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Thursday, November 25, 2010
Apple hiring BlackBerry enterprise sales staff
The era of the BlackBerry's dominance in the corporate communicator market may be drawing to a close, and Apple is recruiting staff to speed that process along. Over the past year and a half, Apple has hired at least five senior enterprise sales reps from Research in Motion (RIM), the Canadian manufacturer of the BlackBerry.
In April 2009, Geoff Perfect joined Apple from RIM as Head of Enterprise iPhone Sales, and he has since been joined by four colleagues with contacts in the business. It's unknown how much of the increasing corporate adoption of iOS devices is due to the efforts of this crew and how much would have occurred organically as a result of employees bringing in their own iPhones. Either way, there has certainly been no love lost between Apple and RIM in recent months.
Apple has recently claimed that the iPhone is outselling the BlackBerry and that smaller seven-inch tablets are a bad idea. In response, RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie has accused Apple of playing fast and loose with the numbers and spreading disinformation about devices like its upcoming PlayBook tablet. Ultimately, RIM's biggest problem is unlikely to be either staff poaching or executive sniping. Instead, it is the lack of any real innovation or even keeping pace with its products. Hiring Perfect and his colleagues is probably just a bonus for Apple.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Nokia replaces CEO, appoints Microsoft exec
Nokia Corp. is replacing CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo with top Microsoft executive Stephen Elop as the world's top handset maker aims to regain lost ground in the fiercely competitive smartphone market.
Elop, head of Microsoft's business division, has held top posts at Juniper Networks Inc., Adobe Systems Inc., Macromedia Inc. He takes over Sept. 21, the company said Friday.
Analysts welcomed the choice of the 46-year-old Canadian, who has worked closely with Nokia at Microsoft and Macromedia with developing the Symbian software platform for Nokia phones and delivering Flash player memory capabilities on Nokia devices.
"On the software side he will be an asset to the company," said Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics. "The handset market is computerizing, so having an idea where the mobile handset software is heading in the future will be beneficial."
The company's share price jumped almost 4 percent to euro8.04 ($10.22)in mid-afternoon trading in Helsinki.
With Nokia stock down more than 20 percent this year due to two profit warnings, Nokia veteran Kallasvuo had come under increasing pressure amid speculation he would be ousted.
Jorma Ollila, chairman of the board and former CEO credited with developing the Finnish company to an international leader in the mobile sector said Elop has "a strong software background and proven record in change management" to help Nokia meet new challenges.
In 2005, Elop became CEO of Macromedia, maker of Flash software, just months before Adobe bought the company. Flash allows people to use their Web browsers to watch Internet video and animation, and the software is now increasingly used on mobile phones.
He is a computer engineering and management graduate from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and also served as a systems executive at Boston Chicken, Inc.
"My job is to take this organization though a period of disruption," Elop told reporters. "Nokia has many great assets in smartphone arena. It's about the entire experience, it's about the platform, it's about the applications, it's about the services."
Elop said a key focus would be "to ensure and deliver that end-experience, not only what you think of as a device but all of the supporting elements."
The 57-year-old Kallasvuo, who joined the company in 1982, will leave as president and CEO on Sept. 20. He will give up his seat on the board of directors with immediate effect and be replaced by Elop, who heads Microsoft's business division.
Kallasvuo will continue to chair the board of the Nokia Siemens Networks unit in a non-executive capacity, the company said.
Elop made a striking difference to Kallasvuo's stiff press meetings made in halting English. He discussed ice hockey — close to Finnish hearts — and even jested about Finnish licorice candy he didn't like.
"It seems that Nokia is now ready for an international charismatic leader," said Microsoft Finland CEO Ari Rahkonen. "He is an international leader with broad international networks, a very charismatic performer and very keen on technology."
The appointment would appear to be a logical choice for Nokia,which increasingly has turned to providing more services for handset users such as music and video downloads, navigational maps and games, in a global online market it estimates will reach euro100 billion this year with some 300 million active users by 2011.
Also, Elop been an integral part of the growing cooperation between Nokia and Microsoft in recent years.
In 2009, Nokia launched its first laptop, a netbook with a 10-inch screen that runs on Microsoft's Windows 7 software. Previously, access to some of Microsoft's most popular Web services, like Hotmail and Windows Live Messenger, have been built into Nokia phone models.
Although it is still the world leader in handset sales — with a 33 percent market share — Nokia has been slow at detecting the latest trends, like folding clamshell models and touch screen handsets.
Markets have for long been expecting something fresh and new from the company that once had the innovative edge in the industry but that has not happened since Kallasvuo took over in 2006. He has also been unable to tackle problems in the North American market, the company's worst performer, despite a pledge to make it a top priority.
Kallasvuo's departure was hinted at as early as July. When announcing the company's second-quarter earnings report, he conceded that rumors that he might be replaced were "not good for Nokia, and in one way or other we should be able to solve the problem to end the speculation."
Nokia also has predicted that while global mobile market will grow 10 percent this year its own growth will remain flat and its ailing network sector, Nokia Siemens Networks — a joint venture between Nokia Corp. and Siemens AG of Germany — continues to see revenue fall.
Nokia, based in Espoo near Helsinki, employs 130,000 people worldwide.
WOW! APPLE ITUNES 10
Apple's iTunes, the default music player for over 160 million people worldwide, continues to expand with new features that give it a leg up over the competition. iTunes 10 adds Apple TV integration, 99-cent TV show rentals, Apple Airplay support, better app management, and a few cosmetic changes. The real meat of this update, however, is Ping, a Facebook-like music-oriented social network that lives inside the media player software. Whether you want another social network or not, iTunes is still the media organizer to beat.
iTunes is jammed full of extra features—far too many to detail in this review. Genius playlists and Genius mixes are a great example of this. They automatically create playlists based on song styles and moods. iTunes LP is another, giving you liner notes, photos, and video to go along with an album. Its DJ feature lets you create a live mix in which friends can make requests and vote on songs. This is in addition to what other players give you—an equalizer, Internet radio, and podcast subscriptions. See our previous reviews of iTunes for more on these features. In this review below, I'll mainly concentrate on iTunes 10's new features.
Setup and First Impressions
iTunes is, of course, available for Mac OS X (version 10.5 or later), as well as Windows XP (SP2 or later). If your PC is running a 64-bit version of Vista or Windows 7, you'll need to download the separate 64-bit installer. By default, the installer makes iTunes your default player for audio files, though you can uncheck this if you also like to use Windows Media Player, Winamp, etc.
After you install the software on a Mac, a setup assistant asks you questions that help it customize your installation. The Windows version asks you whether you want to add all songs, audio, and convert and add Windows Media Audio (WMA) files. You can also have iTunes organize your library by renaming files and moving them to the folders that match. A final privacy check asks if you want the app to download album art.
After you first launch iTunes, you're offered nine tutorials that cover topics ranging from the new Ping service to iTunes U; these offer a good, simple way to get you started with unfamiliar features. A nice new view in addition to the list, thumbnail, and Cover Flow of previous versions, called "Album List" view, shows the album art instead of repeated album titles, for a more skimmable view on your library.
Apple doesn't add new file format support with this release, and while its companion QuickTime player does offer a good assortment of media files, you're more likely to be able to play that difficult file in the excellent VLC (Free, ) media player, which supports over 20 video formats alone, compared with iTunes' seven.
Ping—The Walled Music Social Network
The biggest news in iTunes 10 is the Ping music-focused social network. Ping lets you follow (in the Twitter sense) performers and other iTunes users, meaning you'll see which songs they "liked, purchased, or commented on." It also lets users indicate concerts they plan to attend, and offers to find you tickets, too. Really, it's just a direct link to TicketMaster's page for the event. The activity stream looks a lot like Facebook's, down to the blue theme.
You're very limited to what you can post to Ping, as compared with Facebook—no photos, links, or videos, and the lack of a Web version means that Ping lives strictly within iTunes' walled garden. Sure, Apple claims over 160 million iTunes users as potential Pingers, but do users want to open a particular app to take part in a vertical social network, when vertical social networks have pretty much fallen by the wayside anyway? Gmail has more users than iTunes, but Google Buzz is still having trouble getting off the ground.
Privacy is well handled in Ping. You can choose to manually designate which actions to share with your followers, require your approval before anyone can follow you, or not allow others to follow you, if you just want to see what other musicians and fans are up to. If someone you want to follow has protected their posts, you'll get a request-to-follow message box.
A few other drawbacks are that you must use your full name on your Ping page, you can't see "friends"' libraries (let alone stream them), and there's no way to find Ping friends from Facebook or Twitter. In the end, Ping seems more of a marketing tool than a social network, with nearly every post including a buy link. Web-based alternatives like Last.fm (Free, ) actually let you listen to your contact's music in full, rather than just the first 30 seconds iTunes' preview restrict you to. That way you can just buy your MP3 from Amazon.com or whatever other online store you like and still have it noted in your social music net. Ping is a decent service—but whether or not it succeeds will depend on the extent to which iTunes' vast pool of users adopts it. For more on Apple's new social network, read my Apple iTunes Ping: Hands On.
Apple TV Support
If you buy one of the new Apple TV devices, you'll need iTunes running on a Mac or PC so that saved content can play through it. But even if you don't have an Apple TV, you can still take part in the 99 cent TV show rentals, and even play them on your big-screen TV with the right connectors (preferably HDMI). But when I tried this with a middling power Windows 7 laptop (2.6-GHz Core 2 Duo with 3GB RAM and Nvidia GeForce 8400M GS graphics), the 720p HD size stuttered in playback. On a better desktop machine, the playback was smooth and sharp—though not quite Blu-ray sharp, of course.
The selection of TV shows was pretty rich, including HBO hits like Curb Your Enthusiasm and British imports like Skins. You just can't this depth of content choice in Windows Media Center. And the same goes for music—the iTunes store is well organized and massively stocked. I only wish previews transcended the 30 second limit, as was speculated before this version release. Another ding that we seem to repeat every review is the lack of a subscription music service, like that offered by Zune and Rhapsody.
AirPlay
AirPlay is Apple's answer to Windows 7's Play To feature, which lets you stream music to other compatible audio devices in the home. Unfortunately, I was unable to test AirPlay, since the devices it works with are not yet available. By comparison, there are already over 8,000 devices on the market compatible with DLNA, the open standard used by Windows Play To. What's more, DLNA can handle video streaming and photos, which will require an Apple TV to work with iTunes' AirPlay. Apple's iTunes mini-site suggests that deals with the consumer electronics makers are in place, however: "AirPlay wireless technology will be fully integrated into speaker docks, AV receivers, and stereo systems from companies such as Bowers & Wilkins and Denon."
Simpler Syncing
When I synced the iPhone to my MacBook, iTunes 10 did a couple of things better: it displayed a clear bar indicator of how much memory was being used by songs, images, and apps. iTunes let me drag any of my 99 apps to any iPhone screen from within the app, and disable or enable them. It definitely makes iPhone apps more pleasant to work with in iTunes. But I still wish you could simply plug any iDevice into any computer with iTunes and drag a few songs back and forth, especially now that all music you buy is DRM-free. The ability to sync an iDevice with more than one PC and more easily switch users would also be welcome.
