Is the tablet stylus making a comeback?

If indie bands can dress like Fleetwood Mac circa 1975, and women in new York City can sport leg warmers like “Flashdance” extras, why can’t Samsung bring back the stylus pen fortablets and smartphones?

It seems like the company just might try to revive this old trend, much like those indie rockers and fashionable hipsters of new York City are bringing back bygone fashion trends many of us who lived through them the first time wish we could forget.

Ryan Bidan, a product marketing manager for Samsung, told Laptop in an interview published this week that that the company may bring the Galaxy Note’s S Pen stylus to tablets, along with some “3D gesture” technology.

“I think a pen interface continues to make a lot of sense across a number of screen sizes, like the larger is more obvious of those,” Bidan said in the interview. “That’s about as specific as I can be without announcing a product.”

Back in the day when tablets first arrived on the scene, styluses (or styli, if you prefer) were all the rage. Over two decades ago, Microsoft introduced Windows for Pen Computing. Then there were the pen-based “tablet PCs” from IBM, Toshiba, Fujitsu, and others. and they all used a stylus for input into the tablet.

And why was that? Necessity. The early tablets used resistive touch screens, which required users press down hard on the screen to register an input. and a finger simply wasn’t enough to do the trick. But in the mid-2000s, capacitive screens started to come on the scene. and tablets using this technology didn’t need the stylus to make accurate inputs into the device.

Then Apple launched theiPad in 2010, which uses a capacitive screen and does not come with a pen or stylus. in fact, Apple’s late co-founder and CEO Steve Jobs detested the stylus and associated it with failed products. when asked at an Apple event in 2010 if the iPad would ever use one, he spoke of his competitors’ products:

“If you see a stylus, they blew it.”

I know it may be heresy in the tech world to say that Steve Jobs was wrong. But maybe he was. Sure, a stylus or digital pen can get lost between the cushions of the couch. (At least that’s what one editor at CNET said happens all the time to her son’s Nintendo DS stylus.) But sometimes your finger just isn’t enough when it comes to drawing or painting. if it were, then the Mona Lisa would have been a finger-painting.

Sometimes artists need a more refined tool. this is probably why third parties have developed their own apps and styli for the iPad–there are dozens on iTunes that can be used with the iPad to render fine lines for sketches, drawings, photo retouching, and even digital painting.

And perhaps, even Jobs and his beloved Apple may have had a slight change of heart when it comes to the stylus. in July 2011, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office published two of Apple’s patent applications relating to stylus input on capacitive touch screens and other surfaces.

One of those describes a stylus that uses a heated conductive tip. The stylus can be charged when inserted into the touchscreen device for storage. and the second patent describes a stylus that could be used to write on any surface and then it displays what’s written or drawn on a separate computing device, kind of like a Livescribe pen.

What to make of Samsung’s stylus Like Apple, Samsung has not offered its own stylus with its Galaxy Tab, GoogleAndroid tablets. But it recently introduced the Galaxy Note, an oversized smartphone, that uses its S Pen stylus technology as one method of input.

I checked out the Samsung Galaxy Note at CES and I’ll admit that the 5.3-inch screen and tricked-out stylus aren’t for everyone. But I was generally impressed with the performance of the device. I am not an artist by any stretch of the imagination, but I found some useful applications for the S Pen. For example, you can take a screenshot of a map and use the S Pen to trace the route that you’ll be taking directly onto the map. you could also take a screen shot of an article and make notes in the margins, highlighting and underlining excerpts.

Clearly stylus technology has come a long way since the days of tablets using Windows for Pen Computing. Back then the technology was immature. Early handwriting recognition technology was inaccurate. and there weren’t enough good applications to make a business case for owning such an expensive device.

The Samsung Galaxy Note is one proof point that the technology has improved. and it’s not just the stylus that has improved, but the way in which Samsung has packaged the software to use the input from the stylus is also more advanced. in November, Samsung released a software development kit that will allow developers to add S-Pen input to their apps.

Stephen Vilke, co-founder and CTO of the mobile startup Framehawk, had been looking for a mobile device with a stylus for a long time. he tried the HTC Flyer when it came out last year, but he said he was disappointed by the accuracy of the pen. and there was nowhere on the device to attach the stylus so he wouldn’t misplace it. after seeing the Samsung Note at CES this year, he bought one. and so far, he says, he loves it.

