Omio News Blog

Blog Archives

SALE: Independence Day App Blow Out From Gameloft, Namco, Glu Mobile!

Whilst we in the UK commemorate July 4th for being the day upon which Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland was published, as well as being the birthday of popular radio disc jockey Jo Whiley, the Americans rather tend to become excited over it being the day of their independence from British rule. Well, each to their own.

Nonetheless, the neutral territories of App Store-onia celebrates July 4th with a whole bunch of publishers offering some cheap games! Join us, as we run down the generous parties, and revel in their touch-driven delights.

Glu Mobile

Being the ever generous sorts they are, Glu have offered cheap games for iPhone, Android and Palm devices alike! Snap up any of the following for a mere £0.59 / $0.99:

iPhone / iPad:

• Family Guy Uncensored
• Glyder 2 for iPad
• Deer Hunter 3D
• World Series of Poker – Hold’em Legend
• Build-a-lot
• Bonsai Blast
• Stranded 2
• Mini Golf Wacky Worlds
• Transformers G1
• Super KO Boxing 2
• Jump O’Clock
• 1000 – Find Them All
• Cops & Robbers
• Space Monkey
• Cooking Star
• Brain Genius Deluxe
• Beat It!

Android Market

• World Series of Poker – Hold’em Legend
• Family Guy Uncensored
• Diner Dash 2
• Build-a-lot
• Super KO Boxing 2
• Tony Hawk VERT
• Stranded: Mysteries of Time
• Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2

Palm App Catalog

• Deer Hunter 3D
• Family Guy Uncensored
• Glyder 2
• Mini Golf Wacky Worlds
• Super KO Boxing 2
• Transformers G1
• World Series of Poker – Hold’em Legend
• Jump O’Clock
• How to Train Your Dragon

All of these titles will be for sale from Thursday July 1st to Tuesday July 6th.

Namco Bandai

Veteran arcade game makers Namco are getting in the holiday spirit, offering literally a bunch of their biggest name franchises including PacMan, Mr. Driller and Pole Position at rock-bottom prices. Check out these wares:

• ACE COMBAT Xi Skies of Incursion
• Alpine Racer
• Brain Exercise with Dr. Kawashima
• Dig Dug REMIX
• Galaga REMIX
• Garters & Ghouls
• GATOR PANIC
• i Love Katamari
• Inspector Gadget
• Isaac Newton’s Gravity
• Lt. Fly Rise of the Arachnids
• Mr. Driller
• Ms. PAC-MAN
• PAC-MAN
• PAC-MAN Championship Edition
• PAC-Match Party
• Pole Position: Remix
• Pool Pro Online 3
• Star Trigon
• Tamagotchi: ‘Round the World
• Time Crisis Strike
• Tinseltown Dreams: The 50′s

Namco haven’t specified an end date to us, so be quick and get on some of these! Pac-Man for 59p? Bargain.

Gameloft

A rerun of their earlier sale where they put a select few games up for 59p, a new selection of cult classics are up on the cheap. A revamped version of PlayStation classic Driver for less than a pound? Do it.

• The Oregon Trail
• Driver™
• Rayman 2: The Great Escape
• The Settlers
• Tom Clancy’s H.A.W.X

EA Mobile

Graciously branding their sale the ‘Red, White and Blue Event’ (obviously out of respect for the Union Jack), EA have slashed 70% of some of their best-selling titles for the Apple iPhone and iPod touch. Whether you want to satiate you OCD for tidying with Tetris or venture to a far off planet with Mass Effect Galaxy, their sale has you covered.

That is of course, if you are based in the United States. Why the resentment against the rest of the world, EA?

• Battleship
• FIFA 10
• FIFA World Cup
• BOGGLE
• Connect 4
• Skate It
• Mass Effect Galaxy

Get them from their respective app stores, whilst stocks last.

New Version Of Palm webOS Due In May/June, Plenty Of App Ports On The Way

Palm’s last ditch effort to make waves in the smartphone market might have ended with an HP buyout rather than tons of handset sales, but one good outcome was the impressive webOS interface that powered the Pre.

