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Don’t Like the iPhone? Checkout 3 Other Touchscreen Phones

Source: gigaom.com

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Apple shook up the mobile phone playing field with the introduction of the original iPhone a year ago. Phones with touchscreens were nothing new; most Windows Mobile phones have used them for years. But the older phones used resistive digitizer screens, which were operated by a tiny metal stylus. The iPhone uses a capacitive digitizer that’s operated by touching fingers to the screen — a remarkably convenient option, by comparison. It didn’t take consumers long to figure out this was the way to go with touch and other phone makers quickly followed Apple’s lead.

While making a handset with a touchscreen is no big technical feat, the process quickly makes clear the pivotal role that Apple’s UI plays in producing a good user experience. Indeed, UI often ends up being the crucial factor that separates the good phones from the rest. And while the number of phones competing with the iPhone is growing all the time, most come from three companies:

HTC -- Until the last couple of years, HTC was largely making phones for other companies, such as Palm. But once they introduced their own brand to the market, they quickly established themselves as high-end device makers. HTC was also one of the first to dive headfirst into the touch phone pool, and have since produced model after model.

The first (and still available) was the HTC Touch, a phone based on the Windows Mobile platform. Going with the Windows Mobile OS was an easy decision for HTC since it’s a mature platform with tools to handle both the consumer and enterprise markets. The problem is that it wasn’t designed from the ground up for a touch operation, which can severely limit such a phone’s usability. So HTC designed the TouchFLO interface, which sits on top of the Windows Mobile base and adds touch features.

While the HTC Touch wasn’t a bad first attempt, it fell short of being a solid competitor to the iPhone. It followed up this year with the release of the Touch Diamond. A sleek black phone with an enhanced UI designed for touch, it has been well received. And since Windows Mobile has more features than the iPhone, the Touch Diamond was an instant, solid competitor.

This month HTC extended their touch offering with the Touch Pro, which is very similar to the Diamond but also includes a slide-out QWERTY keypad for business users. The lack of such a feature on the iPhone has been roundly criticized by serious email users.

Currently HTC is creating a lot of buzz in the enthusiast community with its yet-to-be-released handset, the Dream. This touch phone is said to be based on the brand-new Google Android platform that T-Mobile is expected to launch next month. Information is gradually leaking out about the Dream — it looks like a device similar to the Touch Pro, complete with a large touchscreen coupled with a sliding QWERTY keyboard.

LG — Electronics giant LG has been making feature phones for years and have produced some solid touchscreen, non-phone devices. Feature phones have typically been viewed as less capable than their smartphone competition, but that criticism is harder to make these days as feature phones can now handle PIM functions and messaging. LG’s first touchscreen phone was the Voyager, which includes two displays — one big touchscreen on the front of the device, as is common, and a non-touchscreen on the inside. The keyboard flips up like a small laptop to be used with the interior screen, making the Voyager a distinctly different type of phone.

Most recently LG has followed up with the Dare, a phone without a keyboard that is touchscreen only. The UI, however, has been optimized for touch operation.

Samsung — Electronics firm Samsung has jumped into the touch phone game in a big way with the recent release of the Instinct, using a media advertising blitz to make clear how serious they were about this new genre. The Instinct has only been out a short while, but it’s already getting rave reviews, and from experts that are known for being hard on such devices. Its web browsing capabilities, notably, rival that of the iPhone.


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Germans Doesn’t Like iPhone VoIP

Source: voip-tech.blogspot.com

In Germany, the T-Mobile, a big multinational company related to mobile network, seems have some annoyance for the use of VoIP over the iPhone, precisely with the service offered by SipGate, because it encourage operations named "jailbreak" (a description of this procedure it’s available in this page), and then tamper the iPhone via software.
I have the feeling that the cheap VoIP begins to make some trouble to the big multinationals, that certainly will take some measures to protect themselves, even if more than a measure, it seems an egoistic monopoly.