Vilke said he was impressed with how Samsung integrated the input from the stylus into the device, allowing users to double-tap the screen to enter the note-taking app or allowing people to temporarily hide their note while referencing an e-mail. he was also impressed by the the screen capture functionality. But he said his favorite thing about the device is Swype, a keyboard application for Android devices that allows people to type much faster by swiping keys on the virtual keypad. Vilke said the application works even better with the stylus than it does with his finger.

“Swype with a pen is genius,” he said. “Your hand barely moves. and I can whip out text way faster now, since I don’t move my hand all over the screen.”

Vilke said he uses the stylus about 60 percent to 70 percent of the time now, because it’s just easier and more natural for him to use than his finger. and because there is a built-in slot for the stylus, he hasn’t lost it.

“This may sound crazy, but the stylus is more natural for a guy like me who spent his school years with a pen or pencil in my hand,” he said.

If Samsung and other developers can translate many of these same apps and functionality into larger tablets, it could find an enthusiastic niche market. and it won’t be the only company including a stylus in their products. The Ice Cream Sandwich version of Android comes with stylus support built in, so other tablets may also introduce tablets stylus support. Microsoft’s upcoming tablet software Windows 8 will also include support for both finger and digital stylus input.

But Samsung and others looking to bring the stylus back will have to be careful about how they introduce and market these products. Recent products highlighting the stylus as an important feature, such as HTC’s Flyer tablet, have been big commercial flops. Of course, this may have been due to other issues, such as pricing and overall device performance. But it’s still something to consider: most products marketed for their stylus have not been hits.

Still, if Samsung’s stylus technology is better than the technology used in other products, or it’s able to integrate the input method more seamlessly into the product, it could strike a chord with all those artists looking to add a stylus to the iPad. after all, if leg warmers can make a comeback, certainly the tablet stylus can become vogue again, too.

<a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-57366300-266/is-the-tablet-stylus-making-a-comback/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-57366300-266/is-the-tablet-stylus-making-a-comback/Thu, 26 Jan 2012 21:14:10 GMT”>Is the tablet stylus making a comeback?

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LinkedIn IPO to be priced, called “LNKD”

The professional social network LinkedIn is expected to be priced today in its highly-anticipated IPO. on the new York Stock Exchange (NYSE), LinkedIn will be known as “LNKD”.

According to Forbes, LinkedIn’s financial team has raised the asking price from $42/share to $45/share, giving LinkedIn a marketing value of $4 billion dollars.  This valuation makes LinkedIn the largest IPO in the US since Google in 2004.  Wow.

The company did well in 2010, earning just over $3 million on $243 million in revenue (here).

My bet is that LinkedIn will ride this wave of internet IPOs coming down the pipeline (potentially Facebook, Twitter, Zynga, etc) and increase in value over the next 18 months.  Thereafter, who knows.

<a href="http://bostinno.com/2012/01/11/ces-roundup-day-two-augmented-reality-becomes-reality-facebook-mercedes-team-up-how-to-waterproof-your-smart-phone-videos/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://bostinno.com/2012/01/11/ces-roundup-day-two-augmented-reality-becomes-reality-facebook-mercedes-team-up-how-to-waterproof-your-smart-phone-videos/Wed, 11 Jan 2012 18:34:36 GMT”>LinkedIn IPO to be priced, called “LNKD”

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Every moment counts in Mozilla’s bid for mobile relevance

Mozilla could soon release a beta version of its dramatically overhauled Android browser, a crucial step in the organization’s attempt to stay relevant in the tech industry’s mobile transformation.

Or it might have to wait six weeks. And, given Mozilla’s continuing absence from the explosively growing mobile market, every moment counts.

After the first versions ofFirefox forAndroid browser suffered from slow startup, Mozilla chose to create an Android-only version that employed the native user interface of Google’s mobile operating system. that meant forsaking add-ons that historically have been built with Mozilla’s own XUL interface, but fixing the slow app launch was critical.

“Native UI is closing in on beta quality,” Mozilla said in meeting notes this week. Added developer Mark Finkle in a blog post, “Start-up time is many times faster than the XUL version. Launching via the icon is almost instantaneous.”

It uses less memory, too, and will be able to run Android-native add-ons, he said. A native-UI version of Firefox fortablets, too, is part of the group’s plans, Finkle said in a presentation on the rebuilt mobile Firefox.

The big question, though, is when it will arrive.

