Google launches Adiantum encryption for low-end Androids
Way faster than AES.
Google snaps up Fossil smartwatch tech, staff
Only for a singular technology, though.
Ericsson certificate expiry downs mobile data networks
Whoops.
Motorola has confirmed that it has a range of handsets based around Google's open-source Android platform in the pipeline, and may be boosting staff to accomodate.
SanDisk has introduced a new physical music format dubbed slotMusic in conjunction with the four major record labels.
Opera Software, creator of the popular Opera range of web browsers, has announced membership in the Nokia led Symbian Foundation.
Finnish mobile giant Nokia has purchased Samsung's share of the Symbian mobile platform rights for $410 million as part of a plan to release it under an open-source licence.
The iPhone 3G has outsold its 2G predecessor in just seven weeks - and Foxconn is ramping up prodution to meet ever-growing demand for the device.
IDF FALL 2008: Intel is still banging the MID drum, but it's not good news when demos are unconvincing and devices are uninspired.
IDF FALL 2008: Anand Chandrasekher said that Moorestown is on track for 2009/2010 and shows off silicon for the first time.
IDF FALL 2008: Dadi Perlmutter announces imminent availability of mobile quad-core processors based on the Penryn architecture.
IDF FALL 2008: Intel talks about its research efforts behind a new Connected Visual Computing initiative.
Rumours spreading across the 'net have T-Mobile ready to launch the HTC Dream smartphone, the first handset to run on Google's Linux-based Android platform.
Micro-blogging site Twitter has cancelled the ability to be notified of updates via SMS in the UK due to spiralling messaging costs - but is hopeful that it'll be able to bring it back eventually.
The LiMo Foundation has announced eleven new corporate members, bringing the total to over fifty companies helping mould mobile Linux - along with some new handsets.
To upgrade the memory in your Wind you have to intentionally void the warranty - OK for some regions, but not all.
Intel has officially launched the latest version of its mobile platform, Centrino 2 - previously codenamed Montevina - and there are some impressive new features included.
Bioware, developers of Mass Effect and the Baldur's Gate games, is reportedly looking closely at the iPhone as a gaming platform.
Sony is once again rumoured to be working on developing a PlayStation branded mobile phone for gaming.
Finnish mobile giant Nokia has announced plans to purchase all remaining rights to the Symbian mobile platform in order to release it under an open source licence.
Delegates from the United Nations are to meet in Indonesia this week to discuss the thorny problem of waste electronics - with the safe disposal of mobile 'phones top of the agenda.
COMPUTEX 2008: Asus has upgraded the Eee PC line to include not only Atoms, but a bundle of other features too.
COMPUTEX 2008: At his Computex keynote, Intel's Sean Maloney talked about the future of the Internet on mobile devices.
Mobile internet devices based on the open-source Linux operating system are expected to account for 23 percent of the market by 2013 according to analysts.
COMPUTEX 2008: Silverstone has a nice sideshow device that might actually make you want one - functional, elegant and very sexy.
COMPUTEX 2008: Nvidia has introduced the Tegra family of system-on-a-chip processors, which are aimed squarely at Intel's Centrino Atom platform.
October 14 2021 | 15:04