Saturday, March 24, 2012

Acer Iconia Tab Available for Preorder

 
 
 
Specs:
Display - 10.1" WXGA
Processor: NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core @ 1.3gHz
RAM: 1GB
Onboard Storage/SD Storage/Total Storage: 32GB/32GB/64GB
Camera: 5MP Rear, 1MP Front
Battery: 9800mAh
Connectivity: WiFi Only
Bonuses: Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)
 
 
You can preorder yours today!

Zynga has Purchased Draw Something for $200 Million



Popular mobile game developer Zynga, who is responsible for hits such as Words with Friends and Hanging with Friends, bought out OMGPOP's Draw Something for $200 million. They now own the application and all rights to it.

Zynga makes its money off of in-game advertisements and premium downloads that support you with in-game goodies. For example in Hanging with Friends, you can purchase the coins that allow you to use lifelines using real life money. Obviously most people do not take advantage of this, but selling digital copies of something is easy to do as it requires almost no actual money being spent on Zynga's part in order to make that profit happen.

The mobile game business is coming a long way, and a purchase like this shows that there is a lot of money to be made in mobile gaming this day in age.

Google Patenting the Ability to display Voice Ads During Phonecalls

Google is doing what?

Google is attempting to get a patent for a technology that will listen to what two or more people say during a phone call and apply related ads to what you are talking about. They could perhaps be looking to do this on services that are normally free like Google Voice.

I'm all for Google making money through advertising... but this is a little ridiculous.

Monday, January 30, 2012

How to Get the Most out of Your Smart Phone

Smart phones seem to be a common trend amoungst any age range of people in today's world. My one year old nephew loves my brother's cell phone, my girlfriend's grandfather has an iPhone 4S, my 50 year old mother has one, I have one, all my friends have one. But does that mean that everyone needs one?

If someone talks <1000 minutes a week, doesn't text, and doesn't currently use the web (even though they have a simple phone now). They don't actively use the internet at home except for e-mail. Does this person need a smart phone? Probably not.

People like this in today's age get the short end of the stick. Most carrier's charge $39.99 for your basic talk plan which includes 450 minutes, maybe has free mobile-mobile, no texting, and no data. If you add texting and data, you are looking at $79.99+. That is about $2.60 a day. For simple phones, that $40 comes out to $1.80 a day. Now, that being said, do most people 'get their money's worth' for their smart phone? Let's find out.

Smart phones are incredibly powerful devices. When you purchase one, you essentially get these basics with it:

-Calender
-Calculator
-Alarm Clock
-Camera
-Address Notebook/Phonebook
-MP3 Player
-GPS
-Movie Player
-Book store

Now that doesn't take in to consideration any applications you download, which unlock the true potential of your device. Let's go over some other things you can do to increase the value in your precious investment.

1. A Flashlight Application

Already having your arsenel of things your phone can do, adding the ability to be a flashlight will prove more valuable than you think.

2. Do your banking from your phone

You don't have to be paying bills from your phone and such (although it is incredibly easy and convienient), but most banks today have an application that allows you to securely check your account balances. For credit card companies, you can check your balance and available credit as well.

3. Download applications that are made to save you money

Things like Google Shopper and GasBuddy are made to save you money. Google shopper will allow you to enter or scan in a product and it will search every local brick and mortar store and online retailer for the lowest possible price for you for that item. This has saved me well over $100 throughout it's life time when I shop at places that price match like Walmart and Best Buy. GasBuddy will ask you to enter your zip code (or if you have GPS on, it will auto-locate you) and find you the cheapest gas station within a reasonable distance from you. You would be surprised that prices fluctuate about .10 cents within 5 miles.

4. Get applications that will increase your productivity and ability to do your job at work

For some people, you can get a large range of applications related to your job field. For example construction workers can get an app that works as a bubbl level for seeing how level something is, or a notepad application to jot down the total cost of a job thus far in materials. Search aroundd the market to find something that will benefit you in your job and increase your odds for success.

5. Make it yours

With Android, you can change the background wallpaper, the lock screen wallpaper, the look of your UI with things like GOLauncher, and even icon packs and fonts with special apps from the market. Make your smart phone look different and unique to you. Get a custom case (iPhone's have tons of cases available for them), get your own custom background, and go to town on custom icons.

6. Use the basic functions as often as you need them

The list above (calculator, alarm clock, etc) is an amazing set of tools already at your disposal on almost any smart phone. Use those things on a regular basis and incorporate the things like a calender in to your daily life. You will increase your self-efficiency and productivity and overall be more focused and organized.

That's it for now... expect article #2 soon with more ways for you to get your moneys worth out of your smart phone!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Why Motorola is Good at Enraging Customers


Imagine this. You buy a phone, say the iPhone 4S. Two months later, Apple releases the iPhone 5 and your phone is immediately out dated. That would make anyone angry.

Motorola during the last quarter of 2011 did just that. The DROID Bionic was released in September, the DROID RAZR was released in November, and the RAZR MAXX in January 2012. That's three phones over four months. The Android market is so saturated with phones right now it's a sin. It makes people who are shopping for a phone who aren't nerds about it very stressful. This compared to this, that compared to that, and then in the end there isn't really any difference.
Why do they not just wait and release a thin, fast smart phone? Perhaps a mix between the RAZR and the Bionic. Surely if they had more time on the r&amp;d on the Bionic, they could have made it thinner and lighter like the RAZR.

Luckily, Motorola has announced that this year they will be releasing less smart phones than they did during the end of 2011, which is a good thing for all.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Current Phone Lineup - Hardware Battle

(Click for larger image)

Phones have been coming out at a rapid rate lately. Motorola pushed the Bionic and RAZR our within a relatively small amount of time from each other, which might have actually pissed some people off. I would get in to a discussion on whether this is healthy or unhealthy for the mobile gaming world, but that's another topic for another time.

As far as the hardware comparison chart goes, sections that are bolded and in red are "best in class" in the mobile world right now.

A few things to keep in mind though when comparing hardware - bigger doesn't mean better, ALWAYS. For example, the Rezound has a 1.5gHz processor and the Bionic has a 1930mAh battery. I will tell you right now, you don't need 1.5gHz of dual-core power for anything right now. The only thing that is going to do is drain your battery even faster on an already tanked 4G LTE device. On the same hand, the Bionic's 1930mAh battery will not seem noticably bigger due to the fact that it is a 4G LTE device on Verizon, which has been notoriously bad on phone battery. Just some food for thought when looking over these devices.

MotoACTV rooted, now running Honeycomb


The MotoACTV has been rooted by Chris and is running Honeycomb. Above is his YouTube video of it. The concept behind an Android watch is amazing, and I would love to sport one of these bad boys at some point. Perhaps when they enhance the features a little more (or a stable Honeycomb or ICS root comes out for it) I would look in to getting one to mess around with. He shows off and explains that just because it has a small 1 1/2" screen, it doesn't take away from the value of Honeycomb at all.

Seems pretty cool. Here's an idea, if you could, would you purchase all Android electronics? A Kindle Fire, Transformer Prime, Galaxy Nexus, MotoACTV, a Samsung Android-powered Refrigerator, and an LG-powered Microwave?

Oh, the future...