Samsung + Bang & Olufsen M7600 Pledges to Bring the Noise: Funk As Yet Unconfirmed

Posted in News on Saturday, February 7th, 2009 at 5:15 pm No Comments

Samsung teamed up with audiophiler Bang & Olufsen for the Helio Oceanesque M7600 handset. The internal B&O amplifier promises to make it a force to be reckoned with in the sound department. Specs:

- 2.8″ AMOLED touchscreen (not sure if it’s capacitive or resistive, hoping for the former)
– 3 MP camera
– DivX support
– HSDPA and GPS

The M7600 is rumored to hit European shores this coming May, with no hint as yet of a US release. It’s not out of the question that the device might pack some quad-band 3G, but until we hear some rumbling, we wouldn’t bet on it. [Boy Genius Report]

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Samsung + Bang & Olufsen M7600 Pledges to Bring the Noise: Funk As Yet Unconfirmed

Posted in News on Saturday, February 7th, 2009 at 5:15 pm No Comments

Samsung teamed up with audiophiler Bang & Olufsen for the Helio Oceanesque M7600 handset. The internal B&O amplifier promises to make it a force to be reckoned with in the sound department. Specs:

- 2.8″ AMOLED touchscreen (not sure if it’s capacitive or resistive, hoping for the former)
– 3 MP camera
– DivX support
– HSDPA and GPS

The M7600 is rumored to hit European shores this coming May, with no hint as yet of a US release. It’s not out of the question that the device might pack some quad-band 3G, but until we hear some rumbling, we wouldn’t bet on it. [Boy Genius Report]

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How To: Hack Android For Multitouch Web Browsing on the T-Mobile G1

Posted in News on Saturday, February 7th, 2009 at 11:00 am No Comments

Android’s new 1.1 update doesn’t include multitouch because Google is scared of Apple. We are not, however, and nor should you be-follow our guide to get iPhone-like multitouch browsing on your G1 right now.

As teased yesterday, this update will also give you all the new Android 1.1 firmware features, so if you haven’t received your over-the-air update from T-Mobile yet, wait no more and follow our guide. And on top of the added multitouch features, the hacked ROM you’re going to install will also include handy root access to your G1 for further hacking.

Many thanks in particular to the folks at the xda-developers forum, the #1 hangout for HTC phone tweakers on the web.

What You’ll Need:
• Your G1
• USB cord
JFv1.41_RC33.zip-an Android RC33 ROM With Multitouch assembled by a nice chap that goes by the name of JesusFreke.
• An old RC29 ROM (with root access bug)
• An Android recovery image
• A micro-SD card reader (maybe, if you mess things up)
• The Android SDK (for installing more multitouch demos)

Let’s get started:

Downgrade Your Android Software to Gain Root Access
Even though Android is open source, access to the root user is disabled by default, so you still have to work to get root access. To do that you have to exploit a well publicized bug in an earlier Android build that easily allows you to slip into root access easily.

Note: In doing this, you will lose everything you have saved to your phone. Your synced Google Account info will of course stay put, but you’ll lose your installed apps, text messages, and anything you have on your SD card. Searching “backup” in the Android Market will lead you to apps that can backup your SMS messages and other files.

1. Your phone is likely running either the RC30 (1.0) or the new RC33 (1.1) version of the Android software (you can check under Settings -> About phone -> Build number). RC29 is the one with the bug, so you’ll need to download that file here (grab this one if you’re in the UK, and perhaps seek out a UK-specific guide, as we’re talking North American language here and I don’t want you to hurt your phone).

2. Reformat your phone’s SD card to the FAT32 format.

3. Rename the downloaded file to exactly this: DREAIMG.NBH in all caps for the extension and the filename. It matters. It will still show up with a lowercase extension in the bootloader, but that’s OK, as long as the file you dropped on your SD card was named properly, you won’t get a FAIL.

4. Drop the downloaded and renamed RC29 file onto your SD card via USB, power your phone off, and then power it back on while holding down the camera button. This will bring you into the bootloader. Press the power button to start the update, which will wipe your phone and install the old software.

5. When it’s done you should get a declaration of success. After that, hit the trackball button (known as the “action button” in the darker recesses of the G1’s bootloader) and then press Call, Menu and End simultaneously to reboot into your downgraded G1. You’ll see that you’re starting from scratch.

