Fresh iPhone Apps for June 29: Movie Profiler, Postale, VS. Racing, Paper Racer – iPhone app article – Phil Hornshaw

Need help remembering to whom you’ve lent your DVDs? Today’s leading Fresh App, Movie Profiler, is here for you, allowing you to input all your movies into its in-app database and log who you lent what and when, along with a lot of other cool info. Postale, our next app, lets you create e-postcards using your iOS device’s photos and a few handy themes and layouts. Today’s games have a need for speed: a pair of top-down racers that take different approaches to the subject matter. VS. Racing brings tilt controls and up to six people in local multiplayer, while Paper Racer uses a cool physics engine to simulate collisions and lets you draw and create your own cars.

With Movie Profiler, you can keep track of every title in your movie collection in one place. the app lets you search by a number of keywords, including title and actors, so you can find the exact title and format (DVD or Blu-ray) you’re looking for and add it to your collection with one tap. once you’ve got your titles organized, you can see all kinds of information about your titles, like movie posters, cast and crew information and plot summaries.

Probably the most useful thing about Movie Profiler is that once you’ve got your movies listed, you can alter their information and even keep track of anybody who might be borrowing your stuff. Imagine never losing a great movie to being “permanently borrowed” again. You can also share your lists with friends and create wish lists, too.

Like most smartphone owners, you probably find yourself snapping off a lot of shots with your iOS devices, especially the iPhone since it’s always in your pocket. but beyond uploading photos to Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, there’s not a lot to do with them – unless you use Postale, which allows you to create and send e-postcards using your own photos, right from within the app.

Postale includes three different layouts, three themes and five fonts to choose from, and the app lets you edit and reposition your photos to fit the cards you want to send. You can add a personal message, save a postcard for later so you can edit it again, and then send it through Facebook, Twitter or email.

Top-down racer VS. Racing’s coolest feature might be its intuitive tilt controls. You face off against multiple other drivers in 34 different races across six tracks when you play alone, and you can choose to use the game’s virtual button interface, or go with the gyroscope and tilt your way to victory. Tilting works well in lots of iOS games, but it’s weirdly suited to racing in VS.

Once you get good at smashing through the single-player campaign and its computer-controlled racers, you can step up to a real challenge and take on your friends. VS. Racing supports six players in local multiplayer over Wi-Fi, but if you don’t have a router handy, you can battle up to two other friends using a Bluetooth connection.

For a different take on the same premise of VS. Racing, look no further than Paper Racer. Another top-down racing game, Paper Racer doesn’t use tilt controls, but it does have a great art style, invoking a pile of debris on a desk, complete with paper cars. the desk and all its junk, like erasers, pencils and spilled paint, have been turned into the race track, creating some fun and interesting mayhem as you blast through the game’s 16 tracks. Paper Racer has a specially designed physics engine at work that makes objects like pencils and rulers react realistically to collisions with your tiny car.

Another great Paper Racer feature is that it allows you to create your own cars. all the cars found in the games are drawings, and you can draw your own and snap a photo of it with Paper Racer to import it into the game. You can also share your cars on Facebook and Twitter, and you can compare your scores online with other paper racers using Game Center’s leaderboards.

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Scion adds Pandora to 2012 xB’s stereo

Scion's new base stereo for the 2012 xB includes Bluetooth audio streaming and a Bluetooth phone system.

(Credit:Scion)

The 2011 Scion xB’s premium audio system proved a disappointment, but the company has announced new stereo choices for the 2012 model. the base and upgrade Pioneer head units add standard Bluetooth and HD radio, and the upgrade brings iniPhone Pandora integration.

At its launch, Scion relied on aftermarket head units for itscars, which should have kept it on the edge of in-cabin electronics. But recent models used older electronics, and lacked feature-rich Bluetooth phone systems or modern audio sources. the new Pioneer head units add HD radio and Bluetooth audio streaming to the existingiPod support.

The upgrade Pioneer audio system features a large screen, which should make browsing music libraries easy. Both head units rely on the same audio system, with four speakers in front and two in the rear. Owners can add a subwoofer through an RCA jack in the back of the head units.

Pioneer previously announced its App Radio, offering integration with Pandora and a number of smartphone apps.