Thankfully the new owners have already pledged to continue investing in the smartphone operating system, whilst developers have recently been informed that a new version of webOS is being rolled out for app compatibility checks this month.

With the latest SDK arriving in ‘early May’ according to documentation, developers will apparently have a brief testing window of one week, then ‘another two weeks’ for bug squashing before the next build arrives on Palm Pres and Pixis (Pixies?) across the land.

Whilst not big in terms of interface upgrades, this update will enable PDK apps to run – quick and easy ports of mobile applications from other formats, including the iPhone – meaning the virtual shelves of Palm’s App Catalog should fill up that much more quickly.

The email does also say that the changes beyond this in the new build will be ‘limited’, ruling out plans for a major revamp. Nevertheless, it is still heartening that Palm’s plucky OS will see a future past this generation of handsets. It certainly had the makings of a great interface, even if it wasn’t quite enough to topple Apple’s ivory tower.

Source: Pre Central

Palm Releases New Ads, Unfortunately No Longer Super Creepy

Looks like Palm and BlackBerry have been tapping up the same ad agency for their new line of commercials…

Rather than director Tarsem Singh’s delightfully unhinged (and thoroughly mocked) ‘Palm lady’ ads, this 30-second short shows off the strengths of WebOS as well as being mercifully free of cringe-worthy moments.

The user interface reveal for BlackBerry’s 6.0 update was equally Minority Report inspired, although it was a little heavy on the ‘Boom Boom Pow’ when it came to the soundtrack.

With HP at the helm of their new purchase, perhaps the innovative operating system that debuted on the sadly overlooked Palm Pre and Pixi will finally get the mainstream audience it deserves…

Source: Gadgetell

Palm Pre To Get iPhone Apps, Ports Possible ‘In A Matter Of Days’?

The Palm Pre may not have set the world alight quite as we had expected, but it has gone from strength to strength both as a versatile smartphone and an enterainment device, thanks in large part to the refreshing touch interface and the myriad titles available on the App Catalog.

Palm are hoping to take this to the next level, presenting a new software kit at this year’s Game Developer’s Conference that makes it even easier for programmers to make graphically intensive games and applications, as well as porting content from the iPhone and getting it to work on the Pre with minimal effort.

The Palm Development Kit is said to be so friendly with Apple’s applications that they “can be ported over in a matter of days…and they don’t really suffer any degradation in performance,” according to John Paczkowski of All Things Digital.

This goes some way to explaining why the virtual shelves of Palm’s App Catalog are filled with wares from big names like Glu, Gameloft and EA Mobile (the lattermost currently giving away their biggest games to demonstrate the Pre’s new-found gaming prowess), whilst Android phones are coming up short when it comes to digital distractions.

The ease of porting these titles means extra money for publishers with minimal added development time and resource spend, and a profusion of third party applications coming to the Pre would hardly be a bad thing.

Following from this logic, why stop at games? If Palm’s software is as snazzy as they claim, then we may see all manner of applications make the O2-exclusive handset even more appealing to those not willing to opt for Apple’s iconic device.

Considering that an App Store equivalent was found wanting in both quality and quantity upon the Palm Pre’s release, this concerted ramp up in the offerings to be found on the device is certainly an appealing development, as is Palm’s pro active nature in giving developers the tools to make it happen.

Let’s just hope Palm don’t stray too far into lawyer-baiting territory once again, you know how Apple gets…

EA Mobile Offers Free Games For Palm Pre

To celebrate the imminent release of the full range of App Catalog wares for the Palm Pre in the UK and Ireland, EA Mobile has generously offered the mobile versions of three of their biggest franchises for free.

Until the end of March, EA are allowing lucky folk to download Need for Speed Undercover, The Sims 3 and Monopoly for the Palm Pre for nothing, a sampler of the 3D gaming loveliness the diminutive device is now capable of.

Simply go the App Catalog on your Pre, search for the name of the game, click ‘download for free’ and collect your spoils!