Published on July 18th, 2008 under , , , ,

Hidden Costs of T-Mobile’s @Home

Source: www.voip-news.com

Is T-Mobile’s @Home as great a deal as it sounds? The service touts $10 a month unlimited calling via broadband . . . but you need a broadband line. And a T-Mobile cell phone line. And a special router . . .

Starting to sound like there’s a lot being tacked onto the deal? There is. But for some, it could be worthwhile.

To learn more about the true costs of @Home, check out this VoIP News feature.

Published on July 3rd, 2008 under , , ,

T-Mobile 3G May Not Be Data Ready

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I’m not an engineering type. I just use technology. So when I read Matt Miller’s post this morning it got me thinking.

3G is data. Voice rides over the data network. What this likely means is the data plans are not ready yet. I mean, TMO didn’t need 1700 mghz spectrum to sell voice.

Besides, the cute sales lady at the UTC T-Mobile store told me months ago they will have 3G data in the Spring when I bought a new device there. What’s the big mystery?

The mystery is T-Mobile got caught before THEY put the story out.

Published on May 1st, 2008 under , , , , ,

AT&T WiFi Branding Replacing T-Mobile’s

Source: alanweinkrantz.typepad.com

Yes, the AT&T WiFi branding is at the Starbucks store.  I suspect you will see more of these as they roll out San Antonio.
Wifi_sticker_at_starbucks

Published on April 16th, 2008 under , , , ,

Here is The Log in Screen - Notice Both the AT&T and T-Mobile Logos

Source: alanweinkrantz.typepad.com

I am starting to get calls from reporters.  One of the most frequently asked questions is "So, what happens to T-Mobile?"
Picture_12_3

I don’t do PR for T-Mobile and I don’t want to speculate what will or will not happen.  All I do know is that if you look at the screen shot above, it has both the AT&T and T-Mobile logos.

Here is the joint announcement from Starbucks and AT&T 

Published on April 15th, 2008 under , , , , ,

T-Mobile Hotspots Go Cold In New York City

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Much to many people’s surprise this morning some of the always reliable T-Mobile Hotspots in Manhattan stopped working. It seems T-Mobile has a massive outage affecting the Big Apple this morning, and according to Hotspot support there isn’t any estimated repair time known yet.

The outage this morning that currently affects all T-Mobile Hotspot users in the Amtrak Penn Station, most of the Midtown Manhattan hotspots (i.e. Starbucks) and the Grand Hyatt. I found out as I’m affected by it when I exited my morning train to New York for meetings at Penn Station and was able to log on to the T-Mobile Hotspot but couldn’t go any farther. My call to Hotspot support confirmed what I suspected as I realized that when both the browser authentication and when the Blackberry Curve showed my devices connected to the hotspot, but then kept seeing the Curve seeking the UMA connection that something was amiss.

Well at least there will be some Boingo hotspots working in the city :-)

Published on April 11th, 2008 under , , , , ,

Walt Mossberg Tests The New T-Mobile @ Home

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I love when companies give Walt Mossberg something to test, and like it even more when Walt tries extra hard to make something easy to understand like he did today.

Basically in his review of the T-Mobile @ HOME service he points out the warts of the system, especially the Home Alarm system and Fax machine issues. The Home Alarm issue can likely be solved by Next Alarm, as their Alarm Broadband Network is the ideal compliment to an IP based phone system. The faxing issue is one that has been a hassle for most people in VoIP also and while there are solutions, what I’m finding easier these days is to scan and email to send a fax, and to have one of those free services to receive faxes by email.

The best and most revealing line about the @HOME service though is this one:

This new system is not a so-called voice-over-Internet-protocol phone system, such as Vonage. It doesn’t carry your phone calls wholly over the Internet, but merely uses the Internet to get them to the T-Mobile cellphone network, which then carries the calls as if they had been made on a cellphone.

