Posts Tagged Three Months

RIM indulges in some ‘myth busting’ at BlackBerry DevCon Europe

Posted by on Tuesday, 7 February, 2012

Alec Saunders, VP of Developer Relations, just took the stage at RIM’s DevCon gathering in Amsterdam to build up and promptly knock down a few “myths” about RIM’s state of health. First up, he tackled the notion that BlackBerry is a declining platform by saying that App World is seeing six million downloads per day, which is up 30 percent from three months ago. He also rejected the idea that BB apps devs don’t make money, revealing that 13 percent of them have made over 0,000 from their products and that App World generates 40 percent more revenue than the Android Market. Lastly, Saunders said “we’re sorry” that RIM’s strategy has been “hard to understand” for “some people”, but added that BB10 will solve that problem. He said that the new OS represents a “simple and easy-to-understand strategy” that is about combining the best of QNX and the current BB OS, offering consistent cloud services and making software that is both backwards and forwards compatible.

RIM indulges in some ‘myth busting’ at BlackBerry DevCon Europe originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Feb 2012 05:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SolarKindle Cover Frees Your eReader From Charging Cables For Three Months [EReaders]

Posted by on Sunday, 8 January, 2012

How would you change Amazon’s Kindle (2011)?

Posted by on Sunday, 18 December, 2011
Amazon’s Kindle is, broadly, the million-selling gold-standard that all other e-readers aspire to. This year’s edition was slashed back to basics, with the hardware keyboard, touchscreen, expandable memory, 3G access and MP3 support sacrificed in favor of a (with ads) price tag. Now you’ve had three months to get to grips with the changes, do you feel it was worth it? Do you miss the keyboard, are the adverts too intrusive, is it the right size for comfortable use? If you were in Jeff Bezos’ shoes, let us know what you’d have done differently in the comments below.

How would you change Amazon’s Kindle (2011)? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 18 Dec 2011 21:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nook Newsstand getting Condé Nast publications (except Vogue)

Posted by on Tuesday, 15 November, 2011
After all of our tablet stories, the first question people ask is “But will it run Vogue?” Fortunately for all of you who are desperate to strike a pose and let your bodies move to the music, it won’t be long now. Condé Nast is bringing 17 of 18 titles to Nook Tablet, the only omission being Vogue; which is coming in early 2012. Until then, you’ll be able to enjoy the rest of the publisher’s stable including Glamour, GQ, Teen Vogue and The New Yorker from the end of November. You can purchase individual issues or an annual subscription, print subscribers will get the digital edition free of charge and anyone who does pay will get a fortnight’s trial. The only downside to the trial is that it’s significantly shorter than the three months offered by the same publisher on the Kindle Fire. There’s plenty more details after the break, where we’ve got a press release all waiting for a closeup.

Continue reading Nook Newsstand getting Condé Nast publications (except Vogue)

Nook Newsstand getting Condé Nast publications (except Vogue) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Nov 2011 21:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Ventures-backed Nosh checks into Google Places

Posted by on Tuesday, 25 October, 2011

There is a seemingly endless stream of food/restaurant rating/check-in apps popping up all the time. All of them aim to help you find good food, and many of them do it very well. Nosh is among the newer faces in the pack. The app wants to help people find the best thing to order, and eventually aims to use the feedback it gathers to help restaurants. It launched just three months ago from Firespotter Labs, whose CEO Craig Walker was one of the founders of Google Voice. The app now has 1 million ratings of dishes, and on Tuesday the company announced a series of updates, including the integration of Google Places.

Some of the other changes in version 2.0 of Nosh include:

  • They finally snagged Nosh.com. Yes, when they launched the best they could do was Nosh.me.
  • Besides an iOS and Android app, there’s now an interactive web interface for Nosh.
  • Nosh is now international, going outside the U.S. for the first stime.

But the one that most impacts how people use the product is this: Integration with Google Places. Places is Google’s Yelp competitor, and clearly Nosh is competing with Yelp too, so that makes this Google marriage very convenient. Places integration means every restaurant, bar, bakery, brasserie, bistro and diner Google knows about is built into Nosh’s database of dining establishments. And that’s very helpful for what Nosh is trying to do, which is have millions of places and their full menus available in its database. With the help of Google, for any place a Nosh user could ever want to walk into, they can instantly see what’s available to order, what is recommended as the best thing to eat, and naturally, what to avoid based on low user ratings.

Another cool thing Nosh is trying has to do has to do with ratings. Recognizing that users can rate a lot of dishes a “5-star” (the highest rating), which eventually can dilute what “best” means, Nosh has added superlative options: If you rate something a five star or a one star, the app will ask you afterward whether it was the best dish you ever had or the worst. That will show up on your profile, and of course, you can continually change the best and worst things you’ve eaten.

Once that data is aggregated, “it makes it a little more interesting information,” Walker said, being deliberately vague about what Nosh would be doing with that. But it seems logical that a restaurant would be keen to know if its dish (or dishes) was the worst or best thing a diner had ever eaten.

Walker, who spoke to me by phone Tuesday, says this is all in preparation for much more to come in Nosh’s quest to use social and mobile tech to flip the restaurant business on its head.

“The reason I got in to this was I was going to put some money in a friend’s restaurant and I realized restaurant owners dont have very many tools. What they’re armed with is not great. How can we provide services that will make that picture a little clearer and how do you get the diner involved?” he asked.

“I don’t want to ask the waiter what’s good, I want to ask the guy who was eating here what’s good [...] We’re looking at Nosh as a perpetual evolution of the entire restaurant and dining experience.”

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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Beer Can Freezes Time in Northern Heavens [Photography]

Posted by on Sunday, 16 October, 2011