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Google tool aims to make it easy to create Android programs

Consumer Reports gives thumb's down to iPhone 4
Washington (AFP) July 12, 2010 - Consumer Reports, the influential magazine for product reviews, gave the thumb's down Monday to Apple's new iPhone because of reception problems it said were caused by a design flaw. "Consumer Reports' engineers have just completed testing the iPhone 4, and have confirmed that there is a problem with its reception," the magazine said on its website, ConsumerReports.org. "When your finger or hand touches a spot on the phone's lower left side -- an easy thing, especially for lefties -- the signal can significantly degrade enough to cause you to lose your connection altogether if you're in an area with a weak signal," it said. "Due to this problem, we can't recommend the iPhone 4." Apple earlier this month said that it had used erroneous formulas to calculate signal strength for the iPhone 4 and promised to issue a free software patch to resolve the issue that has already triggered lawsuits. The California gadget maker denied that reception problems were due to faults in its new antenna system, which is incorporated in the casing.

Consumer Reports rejected Apple's explanation. "Our findings call into question the recent claim by Apple that the iPhone 4's signal-strength issues were largely an optical illusion caused by faulty software," it said. Consumer Reports said it had tested three iPhone 4s and other devices, including a previous iPhone model, in the same conditions, but "none of those (other) phones had the signal-loss problems of the iPhone 4." Consumer Reports said it had found "an affordable solution for suffering iPhone 4 users: Cover the antenna gap with a piece of duct tape or another thick, non-conductive material." The magazine said the iPhone performed well in other ares. "It sports the sharpest display and best video camera we've seen on any phone," it said, and "outshines its high-scoring predecessors with improved battery life and such new features as a front-facing camera for video chats."

China buys flat screens worth 5 bln dollars from Taiwan
Taipei (AFP) July 12, 2010 - A huge Chinese delegation flew to Taipei Monday to seal 5.3 billion US dollars worth of contracts to buy flat screens, an official said. The sales will amount to a rise of 56 percent from a year ago, when the island shipped 3.4 billion US dollars worth of flat panels -- used in the manufacture of televisions and monitors -- to the mainland due to a parts shortage. "They are here to work out details of the draft contracts guaranteed earlier this year," Huang Wen-jung of the Taiwan External Trade Development Council told AFP. "This is a big deal and important to the local liquid crystal display (LCD) makers."

China had said its trade delegations to Taiwan last year spent 14 billion dollars, shielding the island from the full impact of the financial crisis. It the first shopping trip by Chinese businessmen after negotiators from Taipei and Beijing signed an Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) in the southwestern Chinese city of Chongqing late last month. The pact, by far the most sweeping between the two sides, marks the culmination of President Ma Ying-jeou's Beijing-friendly policy, introduced after he assumed power in 2008. Beijing still regards Taiwan part of its territory although the island has governed itself since 1949 at the end of a civil war.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 12, 2010
Google unveiled a tool Monday designed to allow anyone to create simple applications for smartphones running its Android operating system.

"App Inventor for Android" "makes it easy for anyone -- programmers and non-programmers, professionals and students -- to create mobile applications for Android-powered devices," Google said in a blog post

"To use App Inventor, you do not need to be a developer," Google said. "App Inventor requires NO programming knowledge."

Instead of writing code, App Inventor allows a user to visually design an application using Lego-like "blocks" of code.

Certain blocks are programmed, for example, to store information, others to repeat an action and others to perform an action only under certain conditions.

"You can build just about any app you can imagine with App Inventor," Google said.

"Because App Inventor provides access to a GPS-location sensor, you can build apps that know where you are," it said.

"You can build an app to help you remember where you parked your car, an app that shows the location of your friends or colleagues at a concert or conference, or your own custom tour app of your school, workplace or a museum.

"You can even make use of the phone's sensors to move a ball through a maze based on tilting the phone," Google said.

Google's open-source Android platform is used by a number of leading handset manufacturers to power their devices and the Internet giant said recently that more than 160,000 Android-powered mobile phones are being sold every day.

earlier related report
Microsoft, partners to push tablet computer rivals to iPad
Washington (AFP) July 12, 2010 - Microsoft is teaming up with nearly two dozen hardware makers to release Windows-based tablet computers, Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer said Monday, devices like Apple's popular iPad.

"This year one of the most important things that we will do in the smart device category is really push forward with Windows 7-based slates and Windows 7 phones," Ballmer said.

"Over the course of the next several months you will see a range of Windows 7-based slates that I think you'll find quite impressive," Ballmer said in the opening speech at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference here.

"This is a terribly important area for us," he said. "We are hardcore about this."

"They'll come from the people you would expect -- from Asus, from Dell, from Samsung, from Toshiba, from Sony -- Windows 7-based slates," Ballmer said.

"They'll come with keyboards, they'll come without keyboards, they'll be dockable, there'll be many form factors, many price points, many sizes," he said. "But they will all run Windows 7. They will run Windows 7 applications. They will run Office."

A slide of Windows 7 "slate" partners displayed by Ballmer listed 21 hardware manufacturers including the ones mentioned by the Microsoft CEO. Others included Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Panasonic and Pegatron.

Apple has sold more than three million iPads since it went on sale in April and Microsoft and other technology giants have been seeking to develop products to rival the touchscreen device from the California gadget maker.

Ballmer also said Microsoft had "missed a generation with Windows Mobile," its cellphone operating system which has been losing ground to Apple's iPhone, the Android platform from Google and the Blackberry from Research in Motion,

"We really did miss almost a release cycle," he said. "But Windows Phone 7 has received really great reviews, really quite remarkable reviews."

Mobile phone partners listed on the slide displayed by Ballmer included Dell, Taiwan's HTC, Garmin, Asus, LG, Samsung, Sony Ericsson and Toshiba.

Last month, Microsoft announced that it was killing the "Kin" line of mobile telephones it unveiled in April which were being manufactured by Japan's Sharp.

The Microsoft CEO also stressed the software giant's commitment to Internet-based "cloud" computing.

"The cloud continues to bring new opportunity," he said. "The cloud enables us to help our customers streamline their operations and improve their agility.

"The world of tomorrow is a world of a smart cloud talking to smart devices," he said, where you can "roam your information across the Internet."

"We are at an inflection point in technology history," Ballmer said. "For customers, cloud computing creates tremendous value, which translates to massive opportunity for Microsoft and its partners."

Microsoft said Monday that Dell, eBay, Fujitsu and Hewlett-Packard were deploying a Windows Azure appliance described as the "first turnkey cloud platform for large service providers and enterprises to deploy in their own data centers."

Dell, the Texas-based computer and computer services company, said the Windows Azure platform will allow it to deliver cloud services for its enterprise, public, small- and medium-sized business customers.

Microsoft also said Monday that more than 150 million licenses have been sold for Windows 7, its computer operating system launched in October as a successor to the much-maligned Vista.



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TECH SPACE
Japan's DoCoMo plans new app platform for phones
Tokyo (AFP) July 9, 2010
Japan's number one mobile phone operator NTT DoCoMo has said it will add a new application platform to its "i-mode" handsets this year as it tries to catch up with Apple's runaway iPhone success. NTT DoCoMo will allow third-party individuals to develop applications for the company's 50 million "i-mode" users, spokeswoman Makiko Furuta said. DoCoMo revolutionised Japan's mobile phone mark ... read more







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