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Vodafone Smart: Affordable Android Blower Set For June Release

 

A new Android-powered handset named the Vodafone Smart has been added to the network’s Pay As You Go roster, and is set to arrive by the end of June.

Initially coming in black and white (with other colours to follow), the Vodafone Smart has a 2.8-inch touchscreen and 2 megapixel camera, as well as boasting Bluetooth, 3G and Wi-Fi capabilities.

The phone is able to access the full Android Market and will come equipped with the latest 2.2 upgrade, so users will be able to get their fill of apps or play Angry Birds till their hearts content despite the handset costing just 90-odd Euros.

An exact release date is still yet to be announced, but sign up on Omio and we will let you know as soon as we have deals. If you can’t wait till June to get your hands on a shiny new handset, then check out all the latest mobile phone deals on both contract and prepay currently available on the site.

BlackBerry Claim No.1 Spot in UK Smartphone Market, Bolstered By December Prepay Handset Sales

Research In Motion, the Canadian firm behind the BlackBerry, have rolled out the brass band to trumpet the success of their handsets in the UK throughout 2010 and December in particular.  BlackBerry as a brand seems to be bolstered by sales of their Curve range, available on prepay and affordable SIM-free deals, like the Curve 8520 handsets, and the slightly fancier Curve 3G models.  Statistics come courtesy of market research firm GfK.


According to the stats.  BlackBerry had a 36% share of the overall UK smartphone market in December 2010 making them the No.1 smartphone brand in the UK.  BlackBerrys proved to be something of a Christmas gift hit, shifting  over 500,000 units.  The figures point to BlackBerry being the No.1 prepay smartphone brand with 51.1% of all prepay handsets sales .  We have to agree that’s a lot of stockings stuffed!


Part of the BlackBerry brand’s success over this period can be put down to the uptake of mobile social networking in lower cost handsets.  They have called another couple first places, claiming their handsets to be the No.1 home of the Twitterati by reporting over 6 million Twitter app downloads, as well as claiming to be the No.1 for ‘engagement on Facebook’.  Reports that a RIM representative will be available to attend all the weddings are, as yet, unsubstantiated.


The BlackBerry brand has in the past veered towards the business/productivity market thanks to its physical keyboard and secure email infrastructure, with handsets like the Bold 9780 honouring this tradition.  However they have also infiltrated the consumer market, through valuable exposure as something of a celebrity fashion accessory. For the higher end of the market, handsets such as the hybrid qwerty/touchscreen Torch 9800 and the entirely touch orientated Storm 2 still appeal to the high end user.  The much lauded security of their emailing and messenger service, has had much positive press in disaster situations as well.  During the July 7th London bombings for example, as the mobile networks ground to a halt with the sudden increase in traffic, BlackBerry users reported that their BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) and email services still remained active.


The BlackBerry user base, is now expanding into new territories.  For the younger, more cost conscious prepay user, the attraction is clear towards more affordable handsets like the Curve 8520 and the Curve 3G.  Both contain all the social networking and multimedia functions that you’d care to shake a stick at, and the ease of the classic qwerty keypad loved by messaging addicts the world over.  The brand exclusive BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) service also provides a solid cost-free means of staying in touch with 55 million other BlackBerry users worldwide, without fear of international text costs or tipping over your monthly text allowances.  BBM itself has also developed into something of a social network in its own right, with profiles, file sharing and recently enabling the exchange of contact details via visual QR Codes, rather than the slightly cumbersome PIN id’s. Whilst many of us have at some point heard or referred to them as CrackBerrys, due to the addictive power of their messenging services, this also points to their success at creating a strong user loyalty.


Whilst some are happy enough to splash something in the £500+ range for a high end touchy-feely handset off contract, many more utilise the subsidised model to offset the initial costs.  An 18 or 24 month contract to a mobile provider puts handsets such as the Samsung’s Galaxy S HTC’s Desire range, Apples iphone and the higher end Blackberry Storm 2 within range of anyone who is prepared to shoulder the higher monthly rate.  However it shows that in the prepay end of the market, consumers are demanding smarter phones.  The inevitable forward momentum of technology means features that were once deemed high end, soon filter down to become standard issue.  The handsets of the near future at CES proved that manufacturers were looking to faster 4G connections, 3D screens, dual core processors and Near Field Communications (think contactless credit or Oyster cards) to push the envelope for high end cutting edge mobile tech, and keep us tech heads all cooing over, and shelling out for the latest flash mobiles.


So whilst RIM’s stats rightfully celebrate their 2010 success in the UK, in the world smartphone market, the picture is somewhat different.  Industry analysts and data crunchers Canalsys released figures indicating that Google’s unstoppable ‘Droid army is dominating the worldwide smartphone market overall, with a 33% market share.  This share is made up of handsets notably by Samsung, LG and HTC, but its not so much the handset that matters, rather the platform itself that is important.  Android phones dominated sales with 33.3 million handset sales, growing 600% and edging Nokia off the top spot.  Apple  and RIM seem some way behind, selling 16.2 million and 14.6 million units respectively by the end of 2010.