MobileTechRoundup show #242; WWDC, Nokia, and other sensational topics

Listen here (MP3, 52.6 MB, 58:49 minutes)

Subscribe to the show with this link (RSS)

It has been a couple of weeks since Kevin and I recorded MobileTechRoundup and as you can hear in MobileTechRoundup show #242 news from Apple’s WWDC has us both thinking about a future iPhone device. We also discuss the end of the Apple-Nokia lawsuits, my new Nokia E7 that I won, Evernote on Windows Phone 7, the fabulous HTC Sensation 4G, some first impressions of the HTC EVO 3D, and Honeycomb and RIM woes.

Please let me know if you have any topics you want us to cover on a future show and make sure to join us live each week on Ustream. We find it very helpful to have audience participation where we can address your questions on the show live and have some great participants joining us each week.

QCOM: Susquehanna Sees 4 Bil-Person Emerging Market Opportunity

By Tiernan Ray

Susquehanna Financial Group analyst Chris Caso this afternoon started coverage of Qualcomm (QCOM) with a “Positive” rating and a $70 price target, writing that there’s a “long term bull case” to be made that 4 billion or more people in emerging markets who are using 2G handsets will move to 3G handsets over time, leading to more royalty payments for Qualcomm for all the intellectual property it will sell into all those handsets.

How do you put that all in financial numbers? Caso suggests looking at how Qualcomm is slashing prices to gain “incremental” sales into cheap 3G phones for the developing world, which will produce incremental royalty:

Our checks in Asia last week indicate that QCOM is pressuring prices even on low price competitors such as Mediatek, offering the MSM 7227 chipset at pricing as low as $8-$10. […] If we assume QCOM is selling the 7227 for $9 into a $200 phone (wholesale cost), that would provide a $7 incremental royalty (at a 95% gross margin), since the emerging market purchaser of that phone is likely upgrading from a 2G phone, for which QCOM does not enjoy a royalty. Assuming about a 50% gross margin on the chipset, the total transaction would yield $16 in QCOM revenue and $11.15 gross profit.

And apart from licensing and royalty, Qualcomm’s own chip business is not too bad, he thinks:

We think the near- term opportunities at NOK and on the iPhone are very positive, although well known. while we think these opportunities still represent potential upside, these are consensus expectations. We think less well expected are gains at other OEMs (particularly at HTC, which uses QCOM exclusively, and has established a leadership smart phone position), as well as opportunities at Chinese OEMs. We think the incumbent Chinese 2.5G silicon vendors are in an inferior position to support that market’s transition to 3G (and in no position to support LTE), and we consider this a new opportunity for QCOM.

And lastly, Caso thinks Qualcomm’s chip sales will do just fine regardless of whether Nokia (NOK) or Research in Motion (RIMM) have a resurgence, or flame out. Qualcomm is in a good position to be the main supplier to Nokia for its forthcoming phones based on Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows, and also to RIM for that company’s phones based on BlackBerry OS 7, coming this year, and phones based on the “QNX” operating system, expected next year.

But either way, if one of those two loses market share, probably they lose share to another handset maker who’s a customer of Qualcomm, Caso concludes.

Qualcomm shares today fell 2 cents to $55.43.

Incipio Reintroduces a Best-seller and a Completely New Concept for Smart Phone Cases at CE Week

Irvine, CA (PRWEB) June 22, 2011

Irvine, CA based Incipio–the leading manufacturer of accessories for smart phones, tablets, and notebooks–welcomes three new protective cases to its family of mobile accessories at the Consumer Electronic Associations (CEA) Line Shows in new York.

The first two cases being announced are based on the extremely popular Silicrylic™ line of protective cases for two recently released handsets: the Droid X2 and the Samsung Droid Charge, both from Verizon. a two-part case comprised of a high density, shock absorbing silicone core paired with a high quality polycarbonate exterior, the Silicrylic™ offers maximum protection without any added bulk. the new Silicrylic™ protective cases are available in four attractive color combinations and are reasonably priced at $29.99 for both the Droid X2 and the Droid Charge.

“We’re sensitive to the demands of our audience and mobile users in general,” said Incipio’s Director of Product Development, Valentine Lopez, when asked about Incipio’s process for deciding which products to pursue. “The audience determines what’s going to do well and what they need; we meet that need.”

Moving away from a sure-thing like the Silicrylic™, Incipio stretched its creative legs and answered requests from its fan base for more customized case solutions like its Bespoke™ app (available in the iTunes App Store). the result is the Triad for iPhone 4, a three-part polycarbonate case that is available in multiple color combinations and will be customizable by the user through the Bespoke™ app. Triad will be available for purchase mid-July and will be priced at $29.99.

The Silicrylic for the Droid X2 and Droid Charge and the Triad will be available through myincipio.com.