Should you Ping iTunes 10?
When it comes to CD ripping, music organization, and playback, Windows Media Player is just as good as iTunes, but iTunes adds goodies like Genius, DJ, and using an iPhone as a remote. Windows Media Player does have the advantage of letting you Play To a lot of existing devices and can make your media accessible over the Internet. And as far as playing the most types of media, don't forget the free VLC. But it's really all of iTunes' extras and Apple's enormous content offerings, particularly HD video content, which hurdles it past the competition and earns it our Editors' Choice.
Apple's iTunes, the default music player for over 160 million people worldwide, continues to expand with new features that give it a leg up over the competition. iTunes 10 adds Apple TV integration, 99-cent TV show rentals, Apple Airplay support, better app management, and a few cosmetic changes. The real meat of this update, however, is Ping, a Facebook-like music-oriented social network that lives inside the media player software. Whether you want another social network or not, iTunes is still the media organizer to beat.
iTunes is jammed full of extra features—far too many to detail in this review. Genius playlists and Genius mixes are a great example of this. They automatically create playlists based on song styles and moods. iTunes LP is another, giving you liner notes, photos, and video to go along with an album. Its DJ feature lets you create a live mix in which friends can make requests and vote on songs. This is in addition to what other players give you—an equalizer, Internet radio, and podcast subscriptions. See our previous reviews of iTunes for more on these features. In this review below, I'll mainly concentrate on iTunes 10's new features.
Setup and First Impressions
iTunes is, of course, available for Mac OS X (version 10.5 or later), as well as Windows XP (SP2 or later). If your PC is running a 64-bit version of Vista or Windows 7, you'll need to download the separate 64-bit installer. By default, the installer makes iTunes your default player for audio files, though you can uncheck this if you also like to use Windows Media Player, Winamp, etc.
After you install the software on a Mac, a setup assistant asks you questions that help it customize your installation. The Windows version asks you whether you want to add all songs, audio, and convert and add Windows Media Audio (WMA) files. You can also have iTunes organize your library by renaming files and moving them to the folders that match. A final privacy check asks if you want the app to download album art.
After you first launch iTunes, you're offered nine tutorials that cover topics ranging from the new Ping service to iTunes U; these offer a good, simple way to get you started with unfamiliar features. A nice new view in addition to the list, thumbnail, and Cover Flow of previous versions, called "Album List" view, shows the album art instead of repeated album titles, for a more skimmable view on your library.
Apple doesn't add new file format support with this release, and while its companion QuickTime player does offer a good assortment of media files, you're more likely to be able to play that difficult file in the excellent VLC (Free, ) media player, which supports over 20 video formats alone, compared with iTunes' seven.
Ping—The Walled Music Social Network
The biggest news in iTunes 10 is the Ping music-focused social network. Ping lets you follow (in the Twitter sense) performers and other iTunes users, meaning you'll see which songs they "liked, purchased, or commented on." It also lets users indicate concerts they plan to attend, and offers to find you tickets, too. Really, it's just a direct link to TicketMaster's page for the event. The activity stream looks a lot like Facebook's, down to the blue theme.
You're very limited to what you can post to Ping, as compared with Facebook—no photos, links, or videos, and the lack of a Web version means that Ping lives strictly within iTunes' walled garden. Sure, Apple claims over 160 million iTunes users as potential Pingers, but do users want to open a particular app to take part in a vertical social network, when vertical social networks have pretty much fallen by the wayside anyway? Gmail has more users than iTunes, but Google Buzz is still having trouble getting off the ground.
Privacy is well handled in Ping. You can choose to manually designate which actions to share with your followers, require your approval before anyone can follow you, or not allow others to follow you, if you just want to see what other musicians and fans are up to. If someone you want to follow has protected their posts, you'll get a request-to-follow message box.
A few other drawbacks are that you must use your full name on your Ping page, you can't see "friends"' libraries (let alone stream them), and there's no way to find Ping friends from Facebook or Twitter. In the end, Ping seems more of a marketing tool than a social network, with nearly every post including a buy link. Web-based alternatives like Last.fm (Free, ) actually let you listen to your contact's music in full, rather than just the first 30 seconds iTunes' preview restrict you to. That way you can just buy your MP3 from Amazon.com or whatever other online store you like and still have it noted in your social music net. Ping is a decent service—but whether or not it succeeds will depend on the extent to which iTunes' vast pool of users adopts it. For more on Apple's new social network, read my Apple iTunes Ping: Hands On.
Apple TV Support
If you buy one of the new Apple TV devices, you'll need iTunes running on a Mac or PC so that saved content can play through it. But even if you don't have an Apple TV, you can still take part in the 99 cent TV show rentals, and even play them on your big-screen TV with the right connectors (preferably HDMI). But when I tried this with a middling power Windows 7 laptop (2.6-GHz Core 2 Duo with 3GB RAM and Nvidia GeForce 8400M GS graphics), the 720p HD size stuttered in playback. On a better desktop machine, the playback was smooth and sharp—though not quite Blu-ray sharp, of course.
The selection of TV shows was pretty rich, including HBO hits like Curb Your Enthusiasm and British imports like Skins. You just can't this depth of content choice in Windows Media Center. And the same goes for music—the iTunes store is well organized and massively stocked. I only wish previews transcended the 30 second limit, as was speculated before this version release. Another ding that we seem to repeat every review is the lack of a subscription music service, like that offered by Zune and Rhapsody.
AirPlay
AirPlay is Apple's answer to Windows 7's Play To feature, which lets you stream music to other compatible audio devices in the home. Unfortunately, I was unable to test AirPlay, since the devices it works with are not yet available. By comparison, there are already over 8,000 devices on the market compatible with DLNA, the open standard used by Windows Play To. What's more, DLNA can handle video streaming and photos, which will require an Apple TV to work with iTunes' AirPlay. Apple's iTunes mini-site suggests that deals with the consumer electronics makers are in place, however: "AirPlay wireless technology will be fully integrated into speaker docks, AV receivers, and stereo systems from companies such as Bowers & Wilkins and Denon."
Simpler Syncing
When I synced the iPhone to my MacBook, iTunes 10 did a couple of things better: it displayed a clear bar indicator of how much memory was being used by songs, images, and apps. iTunes let me drag any of my 99 apps to any iPhone screen from within the app, and disable or enable them. It definitely makes iPhone apps more pleasant to work with in iTunes. But I still wish you could simply plug any iDevice into any computer with iTunes and drag a few songs back and forth, especially now that all music you buy is DRM-free. The ability to sync an iDevice with more than one PC and more easily switch users would also be welcome.
Should you Ping iTunes 10?
When it comes to CD ripping, music organization, and playback, Windows Media Player is just as good as iTunes, but iTunes adds goodies like Genius, DJ, and using an iPhone as a remote. Windows Media Player does have the advantage of letting you Play To a lot of existing devices and can make your media accessible over the Internet. And as far as playing the most types of media, don't forget the free VLC. But it's really all of iTunes' extras and Apple's enormous content offerings, particularly HD video content, which hurdles it past the competition and earns it our Editors' Choice.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Google's New Gray Logo: What It Could Mean
After a bouncy-ball extravaganza yesterday, Google's doodle today is more subdued, but still cool. (via Techland)
When you first land on Google.com, the logo is gray. As you type into the search box, though, colorful letters appear.
Techland argues the doodle is a preview of Google's rumored real-time search, which may be unveiled today. This feature would reveal search results as you type.
History of the Google logo
In 1998 Sergey Brin created a computerised version of the Google letters using the free graphics program GIMP. The exclamation mark was added, mimicking the Yahoo! logo. "There were a lot of different color iterations", says Ruth Kedar, the graphic designer who developed the now-famous logo. "We ended up with the primary colors, but instead of having the pattern go in order, we put a secondary color on the L, which brought back the idea that Google doesn't follow the rules."
In 2010, the Google logo received its first major and permanent overhaul since 1999. The new logo was first tested in November 2009,and was officially launched on May 6, 2010.It utilises an identical typeface and colors to the previous logo, but features a much more subtle shadow and uses a different shading style.
Source:wikipedia
When you first land on Google.com, the logo is gray. As you type into the search box, though, colorful letters appear.
Techland argues the doodle is a preview of Google's rumored real-time search, which may be unveiled today. This feature would reveal search results as you type.
History of the Google logo
In 1998 Sergey Brin created a computerised version of the Google letters using the free graphics program GIMP. The exclamation mark was added, mimicking the Yahoo! logo. "There were a lot of different color iterations", says Ruth Kedar, the graphic designer who developed the now-famous logo. "We ended up with the primary colors, but instead of having the pattern go in order, we put a secondary color on the L, which brought back the idea that Google doesn't follow the rules."
In 2010, the Google logo received its first major and permanent overhaul since 1999. The new logo was first tested in November 2009,and was officially launched on May 6, 2010.It utilises an identical typeface and colors to the previous logo, but features a much more subtle shadow and uses a different shading style.
Source:wikipedia
Monday, September 6, 2010
New Windows moble phone 7 with new promises..in Preview ads
Windows Phone 7
The Start screen of Windows Phone 7
Microsoft had originally planned to continue the Windows Mobile line to Windows Mobile 7, based on an upgrade to the Windows Mobile platform, codenamed Photon. The original Photon and Windows Mobile 7 have since been scrapped, however, Microsoft officially announced Windows Phone 7 Series in its place. Microsoft has since renamed the operating system from Windows Phone 7 Series to Windows Phone 7. It is planned for release by "holiday" 2010.
Windows Phone 7 was initially intended to be released during 2009, but several delays, and likely due to the move away from Photon, prompted Microsoft to develop Windows Mobile 6.5 as an interim release. During the Mobile World Congress 2010 in Barcelona, Microsoft revealed details of Windows Phone 7, which features a new operating system and integration with Xbox Live and Zune services.
Phones currently running Windows Mobile 6.x will not be upgradeable to Windows Phone 7.
Applications built for Windows Mobile 6.x or earlier will not run on Windows Phone 7. The Windows Phone 7 operating system has been rebuilt to only support Silverlight and XNA based applications.(Source:- wikipedia).
The Start screen of Windows Phone 7
Microsoft had originally planned to continue the Windows Mobile line to Windows Mobile 7, based on an upgrade to the Windows Mobile platform, codenamed Photon. The original Photon and Windows Mobile 7 have since been scrapped, however, Microsoft officially announced Windows Phone 7 Series in its place. Microsoft has since renamed the operating system from Windows Phone 7 Series to Windows Phone 7. It is planned for release by "holiday" 2010.
Windows Phone 7 was initially intended to be released during 2009, but several delays, and likely due to the move away from Photon, prompted Microsoft to develop Windows Mobile 6.5 as an interim release. During the Mobile World Congress 2010 in Barcelona, Microsoft revealed details of Windows Phone 7, which features a new operating system and integration with Xbox Live and Zune services.
Phones currently running Windows Mobile 6.x will not be upgradeable to Windows Phone 7.
Applications built for Windows Mobile 6.x or earlier will not run on Windows Phone 7. The Windows Phone 7 operating system has been rebuilt to only support Silverlight and XNA based applications.(Source:- wikipedia).