The Android-native Firefox beta might or might not “ride the next train,” the meeting notes said, referring to the jump from the rougher “Aurora” browser version to the more broadly used beta version. under Mozilla’s rapid-release process, programmers every six weeks promote nightly versions to Aurora, Aurora versions to beta, and beta versions to final. so if the native version misses the train, so to speak, another train will come relatively soon.

The Firefox 11 beta gets started on January 31, according to the handy Firefox release schedule from Mozilla’s Asa Dotzler. It’ll become the final Firefox release on March 13, at which point the Firefox 12 beta development will begin.

Six weeks isn’t that long by most measures. But these aren’t ordinary times. The computing industry is transforming at a breakneck pace, driven by remarkable sales of Apple iOS devices. In the last quarter of 2011, Apple sold 37 million iPhones and 15 million iPads.

In other words, at last quarter’s pace, about 26 million iPhones and iPads were sold in six weeks.

And none of them can run Firefox. That’s because Apple permits only browsers that use its built-in WebKit browser engine, and its own Safari is the dominant mobile browser worldwide. Android phone sales are also strong, though, and Mozilla’s best bet for mobile influence.

For Mozilla, browsers are a means to an end. The nonprofit organization uses browsers–and other technology–to try to keep the Web open and to keep users in control of their own data while using the Internet. so by being largely sidelined in mobile browsing, Mozilla risks losing a means of influence.

The organization has another mobile effort afoot, too, called Boot to Gecko, or B2G. Gecko is the name of Firefox’s underlying engine, and B2G is a project to build a browser-based mobile operating system.

If B2G gains traction, it could give Mozilla a new mechanism to pursue its agenda. But unless it finds a big sponsor, it’s hard to see how B2G could really take off in any real numbers. The mobile operating system world is dominated by iOS and Android, and there’s not much room right now for others.

The BlackBerry OS, despite a solid user base, is faltering; Hewlett-Packard has relegated WebOS to an open-source project without a product line to carry it to market; and Windows Phone is gaining a mere toehold despite massive, sustained investments from Nokia and Microsoft. B2G would have the advantage of being able to run Web apps rather than native apps, which means it would have a developer head start, but in the meantime, mobile apps designed to run natively on Android and iOS show no signs of slowing down.

Mozilla has other plans for relevance beyond browsers, too. Here’s how Ben Adida, Mozilla’s tech lead for identity and user data, described Mozilla’s ambition for letting users control their data earlier this year:

While the browser may be fully under the user’s control, many of the services that users enjoy are not. Sometimes, these Web services handle data in ways that are of questionable value to the user, even detrimental. It’s clear that Mozilla needs to step up and provide, in addition to the Firefox browser, certain services to enhance users’ control over their online experience and personal data.

Those services include the BrowserID technology to let the browser take some control over the username and password chaos and the Mozilla app store for Web apps.

New missions are hard, though, since the vast majority of the world knows about Mozilla only because of Firefox. The browser remains key to Mozilla’s future.

<a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-57365503-264/every-moment-counts-in-mozillas-bid-for-mobile-relevance/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-57365503-264/every-moment-counts-in-mozillas-bid-for-mobile-relevance/Wed, 25 Jan 2012 12:14:35 GMT”>Every moment counts in Mozilla’s bid for mobile relevance

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Google Prepares For Christmas With Array Of Easter Eggs

Unless you live somewhere east of New York, there’s still at least several hours left before December 23rd comes to an end.  but Google is eager to help everyone with kids get Christmas Eve off to a good start, and so the company’s put together lists of all the Santa-related treats its engineers have concocted or come across this year.

First, we’ll mention the Google Doodle you can already see.  then there’s the option to send someone a personalized call from Santa, which our own Mike Sachoff covered earlier this month.  Just remember to come up with an explanation why Santa won’t hold an honest back-and-forth dialogue.

Next, in an email to WebProNews, a Google representative noted, "Starting tomorrow on Christmas Eve and visible throughout Christmas Day, the Street View feature in Google Maps will celebrate the holidays with a special Santa Pegman."

Then here’s another interesting idea: "Visit www.noradsanta.org to see Santa on Google Maps and in 3D on Google Earth.  You’ll also be able to watch 28 city-specific videos of Santa as he passes through various places on both www.noradsanta.org and www.youtube.com/noradtrackssanta."

