Saturday, May 23, 2009

El SO Android crece aceleredamente en Asia.


April 13th, 2009
Forget the G1, the Android invasion is landing in Asia
Eric Eldon & Matthäus Krzykowski


Google's Android operating system has promised to help mobile manufacturers and carriers offer high-quality interfaces for smartphones — if not for netbooks and many other devices. But since its initial release last year, the only phone to carry the OS is the G1 made by HTC and carried in the U.S. by T-Mobile. Despite some market share growth through the G1, Android has yet to live up to its game-changing potential.

Because Android is free and customizable, a number of manufacturers and carriers are expected to add it to new devices — and for this reason it looks to grow big in Asia, first. T-Mobile, Samsung, U.S. carrier Sprint and European carrier Vodafone are planning to introduce phones later this year for the US and European markets, but details have been few and far between and it's not clear how serious some of these efforts are.

More importantly, as we've been hearing since last year, enthusiasm for Android is building in Asian mobile markets like China, India, Japan and Korea. Dell recently announced it would be partnering with China Mobile to offer an Android-powered handset to Chinese customers. Korea-based OHA member Samsung is rumored to be launching Android phones in Korea soon. And anecdotally, if Google Trends are anything to judge by, people in Asian countries are showing the most interest in it.



[War of the Worlds image via Fattest Books; Au Box image via IntoMobile.]

Meanwhile, "pricing is the key to Android's success in India," Google India Country Head (products) Vinay Goel recently explained. "While pricing is the prerogative of each handset manufacturer, the Rs 10,000 figure is a sweet spot." That's around $200. OHA member Qualcomm was arguing a long time ago that Android's goal is to drive smartphones into the mass market price points under $200 as we pointed out last September. Adoption of Android devices in Asia will certainly be heavily affected by the price levels at which the devices can be sold. Expect prices to drop even further. Computer maker Acer said recently that it wants to drive down the cost of smartphones to the point at which mobile operators could give them away for free.

Companies in the Android ecosystem, including third-party application developers could begin to see sizable, stable markets emerge in these Asian countries first, enabled by the combination of improving Android standards and tens of millions of users. So far, third-party applications haven't had many users to work with on the G1.

And expect to see Android spread across more devices. This fall, a Japanese industry group called the Open Embedded Software Foundation (OESF) will be showing off a set-top box called "au Box" that uses Android within for home entertainment systems at CEATEC, a large Japanese electronics show, as the EE Times details. The set-top boxes, made by Motorola for Japanese telecommunication company KDDI, illustrate OESF's goal of getting companies to develop and share standard technology for Android. The OESF is also bringing together companies to build shared technology for market segments like VoIP calling, security services and car navigation devices. However, non-smartphone devices might not reach the market until 2011.

Finally, it seems, the benefits of Android are starting to be realized. It's a free, open-source and standards-based set of technologies that any device maker and operator can customize for their own purposes. Mobile industry companies in Asia want to save money by not having to pay software companies for operating system licensing costs, and they want to be able to control their own interfaces. T-Mobile has so far been the main champion of Android — it could even beat the Japanese companies to introducing Android in the home, according to its recently leaked plans. But majority of Android-focused innovation doesn't seem as likely to happen in the US and Europe in the near future.

And what about Google? For its part, the company hopes more people use Android — or really any browser on any device — so they can access the web, use its search engine and see its ads. That plan, at this point, seems to be on its way to working.

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Celulares con SO Android son el futuro.


May 22nd, 2009
Panasonic: Open-source smartphones are the future
Paul Boutin


"The global market for smartphones based on open source platforms including Android will reach 100 million units in three years." That's the claim made by Panasonic's director of mobile terminal business, Keisuke Ishii, at a press conference on Thursday.



[Image by Rich Dellinger from richd.com]

A hundred million units is a lot. It's comparable to today's entire smartphone market. But Panasonic is, at least publicly, placing its bet on Android and other open-source platforms to replace today's "feature phones" — industry jargon for dumbphones that aren't smartphones — and to aggressively compete with other smartphones, mainly iPhones and BlackBerrys.

