All Posts Tagged With: "mobile phones"
Adobe wants to give Apple a little constructive criticism
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Tue, Nov 03 2009 | 0 Comments
As a lot of people know, Adobe is working on getting Flash out for mobile phones, which would open up a whole new world of mobile entertainment (cell phones wouldn’t be held to only third party apps like YouTube, but could actually go to sites like Hulu to watch television shows).
There is, however, a war brewing between Adobe and Apple. While cell phones and the iPhone have never been able to play anything that is Flash based, Adobe has gone and added a new error screen that pertains directly to the iPhone and Apple.
The error message says “Apple restricts the use of technologies required by products like Flash player. Until Apple eliminates these restrictions, Adobe cannot provide Flash Player for the iPhone or iPod Touch.”
I am guessing that Adobe’s idea when it posted this was to get users angry enough to contact Apple about Flash not being supported. The only thing I can think of that could maybe get users even more angry than saying that Apple is at fault is to say which devices do allow Flash.
I am actually looking forward to having Flash on my Palm Pre, although now it doesn’t look like I will be getting it at all on my iPod Touch.
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Tags: mobile phones, mobile entertainment, hulu
Amazon.com to offer Kindle e-books on cell phones, eventually.
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Mon, Feb 09 2009 | 2 CommentsAmazon can’t keep up with the demand of the Kindle. The Kindle is an electronic device that displays ebooks purchased from Amazon. Now, to curb demand for the device, Amazon has announced that it will be offering the Kindle e-books for mobile phones…eventually.
I think the announcement was made in haste because Google just announced Google Book Search. Book Search is a free service for mobile phones that is basically ebooks on your cell. Amazon did not release which phones it would be offering the Kindle books for or when…I think it just wanted to stay relevant next to Google’s free service.
I don’t really understand how people can read entire books on a screen like that. I can’t look at a computer screen for more than an hour, let alone read an entire book on one.
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Tags: search book, amazon, computers
What’s so great about BlackBerry?
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Sun, Jan 11 2009 | 1 CommentPresident elect Obama is just short of flat out refusing to give up his precious BlackBerry. Maybe I’m missing something, but what is so amazing about the BlackBerry?
Is it the actual BlackBerry that is so amazing or is it any all-in-one device, like Android and Windows Mobile phones?
I have played around with BlackBerries in the past and don’t see what makes people so addicted to them. I can’t think of one feature that it had that I can’t get on any other PDA. I mean, I don’t have to pay the extra service fee for having a Palm, and my email is not only sent to my phone but it buzzes when I get a new message. Not to mention the hundereds of applications I can put on it to organize my day a little easier.
If you’re a BlackBerry user, let me know. I’m actually curious.
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Tags: palm, dow, email
Out With the Old and in With the New: Changing Sony
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Tue, Nov 04 2008 | 0 CommentsThere was a time when Sony was on the edge of technological advancements. Since then, it has fallen behind. Apple has become the new “cutting edge” brand. Even one former Sony executive said, “Apple is the Sony of the 21st century.” In an attempt to revitalize the Sony brand, Sony’s Chief Executive Howard Stringer hired Tim Schaaff, a top lieutenant of Apple CEO Steve Jobs, three years ago. The idea behind his hiring was to bring the change Schaaff has displayed at Apple to Sony. Schaaff, was one of the software engineers of Apple’s QuickTime software, a foundation of products such as the iPod and iPhone.
Change was needed at Sony. There were both external and internal forces leading the force for change. Externally, the marketplace created a need for change in Sony. Consumers began to see Sony as the past and Apple, as well as other brands, as the future. Internally, Sony had divisions in the company that would not collaborate to create new and innovative products. Also, when Stringer hired Schaaff, there was opposition to the decision. In an attempt to combat the opposition, at a 2006 management meeting, Stringer instructed all the young software engineers to the front of the room and all the older, senior executives to the back.
There are organizational changes going on currently at Sony. Starting with structure, while it is still departmentalized, many of the departments are beginning to work together to accomplish a single goal for the company. When Sony wanted to begin the PlayStation Network, a network where users could download movies to their PlayStation 3 system, Schaaff’s group, the PlayStation, and Sony’s film division all worked together to get the network online on July 15, 2008.
People are also changing at Sony. The attitudes that attributed to the division of its departments are being eliminated. When PlayStation chief Ken Kutaragi was critical of sharing power at the company, Stringer moved him into a different role in the company; Kutaragi later resigned altogether. Stringer brought in new executives whom he worked with over the years to oversee divisions such as mobile phones, PlayStation, and the Sony Reader (Sony’s attempt to break into the digital book market). These new executives were more accepting of change, and have been working well with Schaaff. However, one of Schaaff’s friends and also a former Apple executive, Ty Roberts said that “Tim [still] has to do things very gently.” Things must be done gently because if a large change happens very abruptly, some divisions could see sales drop further, or worse.
Over the past three years, a noticeable difference has come over Sony. The changes can be seen in its newest VIAO laptops (they are now sleeker, rounded, and have Apple styled keyboards), in its PlayStation 3 (with the integration of other divisions of the company), and in its mobile phones (breaking down barriers and opening up to Microsoft software). All that is left now is for Sony to accept the change as ongoing, and to manage and plan accordingly.
NOTE: This is about organizational change based on a November 10, 2008 BusinessWeek article titled : Sony Chases Apple’s Magic
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Tags: senior executives, businessweek, laptop

