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The Next Superpower – China Rises In Pew Global Study

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The Pew Global Attitudes Project is a series of worldwide public-opinion surveys and reports. It is globally respected for its accuracy and reliability. It just released a new finding where it undertook to know the percentage of people that thinks that China has surpassed or will surpass U.S. as the leading superpower.

 

This is how the survey, percentage who believe China will become the superpower or has already, came back:

France 72%

UK 65%

China 63%

Israel 47%

USA 46%

Russia 45%

Indonesia 33%

India 32%

 

No African nation was included in this report – perhaps our opinions do not count!

 

Competitive Review Of Spotify Business In The United States

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The European market was easy to conquer, but U.S. music industry will not be that easy. July 14 2011 was the day Spotify got the legal backing to go live in the United States – the biggest market and the domain of happy spending music fans. Spotify is an online jukebox that streams free music making it possible for friends to share along the way. In Europe, 10th of its users (about 10million) paid for its services.

 

U.S. music industry is very competitive. Many have come and gone in the online business of trying to stream music. First huddle is getting the contents owners in line. But right there, Spotify got it nailed with the agreements with Sony, Universal, EMI and Warner. But the road is not paved with gold just because you have the contents. There are battles to be fought.

 

Who remembers Lala.com. It came as Spotify and has fizzled – one of the signs of how competitive this industry is in US. The greatest threat to the success of Spotify is Apple iTunesPandora is there also, but with Spotify, it looks like an old lady right now. While you need to pay to listen to iTunes, Spotify is free. And in Pandora, you cannot share playlists with your friends. It allows you to use a desktop app to stream music even when you are offline!

 

So, with a few clicks, you open an account and 15 million library of music is available for your delight. Hold on, things are going to change soon. This honeymoon is going to be over soon. The unlimited cannot be unlimited. They will surely cap how many free hours of free music you can enjoy for free in the next few months. Recall Yahoo Music that came free and then instead of full music, they started sound bites and if you like, you buy. Free will also impose how many free songs you can play.

 

These are potential payment benefits system you can expect

  • Better sound quality will be available for paid customers
  • No ads which is the way, right now, the music is being made free
  • Offline stream so you can listen anytime and anywhere

 

Besides iTunes, Pandora, Rhapsody, and MOG, other competitors are Rdio, Google and Amazon. The last two are building competing products in the cloud. There is also AOL partnership with Slacker and of course the remake of Myspace as it goes back to its root of music.

 

How the business model of Spotify will play out is not clear. But they have to move fast before the contents owners decide to think otherwise. If they do not see any revenue stream coming in, there could be problems.

 

Google Goes Offensive Against Microsoft And Others – Condemns Android Avalanche Of Patent Litigations

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Google senior VP and chief legal officer David Drummond has published an open letter criticizing the rush on patents in the mobile industry with all targeting Google’s Android platform.

 

“Android is on fire,” he writes. “More than 550,000 Android devices are activated every day, through a network of 39 manufacturers and 231 carriers. Android and other platforms are competing hard against each other, and that’s yielding cool new devices and amazing mobile apps for consumers. But Android’s success has yielded something else: a hostile, organized campaign against Android by Microsoft, Oracle, Apple and other companies, waged through bogus patents.”

 

He was making a direct reference to the moves by major firms to “band together” to acquire patents held by struggling firms, citing a successful $4.5 billion bid by Microsoft, Apple and others in June to acquire 600 patents from Nortel.  The goal, according to him, was to “make sure Google didn’t get them [the patents],” the letter alleges. Drummond also complains about things like Microsoft demanding that companies like Samsung pay licensing fees for Android phones.

 

“Patents were meant to encourage innovation, but lately they are being used as a weapon to stop it,” the VP continues. “

 

A smartphone might involve as many as 250,000 (largely questionable) patent claims, and our competitors want to impose a ‘tax’ for these dubious patents that makes Android devices more expensive for consumers. They want to make it harder for manufacturers to sell Android devices. Instead of competing by building new features or devices, they are fighting through litigation.

 

“This anti-competitive strategy is also escalating the cost of patents way beyond what they’re really worth. Microsoft and Apple’s winning $4.5 billion for Nortel’s patent portfolio was nearly five times larger than the pre-auction estimate of $1 billion. Fortunately, the law frowns on the accumulation of dubious patents for anti-competitive means — which means these deals are likely to draw regulatory scrutiny, and this patent bubble will pop.”

 

Drummond says Google is “encouraged” that the Department of Justice forced a change in the terms of the Novell deal, and investigating whether Apple and Microsoft bought the Nortel patents for anti-competitive reasons. “We’re also looking at other ways to reduce the anti-competitive threats against Android by strengthening our own patent portfolio. Unless we act, consumers could face rising costs for Android devices —- and fewer choices for their next phone,” the letter concludes. Recently it was revealed that Google acquired 1,030 IBM patents in July.

 

Some time ago, Florian Mueller, an observer (and a host of other Android apologists) who has posted blogs about numerous Android patent disputes, has criticized Google for not rising to the defense of Android and its large, global group of independent developers. Mueller told said that Drummond’s response “reflects profound concern on Google’s part over the patent situation surrounding Android.”

