Archive for June, 2010
| Bada a viable ecosystem ? | ||||||
| By Shaun Zelber, June 29th, 2010 :: OS & Handsets | ||||||
I attended the Bada Developer event yesterday and here are my thoughts. Samsung have created a complete eco system for their smartphone technology. This includes: Overall this has been a massive undertaking for them and it’s appeared in very impressive timescale. The phone itself is exceptional build quality and the screen colours are the best I’ve seen using Super Amoled tech. They seem to have based the system on an in house OS which has been heavily customised. | ||||||
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| ABBYY – FotoTranslate App | ||||||
| By Naveed, June 22nd, 2010 :: Advertising, Geek & Tech, OS & Handsets | ||||||
FotoTranslate is available in multiple language packages which can be purchased independently. The application requires Symbian OS S60 3rd Edition, 5th Edition. You may contact us to get Free Serial Numbers to check the trial version. For more information : http://www.abbyy.com/fototranslate/ | ||||||
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| The Price of The Top Grossing iTunes Apps | ||||||
| By Shaun Zelber, June 14th, 2010 :: Uncategorized | ||||||
In response to developer complaints that more expensive apps were getting buried at the bottom of popularity rankings, Apple recently introduced a separate ranking based on revenue. (The Top 100 Paid apps ranks apps are based on number of downloads.) In this post, I’ll validate that compared to downloads, the Top 100 ranking based on revenues does contain pricier apps. For each decile, I calculated the MEAN price of the Top 100 Apps over the 2 most recent weeks. Notice that for the most recent week, the MEAN price for each decile† of the Top 100 Grossing apps is more than $5. In contrast, none of the deciles for the Top 100 Paid apps had a mean of $4 or more. There isn’t much of a relationship between rank and price although there was a slight downward trend in the price of the Top Grossing apps over the most recent week: except for the blip in the 5th decile of apps ranked 41-50, the top deciles tended to have higher MEAN prices.
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| Mobile Application Development Trends | ||||||
| By Shaun Zelber, June 8th, 2010 :: Apps & Sites, Geek & Tech | ||||||
If you are an entrepreneur or a small business owner looking into the mobile application industry, either to ride the wave or to capitalize on the fact that your customers are spending more time with their phone, this post could come in very handy Bellow you may find some thoughts on how the Mobile Development industry will evolve in the nearest future. 1. Micropayments 2. Enhanced Security 3. Business App Store 4. Location-Based Technology 5. Social Based Applications 6. Augmented Reality (AR) 7. High Entry Barriers for Fledgling Developers 8. Mobile Application Advertising 9. Importance of Marketing for Applications 10. HTML 5 – Native Apps vs Web Apps What other trends do you think will be likely this year for the mobile applications industry? Kristina Kozlova | ||||||
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| Want to know why Symbian lost the app war? | ||||||
| By Shaun Zelber, June 3rd, 2010 :: Uncategorized | ||||||
The iPhone changed all that by letting you install new apps that fundamentally changed the features of the phone in thousands of different ways. Except, it wasn’t a new idea, even years before the iPhone was released. Symbian had offered the ability to add apps to its phones for years. So why did the iPhone become the phone with apps and Symbian become the forgotten mobile OS?… Simple: Symbian’s obsession with security. In what should be a huge wake up call to Steve Jobs and the increasingly totalitarian regime that he’s creating around the walled garden that is everything i (iPhone, iPad, iTunes, iPod), Symbian insisted on approving each and every app that was written for the Symbian platform. The only problem was that its approval process was even slower than Apple’s. Whereas iPhone apps can take from a week to 2 months to be approved, a Symbian app still takes half a year before it’s approved! Half a year is simply insane. The smartphone market is so fast moving that an app is usually out of date 6 months after it’s first released. According to Lee Williams, Symbian’s Executive Director, this is still the case now. So not only did Symbian squander the app advantage they had when the iPhone was first launched, they continued to do nothing about the situation for a full three years while Apple cut a swathe throught the market unabated. Sometimes you want to just bang your head against the wall at the sheer incompetence of large organizations! | ||||||
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| Bada open to other handset manufacturers | ||||||
| By Shaun Zelber, June 2nd, 2010 :: OS & Handsets | ||||||
After the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona where Samsung made as much noise as possible about Wave and Bada I have remained curious about the development of yet another OS platform. I really wonder how Samsung plans to actually stand up to the open platform of Android and the existing WinMo and other fringe platforms like LiMo. How could they get developers to actually adopt still another OS and thus fragment the market yet further… not to mention make things even more complicated for development houses. It is quite obvious what motivates them.. they want to replicate Apple’s success and to a lesser extent to Android’s extent. Samsung wants an app store that allows them a piece of the pie! Being one of the largest handset manufacturers in the world (about 20% of world wide handset sales) of course does give them a certain pull. But this didn’t do it for Nokia which remains the largest by far but still struggles with imposing Symbian as a viable platform and it’s other ventures such as Maemo/MeeGo flounder. Nokia’s OVI remains an app store player but not a run-away success. Samsung has recently launched their first Bada phones in Europe and claim plenty of big name content providers who have developped in Bada : Electronic Arts, Gameloft, The Associated Press, CNN, WeatherBug, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Universal Film, Layar, Expedia Affiliate Network, ZAGAT, and many others.Including well-known applications such as Need for Speed Shift (EA), Weather Bug(WeatherBug), Zagat to go(Handmark), and Travel Booker(Expedia) are cited as Bada developers. But can Samsung really replicate what Apple has done with a closed circuit ? Well a tidbit in their press release seems that they hint at not keeping it closes : So Samsung plans to licence out the Bada OS ? Seems like it. But they plan on then selling all applications developed via their store as evidenced by this statement : Now that seems strange… would LG developers to sell apps for their Bada phones via Samsung’s application store ? I think NOT! So what are we talking about here ? A multitude of app stores for each handset manufacturer ? I really don’t have the answers but I thought that this article was very interesting article which gives a projected market like this : So in that hypothetical model the market shares among the Top 10 would be in a couple of years something like Symbian (Nokia) 35% Whatever the case it is quite exciting to see what will happen over the rest of year. Lets watch and see.. | ||||||
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A useful tool which translates text using image based processing on your mobile phone. The application uses the camera on the phone to take a picture of a word or phrase; which is then processed and recognized as separate words. The user is then able to get word-by-word translations on-the-fly. The translations are done accurately depending on the quality of the image taken; the semantics used in the image-to-text conversion appear to be extensive and can usually recognize even a moderately distorted image. Processing of the image hardly takes any time, thereby making the user experience a pleasant one.
Being able to install new apps developed by third parties gave the iPhone a whole new dimension that other phones simply couldn’t offer, so the iPhone’s stroke of genius was its apps. Before the iPhone, your phone came with a pre-installed set of apps (usually games, a calendar and an alarm clock), and that was that. To get new features you needed a new phone.