Due to the size of these games, Palm (and we) do recommend that you connect to a Wi-Fi network to enable downloading without smashing through your data limits.

Enjoy!

Source: Palm UK

Social Networking on Mobiles: Esoteric or Essential?

motorola-DEXT-2Time was once that talking and texting were more than sufficient functionality for a mobile phone.

The fact that mobile phones could keep people connected irrespective of time and place made them the social networking tool.

No more notes left on the fridge, no more answerphone messages or waiting by payphones, the mobile as a primary means of communication was a turning point that increased people’s voracious appetite for instant gratification.

The downside of this is that now everyone has to know what was going on, all of the time. Which is fine, because everyone else is only too happy to broadcast the minutiae of their daily lives from the comfort of a computer.

More erudite than text, more vivid than picture messages, these sites serve as mini-blogs where thoughts, feelings, rants and regaling of tall tales became commonplace.

All the while mobile phones have been missing out, out of step with the explosion of social sites. Up until recently, attempts to take social networking mobile have been little more than a paltry logo in a phone menu serving as a bookmark, with the use of a mobile-optimised site painfully unintuitive to use upon its languid arrival.

Whether these sites actually serve a purpose is moot. People are inextricably linked to them, their Wall acting as a meeting point, their homepage reflecting personality and acting as a virtual pinboard for all their photos, messages and moods. The need to maintain these with more frequency was overwhelming, and only recently has mobile truly stepped up to fill that void.

The shift has only gathered pace now that cutting-edge mobile phone tech has become a mass market commodity. 3G connectivity is now a necessity rather than a luxury, as are full QWERTY keyboards. The fact that Samsung has managed to sell over 9 million units of their Tocco Lite in a mere six months (and 3 million of the Genio Touch in two months) is a stark sign that touch screen phones are no longer the preserve of CEOs and ardent early adopters.

The initial wave of social networking on mobile seemed to embrace the concept of ‘push’, not in the sense of the instant forwarding of mail, but rather in the nature of beaming out alerts and updates with the mobile phone acting as a beacon to the world.

Little more than text windows, these light servings of social media at least enabled access to the core functionality of a site, without the drain that the profusion of images, Farmville updates and sheep throwing usually faced with when logging onto Facebook. Log in, look at the status updates of others, add a new one of your own, log off. Simple.

Despite seeming like the latest bandwagon to jump on, the latest phones have shifted from a push service to one of ‘pull’, drawing information from a variety of social networking hubs to populate a handset full of unique personal information.

Handsets like the Palm Pre, Motorola DEXT and the forthcoming Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10 all ‘pull’ data from these sites (once given permission) effortlessly, adding contact names and images to phone numbers, drawing status updates and alerts to present them in full view. The latter two operate on Google’s Android operating system, a platform engineered to make the most of the mobile web. Novel additions like tracks listened to on Last.fm and recent tweets truly add a vibracy and level of interaction with contacts that has never been seen before.

This idea of pulling data from social networking sites has managed to transcend the mobile phone entirely with offerings like Vodafone 360, termed as an internet service that brings phone, email, chat and social network contacts together in one place.

Debuting on their Linux-driven Samsung 360 H1 and 360 M1 phones, Vodafone 360 is designed as being able to exist independently of a particular mobile or manufacturer, acting as a separate entity to keep friends connected (and using data, presumably) on their network.

With plans to serve 360 up as an application for iPhone when the coveted device arrives onto the carrier in early 2010, Vodafone realises that the value and longevity this kind of additional service can extend far beyond shilling a particular handset and in fact become a reason to join their network over another.

Whilst far from a novelty prior to Apple’s device, mobile applications where somewhat of a dark art until the iPhone became an alluring proof of concept for the casual observer, whilst their App Store gave a prominent shop window for these wares to be displayed. Many of these apps piggyback on the fun side of social networking sites, enabling multiple status updates or grouping of content to be done with ease.

Naturally the world’s manufacturers have followed suit, causing dedicated social applications to be created for practically every phone platform, and literally hundreds of third party solutions for micro-blogging and the like.