6. Sign in to your Google account and then grab the “Telnet” app from the market. You’ll need this to exploit your newly gained root access.

Update Your G1 With a Multitouch-Enabled ROM
Now that you have not only the permission but the impetus to do naughty things with root access, it’s time to install the updated Android files.

These are assembled by a nice chap that goes by the name of JesusFreke on various phone-hacking forums. He’s the one, primarily, who made all this multi-touching on the G1 possible.

1. Grab Le Freke’s RC33 v1.41 ROM (the one with multitouch goodness baked in) and rename it from “JFv1.41_RC33.zip” to “update.zip”-all lowercase-and copy it to your SD card.

2. Also grab this tweaked “recovery.img” file and also copy it to your SD card. Eject your SD card from your desktop and unplug the USB cable when you’re done.

3. Now that you’re in the exploit-y RC29 version, your phone will start responding to various Linux commands you type on the keyboard no matter what you happen to be doing in Android at the time. Fun! What you need to type to get root access is:

UPDATE:Due to some HTML weirdness, this command didn’t show up properly before. What you have to do here is press the enter key twice, then type “telnetd” (no quotes) and then hit enter once more. Sorry for the confusion:

[enter] [enter] telnetd [enter]

You may find yourself in some odd place in the OS, but it doesn’t matter-if done correctly, a telnet server should be running in the background on your phone.

4. Open up the Telnet app you downloaded from the Market, type in “localhost” in the box if it’s not there already, and tap “Connect to server.” You’ll see some weird ASCII characters, but all should be well. To test, type this in at the prompt (make sure you’ve ejected your SD card from your computer and detached the USB cable):

ls /sdcard

You should see the names of the files you copied (if you don’t, try step 3 and 4 again).

5. Now it’s time for some more command line magic. You’ll need to type four more commands to mount the file system in a writeable state, change to the system directory, copy the recovery.img file from your SD card to your phone’s /system directory, and flash the recovery image, in that order:

mount -o remount,rw /dev/block/mtdblock3 /system

cd /system

cat /sdcard/recovery.img > recovery.img

flash_image recovery recovery.img

You won’t get any response from any of these commands other than a slight pause before the next prompt appears-that means you’ve done everything correctly. If you get any error messages, check for typos and try again.

6. Power down your phone, then power it back on again. One power cycle is required to complete the magic.

7. Power down your phone AGAIN. And now, while off, start it up by holding the Home button along with Power; your phone will enter into recovery mode, which normally shows a caution icon with a phone, but will in this case stream a bunch of Linux code on the screen. Wait for that to calm down, and you will reach the ROM flashing screen of Mr. Freke’s design. If all looks good, press Alt+S to flash your ROM, then press Home+Back when prompted to restart into your multitouch-enabled G1.

8. Open up the browser, and try the ol’ pinch-to-zoom gesture. Hey, what’s that? Zooming! It’s not lighting fast at the moment, but I’d say it still beats pressing plus and minus buttons to zoom.

While Mr. JesusFreke is responsible for packaging this up for consumption, we can thank Mr. Luke Hutchison for the actual multitouch coding. His blog sheds more insight on the state of the multitouch implementation you’re now playing with, and illustrates how it will soon improve. But let’s play some more.

Download More Multitouch-Enabled Apps
In the flashed ROM you just installed, only the WebKit browser has been tweaked to accept multitouch input. But your fun shan’t stop there. Hutchison has provided a few more demo apps-including a simple Google Maps app, photo browser and fun Multitouch visualizer. You can download them all in .apk package format from his site.

To install an APK package via the Android SDK, make sure you’ve enabled “Unknown sources” under Settings -> Applications, then follow these instructions for Windows or, for Mac:

1. Open the Terminal and navigate to the directory where you unzipped the Android SDK (you can auto-fill the Unix path to any file or directory in Finder by dragging it to the cursor point in Terminal):

cd

2. Then, with your phone plugged in via USB, type:

./tools/adb install

3. After the “Success” message, voila, the app is now on your phone.

And that’s about it! Enjoy multitouch browsing, and for more Android hacking on the G1, check out these sites:

References
AndroidWiki
XDA Developers Wiki
XDA Developers Forum

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Jump Ship On Sprint ETF-Free Through March 15th

Posted in News on Friday, February 6th, 2009 at 12:40 pm No Comments

The period that Sprint customers can escape from their contracts without paying early termination fees has been extended to March 15th. Although, you might want to hold tight with the Palm Pre on its way. [BGR]

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50 Million Blackberries

Posted in News on Friday, February 6th, 2009 at 12:05 pm No Comments


RIM has celebrated shipping its fifty millionth BlackBerry, ten years after launching the device.