Finally, if you really feel like verging on information overload, there’s a NORAD/Santa Facebook page and a Twitter account, and Google’s thought of a real-time search query users can run to keep track of all the updates.

Here’s wishing everybody a safe and happy Christmas Eve and Day.

<a href="http://www.webpronews.com/study-finds-android-users-prefer-apps-iphone-users-prefer-games-2011-12tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.webpronews.com/study-finds-android-users-prefer-apps-iphone-users-prefer-games-2011-12Wed, 28 Dec 2011 20:45:37 GMT”>Google Prepares For Christmas With Array Of Easter Eggs

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Tethering: A Quirky Conundrum

It’s a weird thing, a service that’s either free or $50. but the way today’s wireless customers are expected to pay for data plans today, that’s how it stands for anyone who wants to use their phone to connect a laptop or another device to the web.

That connection is usually termed as either “tethering” when it involves a cable connection between phone and laptop, and as a “hotspot” when the device creates a very small Wi-Fi access point that multiple devices can connect to wirelessly. To anyone who’s had to pay painful ransoms for working Wi-Fi at a hotel or airport, or found their coffee shop’s connection unusably bogged down, this sounds like a nice little preparedness tool. (See “Wi-Fi Tethering 101: Use a Smartphone as a Mobile Hotspot.”)

And it is, but if you want to “officially” tether your phone, it’s going to cost you. under AT&T’s newest data pricing, you have to purchase the most expensive plan, $50 per 5 GB per month. Sprint charges $29.99 per month for Sprint Mobile Hotspot, which is capped at 5 GB per month, and Verizon hotspot plans include a 4 GB monthly offering for $50.

T-Mobile, on the other hand, is, according to what looks like leaked internal memos, bundling hotspot service with its unlimited 4G data plans, beginning January 25. It’s cited as a potential tool for salespeople to push a customer on the fence and weighing data costs toward the fourth-place network. but then again, how many customers are really aware that tethering and hotspots are even available, and what they offer?

I couldn’t find any research or studies showing tethering or hotspot use in searches of Google News and a private research database (but if you’ve found a good study or survey, leave a comment here and I’ll update the post). Informally, among friends and contacts, the only folks who know about tethering know two things about it: it’s expensive if you pay for it, and that there are many ways to avoid paying for it.

One of the biggest reasons, if not perhaps the biggest reason, that owners of Android and iPhone phones “root” or “jailbreak” their device to install custom firmware and operating systems is so they can install unofficial tethering and hotspot services. Perhaps the most popular unofficial system, CyanogenMod, is at the point where it not only pushes Google to offer some of its features in their official Android builds, but is considering its own Android app store, to provide apps like ClockworkMod Tether.

The main pitch for ClockworkMod Tether is that it uses a bit of Android development know-how to pass your cellular connection along to a Windows, Mac, or Linux system without, supposedly, your carrier being able to notice the conversion taking place. Carriers have, in the past, shown that they can see exactly what customers are doing when they plug into their phone, whether by simply blocking the effort and showing a warning, or going a bit further and automatically adding a tethering plan to a customer’s service plan.. Some carriers have exerted their influence to make unofficial tethering apps unavailable to their customers in the Android Market, while Google, in its own line of Nexus devices, makes tethering and hotspots a built-in feature.

Using official or unofficial tethering apps, the connection is almost never as fast as it would be on just the device alone, especially when it comes to looking up new sites and searching. Nobody looks or feels in control when they have to fumble with two devices connected by a cord. and when you make a phone or tablet into a straight-up data pipeline, the battery life is about as good as if you were using it as a space heater. but a certain set of users will always want a backup plan, and the phone is the best one most of us have.

Do you tether your phone, on-contract or otherwise? When has it come in handy, and when has it been more hassle than it’s worth? I welcome your tethering and hotspot thoughts in the comments.

<a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/248528/tethering_a_quirky_conundrum.htmltag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.pcworld.com/article/248528/tethering_a_quirky_conundrum.htmlSun, 22 Jan 2012 15:21:14 GMT”>Tethering: A Quirky Conundrum

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LG Prada Phone 3.0 Coming To T-Mobile

The LG Prada Phone 3.0 has been added to T-Mobile’s coming soon page and is due to launch at the start of next month.

We already knew that the luxury mobile would be stocked by Phones 4U, but we’re grateful you’ll be able to get it directly from an operator. Sadly, we don’t have any details about what tariffs it’ll be available on, but once we get them we’ll let you know.