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
The Mac cracks the engineering market
AutoCAD for Mac beta. Source: Macstories
After an 18-year hiatus, AutoCAD returns to the platform and is coming soon to the iPad.
In an important vote of confidence in Apple's (AAPL) resurgence as a mainstream computing platform, Autodesk (ADSK) announced overnight Tuesday that it is bringing AutoCAD back to the Mac.
AutoCAD is an industrial-strength 3D modeling program for software and engineering design. According to Autodesk, its various Microsoft (MSFT) Windows configurations are used by some 10 million people around the world. The last version that ran on a Mac was released in June 1992. Autodesk stopped supporting it two year later.
The new Mac version is scheduled to be released in October. It will cost $3,995, same as Windows. But in addition to the desktop edition, Apple will be getting a free companion iOS version that runs on the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. This will have limited design capabilities, but would allow an architect, for example, to bring drawings to a job site without having to print them out.
"Apple is thrilled that Autodesk is bringing AutoCAD back to the Mac," Apple vice president Phil Schiller said in a news release. "We think it's the perfect combination for millions of design and engineering professionals."
Apple sold 3.5 million Macs in the quarter that ended in June and is finally starting to get some traction in large enterprises. According to IDC, Mac sales last quarter grew 3 times faster in the business market and 16 times faster in government that the rest of the industry.
AutoCAD is widely used in both those markets. According to Amar Hanspal, senior vice president for platform solutions at Autodesk, requests for a Mac version were coming with increasing frequency and could no longer be ignored.
The fact that Autodesk was working on the Mac edition was hardly a secret. More than 5,000 users participated in beta testing. Screen shots and YouTube videos of the program in action started appearing on the Web several months ago.
Friday, August 27, 2010
Mozilla Introduces Fennec Alpha For Android (2.0 Or Higher), Nokia N900
Mozilla this morning introduced the Alpha release of the next version of its mobile browser Fennec for Android and Nokia N900. Fennec, which serves as the codename for Firefox mobile, comes with add-ons and is also built on the same technology that powers Firefox for the desktop.
An earlier version had surfaced back in April this year.
Fennec Alpha for Android and Nokia N900 comes with Firefox Sync built right into the browser, which means your smartphone browsing experience should closely match the one on your desktop.
An earlier version had surfaced back in April this year.
Fennec Alpha for Android and Nokia N900 comes with Firefox Sync built right into the browser, which means your smartphone browsing experience should closely match the one on your desktop.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Apple iTV coming this sept
Apple's iTV Coming in Sept for $99
Apple will launch its rumored iTV platform in September running iOS and priced at about $99, according to a blog post from Digg founder Kevin Rose.
Apple's iTV will reportedly be a revamped version of its existing Apple TV, though Apple has made no announcements.
Rose said he has heard rumors that iTV will "run the Apple iOS (same as the iPhone/iPad), and be priced around $99."
"From what I hear, we should expect to see the iTV launch in September," he wrote.
It's not clear who Rose is talking to about iTV. With the exception of that lost iPhone that was later sold to a Gizmodo editor, Apple is usually very guarded when it comes to product leaks.
Rose said he heard that iTV will include iOS TV applications. "Expect to see an iPhone/iPad-like marketplace for television applications [like] video sharing, streaming, recording apps, interactive news apps, and of course, games," he wrote.
Users would also be able to select a-la-carte app stations, according to Rose. Networks like NBC or ABC could "directly monetize and distribute their content, [which] will eventually destroy the television side of the cable and satellite industry, as your only requirement to access these on-demand stations will be an Internet connection," he wrote.
Rose also talked up MobileMe video and picture sharing, as well as the possibility of the iPad becoming a "big, bad-ass remote control."
Rumors about a revamped Apple TV first emerged in May when Engadget reported the new version would be $99, tap into cloud storage, and essentially be an iPad without a screen. There was speculation that this might be Steve Jobs's "one more thing" at the iPhone 4 launch, but to no avail.
Apple last updated Apple TV in 2009 with Apple TV 3.0, which added streaming Internet radio as well as some iTunes updates.
Apple has not confirmed any events for the fall; the company's September press events usually focus on music, so stay tuned. One thing that won't be involved – the Beatles on iTunes. John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, recently shot down that idea.
Apple will launch its rumored iTV platform in September running iOS and priced at about $99, according to a blog post from Digg founder Kevin Rose.
Apple's iTV will reportedly be a revamped version of its existing Apple TV, though Apple has made no announcements.
Rose said he has heard rumors that iTV will "run the Apple iOS (same as the iPhone/iPad), and be priced around $99."
"From what I hear, we should expect to see the iTV launch in September," he wrote.
It's not clear who Rose is talking to about iTV. With the exception of that lost iPhone that was later sold to a Gizmodo editor, Apple is usually very guarded when it comes to product leaks.
Rose said he heard that iTV will include iOS TV applications. "Expect to see an iPhone/iPad-like marketplace for television applications [like] video sharing, streaming, recording apps, interactive news apps, and of course, games," he wrote.
Users would also be able to select a-la-carte app stations, according to Rose. Networks like NBC or ABC could "directly monetize and distribute their content, [which] will eventually destroy the television side of the cable and satellite industry, as your only requirement to access these on-demand stations will be an Internet connection," he wrote.
Rose also talked up MobileMe video and picture sharing, as well as the possibility of the iPad becoming a "big, bad-ass remote control."
Rumors about a revamped Apple TV first emerged in May when Engadget reported the new version would be $99, tap into cloud storage, and essentially be an iPad without a screen. There was speculation that this might be Steve Jobs's "one more thing" at the iPhone 4 launch, but to no avail.
Apple last updated Apple TV in 2009 with Apple TV 3.0, which added streaming Internet radio as well as some iTunes updates.
Apple has not confirmed any events for the fall; the company's September press events usually focus on music, so stay tuned. One thing that won't be involved – the Beatles on iTunes. John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, recently shot down that idea.
Lifehacker Pack for Android: List of the Best Android Apps
The Android Market isn't always an easy place to get around. Our first edition of the Lifehacker Pack for Android rounds up essential Android apps—our personal favorites for productivity, multimedia, internet life, and just plain usefulness.
Lots of people are picking up new Android phones these days—nearly 200,000 per day, at last count. Google's default apps are pretty handy, but the Market has many great apps, most of them free. Here's a look at our favorite free and cheap Android apps.
We're using the great app search and sync service AppBrain to create a Lifehacker Pack for Android. If you install the AppBrain App Market on your Android phone and sign in through the AppBrain site (using a Google OAuth, no-password-revealed log-in), you can check off and click install multiple apps from the list, or visit the individual [AppBrain] link at the end of each app write-up to find out more and install. If you install AppBrain's Fast Web Install, it's actually ridiculously easy—click "Install" on AppBrain, and your apps instantly start downloading to your phone (as we previously detailed).
Like our iPhone Pack, this list is no short grocery checklist. You can skip to any of the sections from these links:
Productivity
Internet/Communication
Location-Aware
Utilities
Media
Photography
Backup and Security
Food, Shopping, and Entertainment
Photography
Productivity
Astrid:
Astrid is a simple to-do manager into which you simply start typing, add context if you want to, then save. You can create advanced filters in Astrid, sync it to your Remember the Milk account for access on the web, and, most helpfully, Astrid is an extremely tenacious beast that won't stop reminding, beeping, and buzzing you until certain very important tasks are done. [AppBrain]
Evernote:
Evernote's universal note app on Android is not as elegant, fast, or intuitive as Evernote on iPhone. But with the latest update, the app has gotten a lot more usable. There's a home screen widget for quickly searching out notes or recording new text, image, or audio notes. You can send any text, image, or audio on your phone to Evernote through the "Share" menu. And with offline caching and speed improvements, Evernote offers an impressive, seamless thoughts-into-notes experience. [AppBrain].
Mint.com Personal Finance:
Even the most stalwart privacy/password protectors among Lifehacker's staff eventually handed it all over to Mint to benefit from the great power of having all your balances, spending, budgets, and planning tools in one place. You can PIN-protect the app, of course, or go the opposite route and keep a quick-glance widget on your home screen, along with recent transactions in a folder or your searchable items. [AppBrain]
mNote:
At least some of the Lifehacker editors consider synchronized cloud-based note service Simplenote to be the Holy Grail of ubiquitous plain text capture. The mNote app is, at least, a notes app for Androids that usually don't have one built in, with the added benefit of those notes constantly saving themselves and being easily accessible everywhere else. [AppBrain]
TripIt:
TripIt saves you from the print-outs, email searching, and airport panic sessions common to modern-day travel. Sign up for TripIt, forward your travel itineraries along (or have TripIt automatically import them from Gmail), and then you've got a whole master travel plan on your phone—check-in links, flight information, weather and traffic stats for your destination, and so on. It's an essential for frequent fliers, hotel guests, and train travelers. [AppBrain].
Internet/Communication
Dolphin Browser HD:
For getting around the web, Android's built-in Browser is compatible, capable, and fast—especially under Android 2.2. But Dolphin Browser's got a few handy tricks up its sleeve. Gesture-based browsing, tabs on top that disappear for full-screen browsing, add-ons that can block ads and send articles to Read It Later, and quite a few other doodads worth checking out.
Facebook for Android:
Until this past month, it was a shame how diminished the Facebook client looked in the shadow of its successful iPhone counterpart. But now Facebook's Android presence is capable, good-looking, and even offers a few of its own unique perks, like a pull-up notifications shade and a front-page scroll of recent photos from friends.
PDANet:
Data tethering is built into the latest builds of Android. But unless you own a Nexus One, or happened to luck into a cell carrier that's generous with their bandwidth, you probably have to pay an extra sum every month to use your Android's net connection with a computer. PDANet is a reliable third-party option, for Windows and Mac systems, to connect to your Android phone's data plan via USB cable or Bluetooth. It is nothing like free ($19 for the full version), but you can use the free version as long as you'd like—it just doesn't allow access to secure (https) sites. Pay the one-time fee, or use it in a pinch, and you'll get why PDANet is an essential.
Google Voice:
Android's tight integration with Google Voice, the service that puts your voicemail, SMS, and phone management in the cloud, is one of its key selling points. After many revisions, Google's Voice app now makes calling or SMS messaging with a Voice number nearly indistinguishable from a standard call, and the voicemail transcriptions and playback are just another nice bonus of the Google halo.
Trillian:
Mobile IM client Trillian manages multiple chat accounts through one app, and we like the interface, too. Because it's in beta, you might want to check out the more tested eBuddy Messenger, which offers similar multi-IM capabilities, but Trillian looks pretty darned nice to us, even in its infancy. That it sends pictures over IM, across networks, with no problems speaks quite a bit to its usefulness alone.
Twitter for Andorid:
Honestly, we could have gone one of a few ways with this recommendation, but Twitter seems like the best app for the average Twitter user. Other apps, like Seesmic and Twidroyd, offer all kinds of nitpick options, like choosing between old-school "RT" and the official retweet methods and supporting multiple accounts. But if you like clean looks, smooth transitions, and just an easy way to update your status, the official app is the way to go.