In the near future RIM are looking to make a move into the lucrative and yet Apple/Android dominated tablet market, with the upcoming release of the BlackBerry Playbook.  They must hope that some of that brand loyalty will carry users over from their established and new markets.  If Apple were to make a similar yet opposite move and release the oft rumored ‘iPhone Nano’, a smaller, affordable iOS device, it could be seen as an aggressive maneuver to expand out from the high end handset market, into territory that is currently being gobbled up by RIM in both the UK and also the US and Latin America.  Whilst Apple have never been closely associated with the words ‘cheap’ or ‘affordable’, this could help them win back some of this market share from Google and possibly spell trouble for RIM.



However, it begs the question, do Apple really need to make such a move to attack Google’s dominance?  Further figures this time from Asymco- (seriously, who comes up with these names?) shows Apple ending 2010 having gobbled up a staggering 51% of the entire mobile industry’s profit pie chart.  In any event, if Apple ever were to make such a move, they may find themselves having to physically prize the phones out of the hands of hoards of loyal BlackBerry addicts,  before they can take over any of RIM’s market.


Google Nexus S Now Dated For December 22nd, Gets Price Cut To £429.99

Google’s second swing at an own-brand smartphone – the Nexus S – had been slated for release the 20th, but a recent release states that UK Best Buy and Carphone Warehouse stores will rather be delaying its sale by a couple of days to Wednesday December 22nd.

Better news is that the Google Nexus S is also making a last minute bid to slip into Xmas stockings, getting its SIM-free price slashed by £120 from £550 to £429.99.

Contract pricing has also been taken down a rung, making the Android-powered device available for free from £30 per month on a pay monthly deal. Prepay pricing is identical to the unlocked offering – £429.99 – albeit with a SIM card from your preferred network thrown in.

As for delivery, your best bet is definitely to pick one up before the 25th is by going down to your nearest store, despite the option of ‘instant shipping’ promising the device to your home by the end of the month…

Source: Carphone Warehouse


Nexus S pre-ordering opens up

Carphone Warehouse is now taking orders on the Samsung manufactured Google Nexus S, on tariffs from Orange, T-Mobile, O2 and Vodafone.

Google’s replacement to their Nexus One phone is available free for £35 a month over 18 months, with bundled minutes starting at 600 and stretching to 900 with unlimited text messages.

The Carphone Warehouse exclusive mobile has a curved 4-inch Super AMOLED touch screen, 16GB of memory, a 5-megapixel camera with an LED flash and a front-facing camera, along with the new near-field communications feature.

Google’s Nexus S is the first handset to ship with the newest version of Android, 2.3,  also known as Gingerbread.

Carphone Warehouse also has the phone SIM free and unlocked for £549.95, where it’s also around on pay as you go deals with the same delivery date for later on in December on all contracts.

Check out the full range of Google Nexus S deals at OMIO

Google To Stop Selling Nexus One In U.S.

Google’s Nexus One, the handset many touted as a serious competitor to iPhone when it launched in January, is now history in the United States. The search giant said that it will no longer sell the phone via its website once stock is depleted.

“Once we sell the devices, the Nexus One will no longer be available online from Google,” the company said on its blog. “Customer support will still be available for current Nexus One customers. And Nexus One will continue to be sold in other regions such as Vodafone Europe, KT in Korea and possibly others, depending on market conditions.”

The Nexus One was highly rated by reviewers and is considered a signature Android phone, but it has struggled to find a market. The quick arrival of a whole host of other handsets on the platform, in particular HTC who manufactured the Nexus One, have lessened the need for Google to compete at the highest levels in the smartphone world.

Most significant in hobbling sales was probably Google’s novel early efforts to sell the phone exclusively from its website though.

“With only a small percentage of handset sales going through the Web, it was always difficult for the Nexus One to gain much momentum,” said market analyst Ross Rubin. “Google may have backed into such distribution to avoid competing too directly with its (Android) handset partners.”

Shortly after the Nexus One was launched, HTC then came with the HTC Desire which was almost identically styled and boasted the addition of an optical trackpad and HTC’s Sense UI. Ever since then it’s been a downward slide for the poor Nexus One. Oh well.

Source

Google App Inventor For Android

Ever wanted to make your own application, but been afraid to because you don’t speaker computer? Then this latest project from Google could make you very happy. App Inventor for Android allows you to build just about any app you can imagine and not just games: quiz apps for friends, study apps for students, you can even use Android’s text-to-speech capabilities to get the phone to ask you questions aloud.

App Inventor requires zero programming knowledge and rather than requiring written code, instead allows you to design applications using a lego-like visual system. The App Inventor authors have created blocks for just about everything you can do with an Android phone, as well as blocks for doing “programming like” stuff, for instance, block that store information, blocks for repeating actions, and blocks to perform actions under certain conditions.