3G is a huge fan of the LG Prada Phone 3.0 because it is a luxury smartphone that not only looks good, but also has a good specification.

The best way we can describe the design of the Prada Phone 3.0 is classy and the reverse of the mobile features Prada’s signature Saffiano pattern.

A 4.3 inch Nova touch-screen display is featured on the Prada Phone, while it’s powered by a dual-core processor and has 1GB of RAM. it also has 8GB of on-board memory , an 8 mega-pixel camera and is powered by Android Gingerbread.

Once 3G gets news of the price of the LG Prada Phone 3.0 we’ll let you know.

<a href="http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/Jan2012/lg-prada-phone-3-0-coming-to-t-mobile.htmltag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/Jan2012/lg-prada-phone-3-0-coming-to-t-mobile.htmlFri, 20 Jan 2012 11:12:14 GMT”>LG Prada Phone 3.0 Coming To T-Mobile

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Apple Unveils E-Textbook Strategy for K-12

Published Online: January 20, 2012 Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing, discusses iBooks 2 for iPad on Jan. 19 in new York City. IBooks 2 will be able to display books with videos and other interactive features. —Mark Lennihan/AP By Jason Tomassini Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.

Apple inc. announced aggressive new efforts yesterday to move into the K-12 electronic-textbook market, though educational publishers said the biggest news from the move is how the normally disruptive company is likely to help the publishing industry rather than challenge it.

Through a partnership with three major K-12 textbook publishers—McGraw-Hill, Pearson, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt—Apple is offering interactive textbooks through its iBooks store at $14.99 or less. The textbooks feature multimedia elements, including video, three-dimensional graphics, and photo galleries. they also allow students to highlight text to create flashcards and search within a glossary.

The publishers will give Apple a cut of the revenue; 30 percent in the case of individual consumers, and an undetermined amount when selling on a state or district level. It’s a mutually beneficial model akin to iTunes, publishers said, not a run around the publishing industry, as had been speculated and hinted at by Apple founder Steve Jobs before his death last year.

“Apple developed the software, but it’s our books and our content,” said Genevieve Shore, the chief information officer for Pearson Education, based in Upper Saddle River, N.J. Apple’s large distribution model allows those books to reach more people, Ms. Shore said, and its advanced Web development and presentation allows for a superior textbook.

At the characteristically sleek announcement yesterday from the Guggenheim Museum in new York City, Apple Senior Vice President Phil Schiller and other officials demonstrated a science textbook, Life on Earth, created for the iPad by the renowned scientist E.O. Wilson. It features 3-D models of a cell that can be rotated by swiping a finger. a larger photograph in the sidebar can then be expanded into full-screen mode for a closer look, a move that elicited applause from the crowd at the event.

Apple also unveiled a brand-new application called iBooks Author, which allows users to create and publish their own e-books. The tool can be used only on Macintosh computers, but books can immediately be published into the iBooks store. Using an interface similar to other Apple applications like iMovie or GarageBand, users can import media into the program and drag and drop it onto a blank page. Users can create custom glossaries and custom widgets that allow for greater interactivity.

Lastly, Apple announced it is upgrading iTunes U, its directory for educational content for higher education, to allow teachers to create entire online courses. Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet software and services, said iTunes U is also now expanding to the K-12 market.

In its entirety, the announcement signals Apple’s intent to further deepen its market share in K-12 education. Sales of the iPad are outpacing Mac computers in the education sector, and Apple officials said there were 1.5 million iPads in use in education, more than 1,000 one-to-one iPad computing initiatives in K-12, and 20,000 education apps in the iTunes store.

Critics still question, however, whether iPads improve learning, and there are few independent studies offering data to prove that they do.

Mr. Jobs had always taken an interest in education, and in Walter Isaacson’s 2011 biography of the technology innovator, he is quoted as speaking of a “corrupt” state textbook-approval process, the massive textbook industry, and his hope to transform it.

For textbook publishers, though, business won’t be as disrupted as Mr. Jobs may have hoped.

Ms. Shore of Pearson Education said creating content for Apple would be no different from creating any other kind of textbook content. Pearson creates the content first, then adapts it to multiple platforms, whether it’s Apple, Android, Amazon, or print.

And publishers believe that regardless of the technology (or the user-generation tools), they will still be relied upon to create useful content.