Location-Aware
Google Maps & Navigation:
Get in your car. Press the microphone icon on your screen. Say "Navigate to Nathaniel Square, Rochester," and after a quick ping, you're getting turn-by-turn directions, read out loud to you. Press the Layers button, and you'll also get banks and gas stations for necessary detours. Press the time estimate, and you'll get alternate routes with live, color-coded traffic. The Maps app itself is really handy, too, with built-in, tilt-to-turn Street View among its neatest the-future-is-now applications. But it's the directions, and Navigation in particular, that set Android's location powers apart.
My Tracks:
Whether you're into bike rides, runs or walks, hiking, driving, or other feats of movement, you'll dig how much data My Tracks can deliver. Routes get plotted out on Maps, while a Google Docs spreadsheet can be filled with mileage, elevation, timing, and all manner of notes on what you did and where.
AppBrain App Market:
Android's Market app could be a lot better. AppBrain makes it better, faster, and more search-able, and loads it with savvier recommendations. The basic AppBrain app provides a good search and categorization for Android apps, but more importantly, the ability to sync your list of installed apps two ways to your Google-linked web account. Pick out a bunch of apps on AppBrain, and you can have them installed (or removed) all at once on your next sync. Because many veteran and enthusiastic Android users are hooked into AppBrain, the recommendations and popular app listings tend to be much better than the Market.
Fast Web InstallerThe Fast Web Installer app hooks into AppBrain to make the installation process instantaneous—click "Install" on an app on AppBrain's site, and your app starts installing on your phone as soon as your eyes shift from monitor to phone. These apps made this list possible in some ways, and we highly recommend installing both to make installing everything else very easy.
Astro File Manager:
You usually won't need it, but a good file manager is handy to have when you need to install an unofficial app, send a file into a particular app, or just open a PDF. Astro lets you comb the contents of your microSD card and act on the files there, whether to move, delete, open, or otherwise tinker.
Barcode Scanner:
Until the Market updates with Google's plans to provide over-the-air, instant browser-to-phone app installation, Android enthusiasts have taken to scanning quirky barcodes, or QR codes, to quickly install an application from a blog or print magazine recommendation. To grab those QRs, you need Barcode Scanner. It also offers some basic Google search functionality, but there are better shopping apps, one covered in this list in particular.
Google Chrome to Phone and Android2Cloud:
They're two sides to the same very futuristic-feeling coin. Both require the use of Google's Chrome browser. Chrome to Phone sends links, Maps locations, or text from Chrome right to your Android phone, while Android2Cloud does the opposite (via the Browser's "Share" function). They save everyone a lot of typing, self-emailing, and other awkward moments by naturally linking Google products together.
Dropbox:
File-syncing app Dropbox is so good at doing so many things, but at its most basic level, it seamlessly syncs file across all your devices. On an Android phone, that means making fewer cable transfers necessary, easy installation of non-Market apps, and a way to take pictures, video, or sound recordings and have them instantly available on your desktop or other devices.
Swype:
Keyboard-replacement Swype has previously been available as a limited-time beta (as well as a clandestine off-Market installation), and may come back to be offered in beta preview again. It's also installed by default, but not always activated, on a few Motorola and Samsung phones. But if you can get it on your phone somehow, it's worth it. Swype is a great keyboard idea, especially for one-handed text jobs. Simply run your finger over the letters of a word, and for the vast majority of entries, Swype gets it. If it doesn't get it, its suggestion list almost always has the right word. If it has no idea, you type out the word manually, and Swype stores it for next time. The newest versions also include the Voice Input key missing from earlier betas. Here's hoping Swype gets itself onto the Market soon, because we know plenty of customers willing to pay.
Tasker:
If you had to name one app that delivers on the promise of Android's open, customizable nature, Tasker would be it. The automation utility can pull off any tasks you can put your mind to. Want to have your phone turn on GPS and Bluetooth, raise the ringer volume, and automatically launch the Navigation app when you're in the car, but turn everything off and silent when you put your phone face-down at work? You can do almost anything with Tasker.
Voice Actions / Voice Search:
Create and send text messages and emails, launch Navigation directions, search the web, leave a note for yourself, and play MP3s or streaming music, all with your voice. That's the promise of Google's Voice Actions update to the Voice Search app, which is free but requires Android 2.2. Once more bugs get worked out, Voice Actions will be a pretty amazing service. In the meantime, it's a nice preview of great functionality to come.
Google Goggles:
When Googles works, it feels like living in the future. Snap a picture of an object, a bar code, a piece of art, or something else recognizable, and Googles will harness the power of Google to bring you back as much information as possible on it—where the logo comes from, when the painting was made, etc. It doesn't always work, and it definitely doesn't work with people you see in-person (yet), but it's a neat app to keep in your pocket for finding out more about that great great bottle of beer you just put down.
^3 (Cubed):
It's not much of a stretch to say Cubed (or "superscript 3") is better than the default Music app built into Android. Even the improvements Motorola, HTC, and others have made are largely cosmetic, while Cubed reshapes the look and feel of music playing and browsing. Flip through artists and albums by spinning an almost endless cube, one covered with album art that Cubed can easily pick out for your tracks. Switch the view to a wallpaper mode if you'd like, or a "Morph Flow" that has albums sliding into one another in a vertical stream. There's a track reporter for the Last.fm service, optional alerts for concerts happening nearby involving the artists in your music collection, and a generally better playlist builder. Cubed isn't a knock-off of other music apps—just a good one, on its terms.
Gmote 2.0:
Gmote is a remote control application that works like a charm with VLC, our favorite media player, while also passing muster on a few other media apps on Windows, Mac, and Linux. If you've got a specific media center in mind to control (Windows Media Center, Boxee, XBMC), you can usually find a free or cheap control app in the Market; Gmote is just the app that works across all systems, over 3G or Wi-Fi, and has made hundreds of thousands of users happy with their phone's hidden powers.
Note for iTunes fans: If you're an Android owner who also has iTunes as the center of their home media life, check out Remote for iTunes. It's $5, and likely worth the cost for anyone with split allegiances between the Apple and Google worlds.
Kindle:
Kindle is the app that brings Amazon's Kindle ebook system to your Android device. It syncs notes and page position with your other Kindle devices, and it's really fun to zoom book previews from your browser onto your phone.
Listen:
Google's own podcast manager for the Android is also the easiest to use. Search through Google's vast database of podcasts for long-term subscriptions or quick news takes on a topic, subscribe in Listen (or Google Reader, where subscriptions are synced), and play your picks through an app that's good at keeping your place and configurable to grab new episodes only when it makes sense (on Wi-Fi, and only while plugged in, if you'd like).
Subsonic:
Google's announced that, with their purchase of Simplify Media, remote music streaming from computers to Android phones through cloud storage is likely on its way. In the meantime, you can stream music from any Windows, Mac, or Linux system with Subsonic, a free Android app supported by $10 desktop software (which includes a substantial free trial). The Android app includes offline caching for playback, just in case your home computer gets knocked offline, but otherwise you've always got access to your great tunes on the go with Subsonic.
Pandora:
Pandora's streaming, recommendation-based radio service is catching on like wildfire, and on the Android platform, it delivers just what you'd expect. You enter in one or more artists, songs, or moods you want to frame your mix around, choose a low or high-quality stream, then play your tracks in the background—though you can learn more about the artists or buy the tracks from the app, too.
RockPlayer:
Your Android can play a few video formats on its own. With RockPlayer, it can play nearly any video, simple as that. It's a great app for DVD rips, downloaded videos, Windows-specific formats, and other non-standard clips. (Note: You might need to search out "RockPlayer" in the Market, or on AppBrain, and find the right build of RockPlayer for your phone's processor, v6 or v7, if the standard v7 version linked here doesn't run on your device).
Photography
Andropan:
Your high-megapixel Android camera lacks one thing—a wide view of the big vistas you can see with your own eyes. Solution: take a series of calm, steady shots across a plane, then load them into Andropan to stitch them together into one big masterwork of wide-angle imagery.
Backup and Security
WaveSecure:
Your Android phone has a whole lot of your life loaded onto it—everything in your Google accounts, your contact list, apps with sensitive data, and more. WaveSecure backs up your SMS and call logs and contact data on a regular basis, and can upload your photo and video files, too, which is pretty handy if your phone goes dead. Where WaveSecure really shines, though, is in its security features. You can "lock down" a phone from any and all access when you're traveling, completely wipe out a phone and its memory card, and remotely lock or wipe a stolen phone, plus try to find its location using GPS. WaveSecure is free to download and try for seven days, then costs about $20 per year after that.
Food, Shopping, and Entertainment
Shopper:
Shopper's the app that's really good at recognizing objects you find in stores and pulling comparative prices from other web and retail vendors. So good, in fact, it's hard not to feel guilty using it. ShopSavvy is a very good comparison-shop app, too, with different helper features, but we like Shopper for its much-improved speed, its ability to scan both photos and barcodes, and tight Google search integration.
Yelp:
Yelp's a great app for finding what's good to eat close to wherever you're holding your phone. You can even point your phone down a street and see the icons of reviewed restaurants, and other local items of interest, overlaid on your camera feed, augmented reality style. It's a free app and a handy utility, whether or not you agree with the popular consensus reviews.
Lots of people are picking up new Android phones these days—nearly 200,000 per day, at last count. Google's default apps are pretty handy, but the Market has many great apps, most of them free. Here's a look at our favorite free and cheap Android apps.
We're using the great app search and sync service AppBrain to create a Lifehacker Pack for Android. If you install the AppBrain App Market on your Android phone and sign in through the AppBrain site (using a Google OAuth, no-password-revealed log-in), you can check off and click install multiple apps from the list, or visit the individual [AppBrain] link at the end of each app write-up to find out more and install. If you install AppBrain's Fast Web Install, it's actually ridiculously easy—click "Install" on AppBrain, and your apps instantly start downloading to your phone (as we previously detailed).
Like our iPhone Pack, this list is no short grocery checklist. You can skip to any of the sections from these links:
Productivity
Internet/Communication
Location-Aware
Utilities
Media
Photography
Backup and Security
Food, Shopping, and Entertainment
Photography
Productivity
Astrid:
Astrid is a simple to-do manager into which you simply start typing, add context if you want to, then save. You can create advanced filters in Astrid, sync it to your Remember the Milk account for access on the web, and, most helpfully, Astrid is an extremely tenacious beast that won't stop reminding, beeping, and buzzing you until certain very important tasks are done. [AppBrain]
Evernote:
Evernote's universal note app on Android is not as elegant, fast, or intuitive as Evernote on iPhone. But with the latest update, the app has gotten a lot more usable. There's a home screen widget for quickly searching out notes or recording new text, image, or audio notes. You can send any text, image, or audio on your phone to Evernote through the "Share" menu. And with offline caching and speed improvements, Evernote offers an impressive, seamless thoughts-into-notes experience. [AppBrain].
