I wrote...
HTC Touch Pro2 Shaping Up to be the Windows Mobile Flagship Phone
...last week Friday after noting that Verizon and Sprint appear to be getting ready to sell HTC's Touch Pro2. T-Mobile USA already announced it will be available for their customers this week Wednesday (Aug. 12). If, the following is true...
HTC Touch Pro2 spotted again, this time with AT&T branding -- to be called Tilt 2?
...then all of the big four U.S. mobile carriers will carry the Touch Pro2. This is certainly good news for Windows Mobile fans who have often seen cool new WinMo phones launched on a non-preferred carrier. Full story...
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.
I tend to look at all mobile market statistics skeptically. And, multiyear projections are usually the cause of a bit of eye-rolling for me.
I took Sprint's 3G/4G mobile hotspot, the OverDrive, out for a few hours for a test drive this week.
Do you remember my note from yesterday?
Verizon Rolling Out Droid Android OS 2.1 Update Over the Next Week
I didn't see any OTA (over the air) update notice for my Droid on Thursday.
Do you remember how disappointed and surprised many people were by Apple's inability to provide copy and paste for the iPhone for its first two years? Microsoft, on the other hand, has provided copy and paste features since Windows CE appeard in 1996.
This is part four of five parts of my interview with Ellen Craw of Ilium Software. Click to read: Part One, Part Two, Part Three.
If you are following this blog you know by now that I am a big fan of Evernote. Evernote is a cloud-based information service that you can think of as your electronic notebook, accessible anywhere there is an Internet connection and from just about any device.
Rhapsody is a subscription music service that surprisingly has an iPhone client. It's a surprise because Apple has a history of not allowing applications in the iTunes App Store that provide the same functionality as the built-in iPhone apps, and Rhapsody would appear to provide the same functionality as the iPhone's music player.