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To: iggyl who wrote (12120)11/3/2011 8:08:23 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 32690
 
Oh my god! Are you British?? That would explain a lot.... LMFAO... too funny...



To: iggyl who wrote (12120)11/3/2011 8:12:06 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 32690
 
Android share rises (again), iOS still stagnant
By Joe Wilcox
Published 8 hours ago
betanews.com


The US smartphone market has become so consistent -- Android gains, iPhone is stagnant -- that Nielsen has started revealing other interesting trends, as it did today. First, for the fanboys: Android share among US subscribers 13 or older was 43 percent at the end of third quarter, up from 39 percent at the end of June. Meanwhile, iPhone is top-selling smartphone, but iOS share is stuck at 28 percent, following a trend fairly consistent since mid 2010.

Each fan group has some number to wave around: Android as top-selling smartphone OS (and continually gaining) and iPhone leading handset in its class. To fan the fanboy fires, I should point out that iOS could finally get some pick up from new US iPhone carriers C Spire Wireless and Sprint. However, some of the hottest Android phones either shipped or will ship this quarter, including 4G LTE packing Motorola Droid Razr and Galaxy Nexus on Verizon and HTC Vivid and Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket on AT&T. iPhone 4S lacks LTE.

For anyone keeping track, BlackBerry OS share fell 2 points to 18 percent quarter on quarter. Windows Mobile/Phone held steady at 7 percent. For the Microsoft fanboys, don't feel left out. Windows Phone 7.5 handsets shipping this quarter, such as Samsung Focus S 4G, could finally lift Microsoft's smartphone OS share.

Now to Nielsen's other findings. Forty-three percent of US cellphone subscribers, again 13 or older, had a smartphone at the end of September -- up from 40 percent at the end of July. Interestingly, keeping an ongoing trend, Android OS share tracks consistently with overall smartphone share. Make of that what you will.

More Americans 25-34 have smartphones than any other segment -- 62 percent. It's over 50 percent for anyone older than 17 and younger than 45. Forty-percent of 13-to-17 year olds have smartphones. The oldest segments are least likely to have smartphones -- only 18 percent among those 65 or older. My soon-to-be 90 year-old father-in-law has iPhone 4, which we updated to iOS 5 last night. The many changes already stun him, and it will be worse after upgrading his computer to Mac OS X 10.7. There's a reason to stick with more familiar feature phones.



To: iggyl who wrote (12120)11/3/2011 8:38:57 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 32690
 
Nook Color dropping to $199; new software update brings Hulu Plus, music
Nook Color dropping to $199; new software update brings Hulu Plus, music
by Phil Nickinson on 11/3/2011 | Filed Under: Tablets, News; Tags: android, price, update, tablet, price drop, e-reader, bn, nook, barnes & noble, nook color | 3 comments
Will cost just $50 less than the new Nook Tablet

The venerable Barnes & Noble Nook Color hasn't been left out in the cold just because the new Nook Tablet specs and pricing are here. No, the Nook Color's going to find itself with a nice little price drop down to $199. That's only a $50 drop, and for that difference you'll get a pretty big spec boost in the new Nook Tablet, but we'll take what we can get.

And along with the price drop, a new software update is on the way for the New Color. Nook Color v1.4 will bring TV shows, movies and documentaries with Hulu Plus. You'll get music from Rhapsode, MOG and Grooveshark, with free trials. (Pandora is still included.) You'll get even more magazines and special Nook editions, expanding on current content. And more apps are on the way, too.

So, if you're in the market for an e-reader tabelet this holiday season, and don't want to break the $200 mark, the Nook Color is about to become very, very attractive.



To: iggyl who wrote (12120)11/3/2011 8:41:06 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 32690
 
Leaked: Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet release date, pricing and full specs!
Leaked: Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet release date, pricing and full specs!
by Phil Nickinson on 11/3/2011 | Filed Under: Tablets, News, Featured; Tags: android, tablet, bn, barnes & noble, nook tablet, barnes & noble nook tablet | 14 comments
Pre-orders start Monday,
Nook Tablets in your hand Nov. 16 for $249

Behold, the Barnes and Noble Nook Tablet. Faster, lighter and no longer just a mere e-reader, if the promo materials we've been slipped have anything to say about it.

Let's back up a second, though. Barnes and Noble is in a horse race with the likes of Amazon and its new Kindle Fire to stake claim to the more-than-an-e-reader/not-quite-a-tablet realm. And The Nook Color did wonders for that over the past year. It was a slightly pricey (but still excellent) e-reader at $249, and it quickly became an above average Android tablet thanks to the Android hacking community.

So where does the all-new Nook Tablet fit in, with its "No, we're not an e-reader name"? We've got full specs, launch information and details on what we expect to see at next week's announcement. Keep on reading.

The Nook Tablet hardware Let's start with the obvious: Even in a photocopied black-and-white image, it looks like the Nook Color, no? And it retains many of the same features. Same retangular design, same rounded corners, same hook in the lower left. The display is unchanged as well -- a 7-inch VividView IPS display at 1024x600 resolution and 169 pixels per inch.

But inside. Man, this thing's been beefed up. Consider these features and specifications:

  • Dual core TI OMAP processor at 1.2GHz.
  • It's a tad thinner, at 0.48 inches (down from 0.5 inches).
  • Weight is down a bit, too, at 14.1 ounces (from 15.8 ounces), or 400 grams versus 448 grams.
  • It's now got 16GB of internal storage, plus it can take up to a 32GB microSD card.
  • Battery life is listed as "to be determined," but it looks like BN's expecting 8 hours with Wifi off, or 4 hours of video playback
  • Speaking of Wifi, it'll support 802.11 b/g/n, just like the Nook Color.
So we're expecting it to look and feel a lot like the Nook Color, just a little lighter -- and much faster.



But hardware is just half the game. Content is key here, especially since Barnes & Noble is off the Google grid, with its own app store, and of course books movies and music. And the Nook Tablet wil rock HD movies, TV shows and music, thanks to the likes of Netflix, Hulu Plus and Pandora.

And as you'd expect, it's got an e-mail app, a web browser and lots of other applications. BN appears to be fearmongering just a bit here, saying that unlike Amazon's Kindle Fire, which will be routing your browsing through its servers to keep things speedy, you won't have any such privacy concerns with the Nook Tablet. That's a little tinfoil-hat-like for us, but we do see their point.

One thing that's not mentioned anywhere: The existance of Android. We're assuming it's still running Android, but there are no specs on that. And it makes sense. It's not running the same Android you'd run on your phone. It's totally custom, so whether it's running Froyo or Gingebread or whatever isn't really important.



Nook Tablet price and availability So when can you get one? According to our slide deck, we'll see it announced on Monday in New York. Preorders will go live at that time, and it'll run $249, just like the current Nook Color. Demo units will arrive in stores on Nov. 15, and shipped units should arrive Nov. 16 -- that's one day after the Amazon Kindle Fire is slated to arrive. Interseting timing.

So that's that. A lighter, faster Nook Tablet -- no longer just an e-reader. Stay tuned Monday for the full announcement.





To: iggyl who wrote (12120)11/3/2011 8:42:56 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32690
 
The Kindle Fire, Nook Color, Nook Tablet and ASUS Transformer Prime will clean up this holiday season to the detriment of CrApple.... LMFAO... too funny....