Phones
BlackBerry-Maker RIM Shows Off New Operating System Due 1Q13; It Looks Great But Do You Care?
Wednesday, October 10, 2012 23:12

BlackBerry-maker, Research In Motion, showed off its new operating system yesterday and it looks very good, but is it too late? With Android and iPhone dominating the smartphone market, and Microsoft soon to release a new generation of mobile devices that sync with Office, do you care about what BlackBerry is doing?

 

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The new operating system, called QNX, has been notoriously late. The interface will power the next five to 10 years of BlackBerrys and is a total rewrite. It's due for launch some time in the first quarter, which could be as late as March 2013.

 

Here's a review of what you can expect. But it is too late?

 

With iPhone beloved, Androids outselling iPhones, and Microsoft about to debut smatrphones that work in Office seamlessly with tablets and desktops, do advisors care about BlackBerry anymore?

 

Should A4A even bother continuing to follow RIM? Please take our poll to see.

 

 

Do you care about RIM BlackBerry?
 

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Turn Your Old iPod Into A New iPhone Using FreedomPop
Sunday, September 23, 2012 01:15

Tags: iPhone | phones

A $99 iPhone sleeve case turns an iPod Touch (generation 4) into an iPhone with the connection speed of iPhone5 plus 1GB of free data every month, enough for basic email and iMessage texting -- all for less than $100 and without a contractual commitment.

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If Apple has no choice but accept it, FreedomPop could be a good alternative.

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Don't Buy Your iPad Or iPhone From Apple; Buy It From Your Wireless Carrier So You Won’t Get Screwed By Apple The Way I Did
Friday, September 14, 2012 02:06

Tags: apple | iPad | iPhone | Tablets

Six months ago, I bought a new 64 GB third-generation iPad for $829, and I made the mistake of buying it directly from Apple and paying $99 for Apple Care+. It was a terrible mistake and you should avoid doing the same thing. Instead of buying from Apple, I should have bought it from my wireless carrier.

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Two weeks ago, my wife and I were helping our daughter, a senior at NYU, move in to her new place in Manhattan. We all piled furniture and clothing into the car and were set to leave, when I realized that we had no wire to hang a painting. So I ran back into the house in search of picture-hanging wire.
 
As I walked back to the car, my adorable daughter, Alison, who is about to turn 21, was sitting in the back seat and making a goofy-looking face at me. So I did the same back to her. While I walked to car, I contorted my mouth into a bucktooth grin right back at her.
 
I was so preoccupied,  I forgot to remove the iPad from the roof of th car.
 
Yes, I drove off with my iPad on the roof of my car.
 
By the time I realized I did not have my iPad in the car with me, I was on the Long Island Expressway (LIE), one of the nation’s most traveled, dangerous, and congested highways. I pulled over to look for my iPad, but it was gone, not on my roof and nowhere to be found.  
 
I called our next door neighbor and frantically asked him to look for the iPad in our driveway. He retraced my three-quarters-of-a-mile route to the highway from my house. But my iPad was gone.
 
I did not get too upset, however. I buy insurance on all my phones from Verizon and my iPad would surely be covered.
 
I called Verizon on the way into Manhattan to report the tragedy that had befallen my beloved Apple tablet. Verizon told me I was covered through an insurance policy with Asurion. All I had to do was file a claim. I went online that evening to make the claim and called Asurion. But there was a problem. They had no record of my buying the device.
 
It turned out that I bought the iPad directly from Apple. And, although Verizon is my wireless service  on the iPad, buying it from Apple meant that I did not purchase an Asurion insurance policy on the device.
 
And, even though I purchased Apple iCare+ for my iPad, that protection policy was not the same as insurance. Apple iCare covers a broken iPad but not a lost or stolen one.
 
What's infuriating is that, if I had purchased my iPad from Verizon, it would have had an insurance policy covering the loss. Worse still, if I had a single shard of Monster glass remaining from my iPad, which undoubtedly was smashed on the LIE, Apple says it would have replaced the device.
 
Apple is a great company but it’s as greedy and evil as any other company. The same way that it is screwing consumers today by changing the power cord connector to make everyone with an iPhone buy a new power cord for their home and car to charge the new iPhone 5, Apple screwed me.
 
Imagine, buying the iPad fireclty from Apple instead of from Verizon put me at a disadvantage! iPads bought from Apple cannot be insured!  
 
Don’t make the same mistake. Buy your iPad and your iPhone from your wireless carrier. Otherwise you risk getting screwed by Apple the way I was.
 
 

 

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Google Uses Android Phones To Make Automobile Traffic Reports Worldwide
Wednesday, August 08, 2012 02:33

Tags: google | phones | privacy; security

Google announced today that its mobile maps will provide live traffic data on 130 new U.S. cities, from Kalamazoo, Michigan, to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, as well as in the capitals of Colombia, Costa Rica, and Panama.

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Technology Review reports: "The mapping function on an Android-powered device sends Google anonymous data on your position and current speed that it uses to figure out traffic flows—if you're traveling along a freeway at 60 miles per hour, but suddenly slow to a crawl, Google knows that traffic most likely just snarled up."

 

 

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Four Ways Near Field Communication Will Change Your iPhone Experience
Monday, August 06, 2012 17:05

Tags: apple | iPhone | phones

Near field communication (NFC), a short-range wireless information feed, is rumored to be included in the Apple iPhone 5 debuting in September. You'll be able to pay for items using NFC instead of swiping credit cards.

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With NFC technology, Read Write Web says, your phone can potentially unlock your front door, turn on your dishwasher, and pay for mass transit. 


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