Let the phone technology rise
Nexus One
8 Gadgets That Will Be Huge in 2010
Feb 28th
After everything we’ve seen, these are the tech products we believe will rack up big sales by next Christmas.
number of view: 10
Firefox Mobile Browser Fennec Spotted on Android
Feb 28th
PC World
It might be a little too early to tell if Fennec, the mobile version of Firefox, will revolutionize mobile browsing on Androiddevices, but the project is making headway. Yesterday a few photos were posted on the Firefox for mobile Facebook page showing the browser running on the Nexus One andMotorola Droid.
Fennec wasn’t always slated to come to Google’s smartphone operating system.

In June 2009, Mozilla executives reconsidered an earlier decision to not develop an Android version of Fennec. The changing factor was the release of Google’s Android SDK, which allows code to run natively on Android devices instead of running on the Dalvik virtual machine.
At the time Mozilla was only working on versions for Windows Mobile and Nokia Internet tablets.Don’t get your hopes up for another mobile browser option if you’re an iPhone user. Last November, Mozilla’s European President, Tristan Nitot, told electricpig.co.uk that Mozilla wasn’t in any hurry to work on an iPhone version of the browser.
“We’re not investing time and energy in this direction because we’re pretty sure it would be blocked by Apple, so we’re better off using our time in terms of development to do things on open platforms,” Nitot told the site.
The team hasn’t mentioned anything about release dates for Android.
number of view: 50
Google Earth Mobile app now out for the Nexus One ‘Android 2.1′
Feb 25th
Michael Kwan
There is a new app to add in the already intensive library of Google code for your Android phone. You can use it for everything from Gmail to Google Maps, and now you get to have a global view too thanks to the new Google Earth Mobile app for Android.
Developed to work with Android 2.1, the “fastest mobile version of Google Earth” is now available for download through the Google Marketplace. The Android edition of Google Earth will support a screen resolution of up to 800×480 pixels and a “smooth” frame rate.
Inside the app, you’ll find a roads layer that can be placed over top the digital satellite image. There’s also voice recognition to help you find your points of interest, whether they be specific locations or more general search terms. You can still browse through local businesses too.
The good news is that the new Google Earth app for Android is perfectly happy working on the Nexus One. The bad news is that it is not yet ready for theMotorola Droid, so you’ll have to wait for Moto to roll out Android 2.1 update for that phone first.
number of view: 88
HTC admits customers have Nexus One 3G trouble, not yet blaming the phone
Jan 17th
By Scott M. Fulton, III
If samples from customer support threads are an accurate indicator, hundreds and perhaps thousands of early adopters of Google’s Nexus One phone aren’t looking for humanity from some pinstripe or tapered edges, so much as from customer support.

A spokesperson for HTC, the manufacturer of the Nexus One phone sold by Google and deployed thus far on T-Mobile’s GSM network, told Betanews late Monday evening that it is aware of the magnitude of 3G connectivity problems reported by customers nationwide since last week. As of Monday evening, several hundred messages were posted to Google’s support Web site, many reporting essentially the same problem: For the most part, their 3G connections are spotty and variable; and for some, 3G is non-existent.
Contrary to reports, however, HTC is not acknowledging a problem with the phone. As of now, the T-Mobile network remains equally suspect, especially amid the complete lack of much news whatsoever, including to its customers, from Google.
“While the majority of Nexus One owners have been thrilled with their experience, HTC is aware that some owners have reported having some technical issues with their Nexus One devices,” the spokesperson told Betanews. HTC, Google, and T-Mobile take all such reports very seriously, and are working closely together to determine what issues may be behind these reports.”
Late Monday morning, T-Mobile’s customer support site did include a thread started by support personnel, who appeared to be actively interested in collecting information on the problem. “Let’s see what we can learn about this,” the thread began. “Maybe we can uncover some commonalities among those experiencing issues.”
But although blogs today reported that this thread was an admission of problems with T-Mobile’s network, actually, T-Mobile made no such admission. It merely acknowledged the issue and its personnel (unlike Google’s) are interacting with customers in search of a resolution.
Customers who did manage to get through to HTC support personnel report having been told that a software patch of some sort is in the works; some who received that message last week were told they would receive a patch as soon as today. It does not appear certain that such a patch, if it exists, specifically addresses this problem.
All that Google will say on the subject is as follows: “We are investigating this issue and hope to have more information for you soon. We understand your concern and appreciate your patience.”
Nexus One is far from the first smartphone with 3G problems in the early going. The first US-based Apple iPhone 3G models were plagued with network trouble initially, as was the BlackBerry Bold 9000 — both on the AT&T network. Early troubles with the BlackBerry Storm on the Verizon Wireless network were traced back to the phone.
Some information from Nexus One early adopters tends to point toward the network, not the phone, as the possible culprit. One fellow reports having swapped SIM cards with a friend with an iPhone, and immediately receiving faster 2G EDGE service from AT&T on Nexus One than 3G service from T-Mobile. Another customer who also owns a T-Mobile G1 noted similar 3G connectivity problems on both the G1 and the Nexus One, since last Tuesday when Nexus One was launched.
One story indicative not only of customers’ problems but of their bewilderment over the lack of an obvious solution, comes from user scotty1024, who works in Redmond, Washington, just blocks from the Microsoft campus. “This morning I went into a conference room and no one else had shown up yet so I killed time in the Amazon MP3 store. The phone kept telling me it lost connection and to press here to retry. You’d retry and it would flip to Edge and I was able to pull up lists of titles. But about 2 minutes later it would flip back into non-working 3G and kill the connection. Spin, wash, repeat.”
One would think, scotty1024 goes on, that the phone would be smart enough to route calls via Wi-Fi using Google Voice when 3G service goes dead.number of view: 8
What we craved this week: Nexus One, Netflix to Wii, bear country
Jan 17th
This week has been big on Google. The company’s Nexus One’s pricing has gotten a few tweaks and The Wozdeclared it his favorite gadget–quite a statement coming from the co-founder of Apple, makers of the iPhone, the Nexus One’s direct target.
Speaking of Apple, one of its lawyers accidentally let slip the fact that the infamous Apple tablet might someday exist even though it doesn’t really exist. This is due to Gawker’s $10,000 bounty on anything confirming that the nonexistent tablet exists. I hope he takes PayPal.
Speaking of people messing things up, did you hear the one about the bear who ate an airplane and then the airplane owner fixed it with duct tape and then flew it home? Well I did. True story, too.
And some good news for Wii owners: Your consoles are getting Netflix streaming content. At this clip everything will have Netflix in about five years including my espresso machine. Or at least I’m hoping.number of view: 2
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