to five Nexus One phones per Google account.

- Cancellation: If you cancel within 120 days, you have to pay the subsidy difference ($350) or return the phone to Google.

The subsidized price makes it competitive with the iPhoneiPhoneiPhone

and the Verizon Droid, but we won’t know how well the phone sells or if people will pay the $530 price tag for an unlocked phone until it launches. Let us know what you think of the price in the comments.

[via Gizmodo]

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

Ford brings Wi-Fi to the highway

// December 27th, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

(WIRED) — Ford is making its cars into mobile Wi-Fi hot spots. The next generation of the Sync in-car entertainment and information system will use a USB mobile broadband modem to establish a secure wireless connection capable of supporting several devices simultaneously. The system will be available next year on selected models — no word yet which ones — and you won’t need a subscription or hardware beyond the modem. “While you’re driving to grandma’s house, your spouse can be finishing the holiday shopping and the kids can be chatting with friends and updating their Facebook profiles,” said Mark Fields, Ford president of the Americas. “And you’re not paying for yet another mobile subscription or piece of hardware because Ford will let you use technology you already have.” Several automakers already offer in-car Internet access — Japanese drivers have been using it since 1997 — and many others are rushing to bring it to us. Ford’s announcement follows General Motors’ promise last week to make in-car connectivity available in seven models of trucks and SUVs. They’re the latest automakers to bring the infobahn to the autobahn. Mercedes recently announced it has successfully tested in-vehicle Internet applications — including web browsing, vehicle software updates and VOIP — on a prototype 4G network. It follows BMW’s Internet-connected iDrive system and Chrysler’s Uconnect Web in-vehicle mobile hotspot. With so many automakers getting in on the action, there’s a push to introduce hardware standards. Ford is taking a decidedly different approach, opting to allow consumers to plug in their own USB modem to get connected. General Motors, on the other hand, offers a dealer-installed system called Chevrolet Wi-Fi by Autonet Mobile. It creates a Wi-Fi hot spot 300 feet in diameter around the vehicle, and GM claims the 3G network achieves speeds of up to 1.5 mbps. The hardware costs $199 after the $200 mail-in rebate, and the service costs $29 a month. Given how connected we are, it makes sense for automakers to put the Internet in our cars. The number of iPhones and other mobile devices being used to connect to the Internet jumped 75 percent in the third quarter of this year, according to JiWire Mobile Audiences Insights Report. Letting people log on from the road will be a big selling point among 20-something buyers, the so-called Millennials who have propelled much of Sync’s success. Millennials will make up 28 percent of the driving population next year, a nine-point increase from 2004. Kids aside, Ford says interest in in-car connectivity is high among the general public, with one-third of people surveyed by the Consumer Electronics Association expressing interest in being able to check e-mail or surf the Web from the car. cnn.com

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

Vonage Unveils iPhone, iPod touch, BlackBerry Apps

// December 23rd, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

Vonage Unveils iPhone, iPod touch, BlackBerry Apps 12.22.09 1Comment By Chloe Albanesius VoIP provider Vonage on Tuesday unveiled apps for the iPhone, the iPod touch, and BlackBerry devices. The apps – available now via the iTunes Store and Vonage’s mobile Web site – will provide unlimited international calling to 60 countries. The apps are free to download, but an unlimited international calling plan will run $24.99 per month. The company also has separate calling rates to specific countries. Existing Vonage World customers will save $10 when adding Vonage Mobile, for a total price of $14.99 per month. The iPhone and iPod touch downloads will allow users to make unlimited Vonage Mobile calls in the U.S. over Wi-Fi without using up cell phone minutes. The BlackBerry and iPhone app also run on your existing cellular network, which will eat up minutes. Cell phone numbers remain the same. Users can dial directly from an existing address book without calling cards or PIN codes, Vonage said. To install, click the “Download App” link on the iPhone, iPod touch, or BlackBerry pages, and Vonage will send you a text message with a link to download Vonage Mobile. Follow the steps to complete the installation. There are some restrictions with making calls to cell phones in other countries. There are only 15 countries and regions to which users can place calls to mobile devices: the Bahamas, Brunei, China, Guam, Hong Kong, India, Macau, Malaysia, Saipan, Puerto Rico, San Marino, Singapore, Thailand, United States, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Calls to other countries like Australia, France, Germany, and Japan must be made to landline phones. The apps also allow you to update your Twitter status and view updates from people in your cell phone contact list. Vonage announced in September that Apple had approved its App Store application, but had few details to share at the time.

