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Home Blog Page 7847

Chromebooks + Android-Powered Phones: An insight (Part 1)

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Editor’s Note: Saheed Taiye Adepoju, Co-Founder of Encipher Group, a local tablet player in Nigeria, provided this piece, originally published in Encipher news,  and approved it for publication in Tekedia. It will run in two parts. To contact the author, please visit.

At the just concluded, Google I/O, something fascinating was unveiled, the Google Chromebook. According to their website, Chromebooks are built and optimized for the web, where we all already spend about 90% of our time. It would be available from June 15th from stores around the world.

It has been said that Chromebooks would destroy Windows powered laptops and change the way we do our computing, I couldn’t agree more but from an entirely different perspective.

It has also been said that Chromebooks might destroy the android ecosystem and its advances and ultimately the Android tablets, well at this point, I simply don’t agree. I don’t think a company as big as Google would allow products to kill each other or at least have seen that they might be a clash in the future of both innovative thinking.

First the products:

CHROMEBOOK

The following are specifications of the upcoming Chromebook built in conjunction with Acer and SAMSUNG specs:

  • 12.1? (1280×800) 300 nit Display
  • 3.26 lbs / 1.48 kg
  • 8.5 hours of continuous usage 1
  • Intel® AtomTM Dual-Core Processor
  • Built in dual-band Wi-Fi and World-mode 3G (optional)
  • HD Webcam with noise cancelling microphone
  • 2 USB 2.0 ports
  • 4-in-1 memory card slot
  • Mini-VGA port
  • Fullsize Chrome keyboard
  • Oversize fully-clickable trackpad

 

ACER specs:

  • 11.6? HD Widescreen CineCrystalTM LED-backlit LCD
  • 3.19 lbs | 1.45 kg
  • 6 hours of continuous usage 1
  • Intel® AtomTM Dual-Core Processor
  • Built in dual-band Wi-Fi and World-mode 3G (optional)
  • HD Webcam with noise cancelling microphone
  • High-Definition Audio Support
  • 2 USB 2.0 ports
  • 4-in-1 memory card slot
  • HDMI port
  • Fullsize Chrome keyboard
  • Oversize fully-clickable trackpad

 

 

The following are the features of the Chromebooks:

1)      Boots in about 8secs.

2)      Always connected via wifi or 3G connections.

3)      Same experience everywhere.

4)      Amazing web applications.

5)      Forever fresh.

6)      Inbuilt security.

For further information about Chromebooks and associated videos please visit: Click here

 

Android OS

Android OS accordingly to Wikipedia is a software stack for mobile devices which includes OS, middleware and key applications built by Google. The newest stable version of Android is called Gingerbread (Android 2.3) for mobile devices and Honeycomb(Android 3.0) for tablets.  For more information Click:

 

CHROME Vs Android

In one of such discussions that Chrome is going to kill android, it is said that Google may scale back its android development cause of Chrome.  Although this was way back in 2009, I still see that most industry expert still believe this to be the case. According to this post, experts still believe that end users still need to choose between both platforms.

 

Some of their insights are:

Netbook replacement

ChromeOS was a netbook replacement when netbooks were becoming hotcake due to their size and portability. However, Windows OS (Vista) running on this Netbooks was a nightmare on this platform. Apple introduced Macbook AIR also to rival Netbooks and were first to discard traditional hard drive storage for SSDs.

 

Native Development  Vs Web applications.

Industry expert see that native development on the android platform is a way to go rather than building web applications. With native applications developers are able to access the various hardware components within the android device via its SDK. While web applications might not have full access to the native device.

They also mention that Android OS already comes with a powerful built in browser built on the webkit ChromeOS runs. With the built-in webkit features of the Android browser, developers can make use of the opportunity to access native processes of the android device via the browser and combine with HTML-5 whilst with Chrome OS you are stuck with plain HTML-5.

 

CHROME OS + ANDROID = TRUE CLOUD COMPUTING.

However, this year’s Consumer Electronic show(CES 2011) gave rise to a seemingly interesting product which most industry experts may have missed. That product is: Motorola Atrix 4G.

The following are its specifications:

  • NVIDIA Tegra 2 (dual-core 1 GHz Cortex A9 + GeForce ULP)
  • HSPA+ at 14.4 Mbit/s down, 5.76 Mbit/s up where available
  • Android 2.2; 2.3 upgrade planned for later in 2011
  • 1 GB LP DDR2 RAM
  • 16 GB Internal memory, expandable by microSD 32 GB, total of 48 GB
  • 4-inch PenTile qHD display (540×960) with Gorilla Glass
  • 5.0 MP with dual LED flash, 4x digital zoom and autofocus, 720p video capture at 30 fps

(Full 1080p video capture will be supported via software upgrade post-launch)

  • VGA front-facing camera for video calls
  • TriColor LED notification light
  • Fingerprint scanner
  • 1.93 Ah user-changeable battery
  • 117.75 × 63.50 × 10.95 millimetres (4.636 × 2.500 × 0.431 in)
  • 135 grams (4.8 oz)

From the specifications above, it feels seemingly decent but the real deal with the Motorola Atrix isn’t the phone but the Laptop dock accessory.  The specification for this dock is given as:

 

  • Display: 11.6inch, 1366×768
  • Port: 2-USB
  • CPU, memory, storage, OS: None.

The beauty about the dock is that it is powered by the Atrix’s Tegra-2 processor which is a dual-core 1Ghz processor. When docked, it charges the Motorola Atrix and launches a tiny kernel within the laptop Dock and this mode is called Webtop mode. It has generated a lot of buzz and interests amongst tech savvy geeks and also corporate executives who want a phone laptop combo without the risk of losing anything if both devices get missing.