Despite Ishii's boostery talk on Android, Panasonic didn't actually introduce or pre-announce any open-source phones at the event. The only Android phone from a major Japanese carrier is NTT's HT-03A, made by HTC. Ishii declined to specify when Panasonic would actually enter the market.

© 2004-2008(c) Matt Marshall. All rights reserved.
Site produced by RubyRed Labs, Evan Levelle
powered by Wordpress

COPYRIGHT © 2007 DePapaya.com
Reproduction in whole or in part, without written permission is prohibited.
All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Enchufes/Computadoras a $99 dólares.


BITS BLOG.
Plugging In $40 Computers
By Saul Hansell.
May 21, 2009, 7:45 am




What would you do with a $40 Linux computer the size of a three-prong plug adapter?


Marvell Technology Group is counting on an army of computer engineers and hackers to answer that question.

It has created a "plug computer." It's a tiny plastic box that you plug into an electric outlet. There's no display. But there is an Ethernet jack to connect to a home network and a USB socket for attaching a hard drive, camera or other device. Inside is a 1.2 gigahertz Marvell chip, called an application processor, running a version of the Linux operating system.

All this can be yours for $99 today and probably for under $40 in two years.



Sheeva Plug.

"There's not much in there," said Sehat Sutardja, Marvell's chief executive and co-founder, just a few chips and the sort of power supply used to charge a cellphone battery. Because this computer uses chips designed for cellphones, it uses far less power than chips designed for regular computers.

In its 13 years of existence, Marvell Technology Group has become a major player in semiconductors, with annual sales of more than $2 billion a year. It makes more than half of the microprocessors that control hard disk drives and is also a supplier of chips that go into cellphones.

Mr. Sutardja envisions an explosion of innovation about to hit home users because of the combination of open-source software and very powerful chips that are becoming available at very low costs.

The first plausible use for the plub computer is to attach one of these gizmos to a USB hard drive. Voila, you've got a network server. CloudEngines, a startup, has in fact built a $99 plug computer called Pogoplug, that will let you share the files on your hard drive, not only in your home but also anywhere on the Internet.

"This creates a smart data center for the home," Mr. Sutardja said.

Another application might be to connect a security camera to the Internet, adding enough intelligence to help analyze images to distinguish between a stray dog and a cat burglar.



Sheeva Architecture.

Scientific American asked some "alpha geeks" at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory what they might do with a plug computer. One researcher imagined a system to automatically turn on and off appliances as people moved around the house. Another described a "life filter" that might weed out boring e-mails before sending them on to his computer.

Ultimately, these computers may well be used in more mainstream devices, especially for home entertainment.

"We wanted to seed the thinking of people in the market place with what you can do with our processors," Mr. Sutardja said. "Eventually you won't see the plug. We want this device to be in your TV, your stereo system, your DVD player."

The Marvell chips are based on designs by ARM Holdings, which have emerged as the leading rival to Intel's x86 chip architecture. ARM dominates the cellphone market because of its chips' low power usage. ARM licenses its designs to Marvell and many other chipmakers. A year ago, Warren East, the chief executive of ARM, predicted what would happen when the price of ARM's processors fell from the $10 range to 50 cents. At that level, every light switch may well be an Internet connected computer, he said.

The plug computer idea is clearly a step in that direction. And it is part of an even broader array of chips designed initially for phones that will add features to many other devices.

Mr. Sutardja talked about the sort of digital photo frame you can now buy for about $50. Add $2 in chips, and it can display high definition movies, he said. Another $2 adds a camera. And less than a dollar adds several microphones.

"You now have the sort of video conferencing that corporations buy for much more money," he said.

Not surprisingly, in Mr. Sutardja's view, it is the sort of brain that Marvell makes that will be in the center of all this.

"The uses of an application processor are endless," he said. "It is up to smart people to imagine what it can do."