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  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Tecnologia   

    A Google Phone Called Nexus One? 

    According to several sources, Google has given a new Google phone to its employees. It’s apparently called Nexus One, Android 2.1-based, looks like this and this, has a touch screen, and is built by Taiwan’s HTC but with no HTC branding and full design control by Google. InformationWeek quotes he Wall Street Journal saying that “Google designed virtually the entire software experience behind the phone, from the applications that run on it to the look and feel of each screen. Google appears to want to throw its brand behind a device more directly, designing a phone without working with the wireless carriers that often dictate what features they allow on their networks.” The WSJ predicts that the phone will be available in 2010, apparently (says All Things Digital) sold by Google “without getting a wireless carrier to subsidize the handset” (though they might get infrastructure help from companies like T-Mobile).

    I suppose when Google gives something to every employee they’re not afraid of, perhaps indeed hope for leaks, in order to give an early promotion to their products. Google in a blog post say they consider their product “the concept of a mobile lab, which is a device that combines innovative hardware from a partner with software that runs on Android to experiment with new mobile features and capabilities”. Sharing this with employees from “across the globe” means “they get to test out a new technology and help improve it.”

    To get a feeling for just how public this is, consider that Google put up a special Nexus One game page publicly at android.com/holidays. Non-Nexus devices will be redirected to the Android homepage, but you can still see it loading or look at the source code and some of the included images (the special Android bots are called Abominable Applet, Robo-Ralphie, Runtime Rudolph, Nutcracker Hacker, SQL Snowman, Candycane Coder, Killer App Kringle, Patch Penguin, Christmas Cookie, Emulator Elf, Rock Star, and Gmail Gifty). Note you can also turn off JavaScript in your browser to avoid the redirect. The user agent string Google looks for in the code is
    Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 2.1; en-us; Nexus One Build/ERD62) AppleWebKit/530.17 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Mobile Safari/530.17

    And what’s with the name, Nexus One? John Gruber writes, “Nexus is the brand name of the series of androids (a.k.a. replicants) in Blade Runner and Philip K. Dick’s novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. The story concerns escaped Nexus-6 models”. (Note Sony also called its Android interface Nexus.)

    If you’re a Google employee, please email me some photos of the Nexus One!

    [Thanks DPic! Top image by Cory O’ Brien’s, used with permission.]

    Update: I asked Cory O’Brien, who shot above photo, for some impressions from using the phone. Cory says he doesn’t work at Google but his friend does, so he was able to play around with the phone:

    I don’t have any details on specs, but I can say that the phone felt quick, as the OS was snappy and the touchscreen was just as responsive as my iPhone. Sliding page to page and clicking were all instantaneous. Also, while they were nearly identical in terms of external dimensions, the screen on the Google Phone was about 5mm longer. The phone itself was unbranded with the exception of a small etched Android character on the back, and had a super solid build quality feel to it.

    He adds:

    The phone was brand new, so it just had all the standard Android apps. I didn’t notice any apps that stood out as being new/unique. (…) The X was part of the boot sequence.

    [Thanks Cory!]

    [By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: A Google Phone Called Nexus One? | Comments]

    [Advertisement] Books about Google available on Ebay

     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Tecnologia   

    Why Type? Just Swype It 

    The Mobile Tech Weblog: Swype has announced a new text prediction technology for touch phones in which users simply roll their fingers along the letters of a word on the software QWERTY keyboard of a touch screen phone.

    So in other words (no pun intended) a user simply slides their finger over the onscreen keyboard in succession and then when they lift their finger, the program places all of the possible word suggestions within the text box. It is both finger and stylus friendly and the company claims adept users can reach typing speeds of 30 words-per-minute using the software.

    Swype Hopes to Obsolete Mobile Typing [The Mobile Tech Weblog]

     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Tecnologia   

    PlayStation 3 Cluster, Or Skynet? 

    Last month, we told you about the United States Air Force’s plans to purchase around 2200 PlayStation 3 consoles to crunch some data with. Wonder what that kind of horsepower actually looks like?

    Here’s just a taste. This is the back room of the USAF Research Laboratory’s information directorate in Rome, New York, and these are the branch’s original allotment of 336 consoles. Which is terrifying enough. Factor in another 2200 and we’re getting to the stage where Miles Dyson needs to be blown away.

    [image: sfgate]

     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Tecnologia   

    Apple tablet due March, to get Kindle-killer book deal? 

    Apple’s often-rumored tablet device has been narrowed down to a specific production timeframe and could land a deadly blow against Amazon’s Kindle reader through a revenue deal, according to an unusually detailed research note from Oppenheimer analyst Yair Reiner. Investigations into Apple’s supply network claim the widely reported 10-inch, multi-touch device will be put into mass production in February with a likely launch target of March or April. As many as 1 million will be made every month, according to the sources….


     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Tecnologia   

    Tool to Create Browser-Based Games 

    This looks completely terrific: Effect Games lets you create JS-based browser games, like jump’n’runs, by providing a game/ coding framework, level editor, hosting and sharing options and more. Take a look at their demos and the platformer tutorial to get an impression. [Via Andy.]

    [By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Tool to Create Browser-Based Games | Comments]

    [Advertisement] Books about Google available on Ebay

     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Tecnologia   

    Windows 7 USB Download Tool Lets You Install Windows from a Thumb Drive [Downloads] 

    If you’re trying to install Windows 7 on a netbook (or are having issues with your PC’s optical drive), the free USB Download Tool from Microsoft allows you to take a .ISO image and turn it into a bootable flash drive.

    This was created not only for netbook users, but for anyone that opted to download Windows 7 from Microsoft in lieu of ordering an installation DVD. Windows 7 USB Download Tool can create a bootable flash drive (or DVD, if you prefer) from the downloaded .ISO file in quick fashion—just install it and follow the on-screen prompts. Note that if you opt to use a flash drive, it must be 4GB or larger to hold all the files.

    The coolest part: Microsoft has open sourced this little app. Why, you ask? They got a bit of flak early on in the project for re-using open-source code and improperly documenting it (as well as making the program itself closed source), but true to their word that it was only a mistake, it’s been brought back and declared open source for all to use. So if you still haven’t gotten Windows 7 installed on that netbook of yours, head on over to CodePlex, Microsoft’s open-source repository, and download the tool now.


     
  • Leo 00:01 on 15 December, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Tecnologia   

    Google intros store QR codes for phones 

    Google today brought a taste of the Japanese market to the US through Favorite Places. The addition lets the most popular retail shops on Google Maps carry a QR code that can be scanned in by a camera-equipped phone. When read, the codes take the phone to the store’s Place Page and give users an opportunity to read reviews, favorite the business or even get coupons….


     
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