Archive for April 1st, 2008

Hands On Windows Mobile 6.1 (Update is Skin Deep) [Windows Mobile]

0029_windows_mobile_61.jpgWindows 6.1 is officially out, and after a hands on with the standard and professional versions of the refreshed OS, I’m still not sold on it. There’s no denying the redesigned home screen is beautiful, and easily takes you to emails, texts and events for the day. But it still doesn’t make up for the laggy nature of the OS and the menu surfing required to perform easy tasks.

Once you get past the homescreen, you’re pretty much back to the same context menu-based system of navigation. The main difference between the Professional and Standard editions is that Professional is designed around a touchscreen and Standard is designed around a QWERTY Keyboard and soft keys. For the Professional edition I used an HTC Touch Dual and for Standard edition, I used an HTC S620 and a Moto Q9w.

Some of the new features include Adobe Flash Support, Silverlight support, a new camera interface and the inclusion of the Microsoft Live search engine. Putting Flash to the test with YouTube on an HTC Touch Dual was more or less a disaster. The page is slow and clunky to navigate, video constantly buffers, and when video does play, it is artifacty and pixelated. The Microsoft Live search works pretty well on the HTC SC29. It provides a clean and clear page for results, and is pretty responsive.

When the camera app worked, it wasn’t bad at all. It repeatedly froze on the HTC Touch Dual and required a hard reset to get going. It worked flawlessly on the HTC S620. The Interface includes a translucent overlay on top of the viewfinder display and options for zoom and exposure.

The fonts and colors are new, but the backbone isn’t. Little things like switching between the inbox and sent folder for text messages is no easier than it was before. When browsing the apps menu, I find it silly you still have to click the “More” softkey to bring up all the apps.

With the emphasis on multimedia features in phones lately, I’m surprised there isn’t a new Windows Media Player interface. I still have to use the context menus to go from the Now Playing screen to the Library, which involves a lot of unnecessary clicking.

Overall responsiveness isn’t horrible, as it only only seriously lags when trying to get back to the home screen. The 6.1 update is a slight improvement over its predecessor, but Windows Mobile still has some work to do.


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We’d like to see video of this in action, but the pic pretty much says it all. Flickr member sakjosep dropped his iPhone onto concrete and the glass splintered. The home button is “somewhere in my apt but I can’t…

broken-iphone.jpg

We’d like to see video of this in action, but the photo pretty much states it all. Flickr member sakjosep dropped his iPhone onto concrete and the glass splintered. The home button is “somewhere in my apt but I can’t find it” and the touch-screen continues to work flawlessly, with “no dead spots at all”. A tribute to good engineering, or just dumb luck?

Oh no [Flickr via TUAW]


Via [wired.com]

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With the Olympics coming up, the pressure is mounting on China to turn off its countrywide firewall so journalists can cover the games uninhibited. While it’s a part of the “host city contract” that Beijing agreed to when accepting its role as host of the games, whether or not China will actually follow through has come into doubt with current censorship surrounding China’s human rights abuses in Tibet. Oh, and, uh, Mr. T doesn’t approve of censorship or human rights abuses. Fool. Am I doing this right? [Reuters]


Via [gizmodo]

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With numerous says looking to regulate talking on your cellphone while driving, using a Bluetooth headset is one of your ideal alternatives. However, there are still plenty of tools out there who wander around with two free hands speaking on these things at the top of their lungs (here is a tip for that by the way), as well as corded headset users and people who never use a headset of any kind. So, the question is: do you use a Bluetooth headset?

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Via [gizmodo]

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