MY INSIGHTS

From the above explanation, I am guessing that you already see my views on Chromebooks and Android powered devices. Google, I believe is going to build a combo just like the Motorola Atrix and its laptop dock. It would eventually be Android powered Chromedock devices.

ANDROID ICECREAM SANDWICH (ANDROID ICS: 2.4) + CHROMEDOCKS

Android 2.4( codename: Ice-cream Sandwich) is said to be the end of android fragmentation and the merging of tablet experience and the mobile experience.  Unifying it brings developers some relief as they would just end up coding once and the experience is shared across multiple devices. I believe this is simply the beginning of Google unveiling their ultimate product line up yet, the unification of Android Ice-cream sandwich and the Chromebook. For information click here

The Chromedock essentially would be no different from the Motorola laptop dock. Both are powered by a tiny Linux kernel, both run applications within a browser, Firefox for Motorola and ChromeOS for ChromeDock.

 

Proposed Specifications for ChromeDock:

  • Display: 11.6inch, 1366×768
  • Port: 2-USB
  • CPU: powered by Android mobile device( Tegra-3, QuadCore)
  • Memory: Powered by Android mobile device (2GB)
  • Storage: None.
  • OS: ChromeOS + Android-mode.
  • HDMI output.

 

 

 

So I believe the upcoming Tegra-3  chip (quad-core based) would be an interesting mix to the entire deal as I believe that future Chromebooks would spot a dock-like feature which would allow Android ICS be docked and access all your contacts, applications via the Chrome browser and allow a user switch between Android-mode & Chromebook mode. In the end, it would be beautiful to fully live in the cloud as described by Google.

 

Since Google already has a solid move in it ChromeOS venture and partnerships with ACER & SAMSUNG, I believe these partners can develop ChromeDocks for future Android-powered phones. In the end, ACER, SAMSUNG and others would release Android-powered phones to work respectively with their ChromeDocks stations. Even Encipher would jump on this bandwagon

 

Gistcaster Is Revamped – Now, You Can Start Gisting, Even More Often

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In April, we reported about the Nigerian startup, Gistcaster, that enables us to gist and talk – almost about anything. Now, the startup has revamped its website. It is better, engaging and pretty a good place to just gist.

 

In a post by the team, about a setback in the site, they concluded simply: “Thanks for all the support, so let’s continue Gisting!”. Oh yes, that is what we need to do.

 

The interface is redesigned and more innovations are coming up, they promised.

 

Gistcaster took the basic idea of status updates and extended it into full conversations. Unlike Twitter, there is no 140 character limit. It simply offers full commenting system, Geo location, Groups, and superb privacy settings which enable users decide who-sees-what. The site is engineered around information sharing and discovery based on location or  and networks.

 

And the good one: Gistcaster is 100% FREE to use. No strings attached, although the team suggest that you check their  Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Freedom? Yes. Indeed, a gist is every new conversation.

 

One drawback: you will need to re-register after this redesigned process.But not a big deal as the process is very easy.

 

You can also access the site via mobile device from here.

 

Fasmicro Apps Store Gets First Third Party App – Send Yours Today

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GoldSMS App will become the first third party app that will be hosted in Fasmicro App Store. The app developed by CyberGold is all you will need to do SMS. We want to give you headsup on the GoldSMS.

 

goldSMS is a mobile messaging app which allows you send SINGLE and BULK text messages to any phone number in the world without having to use the airtime from your phone company.  goldSMS is strictly for sending SMS at highly reduced costs from as low as N1/SMS, while airtime on Sim card is strictly for voice calls.  goldSMS uses the same data plan that you use for e-mail and browsing.  goldSMS is a MUST HAVE app by everybody. The goldSMS application itself is free.

 

The app will be available in the Apps Store before Friday.

 

About the company

Cybergold Integrated Consultants is an indigenous Nigeria based information and communication technology (ICT) company incorporated in August 2001. We have earned a solid reputation as a turn key solution provider of broadband communication systems, satellite, satellite-based videos, audio, inter data distribution networks.

 

Our major assets are our quality consciousness, efficiency and innovations combined expertise to provide what is demanded from our ever-growing clients. Our strong technological base, state of the art equipments coupled with our dedicated and well trained staff are positioned to provide customers with services that will help achieve your individual and corporate needs. We are committed to providing excellent value and ICT service by investing in the best people and technology to deliver exceptional customer service.

MIT Students Coming to Train University of Ibadan Students

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MIT students are coming to University of Ibadan to train students on mobility computing.  There is no exact date on their website for the Nigeria training. This is posted on the MIT Africa Information Technology Initiative (AITI).

 

June – July, 2011: AITI is organizing programs in Rwanda, Kenya, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sri Lanka.

 

This is one of those initiatives MIT has introduced to help enable technology penetration across the globe.

 

AITI is a multidisciplinary group of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) that promotes development in Africa by cultivating young technology entrepreneurs. AITI develops curriculum materials, software technologies, platforms, and networks that enable African undergraduate students to innovate in the area of information and communication technologies (ICTs).

Building the Future Mobile Ecosystem in Africa – The Challenges of the Ecosystem and Innovation

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Thanks  Yowe for the tip. These are presentations from Mobile Monday Kampala. Most are truly cool and nice. Notice that the one by Nokia guy is not relevant that much since Symbian is now .gone. But the idea is there about ecosystem, innovation and future of mobility in Africa.

 

1. Building the future mobile ecosystem in africa by Teemu Kiijarvi

2. Mobilizing for innovation by Francis Egbuson

3. Passion vs academic qualifications by Michael Niyitegeka

4. Surviving in the ecosystem by Victor Miclovich