To experience these cases in person at CE Week, please visit table T-39 at the CEA Line Shows on June 22nd and 23rd. the Line Shows are part of CE Week–“the CE industry’s official mid-year conference and tech showcase,” according to the official website of CE Week.

About Incipio: At Incipio we dream big and never settle for the status quo. our sole focus is to provide customers with accessories that look as good as they function. Headquartered in Irvine, CA, we have people in London, Hong Kong, and India, allowing us to reach our customers and work on projects 24/7. our dedicated staff does just that. At 140 strong, our team includes some of the most talented industrial and graphic designers, mechanical engineers, customer satisfaction fanatics and software developers around, all led by a world-class management team. our shared love for mobile devices and accessories fuels our passion to create the best accessories on the planet. in the past 12 years, we have gone from operating out of a suburban garage to being widely recognized as one of the most innovative mobile accessory makers in the world. And we’re just getting started…

STAY IN THE KNOWFacebook at www.facebook.com/incipioTwitter @myincipioWebsite: www.myincipio.com

For the original version on PRWeb visit: www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2011/6/prweb8594492.htm

Elecom USB Battery Charger Powers Up Your Smartphone or Tablet While Mobile [External Battery from Elecom Powers Up Anything That Plugs into USB]

If you often find yourself running out of battery power while on the move, you might want to try alternative solutions to charging your tablet or smartphone. you can go for solar charging options, or you can choose simpler solutions like the Elecom external charger.

The Elecom mobile battery packs are targeted at iPhone and Samsung Galaxy S users, although the device will work with anything that can charge from a USB port. Coming in either 4,700 mAh or 3,000 mAh capacities, Elecom’s external battery packs will give enough juice to power up your device for a few hours’ use. the portable battery can also be used to charge your tablet or smartphone while not using it.

These are available in Japan for 8,400 Yen for the larger capacity (about $104.35) or 7,000 Yen for the smaller capacity battery (about $87). no word if and when Elecom will start selling the mobile chargers outside of Japan, but given the popularity of tablets and smartphones, we reckon these battery packs will make it to other markets sooner or later.

TeleNav and the Mondadori Group Unveil Panorama Drive(TM) for the iPhone(R)

SUNNYVALE, CA and SEGRATE, ITALY, Jun 15, 2011 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –TeleNav /quotes/zigman/118009/quotes/nls/tnav TNAV +0.93% , one of the largest global wirelesslocation-based services providers, and the Mondadori Group, thelargest Italian publisher of books, magazines and advertising, todayannounced the launch of Panorama Drive, a new GPS search andnavigation service for iPhone customers in Western Europe. PanoramaDrive carries the same brand name as Panorama Magazine, one ofItaly’s most prominent weekly magazines and a publication owned byMondadori. The service is available immediately on the Apple(R) Appstore for EUR 3.99 per week and is the only Italian GPS navigationapp for the iPhone that can be purchased through a weeklysubscription. Mondadori is also offering a one-month trial promotionperiod to allow users to download the app for free and let themfamiliarize and appreciate all of its features for an entire month atno charge.

Panorama Drive is similar to personal GPS devices or in-car GPSnavigation systems, but is conveniently available directly on theiPhone and helps customers decide where to go and how to get there.Features include:

— Full-color 3D moving maps with voice and on-screen turn-by-turn driving directions – just like an in-car navigation system, the 3D maps turn, move and stop along with the driver, while also displaying a realistic image of the streets the driver is approaching and passing. while driving, users get up-to-the minute voice and on-screen guidance, including street names, and will automatically be re-routed if a turn is missed. Navigation can be provided in either landscape or portrait mode. — Automatic map updates – Users never have to worry about updating new map information or having to pay for map updates. this is included for customers automatically and at no additional charge. — iPod integration – Customers can listen to music while they receive directions from Panorama Drive. In addition, enhanced iPod controls offer the ability to search through songs, artists, etc. from within the app. — Shake to go – for quick and easy directions to their home address, users simply shake their iPhone while using Panorama Drive and the service will launch the route. — Business Listings/Ratings and Reviews – Users can search and find more than five million businesses and services, including ATMs, restaurants, hotels and petrol stations, and easily navigate to them with the click of a button. Panorama Drive also includes business reviews and ratings so that before users head to a restaurant or make a reservation at a hotel, they can see how it was rated and reviewed by other people. — Customizable route options – Users can customize their route types by choosing to avoid toll roads, using pedestrian mode for navigation while walking or setting the map display colors to a “nighttime” mode for easier viewing at night. — Pedestrian mode – Users can use Panorama Drive for their iPhone to navigate European cities such as Rome, Milan, Paris and more on foot. — Languages – The application is available also in English.

