Wed November 17 2004
Mobile browsers only use a small sliver of information |
06:20 PM by Colin Dunstan in Miscellaneous | Lounge Russel Baettie wrote some interesting bits on "The Mobile Web", in which he argues to push web standards forward to better support mobile web browsers. Look at the little graphic I made above. I've tried to show how the web is this vast repository of information, and how the mobile phone right now only has access to a small sliver of that information. The big orange blob is the public stuff, the black behind is the private web. The ways to interact with that information on your phone is limited: You can reformat it with Small Screen Rendering, view only the pages meant for mobiles, view the XML in various ways, or somehow see all the information out there in some magic, yet to be determined manner. Or hell, you can just ignore the web as it is now all together and find some alternative way of getting information to the mobile devices (which isn't pictured). |
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Namo HandStory Suite V3.1 released |
02:02 PM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book Software | Reading and Management Because of lack of recent updates, we first thought that HandStory has been abandoned. We were wrong. Korean SJ Namo Interactive has just released HandStory Suite V3.1. That is new: Palm OS Pocket PC HandStory Media Suite 3.1 for PocketPC You can download a 15-days limited trial from here. It'll be interesting to see how this revived "'Swiss Army Knife of media viewers" compares to Plucker & co. |
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iPod eBook Creator |
01:33 PM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book Formats | Workshop The iPod eBook Creator is a Web-based tool written in PHP to convert books (or any text) to the iPod Notes format that you can add to your iPod for reading on the go. |
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Report: 2005 - turning point in e-book reader technology |
01:27 PM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | News AFAICS (As Far As Eye Can See) Research published a report called "Developments in e-book, and e-magazine reader technology", which covers the current and future development of e-publication reader technology between now and the end of 2008. Nick Hampshire and Guy Kewney, the two researchers of the report, maintain that just four years from now e-books will be so well established that a typical price for mobile hardware will be less than US $35. They justify their (rather optimistic!) assumption of a growing need for e-book technology, 1. on simple economic grounds, such as the delivery of up to date text books to every one of China’s 165 million school and university students, and 2. on the need for new revenue sources, as is the case with the consumer electronics industry, or, crucially, the mobile phone companies. They also looks at how these devices will evolve over the next few years by examining developments in key areas of technology. Interestingly, PDAs don't have a bright future, at least according to the report. Instead, the researchers claim developments in mobile phones to be the future main drive for e-book technology. The following graph depicts their projected growth in annual sales of devices capable of functioning as e-book devices: A summary of the report can be downloaded from Afaics's hompage. |
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Sharp Zaurus SL-C3000 mini-reviewed |
04:58 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones French Akihabara News has a small mini-review (with a lot of images) of the new Sharp Zaurus SL-C3000. As a Linux-based PDA, the Zaurus stands out among the PDA crowd, and it looks like a good alternative for those who want to switch from Palm OS to something else but aren't quite ready yet for Windows Mobile The reviewer appears to like the new Zaurus, and is only complaining about lack of connectivitiy (no BT or WiFi) and lack of USB2. If you are not fluent in French, you can try the Altavista-translated version. |
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Tue November 16 2004
3D Air Combat Game Pack (Pocket PC Edition) |
04:19 PM by Bob Russell in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Dina at Pdatopsoft has provided the following information on their new product offering... 3D Air Combat Game Pack (Pocket PC Edition) http://www.pdatopsoft.com/PocketPC/3...mbat-Game-Pack 3D Air Combat Game Pack (Pocket PC Edition) includes following games: 3D Mini-Jetfight 1.2b - The Multi-Platform & Multi-Player 3D Modern Air Combat Game features 7 famous jet fighters and A/A missiles. Feel the excitement of high-altitude, high-speed jet fighters and experience the breathtaking air combat with air-to-air missiles! Please go to product page for more information and download a free trial Pdatopsoft.com - Palm, Pocket PC, Windows CE, EPOC(Symbian), Smartphones and RIM software at www.pdatopsoft.com. New submissions daily! |
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TomeRaider 3: P r i n t i s D e a d |
12:08 PM by sUnShInE in E-Book Software | Reading and Management Just Released: TomeRaider 3 Available for Windows, Pocket PC, Psion, Smartphone, and Palm Powered devices. A few new features include HTML support, filter builder, reference links, search acceleration, image support, and super compression. You can even create your own content using TomeRaidIt ($15US). TR is primarily designed to allow you to easily read large databases like The Wikipedia, encyclopedias, IMDB, the Bible, dictionaries, and supports external media. There are over 3,000 free files available at Memoware.com, and many more inexpensive ones available there to boot. Going for $20 to $22.50US, it's been 2 years in the making, and a pretty big overhaul of a great proggie. |
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Sunrise author explains why Palm OS is unfeasable |
09:40 AM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Sunrise "My decision to abandon Palm OS development for now has to be seen in the context of my business plan," Laurens explains. You should read his full blog entry, which makes it perfectly clear why Palm OS is currently unfeasable for small developers. Just as a side note: Sunrise 0.36d is released today removing the HotSync Manager requirement (= Vade Mecum users can now use Sunrise as well). |
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