It was January 1999 when Research In Motion launched the very first BlackBerry. Now, almost a decade to the day since that event, the company is celebrating having shipped its 50 millionth BlackBerry.

The company, which now has 12,000 employees, has the BlackBerry available in 150 countries, from 425 separate carriers, and carries a staggering three petabytes of traffic every month from some 21 million subscribers.

From techvibes:

This week marks the ten year anniversary of Research in Motion’s BlackBerry. It is hard to believe that in ten short years the product has evolved from the monochrome RIM 950 running on a Mobitex network to the current touch screen BlackBerry Storm sold worldwide. The wirless device has evolved rapidly becoming the first Canadian product to make the Millward Brown Optimor list of the worlds 100 most valuable brands. The brands value rose 300% this year to become the 51st most valuable brand in the world.

The small Waterloo based company was in business for 15 years before they released the BlackBerry. RIM spent its early years developing wireless PC cards, pagers, and even modems for vending machines. When RIM released their first BlackBerry in January 1999 the companies founders had no idea how successful their product would soon become. The BlackBerry provided a huge competitive advantage to businesses. A 2007 Ipsos Reid survey found that the average BlackBerry user converted 63 minutes of downtime into work related tasks. It freed up time that would otherwise be wasted and helped create a ‘always connected’ business culture. Only one year after its release the BlackBerry made Time magazines “Best of 2000” list, two years after its release the U.S. Congress purchased a BlackBerry for each of its members, three years into its existence the BlackBerry won Oprah’s approval. Today its biggest endorsement comes from President Obama and his highly publicized fight to hang onto his BlackBerry.

RIM’s BlackBerry has truly transformed the world so it should come as no surprise that the transformations have been incredibly visible in the company’s home town Waterloo. RIM has firmly put Waterloo Region on the map playing a key role in promoting the region as tech friendly area. The company has over 8,000 local employees and has helped attract top talent from around the world. The influx of such highly skilled labor has benefitted all the technology companies in the area and multiple tech start ups have been created by former RIM employees.

Aside from the massive influx of people, RIM’s success has played a vital role in revitalizing the city and shaping the regions cultural institutions. Current and former RIM executives have been responsible for the financing of world class institutions such as the Centre for International Governance Innovation, the Waterloo Children’s Museum and the Institute for Quantum Computing. Perhaps the most high profile contribution has been the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics funded by a $100 Million contribution from RIM’s founder Mike Lazaridis. Recently it was announced that Stephen Hawking will hold a Distinguished Research Chair and spend ‘extended periods’ at the institute each year.

In only ten years a small local company has become one of the world’s most prominent wireless communication leaders. RIM has been given incredible product endorsements by world leaders, they have fought and lost hundreds of millions of dollars in lawsuits, and created a product so addictive it has earned the unofficial nick name ‘CrackBerry’. As competition begins to heat up the BlackBerry has faced greater challenges to its marketshare, but if the first ten years are any indication of the next ten, RIM will continue to innovate and outperform any competitor.

Personally, I love my Blackberry. Couldn’t live without it. Congrats to RIM on a phenomenal 10 year run.

The “Zune Phone” Won’t Be Made by Microsoft?

Posted in News on Friday, February 6th, 2009 at 10:00 am No Comments

According to one of Mary-Jo Foley’s sources, Microsoft is not building a Zune phone. Instead, they’re crafting sample chassis to inspire manufacturers as to what will excite the market.

In this way, Microsoft is able to have their cake and eat it too. They build the bar high through a concept, then they pit manufacturers against one another to polish and mass manufacture the idea. Are you confused? That’s only because it is confusing. Foley summarizes the point better:

There will be Zune phones. There will be other kinds of Zune-enabled mobile devices. But they won’t be crafted – beyond the reference chassis – by Microsoft.

Even the original Zune was made by Toshiba, technically. [ZDNet]

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