“The system developed by TeleNav offers such a wide range of serviceswith such an immediate and user-friendly interface that we had nodoubts about the choice of partner for the launch of this newapplication for our Panorama brand,” declared Roberto Sicardi, Headof Properties of Mondadori Digital. “With Panorama Drive iPhone userswill be able to use a new sat nav system that uses the very latesttechnology and is guaranteed by a highly prestigious brand,” Sicardiconcluded.

“Partnering with Mondadori provides TeleNav with an opportunity toshare our application with iPhone customers across Western Europewhile leveraging the strength of the Panorama brand,” said IanTredgett, director of business development for TeleNav’s Europeanoperations. “We are thrilled to partner with Mondadori and lookforward to working with them to promote this service with theirreaders across the country.”

Panorama Drive is available in Italian and includes maps and businesslistings for 24 Western European countries.

About TeleNav TeleNav, inc. is a leading provider of consumerlocation-based services (LBS), enterprise LBS and automotive LBS withmore than 23 million paying subscribers as of March 31, 2011.TeleNav’s solutions provide consumers, wireless service providers,enterprises and automakers with location-specific, real-time,personalized services such as GPS navigation, local search, mobileadvertising, mobile commerce, location tracking and workflowautomation. TeleNav’s technology is available across more than 600types of mobile phones, all major mobile phone operating systems anda broad range of wireless network protocols. TeleNav’s serviceproviders and partners include AT&T, Bell Mobility, Boost Mobile,China Mobile, Cincinnati Bell, Ford Motor Company, NII Holdings, QNXSoftware Systems, Rogers, Sprint Nextel, Telcel, T-Mobile UK,T-Mobile USA, U.S. Cellular, Verizon Wireless and Vivo Brazil.

for more information on TeleNav, please visit www.telenav.com . FollowTeleNav on Twitter at www.twitter.com/telenav or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/telenav .

About the Mondadori Group

The Mondadori Group is among the most important publishing houses inEurope and Italy’s biggest publisher of books and magazines. Theactivities of Mondadori Group are organized around the followingbusiness areas: books, magazines, advertising, digital, directmarketing and retail, radio. Mondadori is also one of the leadingplayers in France in the consumer magazines market.

with more than fifty subsidiary and associated companies and 3,649employees, the Mondadori Group covers the main publishing activitiesfrom the creation of products to marketing and distribution. In 2010,Mondadori Group had consolidated revenue of EUR 1.558,3 billion.

Copyright 2011 TeleNav, inc. all Rights Reserved.

“TeleNav,” the TeleNav logo, and “telenav.com” are registered andunregistered trademarks and/or service marks of TeleNav, inc. Unlessotherwise noted, all other trademarks, service marks, and logos usedin this press release are the trademarks, service marks or logos oftheir respective owners.

Media Contacts: Mary Beth Lowell TeleNav, inc. 425.531.0122 marybethl@telenav.com Media Contacts Mondadori Tel. +39.027542 3159 rapportistampa@mondadoti.it www.mondadori.it Investor Relations: Cynthia Hiponia The Blueshirt Group (for TeleNav) 408.990.1265 IR@telenav.com mailto:marybethl@telenav.com mailto:rapportistampa@mondadoti.it http://www.mondadori.it/ mailto:IR@telenav.com

Copyright 2011 Marketwire, inc., all rights reserved.

Eircom launch iPhone 4 in Ireland

The latest ‘must have’ technology from Apple; the iPhone 4, is to be released in Ireland by the Eircom Group.

The phone will be available for free, on a monthly plan, on the Meteor and eMobile networks.

Stephen Beynon, Group Managing Director of Consumer and Small Business at Eircom said: “We’re delighted to be bringing iPhone 4 to our eMobile and Meteor customers. iPhone 4 truly is an innovative phone and we expect huge customer demand.”

“the introduction of the iPhone 4 and 3GS means that customers now have even more choice and value with Meteor,” Kealan Donoghue Head of Devices and Product Operations at Meteor, said.

“we have already had more than 10,000 people pre-register for the iPhone on meteor.ie, so we are really delighted to be able to offer this fantastic handset to our customers and better still, they can get an iPhone for free.

“With the surge in smartphone popularity and data consumption, customers are demanding more from their mobiles and are constantly using their mobile to update their status on Facebook, tweet and stay in touch with their family and friends on the go.”

