Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mobile world congress. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mobile world congress. Sort by date Show all posts

16.3.08

The future is in my hands

Sales of smartphones are expected to overtake those of laptops in the next 12 to 18 months as it completes its transition from voice communications.

Convergence has been the Holy-Grail for mobile phone makers, software and hardware partners, as well as consumers. For the first time the rhetoric of companies like Nokia, Samsung and Motorola, who have boasted of putting a multimedia computer in your pocket, no longer seems far fetched.

"Converged devices are always with you and always connected," said Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, Nokia chief executive at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

Last year Nokia sold almost 200m camera phones and about 146m music phones, making it the world's biggest seller of digital cameras and MP3 players. In the coming year the firm predicts it will sell 35 million GPS-enabled phones as personal navigation becomes the latest feature to be assimilated into the mobile phone.

Nigel Clifford, chief executive of Symbian, said: "We see mobile phones evolving into multi-functional devices that now support consumer electronics, multimedia entertainment and mobile professional enterprise applications,".

Symbian shipped 188 million phones last year, a third came with GPS.

Chip shop
More than 90% of the world's mobile phones are powered by technology created by Arm. It designs chip architectures that it licenses to semiconductors makers.

Ian Drew from Arm said future mobile phones demanded ever more processing power. But building chips with greater processing was not a straightforward.

"It needs to get into your pocket. It needs to work for days.", he said.

Via BBC

12.2.08

Mobile: The Web Future

The Internet is the future of mobile, and carriers need to be more selective about the technologies they choose if they want to succeed, Vodafone CEO Arun Sarin said during his keynote speech ate Mobile World Congress.

"Operators need to invest to bring important mobile Internet services to life," he said. "We can't sit back and become bit pipes. The old debates around TDMA, CDMA, and GSM weren't very productive," he said.

Google's emergence in this market has also sparked debate over how many operating systems are needed. Sarin said he didn't care if operators and handset makers use Symbian or Windows Mobile--or Google's Android or the Linux operating system from the Limo Foundation.

"There's no way that an application developer can develop applications for 30 different operating systems. We have to narrow the range."

Via CNET

Image Day - Forget Google!

Yahoo! Executive Vice-President (Connected Life Division) Marco Boerries (L) and T-Mobile's Product & Innovation Officer Cristopher Schlaffer announce that Yahoo! will replace Google as T-Mobile's preferred Web services provider in Europe during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, February 12, 2008.

> Reuters Pictures

7.2.08

Gphone prototype

Next week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona will be the place where some will get a glimpse of the upcoming Google phone -- dubbed the Gphone.

The greatly anticipated Google-Android mobile operating system will be previewed for select members of the media in private sessions early next week.

Google is reportedly partnering with Dell to create the first Gphones.

Via TheStreet

11.2.08

Image Day - Google Android

Prototype of the Google Android mobile on display at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, February 11, 2008. The trade show will run from Feb. 11-14.

> Reuters Pictures