Archive for the ‘opinion’ Category

How would you change Motorola Droid 2?

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

You’ve already told us (and the world, we might add) how you’d change just about every other Droid phone out there, so why not? Motorola’s Droid 2 has been in the hands of loyal can-doers for a few months now, giving the user base plenty of time to nitpick and stew about things that aren’t… quite… right. We had a few bones to pick with the handset during our August review, but as the regulars know, this space isn’t about rekindling old flames. It’s about you telling us how you’d change things if given the lead design position on this here phone. Would you have upgraded the camera? Changed the slide? Tweaked the Android build? Offered it on another carrier? Hit us with your best shot in comments below.

Who Rules?

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

blackberry-palm-iphone-mark

blackberry-palm-iphone-mark


Blackberry, iPhone and Palm are the three most popular Smartphones in the US market. ChangeWave Research has recently conducted a study to find out which Smartphone rules the industry of Smartphones.
According to the study, there is a stiff competition taking place between Apple’s iPhone Smartphones and RIM’s Blackberry Smartphones since the launch of the iPhone in July 2007. Whilst Blackberry Smartphones have held the highest market share for some time now, Apple’s iPhone Smartphones are popular for being the most desired Smartphones in the Smartphone Industry. (more…)

Biggest Threats?

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

Mobile Devices Threats

Mobile Devices Threats

The biggest threat to your network is the smallest device in your user s hand. Mobile devices pose a serious management challenge

I have recently had cause to consider the challenge of managing mobile devices - the various wireless, handheld, portable, and other devices that are sometimes, but not always, connected to the network.

The penetration of BlackBerries, PDAs, smartphones, portables, laptops and other mobile devices is constantly increasing. Everywhere you go people are tapping away at their BlackBerries, thumbing out messages on their cell phones, or scrolling through content on their Palm devices.

Some of these people are surfing the Web, but many are working - getting e-mail, updating sales reports, logging in to corporate portals, downloading brochures, or messaging with colleagues. The BlackBerry supports most corporate mail servers, and runs custom applications. Most new cell phones connect to the Web, get e-mail and run Java applications. Many devices run Windows Mobile (such as the new Treo 700W), and are fully compatible with commercial applications, such as Microsoft Office. Some, like Sony’s “micro PC” , run a full version of Windows XP Pro. (more…)