App Inventor for Android was made possible by significant prior research in educational computing and work done by Google on online environments for development. The educational thrust of this research, and the App Inventor project holds that programming can be vehicle for engaging powerful ideas through active learning.

Google Debunk Android ‘GingerBread’ Murmurs: “You Shouldn’t Believe Everything You Read”

Despite the latest version ‘Froyo’ – only being served up to Nexus One customers earlier this week, rumours regarding the next Android upgrade dubbed ‘Gingerbread’ were rife on the web, and Google’s Dan Morrill has responded quickly to dismiss them.

Responding to word emanating from Mobile Review’s Eldar Murtazin that Gingerbread would only be for a new breed of high-end handsets – fracturing off from Android 2.2 which would languish on current devices – and no longer sport third party makeovers such as HTC’s Sense, Morrill went on Twitter to say “I love it when people make stuff up,” following it up with “rumours are not official announcements”.

As lead of Android Open Source and Compatibility Tech department, Morrill would certainly be in a position to know.

Nevertheless, Eldar’s word has often come to pass including prematurely outing Nokia’s N8 as well as various HTC devices ahead of time. So, is Google attempting to limit the damage made by Eldar’s leaks, or is he simply wide of the mark this time?

We’ll see as manufacturers roll out Froyo to other Android devices, followed by Google announcing what’s baking in Gingerbread in November.

Source: T3

Android Fan Makes Smartphone Powered Scalextric Set

The classic slot car racer might have been superceded in the driving sim stakes by games like Gran Turismo, but gadget guru Grant Skinner has taken a Google Nexus One, a block of wood and bags of ingenuity to drag the humble Scalextric set into the 21st Century.

Using Adobe Air software, a Nexus One and a couple of toy cars, he uses the accelerometer in the device to wirelessly whip the mini racers around a slot circuit.

The best bit of the below vid is when he brings a block of wood, some rubber bands and a Lego motor controller into the mix to MacGuyver up a fully-working gas pedal!

Watch it, and be transported back to knee-high trousers and playing about on the carpet with a die-cast Austin Allegra. Or not. It’s awesome either way.


Source: Android Community via DViCE

Motorola DROID 2 Gets Early Hands-On, Still Does What iPhone Doesn’t?

Pre-empting a heavily hyped Wednesday reveal, Android And Me blog has managed to snare an extensive hands-on with the Motorola DROID 2, the American manufacturer’s swift sequel to their strongest Google-powered handset to date.

Changes are more pronounced on the interior, but the side slider form factor has remained for the DROID’s (known as the MILESTONE in Blighty) second incarnation. Despite swapping the retro Tia Maria inspired black and gold accenting for a far more modern silver, the DROID 2 looks near identical (on the right in the above pic, we’re 80% sure of it!), removing the slightly redundant d-pad from the original for a more spacious keyboard layout.

Internally an iPhone 4-equalling 1GHz processor and 512MB of RAM speeds up proceedings, and the exhaustive set of tests that Android and Me has put the DROID 2 through definitely suggests it is twice as fast as the original (3D graphs never lie).

However, with the iPhone catching up to a few of the features that Motorola leaned on for their original ‘DROID Does‘ campaign – including multi-tasking and the addition of a 5-megapixel camera – it’ll be interesting to see whether this smartphone sequel has what it takes to topple the highly anticipated iPhone 4.

With the recently revealed DROID X seeing an imminent US release, not to mention the MILESTONE XT720 in the UK, Motorola seems to have both the business and consumer markets in its sights with their next generation of high-end Android devices.

Whether this fiercely competitive area actually has room for this trio of boxy entrants remains to be seen…

Google To Close Doors On Nexus One Online Store, Will Become Android Showroom

Citing a ‘change in availability‘, Google are scrapping their valiant effort to sell the Nexus One directly to customers with their online-only store.

Switching to the traditional phone selling model, the search giant will be getting in bed with ever-important networks and retailers, subsidising handset costs with pay monthly deals.

The Google Nexus One deals on Vodafone were the first UK offers to appear, changing from the original outlandish idea of not having any physical stock in stores once direct online sales proved disappointing.

With Android handsets like the HTC Desire and Evo 4G wiping the floor with their home brewed effort in alluring networks and customers alike, the Nexus One will still be available to buy from retailers, just no longer from Google themselves in a pricey SIM-free form.

The site that previously acted as an online shop for the spritely smartphone will now be a testament to the many flavours of Android phone now available, showcasing handsets from manufacturers including HTC and Motorola. Always the mobile platforms strongest suit, we thought.

Google are finally seeing that making the platform as widespread in as many devices as possible is the way to truly compete with Apple, rather than challenging the iPhone with their own hardware.

With a lack of consumer support, no advertising and mixed reactions from early adopters, Google can be admired for at least attempting something radically different with the Nexus One sales pitch. As Andy Rubin states in the blog post, “Innovation requires constant iteration.”

Let’s hope the Nexus Two is a little more retailer friendly…