Mint.com Personal Finance:
Even the most stalwart privacy/password protectors among Lifehacker's staff eventually handed it all over to Mint to benefit from the great power of having all your balances, spending, budgets, and planning tools in one place. You can PIN-protect the app, of course, or go the opposite route and keep a quick-glance widget on your home screen, along with recent transactions in a folder or your searchable items. [AppBrain]
mNote:
At least some of the Lifehacker editors consider synchronized cloud-based note service Simplenote to be the Holy Grail of ubiquitous plain text capture. The mNote app is, at least, a notes app for Androids that usually don't have one built in, with the added benefit of those notes constantly saving themselves and being easily accessible everywhere else. [AppBrain]
TripIt:
TripIt saves you from the print-outs, email searching, and airport panic sessions common to modern-day travel. Sign up for TripIt, forward your travel itineraries along (or have TripIt automatically import them from Gmail), and then you've got a whole master travel plan on your phone—check-in links, flight information, weather and traffic stats for your destination, and so on. It's an essential for frequent fliers, hotel guests, and train travelers. [AppBrain].
Internet/Communication
Dolphin Browser HD:
For getting around the web, Android's built-in Browser is compatible, capable, and fast—especially under Android 2.2. But Dolphin Browser's got a few handy tricks up its sleeve. Gesture-based browsing, tabs on top that disappear for full-screen browsing, add-ons that can block ads and send articles to Read It Later, and quite a few other doodads worth checking out.
Facebook for Android:
Until this past month, it was a shame how diminished the Facebook client looked in the shadow of its successful iPhone counterpart. But now Facebook's Android presence is capable, good-looking, and even offers a few of its own unique perks, like a pull-up notifications shade and a front-page scroll of recent photos from friends.
PDANet:
Data tethering is built into the latest builds of Android. But unless you own a Nexus One, or happened to luck into a cell carrier that's generous with their bandwidth, you probably have to pay an extra sum every month to use your Android's net connection with a computer. PDANet is a reliable third-party option, for Windows and Mac systems, to connect to your Android phone's data plan via USB cable or Bluetooth. It is nothing like free ($19 for the full version), but you can use the free version as long as you'd like—it just doesn't allow access to secure (https) sites. Pay the one-time fee, or use it in a pinch, and you'll get why PDANet is an essential.
Google Voice:
Android's tight integration with Google Voice, the service that puts your voicemail, SMS, and phone management in the cloud, is one of its key selling points. After many revisions, Google's Voice app now makes calling or SMS messaging with a Voice number nearly indistinguishable from a standard call, and the voicemail transcriptions and playback are just another nice bonus of the Google halo.
Trillian:
Mobile IM client Trillian manages multiple chat accounts through one app, and we like the interface, too. Because it's in beta, you might want to check out the more tested eBuddy Messenger, which offers similar multi-IM capabilities, but Trillian looks pretty darned nice to us, even in its infancy. That it sends pictures over IM, across networks, with no problems speaks quite a bit to its usefulness alone.
Honestly, we could have gone one of a few ways with this recommendation, but Twitter seems like the best app for the average Twitter user. Other apps, like Seesmic and Twidroyd, offer all kinds of nitpick options, like choosing between old-school "RT" and the official retweet methods and supporting multiple accounts. But if you like clean looks, smooth transitions, and just an easy way to update your status, the official app is the way to go.
Location-Aware
Google Maps & Navigation:
Get in your car. Press the microphone icon on your screen. Say "Navigate to Nathaniel Square, Rochester," and after a quick ping, you're getting turn-by-turn directions, read out loud to you. Press the Layers button, and you'll also get banks and gas stations for necessary detours. Press the time estimate, and you'll get alternate routes with live, color-coded traffic. The Maps app itself is really handy, too, with built-in, tilt-to-turn Street View among its neatest the-future-is-now applications. But it's the directions, and Navigation in particular, that set Android's location powers apart.
My Tracks:
Whether you're into bike rides, runs or walks, hiking, driving, or other feats of movement, you'll dig how much data My Tracks can deliver. Routes get plotted out on Maps, while a Google Docs spreadsheet can be filled with mileage, elevation, timing, and all manner of notes on what you did and where.
AppBrain App Market:
Android's Market app could be a lot better. AppBrain makes it better, faster, and more search-able, and loads it with savvier recommendations. The basic AppBrain app provides a good search and categorization for Android apps, but more importantly, the ability to sync your list of installed apps two ways to your Google-linked web account. Pick out a bunch of apps on AppBrain, and you can have them installed (or removed) all at once on your next sync. Because many veteran and enthusiastic Android users are hooked into AppBrain, the recommendations and popular app listings tend to be much better than the Market.
Fast Web InstallerThe Fast Web Installer app hooks into AppBrain to make the installation process instantaneous—click "Install" on an app on AppBrain's site, and your app starts installing on your phone as soon as your eyes shift from monitor to phone. These apps made this list possible in some ways, and we highly recommend installing both to make installing everything else very easy.
Astro File Manager:
You usually won't need it, but a good file manager is handy to have when you need to install an unofficial app, send a file into a particular app, or just open a PDF. Astro lets you comb the contents of your microSD card and act on the files there, whether to move, delete, open, or otherwise tinker.
Barcode Scanner:
Until the Market updates with Google's plans to provide over-the-air, instant browser-to-phone app installation, Android enthusiasts have taken to scanning quirky barcodes, or QR codes, to quickly install an application from a blog or print magazine recommendation. To grab those QRs, you need Barcode Scanner. It also offers some basic Google search functionality, but there are better shopping apps, one covered in this list in particular.
Google Chrome to Phone and Android2Cloud:
They're two sides to the same very futuristic-feeling coin. Both require the use of Google's Chrome browser. Chrome to Phone sends links, Maps locations, or text from Chrome right to your Android phone, while Android2Cloud does the opposite (via the Browser's "Share" function). They save everyone a lot of typing, self-emailing, and other awkward moments by naturally linking Google products together.
Dropbox:
File-syncing app Dropbox is so good at doing so many things, but at its most basic level, it seamlessly syncs file across all your devices. On an Android phone, that means making fewer cable transfers necessary, easy installation of non-Market apps, and a way to take pictures, video, or sound recordings and have them instantly available on your desktop or other devices.
Keyboard-replacement Swype has previously been available as a limited-time beta (as well as a clandestine off-Market installation), and may come back to be offered in beta preview again. It's also installed by default, but not always activated, on a few Motorola and Samsung phones. But if you can get it on your phone somehow, it's worth it. Swype is a great keyboard idea, especially for one-handed text jobs. Simply run your finger over the letters of a word, and for the vast majority of entries, Swype gets it. If it doesn't get it, its suggestion list almost always has the right word. If it has no idea, you type out the word manually, and Swype stores it for next time. The newest versions also include the Voice Input key missing from earlier betas. Here's hoping Swype gets itself onto the Market soon, because we know plenty of customers willing to pay.
Tasker:
If you had to name one app that delivers on the promise of Android's open, customizable nature, Tasker would be it. The automation utility can pull off any tasks you can put your mind to. Want to have your phone turn on GPS and Bluetooth, raise the ringer volume, and automatically launch the Navigation app when you're in the car, but turn everything off and silent when you put your phone face-down at work? You can do almost anything with Tasker.
Voice Actions / Voice Search:
Create and send text messages and emails, launch Navigation directions, search the web, leave a note for yourself, and play MP3s or streaming music, all with your voice. That's the promise of Google's Voice Actions update to the Voice Search app, which is free but requires Android 2.2. Once more bugs get worked out, Voice Actions will be a pretty amazing service. In the meantime, it's a nice preview of great functionality to come.
Google Goggles:
When Googles works, it feels like living in the future. Snap a picture of an object, a bar code, a piece of art, or something else recognizable, and Googles will harness the power of Google to bring you back as much information as possible on it—where the logo comes from, when the painting was made, etc. It doesn't always work, and it definitely doesn't work with people you see in-person (yet), but it's a neat app to keep in your pocket for finding out more about that great great bottle of beer you just put down.
^3 (Cubed):
It's not much of a stretch to say Cubed (or "superscript 3") is better than the default Music app built into Android. Even the improvements Motorola, HTC, and others have made are largely cosmetic, while Cubed reshapes the look and feel of music playing and browsing. Flip through artists and albums by spinning an almost endless cube, one covered with album art that Cubed can easily pick out for your tracks. Switch the view to a wallpaper mode if you'd like, or a "Morph Flow" that has albums sliding into one another in a vertical stream. There's a track reporter for the Last.fm service, optional alerts for concerts happening nearby involving the artists in your music collection, and a generally better playlist builder. Cubed isn't a knock-off of other music apps—just a good one, on its terms.
Gmote 2.0:
Gmote is a remote control application that works like a charm with VLC, our favorite media player, while also passing muster on a few other media apps on Windows, Mac, and Linux. If you've got a specific media center in mind to control (Windows Media Center, Boxee, XBMC), you can usually find a free or cheap control app in the Market; Gmote is just the app that works across all systems, over 3G or Wi-Fi, and has made hundreds of thousands of users happy with their phone's hidden powers.
Note for iTunes fans: If you're an Android owner who also has iTunes as the center of their home media life, check out Remote for iTunes. It's $5, and likely worth the cost for anyone with split allegiances between the Apple and Google worlds.
Kindle:
Kindle is the app that brings Amazon's Kindle ebook system to your Android device. It syncs notes and page position with your other Kindle devices, and it's really fun to zoom book previews from your browser onto your phone.
Google's own podcast manager for the Android is also the easiest to use. Search through Google's vast database of podcasts for long-term subscriptions or quick news takes on a topic, subscribe in Listen (or Google Reader, where subscriptions are synced), and play your picks through an app that's good at keeping your place and configurable to grab new episodes only when it makes sense (on Wi-Fi, and only while plugged in, if you'd like).
Subsonic:
Google's announced that, with their purchase of Simplify Media, remote music streaming from computers to Android phones through cloud storage is likely on its way. In the meantime, you can stream music from any Windows, Mac, or Linux system with Subsonic, a free Android app supported by $10 desktop software (which includes a substantial free trial). The Android app includes offline caching for playback, just in case your home computer gets knocked offline, but otherwise you've always got access to your great tunes on the go with Subsonic.
Pandora:
Pandora's streaming, recommendation-based radio service is catching on like wildfire, and on the Android platform, it delivers just what you'd expect. You enter in one or more artists, songs, or moods you want to frame your mix around, choose a low or high-quality stream, then play your tracks in the background—though you can learn more about the artists or buy the tracks from the app, too.
Your Android can play a few video formats on its own. With RockPlayer, it can play nearly any video, simple as that. It's a great app for DVD rips, downloaded videos, Windows-specific formats, and other non-standard clips. (Note: You might need to search out "RockPlayer" in the Market, or on AppBrain, and find the right build of RockPlayer for your phone's processor, v6 or v7, if the standard v7 version linked here doesn't run on your device).
Photography
Andropan:
Your high-megapixel Android camera lacks one thing—a wide view of the big vistas you can see with your own eyes. Solution: take a series of calm, steady shots across a plane, then load them into Andropan to stitch them together into one big masterwork of wide-angle imagery.
WaveSecure:
Your Android phone has a whole lot of your life loaded onto it—everything in your Google accounts, your contact list, apps with sensitive data, and more. WaveSecure backs up your SMS and call logs and contact data on a regular basis, and can upload your photo and video files, too, which is pretty handy if your phone goes dead. Where WaveSecure really shines, though, is in its security features. You can "lock down" a phone from any and all access when you're traveling, completely wipe out a phone and its memory card, and remotely lock or wipe a stolen phone, plus try to find its location using GPS. WaveSecure is free to download and try for seven days, then costs about $20 per year after that.