Meteor has revealed that it has the iPhone 4 16GB and 32GB iPhones available in black and white, as well as the iPhone 3GS with price plans starting at €40, while eMobile has developed specific iPhone plans which give customers free iPhones.

The iPhone 4 is available to eMobile customers in 16GB and 32GB, as well the iPhone 3GS 8GB.

Samsung Galaxy S II First Impressions

Samsung Galaxy S II first Impressions

The Samsung Galaxy S II is coming to Canada soon. We aren’t able to divulge carrier details but during a media briefing we had a chance to play with the device, my first impressions are below and will follow up with a full review shortly.

Samsung has a solid competitor not only to the iPhone, but to the rest of the highly-competitive smartphone market. It seems like they’ve taken their hard-earned lessons to heart, and improved in every way upon the original.

Hardware

The hardware is all plastic, but its lineage owes far more to the Nexus S and Infuse 4G than to the original Galaxy S series. It’s clear Samsung learned a few things from the original: plastic is fine as long as it doesn’t creak; plastic is fine as long as it doesn’t invite fingerprints.

The SGS2 improves upon the first in both respects: the main plastic body extends through the sides and partway to the back, creating a very sturdy “unibody” casing that feels far sturdier than any previous Samsung device I’ve used, while keeping it admirably thin at 8.5mm. That’s 1.4mm thinner than the original.

Before moving onto the front, I must note that the battery cover, which only fits over a portion of the entire back, seems flimsy and breakable. but Samsung has done some wonderful things with plastic, as this thing bends and bends while maintaining its shape. It also has a wonderful ribbed pattern that feels great in the hand and provides more grip than the smooth back of the original Galaxy S.

The screen is hands-down the best in the business. Discount for a second that the 4.3″ display still displays the same number of pixels as the 4″ original, and some 30% fewer than the 3.5″ iPhone 4. once you see it, you will understand. The blacks are the blackest, the colours the most vivid, the text the sharpest. I don’t know how else to explain it, but when I am reading black text on a white background it feels like I’m reading a piece of paper. there is no screen at all. this is likely because the screen itself is so close to the glass, preventing that disconnected feeling you get from looking at a lower-quality LCD. I wish this didn’t read like hyperbole, but it’s the only way I can describe it. With a slightly higher resolution, the Super AMOLED display of the Galaxy S II would be perfect. as it stands, there are issues with pixel density and aliasing that are not present on the iPhone 4′s Retina display. but the 4.3″ size makes it far easier, for me at least, to comfortably read articles, books and web pages.

The design is also commendable. there is a simplicity to the face that is absent from most other Androids. when the screen is off, only the Home button is visible, as the Back and Menu buttons are lit only when needed. there is a noble austerity to the entire device, from its solid lightness to its lack of pretension. It has just two ports: a combination USB/HDMI port on the bottom (known as a MHL port) and a 3.5mm headphone jack on top. The left side finds the small black volume rocker and on the right a power button. there is a single speaker on the bottom rear of the device, where a small chin protrudes.

The phone at 116g is meagre, but weighted perfectly. Holding it to talk is not cumbersome, despite its ample size.

Software

The Galaxy S II ships with TouchWIZ 4, a skin which at first resembles its much-derided predecessor. Luckily, Samsung has made some drastic improvements to performance and aesthetic over the past year, and I can happily say it rivals Sense in responsiveness and usefulness.

Give me a stock Android skin any day of the week, but some of the features Samsung has added to the new TouchWIZ are admirable. but more than anything, this is Android running flawlessly, without slowdowns, crashes or memory problems. that it took a device with a 1.2Ghz dual-core processor and 1GB RAM to finally tame the wild beast that is Android is a bit mystifying, but tame Android it does.

Browsing flies. The stock browser is hardware-accelerated, and over 3G or WiFi performance is unprecedented. there is an iOS-like kinetic scrolling mechanism that all but does away with j***y Android browser scrolling. Pinching your fingers together brings up the tab menu. It’s a simple thing that, combined with the flawless performance, makes me want to use the stock browser. I haven’t done that since 2008.

Elsewhere

The Galaxy S II has Android 2.3.3 Gingerbread loaded, and the dark aesthetic has been adapted nicely to work with TouchWIZ. The camera app has been given a nice visual overhaul, and the 8MP camera takes great shots. Focus is fast, and photos have a nice amount of detail, though colours are somewhat muted giving surroundings a dreary look. some people prefer the way colours “POP” on the iPhone 4, but I think it’s a misnomer to say its quality is superior. Rather, it seems that Samsung captures colours more accurately, and certainly with more detail. It’s a matter of opinion whether purists will prefer Samsung’s results. The 2MP front camera also take nice photos in good lighting and the phone natively supports video calling, though as far as I can tell only between Samsung devices.