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

Google To Acquire DocVerse; Office War Heats Up

// December 21st, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

Google, which is currently on one heck of a spending spree, is closing an acquisition of San Francisco based DocVerse, a service that lets users collaborate around Microsoft Office documents, we’ve heard from a source with knowledge of the deal. The purchase price is supposed to be around $25 million.

Docverse lets users collaborate directly on Microsoft Office documents. Appjet, another recent Google Acquisition, has a related product called EtherPad, although that team is reported to be working with Google Wave and the EtherPad source code has been released to the community.

DocVerse is a product Google is likely to keep. The company was founded by Microsoft veterans Shan Sinha and Alex DeNeui. Shia drove product strategy for SharePoint and SQL Server, $1.6B and $3.0B products, respectively. DeNui ran Microsoft SQL Server’s web strategy.

With DocVerse Google will have a direct software connection to Microsoft Office, allowing users to collaborate real time on documents. Microsoft is also moving in this direction with Office 10. In effect, Microsoft is countering Google Docs with the new Office. And Google is countering that move with the acquisition of DocVerse. For more on this fight, see Imitation Isn’t Always Flattery: Microsoft Previews Google Apps Killer To Beta Testers.

DocVerse has raised just $1.3 million, in 2008, from Baseline Ventures, Harrison Metal Capital and Naval Ravikant.

The deal has not yet been finalized, says our source, but is past the term sheet stage.

Information provided by CrunchBase

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

YouTube Video Lands $30 Million Movie Deal [VIDEO]

// December 19th, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

One producer’s YouTube video, featuring giant robots invading the city of Montevideo, has landed him a $30 million Hollywood movie deal.

Fede Alvarez’s “Ataque de Panico” (Panic Attack) shows the gigantic CGI humanoids capturing the capital of Uruguay as citizens flee; the 5 minute clip has been viewed 1.5 million times on YouTube. It was created on a budget of $300. Alvarez says that after uploading the video on a Thursday, he was receiving offers from Hollywood on the Monday.

He eventually accepted a $30 million dollar deal from Ghost House Pictures for a full-length sci-fi thriller set in Uruguay and Argentina. The movie won’t be based on the YouTubeYouTubeYouTube

video itself, Alvarez told the BBC.

While it makes for a remarkable story, you might be less surprised after watching the clip: it has a Hollywood polish that implies Alvarez’s work is ready for its big screen debut.

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

Paula on Video

// December 16th, 2009 // 1 Comment » // video

Facebook Now Consumes 5 Percent of Our Collective Internet Time

// December 15th, 2009 // 1 Comment » // Personal

Facebook’s already the Internet’s ultimate time waster, with users spending more time on it than any other website including Google, YouTube and Yahoo.

But here’s another remarkable way to look at it: According to comScore, 5.5 percent of all time spent online in the U.S. during the month of November was spent on the social networking site. Considering the billions and billions of pages on the web, that’s a gigantic proportion of users’ time (and more than double last year).

In addition, FacebookFacebookFacebook

passed 100 million unique visitors in the U.S. for the first time (in comScore’s reporting anyways) during the month and moved up one spot to become the fourth most popular website in the U.S. in terms of traffic.

The chart pretty much tells the story of the run Facebook has been on over the past few years:

Image courtesy of iStockphotoiStockphotoiStockphoto

, hidesy

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner

Barnes and Noble Nook e-Book Reader Rooted

// December 15th, 2009 // No Comments » // Personal

Screen shot 2009-12-15 at 12.07.51 AM The recently released e-book reader from Barnes & Noble, the Nook, has been rooted by the community of enthusiasts at nookdevs.com. The complete instructions for hacking the device and obtaining root access are detailed on the site. The Nook went on sale in late November and aims to compete with the dominant Amazon Kindle, a device which has spurred its own community of hackers and modifiers.

The Nook retails for $259, and is an Android-powered device with built in AT&T 3G service and WiFi, along with an e-ink screen that is found in most other readers. The instructions for rooting the device require that the device is opened up and that the SD card which stores the operating system be removed. The process seems a little too simple, almost as if the device was designed to be hacked. The storage is on a removable card, which can then be loaded in another machine where the process of acquiring root access to the operating system is carried out.

This will likely lead to DRM controls being bypassed, and a slew of homebrew projects being created based on the hardware – which might ironically help Barnes & Noble in its bid to unseat both the Kindle and Sony e-Reader.

Full detailed instructions and photographs are available on the site here. The entire process is straight forward and only takes around 30-45 minutes. I might actually order a Nook now.

Tip via Nenad Nikolic (@shonzilla)

Posted via web from Carlos’ Corner