Food, Shopping, and Entertainment
Shopper:
Shopper's the app that's really good at recognizing objects you find in stores and pulling comparative prices from other web and retail vendors. So good, in fact, it's hard not to feel guilty using it. ShopSavvy is a very good comparison-shop app, too, with different helper features, but we like Shopper for its much-improved speed, its ability to scan both photos and barcodes, and tight Google search integration.
Yelp:
Yelp's a great app for finding what's good to eat close to wherever you're holding your phone. You can even point your phone down a street and see the icons of reviewed restaurants, and other local items of interest, overlaid on your camera feed, augmented reality style. It's a free app and a handy utility, whether or not you agree with the popular consensus reviews.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Google CEO Exposes Dark Side of Social Networking
Google CEO Eric Schmidt fears that too much information is shared online, and predicts that people will one day change their name and reinvent themselves in order to escape their digital past. That point of view might be extreme, but it is true that social networking has forced us to more closely examine and redefine the concepts of privacy and identity.
There are many exciting benefits to the evolution of the Web and the rise of social networking. Facebook and Twitter have enabled people to reconnect with friends and family, and provide a platform for sharing information and staying in touch. The real-time aspect of social network status updates has also transformed online search and breaking news.
The problem is that social networking also provides a very powerful tool for embarrassing yourself or ruining your reputation on a global and virtually eternal scale. Once you put it online, it is shared around the world in seconds, and can still be recalled after decades.
You're Hired
It is not uncommon now for the job application process to include sharing your social networking account information. Tech savvy employers want to be able to check out your Facebook profile and your tweet history on Twitter.
What you say and how you act online says a lot about you. Examining your online persona gives employers a raw and unfiltered glimpse at who you really are, and is a much more effective tool for screening potential employees than the psychological personality or aptitude tests relied on in years gone by.
You're Fired
There is a long and growing list of stories of people losing their job as a result of Facebook status updates or Twitter tweets. It is generally a bad idea to bad mouth your boss or your job on a social networking site, or to post pics and status updates about how much fun you're having at the beach after you called in sick.
One poor soul learned this lesson the hard way--possibly costing him a job at Cisco before he even started. Employers are watching, so letting the world know that you hate the job you have been offered is a quick way to get that offer rescinded.
What's Your (Friend's) Credit Score?
It's all about who you know. In this case, who you know could make or break whether or not you can get a loan. Some banks are using services like Rapleaf to scan your social network and identify contacts connected with you that also do business with the financial institution. Based on the financial stability and credit history of your social network connections, the bank can make an assumption about what sort of credit risk you might be.
Till Death Do Us Part
It seems fair to assume that your spouse would be a Facebook friend, and a part of your Twitterverse. Why not? Love is grand, and you want to share everything with your partner...until you don't. If the relationship goes south, you may want to unfriend your ex and be careful what you say online.
A Time Magazine article explains "Lawyers, however, love these sites, which can be evidentiary gold mines. Did your husband's new girlfriend Twitter about getting a piece of jewelry? The court might regard that as marital assets being disbursed to a third party. Did your wife tell the court she's incapable of getting a job? Then your lawyer should ask why she's pursuing job interviews through LinkedIn."
You're probably familiar with the phrase "an elephant never forgets". Well, the Internet never forgets and it has zettabytes of archived storage capacity that can be searched in seconds thanks to companies like Google. I don't recommend changing your identity to try and dodge your digital past, but I do recommend exercising a modicum of discretion and common sense regarding what you post online.
Intel Corp (INTC.O) said it would buy security software maker McAfee Inc (MFE.N) for $7.7 billion to capitalize on rising demand from consumers for better protection of their laptops, smartphones and tablets.
Intel Corp (INTC.O) said it would buy security software maker McAfee Inc (MFE.N) for $7.7 billion to capitalize on rising demand from consumers for better protection of their laptops, smartphones and tablets.
Intel will pay $48 per share in cash for McAfee in its biggest acquisition ever. The price represents a 60 percent premium to McAfee's Wednesday closing price -- a level company executives defended as within the range of other large software and security deals.
The pact is the latest in a steady stream of technology deals, including Dell Inc's (DELL.O) $1.3 billion purchase of storage company 3PAR Inc (PAR.N) earlier this week.
The McAfee deal, which caught some analysts by surprise and worried others because it marries a chipmaker and a software maker, underscores Intel's determination to continue expanding beyond the PC market to hot businesses like mobile devices and smartphones.
But for the moment, the biggest advantage in the deal may be Intel's ability to sell McAfee's software to PC customers. Intel supplies roughly 80 percent of the microprocessors used in PCs.
"Everywhere we sell a microprocessor there's an opportunity for a security software sale to go with it," Intel Chief Executive Paul Otellini said on a conference call.
Intel shares dropped 3.5 percent in morning trade, while shares of McAfee surged 57 percent and helped boost the wider security sector. Symantec Corp (SYMC.O), the biggest security company, saw its shares rise 5.2 percent.
"It's slightly out of left field. Nobody would have seen this coming," said Chris Hickey, an analyst at Atlantic Equities. "At the simplest level, Intel has strong relationships with a number of PC and server vendors. This should be an opportunity to cross-sell McAfee's security software into those PC vendors."
Hickey added, "Ultimately, when we look several years out, almost every device in the home is likely to be connected to the Internet. Intel clearly wants to participate in that market."
DEAL FOLLOWS PARTNERSHIP
McAfee, which was founded in 1987 and had revenue of $2 billion in 2009, has been working with Intel on a variety of projects for the last 18 months.
Through that partnership, Intel "decided a combination could be very powerful for bringing enhanced security to consumers," Renee James, who runs Intel's software and services group, said in an interview.
"We have lots of activities going on in growing connected devices ... from connected television to mobile devices," she said. "As we look at the businesses we're in, we see that security is the No. 1 purchase consideration. We believe that we can enhance security with hardware and come up with a better solution."
Intel said that McAfee would become a wholly owned subsidiary, maintaining all of its current business lines, but that any "deep collaboration" between the two companies was likely about two years away.
Boards of both companies had approved the deal, and Intel expects it to close once it gains McAfee shareholder approval and regulatory clearance. Executives said they hoped to close the deal by the end of the year.
Vijay Rakesh, an analyst at Sterne Agee, said he was surprised by the size of the premium.
"I think people were probably (expecting) some smaller acquisitions from Intel. It's definitely -- even by Intel's standards -- a pretty big acquisition for them." said Rakesh.
The chipmaker has made several software acquisitions in the last few years, including the purchase in 2009 of Wind River, a company focused on mobile software.
Some analysts, including Trip Chowdhry of Global Equities Research, questioned the logic of combining a chipmaker with a software security firm.
"I think this is a very short-sighted acquisition because of two things: McAfee is of an older generation and their focus has been desktop security -- that is their bread and butter," Chowdhry said. "Secondly, I think if you think about desktop security, Microsoft's essentially is a better product."
Another analyst, Dunham Winoto at Avian Securities, said of Intel: "I'm not sure if this is going to be something they need to do at this stage. Normally they had bought companies that are more along the lines of hardware."
In addition to the Dell-3PAR deal announced earlier this week, International Business Machines Corp (IBM.N) last Friday said it would buy software firm Unica Corp (UNCA.O) for $480 million. Last month, Tyco Electronics Ltd (TEL.N) agreed to buy network equipment maker ADC Telecommunications Inc (ADCT.O) for $1.25 billion.
Technology companies such as Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ.N) and Oracle Corp (ORCL.O) are also believed to be trawling for deals.
Intel was advised by Goldman Sachs and Morrison & Foerster LLP in the deal while McAfee's advisers were Morgan Stanley and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati.
Google Tablet Coming in November From HTC -- or Motorola?
Today’s big rumor, coming from an un-named single source by way of the Download Squad blog, is that a Google tablet, made by HTC, running Google’s Chrome OS, and available on the Verizon network, will go on sale on November 26th this year. That’s Black Friday.
Or, maybe not: Citing similarly un-named sources among “upstream component makers,” Digitimes asserts that it’s Motorola, not HTC, that is Google’s first choice for a tablet, which Digitimes says will be based on Android.
The Motorola-made Google tablet will utilize Nvidia’s Tegra 2 processor platform, and will have a 10.1-inch Sharp-manufactured LCD that’s not as bright as the iPad, but is thinner, says Digitimes. It will be in production by the end of 2010, the paper added.
Download Squad goes on to speculate about the Chrome tablet’s hardware, writing that “the device could be based on NVidia’s Tegra 2 platform and sport a 1280×720 multitouch display, 2GB of RAM, minimum 32GB SSD, WiFi/Bluetooth/LTE connectivity, GPS, webcam, and possibly expandable storage via a multi-card reader,” but that is the author’s guesswork. What of the actual “facts” of the story, though?
HTC would make sense. After all, the hardware-maker is behind many Android phones, and worked with Google on the original G1 Googlephone. That part lines up.
Motorola would make sense, too, given the company’s big commitment to Android in the past year.
As for Verizon, that too is a pretty credible pairing given the net-neutrality furor of the past couple weeks, which has seen Verizon and Google clubbing together to dismiss the need for an un-tiered internet for mobile devices. That, and the fact that Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam said back in May that Verizon and Google are “working on tablets together.”
And the launch date? Either genius or incredibly dumb. If Google were to make the announcement ahead of time, it would certainly get a lot of headlines due to the sheer ballsiness of launching a product into the morass of hype that is the busiest shopping day of the year. But once those headlines have come and gone, the product actually could get drowned in that morass and just disappear. Consumer electronics meant for strong holiday sales typically debut earlier in the year, giving distributors and retailers time to stock up before the holiday rush begins.
Adding some credibility to the timing is TechCrunch’s report on Wednesday that Google is planing to launch the Chrome app store in October. That store, which would give web developers a marketplace for selling web-based applications, might play into the app strategy for an Android-based tablet as well as a Chrome-based one: In addition to native Android apps from the Android Market, tablet users in November would be able to purchase web apps from the just-launched Chrome store. The fact that Google is reportedly planning to charge just 5% commission on Chrome apps, versus the 30% that Apple charges, suggests Google is gearing up to go after the iPad and iPhone in an aggressive way. (Note: (and that Google also charges a 30% transaction fee in its Android Market.)
I really don’t know which way to call this. The pieces all fit so well together, but the sources are odd and unconvincing. Is it possible that Google will launch two tablets this year, one based on Chrome and the other on Android?
Either way, the prospect of an HTC/Verizon/Google tablet or a Motorola/Verizon/Google tablet appeals to us.
Or, maybe not: Citing similarly un-named sources among “upstream component makers,” Digitimes asserts that it’s Motorola, not HTC, that is Google’s first choice for a tablet, which Digitimes says will be based on Android.
The Motorola-made Google tablet will utilize Nvidia’s Tegra 2 processor platform, and will have a 10.1-inch Sharp-manufactured LCD that’s not as bright as the iPad, but is thinner, says Digitimes. It will be in production by the end of 2010, the paper added.