Bundled apps are appreciated, but cannot be removed, which is a shame. there are four hubs: Games, Social, Music and Readers, each powered by a different third-party service. for example, Music is a modified version of 7Digital’s Android app, and Readers is a combination of Zinio, PressDisplay and Kobo. Surely Samsung could have left these out without opposition, but for them it’s a matter of trying to sell content on the device a la iTunes and differentiate from the other Android manufacturers who are without licensing deals.

While the SGS2 doesn’t have a Tegra 2 processor in it, it’s arguably a better gaming machine than the equivalent Optimus 2X or Motorola Atrix. It achieves an awesome 3200+ points on the Quadrant benchmark, compared to around 1500 from the Nexus S and 2500 from the Atrix.

Battery life has proven a marvel. at 1600mAh, it’s some 300milliamps less than the Atrix, and yet it seems to last far longer. In fact, the Galaxy S II has the best battery life of any Android device I’ve tested to date. I clocked nearly 26 hours on a single charge and still had 19% left before I recharged it, and that was with doing what I normally do through the day: browsing, calls, Twitter, email and camera. I’ve heard good things from other users, too, so I know I’m not a lucky aberration.

I’ll leave the rest for the review, but so far, so good. if you’ve had a bad experience with Android before, there is still a lot to like about the Samsung Galaxy S II. make no mistake though, this is one of the smoothest smartphone experiences I’ve ever had, and that includes extensive use of the iPhone 4. Sure, the experience is different, and some would say not as refined, but there are few if any tasks one cannot accomplish as quickly or easily on the SGS2 as they can on an iOS device. It’s taken this long, but with the latest iteration of Samsung, HTC and Motorola devices, it seems that the hardware has finally caught up with the demands of the Android software.

In no particular order, here are a couple field notes of what Samsung has added to the experience:

– Double-tap the home screen for Vlingo-powered voice commands. this also works at the home screen- Touch two points of a web page / photo and tilt the phone to zoom in and out- Move icons around the homescreens by tilting the phone- Mute incoming calls and sounds by turning over the phone- Press and hold an empty part of the home screen to bring up a custom editing menu with excellent widget support- 7Digital-powered Music Hub- Extensive social media support through the Social Hub- Readers Hub with News/Books/Magazine support (PressDisplay/Kobo/Zinio)- Game Hub powered by mobage- Built-in Video Maker and Photo Editor- Kies air management to connect phone to PC or Mac- Built-in IM client, FM Radio, Polaris Office

 

  1. Samsung Galaxy S “Brilliant” listed in Best Buy Reward Zone
  2. Android OS 2.2 upgrade available again for the Bell Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant
  3. Samsung Galaxy S coming to Canada “this summer”
  4. Samsung Canada puts Galaxy S II as “coming soon”

Discussion 47 comments for “Samsung Galaxy S II first Impressions”

Apple patent wireless charging system with 1-meter range

Being able to charge our portable electronics without having to hook up yet another cable is a very good thing. At CES in 2010, RCA showed off the nifty Airnergy, which harvests power from the Wi-Fi signals bouncing around our homes and offices.  HP and Palm have gone the inductive route, offering up the cool TouchStone chargers for webOS phones — and now the HP TouchPad. likewise, Powermat offers its pad and receivers for most popular smartphones on the market. Heck, even toothbrush manufacturers think cordless charging is pretty darn cool.

One company that hasn’t gotten onboard the cord-free charging train yet is Apple, which is a little odd since it has a well-known distaste for excess cabling. With the arrival of iOS 5, you’ll no longer need to plug your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad in to your computer to transfer songs — Wi-Fi sync has finally been enabled. You will, however, still need to jam in a cord to charge the battery.

That may very well change with future Apple devices. Physorg has spotted a patent entitled “wireless power utilization in a local computing environment” from the gang in Cupertino which details a wireless charging system with a one-meter range. The system described is similar in concept to inductive charging mats and pads, but you wouldn’t have to rest a device on anything specific in order for Apple’s system to work — it only needs to be nearby.

A patent doesn’t mean that there are products on the way any time soon, but again — Apple hates cords. Maybe a retina display isn’t the only internal upgrade coming to the new iPad?

More at Physorg, WIPO