What Walt’s referring to is UMA and how T-Mobile uses ATM to transmit data from one point to another. Its not IP end to end, but does use the ‘Net from his house to the ATM backbone. I’m glad he said that because it differs from other services already out there which do use SIP and IP end to end like Earthlink’s TrueVoice, BroadVoice and mostly CallVantage, though some users are on MGCP.

Published on February 27th, 2008 under , , , ,

Cheap VoIP WithT-Mobile HotSpot @Home Talk Forever Home Phone

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

The Talk Forever Home Phone plan, according to T-Mobile, is for those who want to keep their home phone but say goodbye to their expensive home phone bill. If you want to have this service, you will need the following:
• Existing high-speed Internet connection
• T-Mobile Wireless Router with Home Phone Connection
• A qualifying T-Mobile mobile voice rate plan and the Talk Forever Home Phone plan
• A compatible home phone: 5.8 GHz cordless phone(s) or traditional touchtone phone(s)
Yes that is T-Mobile VoIP service that is offered for $10 a month. T-Mobile customers can add a new T-Mobile home phone line that includes unlimited nationwide calling, true Caller ID, voice mail and many other included features.
HotSpot @HomeSM Talk Forever Home Phone plan is currently available for our customers in Seattle and Dallas only.
Learn more here, at T-Mobile.

Published on February 24th, 2008 under ,

Nokia Has Doubts About UMA

Source: gigaom.com

Nokia is uncertain about the future of UMA and may not develop any more dual-band handsets for the standard, according to George Fry, director of technology alignment for the Finnish company. “We’re not seeing use diminishing, but we are seeing deployments level off,” Fry said earlier this week at the Personal Computing and Communications Association meeting.

Fry said that in cases in which an operator such as T-Mobile is trying to fill holes in its coverage without spending more to build out the network, UMA makes sense. But he said he wasn’t aware of any new deployments in the last six months or so. Indeed UMA, a standard that allows for secure hand-off between a cellular and fixed network, has proved somewhat polarizing.

Meanwhile Steve Shaw, associate VP of marketing for Kineto Wireless, notes that UMA is also a key component of femtocells, which are currently en vogue in the telco world. Again, there’s no sense of how wide any sort of femtocell deployment might be, but Shaw, whose company bills itself as the UMA company, isn’t counting the standard out.

While admitting that current UMA deployments requiring dual-mode handsets are few, he points out that Orange does have plans to deploy a dual-band network in the UK, Spain and Poland to augment its program started in France. Maybe UMA will become a useful but limited standard, in a manner similar to the way Infiniband was hyped as a replacement for Fibre Channel and Ethernet, but instead was only adopted by the smaller market for high-performance computing.

Published on February 22nd, 2008 under , , , , ,

T-Mobile Launches VoIP Service

Source: www.voip-news.com

T-Mobile is getting in on the VoIP wave.

The company has launched Hotspot@Home, an unlimited calling plan where you use your existing broadband connection and a T-Mobile provided wireless router. The cost? $10 a month, if you have a qualified T-Mobile phone plan. Sorry folks with other wireless carriers - you aren’t eligible.

The wireless router will run you $50. And there is a $200 fee if you cancel the service before the contract is up. Other than that, it’s a bargain at $10 per month.

The service allows you to port your current phone number as well. And it includes the standard fare of voicemail, caller id, call waiting, call forwarding and 3-way calling.

To learn more, click here.

I wonder how long it will be before the other wireless biggies begin offering similar plans as add ons . . .

Published on February 21st, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

T-Mobile Drops Google And Uses Yahoo! for Mobile Search

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

T-Mobile has entered into a new strategic partnership with Yahoo to introduce a range of mobile services across Europe.
The agreement supplants Google as T-Mobile’s mobile search services provider in Europe, and sets the stage for Yahoo oneSearch to become the exclusive mobile search service for T-Mobile customers from April.
Read more at vnunet.

Published on February 13th, 2008 under , ,

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