 

But Mueller added that he disagreed with Drummond over how organized the anti-Android campaign is. “As an observer of those disputes, I actually don’t see any indications of an ‘organized, hostile campaign’ going on,” Mueller said. He said the companies attacking Android are doing business as usual and that Microsoft had begun buying up patent licenses “years before Android” appeared. Mueller added that Oracle’s patent disputes over Android stem from wanting to monetize Java and “show the world who controls that platform.”

 

As of May, Mueller said he had counted more than 40 patent infringement lawsuits mostly over Android. Many companies such as Samsung are buying up pools of patent licenses related to smartphone software just to be able to grab a piece of ownership of the intellectual property included in devices such as smartphones, he added. Drummond noted that a smartphone is highly complex computer and radio technology that could generate as many as 250,000 patent claims by opponents, claims that he said would likely be “largely questionable.”

 

The patent claims can lead to increased licensing fees that end up like a tax that makes Android device more expensive for consumers, Drummond said. He said Google is determined to fight patent claims, though he didn’t say how. “We’re determined to preserve Android as a competitive choice for consumers, by stopping those who are trying to strangle it,” he wrote.

 

Google is also planning to strengthen its own patent portfolio presumably by buying licenses from collectives such as Intellectual Ventures. The company must act or consumers “could face rising costs for Android devices–and fewer choices for their next phone,” Drummond said.

Yahoo News In Yahoo Mail Is Always Old News – Yahoo Should Update That More Often

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It is very obvious that Yahoo has stopped serving its customers towards becoming a leader in its business. As late as 8pm yesterday, Yahoo was still reminding us  of the death of ex-US First Lady, Mrs Ford. No one is updating the news that shows up when you login into your email. The same top news has been there for weeks now and no one cares in Yahoo! Does it mean that their staff do not use Yahoo to know that they have to fix those issues?

 

Yahoo, you better get serious. Otherwise, you will be bought over by another company, for cheap. Get serious and show service and stop showing us news after it has passed for weeks. Even if you have abandoned service, you could still try to serve customers so that you can be valued much better.

 

The fifth news item on the email welcome page is due for change. If you cannot do this, then discontinue the service because it is very embarrassing as no one wants to waste time looking at old news. What you offer there is no news!

 

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Acer neoTouch P400 Review – A Windows Mobile And Virtual QWERTY Keyboard Smartphone

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In a word or two

The Acer neoTouch P400 is a Windows Mobile touchscreen smartphone.

 

The Design

The black frame and choice of black or high gloss silver for the battery cover gives the Acer neoTouch P400 a professional look. Tall and slim, the handset has a chrome line running around its side to enhance its sleekness.

 

The smart design does not mean the Acer neoTouch P400 isn’t friendly. The phone has the Acer signature home key, highlighted by a circle of light which changes colour according to what you are doing. When you receive a text message, a missed call or the battery is running low, this home key’s colour alerts you.

 

The 3.2 inch touchscreen has an inbuilt accelerometer to automatically rotate the display to landscape when you are typing or viewing a video. The screen is responsive and supports multi-touch as well as a finger-friendly virtual QWERTY keyboard.

 

 

The Acer neoTouch P400 is a taller, wider and thinner version of the P300 without the slide-out keyboard, and internally it is similar to the beTouch E400 except it is run on a Windows instead of an Android platform.

 

Acer neoTouch P400 Specifications

Packed with multiple connection ability including 3G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS, the Acer neoTouch P400 offers you an easy way to stay in touch with your world. Run on the Windows Mobile 6.5.3 platform and powered by 600MHz Qualcomm processor, the P400 is quick and efficient for surfing the net or editing a document. The Internet Explorer 6 browser has Flash support and lets you switch between a column and full screen view, depending on your preference and the web page you are viewing. This browser also lets you log into secure sites, buy items online and submit forms.

 

Bing, Microsoft’s search engine, is onboard the Acer neoTouch P400 so you can easily find information on the move.  The Microsoft Exchange Server support lets you access your Outlook emails from your phone and the app for Office Mobile enables you to read, edit, create and email Word, Excel, PowerPoint and PDF documents.

 

 

For entertainment, you can listen to music and watch videos using the Windows Media Player 10. Other options include the pre-installed YouTube app and the inbuilt FM radio for your visual and aural enjoyment on the Acer neoTouch P400. You also have instant access to the Microsoft Marketplace for downloading any additional apps, games or software updates you may want.

 

 

The 3.2-megapixel camera has some good features including autofocus, geo-tagging your pictures using GPS, and anti-shake to help you take blur-free images.

 

Considerations

Aspects of the Acer neoTouch P400 – including price – are yet to be verified and we will update this review soon.

 

Verdict

With all the features you’d expect from a Windows Mobile handset combined with a decent touchscreen, the Acer neoTouch P400 looks set to make a splash in the smartphone market.

 

You can buy this phone from our partner site: Best Mobile Contracts UK

You can buy this phone from our partner site: Best Mobile Contracts UK