Download Squad goes on to speculate about the Chrome tablet’s hardware, writing that “the device could be based on NVidia’s Tegra 2 platform and sport a 1280×720 multitouch display, 2GB of RAM, minimum 32GB SSD, WiFi/Bluetooth/LTE connectivity, GPS, webcam, and possibly expandable storage via a multi-card reader,” but that is the author’s guesswork. What of the actual “facts” of the story, though?
HTC would make sense. After all, the hardware-maker is behind many Android phones, and worked with Google on the original G1 Googlephone. That part lines up.
Motorola would make sense, too, given the company’s big commitment to Android in the past year.
As for Verizon, that too is a pretty credible pairing given the net-neutrality furor of the past couple weeks, which has seen Verizon and Google clubbing together to dismiss the need for an un-tiered internet for mobile devices. That, and the fact that Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam said back in May that Verizon and Google are “working on tablets together.”
And the launch date? Either genius or incredibly dumb. If Google were to make the announcement ahead of time, it would certainly get a lot of headlines due to the sheer ballsiness of launching a product into the morass of hype that is the busiest shopping day of the year. But once those headlines have come and gone, the product actually could get drowned in that morass and just disappear. Consumer electronics meant for strong holiday sales typically debut earlier in the year, giving distributors and retailers time to stock up before the holiday rush begins.
Adding some credibility to the timing is TechCrunch’s report on Wednesday that Google is planing to launch the Chrome app store in October. That store, which would give web developers a marketplace for selling web-based applications, might play into the app strategy for an Android-based tablet as well as a Chrome-based one: In addition to native Android apps from the Android Market, tablet users in November would be able to purchase web apps from the just-launched Chrome store. The fact that Google is reportedly planning to charge just 5% commission on Chrome apps, versus the 30% that Apple charges, suggests Google is gearing up to go after the iPad and iPhone in an aggressive way. (Note: (and that Google also charges a 30% transaction fee in its Android Market.)
I really don’t know which way to call this. The pieces all fit so well together, but the sources are odd and unconvincing. Is it possible that Google will launch two tablets this year, one based on Chrome and the other on Android?
Either way, the prospect of an HTC/Verizon/Google tablet or a Motorola/Verizon/Google tablet appeals to us.
European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition: SolarWorld Einstein Award 2010 goes to Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus |19 August 2010
SolarWorld is to present the 2010 SolarWorld Einstein Award to Nobel Peace Prize laureate and micro-finance pioneer Muhammad Yunus in September. The award is being presented in recognition of Yunus' micro-loans for the poor, created through Grameen Bank, of which he is founder, which have made possible the installation of more than 400,000 small solar power systems, securing energy supplies for people in rural regions of Bangladesh who live far from the national utility grid.
"Professor Yunus stands for radically new thinking in economics and banking. He has recognized the potential of the poorest of this world who manage to make a decent living on the basis of a small starting credit, a lot of creativity and the sun as the source of energy. This is more than exemplary," explains Dr. Ing. h. c. Frank Asbeck, chairman and CEO of SolarWorld.
With help from micro-loans, program recipients can obtain small off-grid solar power plants. This clean energy enables regional residents to work after dark, learn more in school and operate electric machines, radios and mobile phones. At the same time, it reduces climate and health hazards emanating from kerosene lamps.
Thousands of women have been trained in the installation and maintenance of these solar plants, providing them with reliable income. Due to savings on kerosene costs, solar plant owners can pay back the loans within two to three years. Yunus' nonprofit company Grameen Shakti (GS) is pursuing the objective of installing one million solar power systems by 2015.
The SolarWorld Einstein Award 2010 will be presented in a ceremony at the 25th European Photovoltaic Conference in Valencia, Spain, on Sept. 6, 2010.
"Professor Yunus stands for radically new thinking in economics and banking. He has recognized the potential of the poorest of this world who manage to make a decent living on the basis of a small starting credit, a lot of creativity and the sun as the source of energy. This is more than exemplary," explains Dr. Ing. h. c. Frank Asbeck, chairman and CEO of SolarWorld.
With help from micro-loans, program recipients can obtain small off-grid solar power plants. This clean energy enables regional residents to work after dark, learn more in school and operate electric machines, radios and mobile phones. At the same time, it reduces climate and health hazards emanating from kerosene lamps.
Thousands of women have been trained in the installation and maintenance of these solar plants, providing them with reliable income. Due to savings on kerosene costs, solar plant owners can pay back the loans within two to three years. Yunus' nonprofit company Grameen Shakti (GS) is pursuing the objective of installing one million solar power systems by 2015.
The SolarWorld Einstein Award 2010 will be presented in a ceremony at the 25th European Photovoltaic Conference in Valencia, Spain, on Sept. 6, 2010.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Big Films like We are the family,Dabang,Anjanna Anjaani,Kajrare,Aakrosh,Jhootha hi Sahi,Run Bhola Run,Action Replay,Golmal 3,Guzaarish,Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey,No Problem,Toonpur Ka Superhero,Tees maar khan,Yamla Pagla Deewana,Rockstar etc. are all set to come this year |free free free absolute about the forthcoming bollywood releases
August
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Aug 6 -Aisha- Abhay Deol, Sonam Kapoor, Cyrus Sahukar, Arunoday Singh Romance Rajshree Ojha Anil Kapoor Anil Kapoor Films Company, PVR Pictures
Aug 13 -Help -Bobby Deol, Mugdha Godse, Sophia Handa Horror, Thriller Rajiv Virani Sanjay Ahluwalia, Vinay Chowksey M/s Rupali Aum Entertainment Pvt. Ltd
Aug 13 -Peepli Live- Omkar Das Manikpuri, Raghuveer Yadav, Malaika Shenoy, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Shalini Vatsa Social Anusha Rizvi Aamir Khan, Kiran Rao Aamir Khan Productions
Aug 20 -And Once Again- Rajat Kapoor, Rituparna Sengupta, Antra Mali Drama Amol Palekar - Shangrila Kreations, Parth Productions
Aug 20 -Kis Hudh Tak... -Shital Shah, Pavan Sharma, Sujata Kumar, Bikramjeet Kanwarpal Thriller, Drama Tarun Dhanrajgir Tarun Dhanrajgir Pics India
Aug 20- Lafangey Parindey -Neil Nitin Mukesh, Deepika Padukone Romance Pradeep Sarkar Aditya Chopra Yash Raj Films
Aug 27- Aashayein -John Abraham, Prateeksha Lonkar, Shreyas Talpade, Anaitha Nair, Sonal Sehgal, Girish Karnad Drama Nagesh Kukunoor Elahe Hiptoola Percept Picture Company, SIC Productions, T-Series
Aug 27- Antardwand- Raj Singh Chaudhary, Vinay Pathak, Swati Sen, Akhilendra Mishra, Himanshi Crime Sushil Rajpal - Nawabs Cottage Productions
Aug 27 -Hello Darling- Celina Jaitly, Gul Panag, Eesha Koppikhar, Javed Jaffrey, Rajpal Yadav, Chunky Pandey, Amrita Arora, Divya Dutta - Subhash Ghai, Manoj Tiwari Ashok Ghai Mukta Arts Ltd
Aug 27 -Life Express- Kiran Janjani, Rituparna Sengupta, Divya Dutta, Yashpal Sharma, Alok Nath, Nandita Puri Drama Anup Das Sanjay Kalate Sky Motion Pictures
Aug 27- Madholal Keep Walking -Pranay Narayan, Subrat Dutta, Neela Gokhale, Swara Bhaskar, Varnita Aglawe Drama Jai Tank Jai Tank, Apurva Tank Dream Cuts
Aug 27- Soch Lo -Sartaj Singh Pannu, Nishan Nanaiah, Barkha Madan, Himanshu Kohli Suspense Sartaj Singh Pannu Karanbir Singh Pannu A Sun Entertainment
Aug - Benny and Babloo -Kay Kay Menon, Rajpal Yadav, Riya Sen, Shweta Tiwari, Rukhsar, Natassha Comedy Yunus Sajawal Umesh Chouhan Chamunda Films
September
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Sep 3- Mallika Sheena Nayar Horror Wilson Louis - PPC Horrotainment, Glorious Entertainment
Sep 3- We Are Family -Kareena Kapoor, Kajol, Arjun Rampal Drama, Romance Siddharth Malhotra Karan Johar Dharma Productions, Sony Pictures
Sep 10 -Dabangg -Salman Khan, Arbaaz Khan, Sonakshi Sinha, Sonu Sood, Mahie Gill Action Abhinav Kashyap Arbaaz Khan Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd, Arbaaz Khan Productions
Sep 17- Rakta Charitra - I -Vivek Oberoi, Shatrughan Sinha, Abhimanyu Shekhar Singh, Sushant Singh, Zarina Wahab Biographical Ram Gopal Varma Ram Gopal Varma -
Sep 24- Anjaana Anjaani -Ranbir Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Zayed Khan, Anupam Kher Romance Siddharth Anand Sajid Nadiadwala Nadiadwala Grandson Entertainment
Sep 24 -Crook: It's Good To Be Bad- Emraan Hashmi, Neha Sharma Social Mohit Suri Mahesh Bhatt -
Sep - Allah Ke Banday- Sharman Joshi, Faruque Kabir, Naseruddin Shah, Atul Kulkarni, Anjana Sukhani Drama, Action Faruque Kabir Ravi Walia Rising Star Entertainment
Sep - Donno Y... Na Jaane Kyun- Kapil Sharma, Megha Chatterjee, Aryan Vaid, Zeenat Aman, Kabir Bedi, Hazel, Helen - Sanjay Sharma Sanjay Sharma Shanti Niketan Films
Sep - Kajraare -Himesh Reshammiya, Mona Laizza, Amrita Singh, Natasha Sinha Romance Pooja Bhatt Bhushan Kumar, Kishan Kumar Super Cassettes Industries Ltd, T-Series
October