“The common myth is that anybody can create quality content and curriculum,” said Lisa O’Masta, the vice president of STEM marketing—products for science, technology, engineering, and math—at new York City-based McGraw-Hill. “The reality is there’s a lot that goes into what curriculum is created.”

That leaves the accessibility issues up to the publishers, which have to provide high-quality content across multiple platforms, not companies like Apple that offer the platforms, Ms. Shore said.

Some educational technology experts agreed.

“It’s not whether the tablet or iPad is beneficial; it’s the content,” said John Bailey, a former director of educational technology for the U.S. Department of Education under President George W. Bush and now an educational technology consultant.

The bottom line, at least for the major publishers, doesn’t stand to change much either, Ms. O’Masta said. a traditional textbook that costs nearly $100 is updated every five years or so, requiring the school to buy new ones. E-textbooks can be updated at any time, and students must purchase them every school year. even with the cut going to Apple, there’s not likely to be a major difference in revenue.

Publishers wouldn’t speculate on whether they would bundle in certain devices when selling textbooks at the district level. for districtwide textbook purchases, students will be given a code to access books on their devices.

But some critics believe the cost of the devices could prevent the innovative textbooks from being used by the students who need them most. By the end of the year, for example, McGraw-Hill will produce five Apple-only textbooks. If the textbooks can be used on Apple devices only, it could require cash-strapped districts to decide on Apple or a lesser education.

“Unless the economy significantly improves and the state governments have a load of money, I’m not sure where the districts will find money for $400 devices, and textbooks,” said Osman Rashid, the chief executive officer and co-founder of Kno, an e-textbook company in Santa Clara, Calif., that focuses on higher education.

Ultimately, Mr. Rashid said, Apple’s plans will have an overall positive effect on education because it will help prove the value of interactive textbooks and learning. Plus, it will provide more competition in a crowded but important area.

“May the best product win,” he said.

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<a href="http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/01/20/18apple.html?tkn=XWZFBr1VFxkcbnzHJ18z7N7klZZmcBtpxnTi&cmp=clp-edweektag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/01/20/18apple.html?tkn=XWZFBr1VFxkcbnzHJ18z7N7klZZmcBtpxnTi”>Apple Unveils E-Textbook Strategy for K-12

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How do I update the Android Market on my T-Mobile sidekick 4G?

I tried to make a purchase and I got a message saying that I need to update my Android Market to version 2.3.4 or higher.

I heard somewhere that the Android Market is supposed to update itself, but I'm not sure. How can I get the latest Android Market?

P.S. – my phone has been updated with the latest software.

How do I update the Android Market on my T-Mobile sidekick 4G?

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The Next Big Thing: Android in the home, and in the fridge

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt talks ecosystem with CNET's Molly Wood.

(Credit:Sarah Tew/CNET)

Nearly every device in your house, from your television to your refrigerator, is going to be networked and could very well beAndroid-powered, panelists said today at a CNETCES event in Las Vegas.

of course you’d expect Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google, to say that. But the vision was also endorsed by executives at Google partner Samsung, Sling Media, and Benchmark Capital, who spoke to CNET’s Brian Cooley and Molly Wood about ecosystem trends. Here’s what they said.

Eric Schmidt, Google executive chairman

the smartphone will become the portal to other devices and appliances in the home, which will all work together seamlessly and allow access to whatever type of information you want anywhere in the house. It’s already happening, with Wi-Fi being used now to control lights in houses.

Google’s strategy is to move the focus from mobile devices to a more encompassing utilitarian function that shares information and intelligence much like peer-to-peer devices do. “You want to be able to walk into your house and have all the appliances adjust, know it’s you,” Schmidt said. “A text message goes to the TV because that’s your preference” and it all syncs together.

an early foray is the TV. Google TV (offered by LG and soon Samsung, Sony and others) represents a melding of the computer with Android apps and the TV. “Google TV is the only offering I know of that fully integrates the television experience and the browsing experience,” Schmidt said.

Does ‘ecosystem’ mean gadgets are dead?

Asked if the fragmentation of the Android market, with so many different makes and models of devices, was a threat to the ecosystem, Schmidt said he preferred “differentiation” rather than “fragmentation” and argued that consumers want choice. “Fragmentation means the app only runs on one device and not the others. That is not happening to Android,” he said. “Competition provides value, drives cost down, etc. etc.”