Sony Ericsson phones like the Yari have Facebook functionality built into the device, enabling a rich and vivid user experience directly from the homepage. A stream of the latest status updates from friends and presented directly onto the home screen, and a single press enables a response, with the ability to add status updates and reply to Inbox messages without missing a beat.

This is the instant gratification users have been clamouring for, that seamless integration of social networking into core functionality, rather than lip service and laggy web apps that do little to enhance the online experience.

INQ1The INQ1 from 3 is a revolutionary handset, not only in the degree of connectivity between on- and offline content, pooling of contact information from social networking sites, but also offering instant messaging over Windows Live and VoIP calls over Skype, all in an eminently affordable phone.

Treating social networking and internet connectivity as integral functionality rather than a marketer’s bullet point, the INQ1 was rightly recognised as a landmark device, and put the meagre offerings from many supposedly smart phones to shame.

With the new INQ Mini 3G, they have added support for today’s trending topic – Twitter – whilst giving the phone itself a much needed reboot in the style stakes. The micro-blogging service currently has the pulses racing of the social elite, and it is a natural fit for mobiles to dip into the world of hashtags and retweets.

Having said that, the value of Twitter as a real-time news service cannot be ignored, as breaking events from the Hudson River plane crash to the Balloon Boy saga have been documented in up-to-the-minute 140 character glory on mobiles.

The brevity and constraints of Twitter are enablers to get messages out there with a minimum of fluff, rather than the destroyer of the English language that school professors make it out to be.

The portable nature of a mobile phone combined with the ubiquity and connective tissue of social media sites are finally realising the potential of everyone becoming a news source, first on the scene whether a raging inferno or an underground rave.

Everyone always online regardless of location, with the ability to exchange pictures, jokes and occasionally useful information makes the current age of mobile phone the most exciting since the heady days of extendable aerials and Snake.

Mobile phones have certainly caught up with social networking, and it is up to the sites to pick up the slack. Video streaming, geo-targeting nearby friends Google-Latitude style, multi-player gaming – there is so much more that the medium can offer when unshackled from the constraints of a desktop computer.

When the current crop of networking site adopt the added functionality that a mobile phone can bring, rather than making Facebook a bit more phone-sized, only then might it become essential in our daily lives.

WebOS Update Comes Without Music: Has Palm Given Up The iTunes Fight?

Palm PreThere are a myriad of great new features in the latest WebOS update for the Palm Pre – wide screen YouTube, support for Yahoo! messaging amongst other things…yet curiously absent in this build is the infamous syncing support for Apple’s iTunes service.

Since the US launch this summer, every iTunes update that attempted to sever the Pre’s much vaunted illegitimate connection with their media download portal was swiftly met by an update from Palm, resuming the ability to transfer music and movies seamlessly between the two. But not this time.

The dispute ratcheted up in August when Palm attempted to take Apple to task over USB permission rights, but were tersely put down by regulatory body the USB Implementer’s Forum over having the Pre pretend to be an iPod in order to gain access in the first place. The battleground has been curiously quiet since…

Rumours as to why Palm have let Apple win this round have been varied, from Palm investing in developing their own syncing solution to simply running out of energy.

Palm has confirmed that the syncing feature is indeed absent from this latest version of WebOS, compatible with the diminutive Pixi as well as the pebble-shaped Pre, but have declined to comment on as to why this is.

Let’s hope that the find a solution, amicable or otherwise, to the smartest – and most controversial – unique selling points of Palm’s slick device.

Compare O2 Palm Pre deals on Omio.

Source

BREAKING NEWS: iTunes 9.0.2 Update Disables Palm Pre Sync…Again.

Picture 6

In a shocking twist to this seemingly endless game of cat-and-mouse, the latest update to Apple’s iTunes software (9.0.2) disables the ability of the Palm Pre to sync music and movies using the platform.

