You've probably noticed a second blogger byline appeared on the MobileContentToday blog last week. It is my great pleasure to welcome my old friend and fellow mobile tech geek Frank McPherson as co-editor and co-blogger here. Frank and I go way back to the Windows CE days in the 1990s. We've remained friends and gadget hounds over the years. Frank will provide more information about himself and his focus here. I'm excited to have a second voice and opinion appear in this blog. Although Frank and I are friends, we don't always agree (although I'm slowly coming around to his point of view about speech recognition - we've argued about that topic for years). Full story...
You might be wondering what the all the fuss about Palm's future is about when you read article and blog titles like this one:
Who will buy Palm? (Monday Note blog)
Here's the problem.
This is part five of five parts of my interview with Ellen Craw of Ilium Software. Click to read: Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four.
Earlier this week I wrote about Android Tapp, which provides a desktop web front-end to the Android Market that makes it easier to find and install new applications on Android phones.
If you aren't turned off by all of the negative news about Windows Phone 7 Series that came out this week, and you are eager to learn all you can about this new mobile phone software from Microsoft, you will find several videos and screenshots done by PocketNow using the emulator that is part of the developer tools.
Developers eager to have their apps in the iPad App Store when the iPad launches need to get their work completed and submitted to Apple by 5 PM, Saturday, March 27.
I use a lot of Google products including a pair of Android based phones. But, two recent products have left me puzzled: Wave and Buzz.
Check out this ZDNet item:
Roewe 350 touted as the world's first Android-powered automobile
Don't worry, I'm not trying to turn this blog into a car review blog.
The Palm Pre generated a lot of excitement as a possible iPhone-killer when it was announced in early 2009.
When T-Mobile rolled out their late-to-the-game 3G service in my area last year (they were last by years), it was a tiny corridor that seemed to stretch just a few miles.