As far as the most surprising thing he saw in 2011, Schmidt said he was surprised to see how powerful ecosystems can be. “Amazon, Apple, even the Facebook ecosystem, which have similar characteristics in this regard, as well as Google,… everyone is working against this cloud platform model. It means everyone is a winner…and you get enormous growth effects. the secret is to make them open enough…to enable the creative people, the content creators, developers…to love them.”

Tim Baxter, president of sales, marketing, and operations for Samsung Electronics America

Samsung’s job is to provide device choices to the market and leverage its expertise in the consumer market to create products for businesses as well, he said.

“We are not a cloud infrastructure company. We are an entertainment company. We are a company that is focused on adding value in hardware and recognizing the industry, the market, and consumer expectations that have radically shifted from discrete devices to connected devices,” he said. “People want choices, and we are about giving them choices.”

Blake Krikorian, Sling Media co-founder and Amazon board member

“Fragmentation will continue to be the challenge as well as the strength for the (Android) platform,” he said. “Android will have growing pains.” (Krikorian used to work with Andy Rubin, Android inc. co-founder and senior vice president of mobile at Google, and at mobile firm General Magic.)

meanwhile, Krikorian said Android works well for home automation but iOS doesn’t. “I didn’t want to have to swipe the damn thing to make it work.”

Bill Gurley, general partner at Benchmark Capital

“I think Google’s Android execution may be the most aggressive strategic initiative in the history of (tech) business,” he said, while Google also has succeeded in protecting its search empire. “It’s amazing the momentum they have.”

In addition, Google has been smart about investing in developer relations. “What Google is doing with Android, it’s going to destroy a lot of market cap. It’s already happened with RIM and Symbian.”

Apple, meantime, has alienated partners. “Apple made one mistake, they haven’t made many,” he said. “They got greedy on the rake (commission),” of 30 percent. They alienated Amazon and Facebook…. They should have made them their best friend and had them deeply integrated in the operating system like Twitter is…. now we’ve got a multifaceted war.”

<a href="http://www.cnet.com/8301-33365_1-57356608/the-next-big-thing-android-in-the-home-and-in-the-fridge/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.cnet.com/8301-33365_1-57356608/the-next-big-thing-android-in-the-home-and-in-the-fridge/Wed, 11 Jan 2012 02:23:49 GMT”>The Next Big Thing: Android in the home, and in the fridge

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It’s garbage day, there’s an app for that – Kelowna News – Castanet.net

need a reminder in the morning to take out the trash? There's now an app for that!

The Regional Waste Reduction Office has launched a free mobile phone and tablet application for recycling and garbage, called My-waste.

Waste Reduction Facilitator Rae Stewart says downloading the My-waste app is free and easy.

“For residents who’ve got an internet-enabled smartphone or tablet, you can now get the Central Okanagan’s garbage, recycling and collection details right at your fingertips, anytime you want them," says Stewart.

"The My-waste app lets you download the full range of info found in the Living Greener Calendar, set up regular reminders for garbage, recycling and yard waste collection. plus it provides depot locations and hours, and recycling and disposal options for dozens of materials.  It’s like having the Living Greener Calendar on your smartphone!”

Download the My-waste app at regionaldistrict.com/mywasteapp, then either scan the QR code or select the link that will take you to the store or marketplace for your device. there are currently versions of the My-waste app for iPhone, iPad, Android and new 2012 Blackberry devices.

Stewart explains, “this is a new way for us to connect residents with local waste disposal and recycling programs. We’ll be able to update the information on the my-waste app as needed during the year, so it will always be current. Residents will never forget a collection day and that should lead to increased recycling. everybody wins!”

Stewart adds information on collection schedules will still be on the Regional District website and in printed form with the Living Greener Calendar for residents who prefer to use traditional educational materials.  Print copies of the calendar are available at all local government offices in the Central Okanagan.

For more information on the My-waste app, visit regionaldistrict.com/mywasteapp or call the Regional Waste Reduction Office at 250.469.6250.

<a href="http://www.castanet.net/news/Kelowna/69928/It-s-garbage-day-there-s-an-app-for-thattag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.castanet.net/news/Kelowna/69928/It-s-garbage-day-there-s-an-app-for-thatFri, 20 Jan 2012 00:17:53 GMT”>It’s garbage day, there’s an app for that – Kelowna News – Castanet.net

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