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Oct 1- Aakrosh- Ajay Devgan, Akshaye Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Paresh Rawal Social Priyadarshan Kumar Mangat Big Screen Entertainer, Zee Motion Pictures
Oct 1 -Chillar Party - Children -Vikas Bahl, Nitesh Tiwari - UTV Spot Boy
Oct 1 -Knock Out -Sanjay Dutt, Kangna Ranaut, Irrfan Khan, Gulshan Grover, Rukhsar Action Mani Shankar - Sohail Maklai Entertainment Pvt Ltd
Oct 15- Jhootha Hee Sahi -John Abraham, Pakhi, R Madhavan, Sohail Khan, Arbaaz Khan, Naseruddin Shah Romance Abbas Tyrewala Madhu Mantena Saregama-HMV
Oct 22 -Impatient Vivek- Vivek Sudarshan, Sayali Bhagat Comedy, Romance Rahat Kazmi Ashok Chauhan, Malvee S. A SEARCH Film's Production
Oct 22 -Paan Singh Tomar- Irrfan Khan, Mahie Gill Crime Tigmanshu Dhulia - UTV Motion Pictures
Oct - Phillum City -John Abraham - Deven Khote - UTV Motion Pictures
Oct - Run Bhola Run- Govinda, Tusshar Kapoor, Amisha Patel, Celina Jaitly, Rahul Dev, Sharat Saxena Comedy Neeraj Vora Dhillin Mehta Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd
November
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Nov 5- Action Replayy -Akshay Kumar, Aishwarya Rai, Randhir Kapoor, Neha Dhupia Drama Vipul Shah Vipul Shah -
Nov 5 -Golmaal 3 -Ajay Devgn, Kareena Kapoor, Mithun Chakraborty, Tusshar Kapoor, Shreyas Talpade, Kunal Khemu, Johny Lever, Arshad Warsi Comedy Rohit Shetty Dhilin Mehta Shri Ashtavinayak Cine Visions
Nov 17- Guzaarish- Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai, Aditya Roy Kapoor, Monikangana Dutta Romance Sanjay Leela Bhansali - UTV Motion Pictures
Nov 26- Break Ke Baad- Imran Khan, Deepika Padukone, Sharmila Tagore, Shahana Goswami, Yudishtir Urs Romance Danish Aslam Kunal Kohli Kunal Kohli Productions, Reliance Big Pictures
Nov - It's My Life -Harman Baweja, Nana Patekar, Genelia D'souza, Asrani Drama Anees Bazmee Sanjay Kapoor -
December
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Dec 3 -Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey -Abhishek Bachchan, Deepika Padukone Period, Thriller Ashutosh Gowariker Ashutosh Gowariker, Sunita Gowariker, Ajay Bijli Ashutosh Gowariker Productions, PVR Pictures
Dec 3- No Problem- Anil Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt, Akshaye Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Kangna Ranaut, Neetu Chandra, Paresh Rawal, Sushmita Sen Comedy Anees Bazmee Anil Kapoor Anil Kapoor Films Company, Spice Enfotainment
Dec 10 -No One Killed Jessica -Vidya Balan, Rani Mukherjee Social, Thriller Rajkumar Gupta - UTV Spot Boy
Dec 17- Toonpur Ka Superhero- Ajay Devgn, Kajol Children, Animation Kireet Khurana Kumar Mangat Big Screen Entertainment
Dec 24 -Tees Maar Khan -Akshay Kumar, Akshaye Khanna, Katrina Kaif Drama Farah Khan - Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd, Hari Om Productions, Three's Company
Dec 24 -Yamla Pagla Deewana- Sunny Deol, Dharmendra, Bobby Deol, Kulraj Randhawa, Paresh Rawal Comedy Sameer Karnik Sunny Deol Vijayta Films
Dec - Rockstar -Ranbir Kapoor Cult Imtiaz Ali Ronnie Screwvala UTV Motion Picture
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Aug 6 -Aisha- Abhay Deol, Sonam Kapoor, Cyrus Sahukar, Arunoday Singh Romance Rajshree Ojha Anil Kapoor Anil Kapoor Films Company, PVR Pictures
Aug 13 -Help -Bobby Deol, Mugdha Godse, Sophia Handa Horror, Thriller Rajiv Virani Sanjay Ahluwalia, Vinay Chowksey M/s Rupali Aum Entertainment Pvt. Ltd
Aug 13 -Peepli Live- Omkar Das Manikpuri, Raghuveer Yadav, Malaika Shenoy, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Shalini Vatsa Social Anusha Rizvi Aamir Khan, Kiran Rao Aamir Khan Productions
Aug 20 -And Once Again- Rajat Kapoor, Rituparna Sengupta, Antra Mali Drama Amol Palekar - Shangrila Kreations, Parth Productions
Aug 20 -Kis Hudh Tak... -Shital Shah, Pavan Sharma, Sujata Kumar, Bikramjeet Kanwarpal Thriller, Drama Tarun Dhanrajgir Tarun Dhanrajgir Pics India
Aug 20- Lafangey Parindey -Neil Nitin Mukesh, Deepika Padukone Romance Pradeep Sarkar Aditya Chopra Yash Raj Films
Aug 27- Aashayein -John Abraham, Prateeksha Lonkar, Shreyas Talpade, Anaitha Nair, Sonal Sehgal, Girish Karnad Drama Nagesh Kukunoor Elahe Hiptoola Percept Picture Company, SIC Productions, T-Series
Aug 27- Antardwand- Raj Singh Chaudhary, Vinay Pathak, Swati Sen, Akhilendra Mishra, Himanshi Crime Sushil Rajpal - Nawabs Cottage Productions
Aug 27 -Hello Darling- Celina Jaitly, Gul Panag, Eesha Koppikhar, Javed Jaffrey, Rajpal Yadav, Chunky Pandey, Amrita Arora, Divya Dutta - Subhash Ghai, Manoj Tiwari Ashok Ghai Mukta Arts Ltd
Aug 27 -Life Express- Kiran Janjani, Rituparna Sengupta, Divya Dutta, Yashpal Sharma, Alok Nath, Nandita Puri Drama Anup Das Sanjay Kalate Sky Motion Pictures
Aug 27- Madholal Keep Walking -Pranay Narayan, Subrat Dutta, Neela Gokhale, Swara Bhaskar, Varnita Aglawe Drama Jai Tank Jai Tank, Apurva Tank Dream Cuts
Aug 27- Soch Lo -Sartaj Singh Pannu, Nishan Nanaiah, Barkha Madan, Himanshu Kohli Suspense Sartaj Singh Pannu Karanbir Singh Pannu A Sun Entertainment
Aug - Benny and Babloo -Kay Kay Menon, Rajpal Yadav, Riya Sen, Shweta Tiwari, Rukhsar, Natassha Comedy Yunus Sajawal Umesh Chouhan Chamunda Films
September
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Sep 3- Mallika Sheena Nayar Horror Wilson Louis - PPC Horrotainment, Glorious Entertainment
Sep 3- We Are Family -Kareena Kapoor, Kajol, Arjun Rampal Drama, Romance Siddharth Malhotra Karan Johar Dharma Productions, Sony Pictures
Sep 10 -Dabangg -Salman Khan, Arbaaz Khan, Sonakshi Sinha, Sonu Sood, Mahie Gill Action Abhinav Kashyap Arbaaz Khan Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd, Arbaaz Khan Productions
Sep 17- Rakta Charitra - I -Vivek Oberoi, Shatrughan Sinha, Abhimanyu Shekhar Singh, Sushant Singh, Zarina Wahab Biographical Ram Gopal Varma Ram Gopal Varma -
Sep 24- Anjaana Anjaani -Ranbir Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Zayed Khan, Anupam Kher Romance Siddharth Anand Sajid Nadiadwala Nadiadwala Grandson Entertainment
Sep 24 -Crook: It's Good To Be Bad- Emraan Hashmi, Neha Sharma Social Mohit Suri Mahesh Bhatt -
Sep - Allah Ke Banday- Sharman Joshi, Faruque Kabir, Naseruddin Shah, Atul Kulkarni, Anjana Sukhani Drama, Action Faruque Kabir Ravi Walia Rising Star Entertainment
Sep - Donno Y... Na Jaane Kyun- Kapil Sharma, Megha Chatterjee, Aryan Vaid, Zeenat Aman, Kabir Bedi, Hazel, Helen - Sanjay Sharma Sanjay Sharma Shanti Niketan Films
Sep - Kajraare -Himesh Reshammiya, Mona Laizza, Amrita Singh, Natasha Sinha Romance Pooja Bhatt Bhushan Kumar, Kishan Kumar Super Cassettes Industries Ltd, T-Series
October
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Oct 1- Aakrosh- Ajay Devgan, Akshaye Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Paresh Rawal Social Priyadarshan Kumar Mangat Big Screen Entertainer, Zee Motion Pictures
Oct 1 -Chillar Party - Children -Vikas Bahl, Nitesh Tiwari - UTV Spot Boy
Oct 1 -Knock Out -Sanjay Dutt, Kangna Ranaut, Irrfan Khan, Gulshan Grover, Rukhsar Action Mani Shankar - Sohail Maklai Entertainment Pvt Ltd
Oct 15- Jhootha Hee Sahi -John Abraham, Pakhi, R Madhavan, Sohail Khan, Arbaaz Khan, Naseruddin Shah Romance Abbas Tyrewala Madhu Mantena Saregama-HMV
Oct 22 -Impatient Vivek- Vivek Sudarshan, Sayali Bhagat Comedy, Romance Rahat Kazmi Ashok Chauhan, Malvee S. A SEARCH Film's Production
Oct 22 -Paan Singh Tomar- Irrfan Khan, Mahie Gill Crime Tigmanshu Dhulia - UTV Motion Pictures
Oct - Phillum City -John Abraham - Deven Khote - UTV Motion Pictures
Oct - Run Bhola Run- Govinda, Tusshar Kapoor, Amisha Patel, Celina Jaitly, Rahul Dev, Sharat Saxena Comedy Neeraj Vora Dhillin Mehta Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd
November
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Nov 5- Action Replayy -Akshay Kumar, Aishwarya Rai, Randhir Kapoor, Neha Dhupia Drama Vipul Shah Vipul Shah -
Nov 5 -Golmaal 3 -Ajay Devgn, Kareena Kapoor, Mithun Chakraborty, Tusshar Kapoor, Shreyas Talpade, Kunal Khemu, Johny Lever, Arshad Warsi Comedy Rohit Shetty Dhilin Mehta Shri Ashtavinayak Cine Visions
Nov 17- Guzaarish- Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai, Aditya Roy Kapoor, Monikangana Dutta Romance Sanjay Leela Bhansali - UTV Motion Pictures
Nov 26- Break Ke Baad- Imran Khan, Deepika Padukone, Sharmila Tagore, Shahana Goswami, Yudishtir Urs Romance Danish Aslam Kunal Kohli Kunal Kohli Productions, Reliance Big Pictures
Nov - It's My Life -Harman Baweja, Nana Patekar, Genelia D'souza, Asrani Drama Anees Bazmee Sanjay Kapoor -
December
Release Date Film-Title Star-Cast Genre Director Producer Banner
Dec 3 -Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey -Abhishek Bachchan, Deepika Padukone Period, Thriller Ashutosh Gowariker Ashutosh Gowariker, Sunita Gowariker, Ajay Bijli Ashutosh Gowariker Productions, PVR Pictures
Dec 3- No Problem- Anil Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt, Akshaye Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Kangna Ranaut, Neetu Chandra, Paresh Rawal, Sushmita Sen Comedy Anees Bazmee Anil Kapoor Anil Kapoor Films Company, Spice Enfotainment
Dec 10 -No One Killed Jessica -Vidya Balan, Rani Mukherjee Social, Thriller Rajkumar Gupta - UTV Spot Boy
Dec 17- Toonpur Ka Superhero- Ajay Devgn, Kajol Children, Animation Kireet Khurana Kumar Mangat Big Screen Entertainment
Dec 24 -Tees Maar Khan -Akshay Kumar, Akshaye Khanna, Katrina Kaif Drama Farah Khan - Shree Ashtavinayak Cinevision Ltd, Hari Om Productions, Three's Company
Dec 24 -Yamla Pagla Deewana- Sunny Deol, Dharmendra, Bobby Deol, Kulraj Randhawa, Paresh Rawal Comedy Sameer Karnik Sunny Deol Vijayta Films
Dec - Rockstar -Ranbir Kapoor Cult Imtiaz Ali Ronnie Screwvala UTV Motion Picture
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