Whilst this latest update is said to offer all sorts of whizzy new features to iTunes 9 and improved support for Apple TV, an unfortunate side effect (if you are Palm) is that it has severed their connection once again…

Despite the diminutive handset having basic synching software of its own, Palm’s device has piggybacked off the popular iTunes service since launch, even making it a selling point to convince customers to defect from iPhone 3G and the House of Jobs.

At every turn Apple has attempted to thwart this, claiming that the Pre’s method of masquerading as an iPod to gain access was a violation of the use of the USB format.

Almost every iTunes update since has locked out the Pre from their digital download party, only for Palm to find a new way in with their own ‘Web OS’ software upgrades.

It is very likely that Palm will yet again try to restore the popular feature, as Apple’s big 9.0 update took their elite squad of ninjas mere hours to unravel.

Alternative apps for Pre synching do exist, but the robust nature and ease of use that iTunes offers for purchasing and transferring media is something even the most staunch Pre supporters find it tough to deny.

The strange dance continues…

Palm Pre Now Available To Buy!

Picture 3

After what feels like an eternity of celebrity endorsements, freaky advertising blitzes and iTunes syncing spats on the other side of the pond, the Palm Pre finally arrives on UK shores from today!

Released as an exclusive on O2, the Palm Pre is the first handset to rattle the iPhone’s ivory tower with the combination of cute design, slide-out QWERTY keyboard and the debut of their new ‘Web OS’ user interface finally providing a worthy smart phone alternative to Apple’s behemoth.

Already a million-seller in the United States, the Palm Pre is a well-kitted device with a 3.1″ touch display and 3.1 megapixel camera, whilst the social networking functionality of Web OS enables contact information to be automatically pulled from various sites including Facebook.

The mobile deals available for the Palm Pre are fairly competitive by offering a free handset on a 24 month contract, with 600 minutes, 500 texts and unlimited wi-fi for £34.26.

18-month tariffs are also available, with the 8GB Pre priced at £96.89 for breaking off the relationship early. Not too far off the iPhone 3G deals, but a few quid less than O2 are asking for the iPhone 3GS.

What do you think? Is the Palm Pre cutesy or cool enough to steer you away from Apple’s hot handset?

BlackBerry Storm 2 Breaks, Can Lightning Strike Twice?

BlackBerry_Storm_9520_face_on_g4

It seems like we’re in store for some bad weather but some great phones this winter, with Vodafone and RIM unveiling the BlackBerry Storm 2 this morning.

Taking on board the negative points levelled at the original handset, Research In Motion have gone back to the drawing board to make the Storm 2 the perfect touchscreen smart phone, yet retaining that BlackBerry feel.

The display itself was the big divider for users of the original Storm, with the ‘clickable’ screen trying to emulate the feel of a physical keyboard. Whilst some found it revolutionary, many found it strange to use and requiring far too much pressure to register presses.

The Storm 2 aims to fix this with a refinement of the SurePress technology, now using electronic pulses as opposed to mechanical gubbins to provide feedback, as well as a raft of new and important changes to the specs sheet.

The smart phone successor comes equipped with an improved version of Blackberry’s operating system, a 3.2 megapixel camera with LED flash, 2GB of internal memory and an important addition in the form of Wi-Fi connectivity – a glaring omission which many never forgave the Storm 1 for.

The changes in form factor are slight, as are the nips and tucks in the browser and mail functionality, but it shows that BlackBerry have gone over the Storm 2 with a fine toothed comb to avoid Stephen Fry-baiting levels of embarrassment this time around.

With Vodafone securing an early release rather than a pair of golden exclusivity handcuffs, the BlackBerry Storm 2 will be reaching stores in the UK and Ireland at the tail end of this month.

Voda’s BlackBerry Storm 2 deals won’t be wreaking damage on your pocket either, with the handset free on a 24 month, £35 a month contract with 600 x-net minutes.

With the Pre touching down on the 16th, Sony’s Ericsson’s torrent of media-savvy handsets unleashed and Windows phones rattling at the windows, it’s time to batten down the hatches for a smart phone onslaught!