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Mobile

TigerText Mobile App Lets You Set a Termination Date for your Text Messages

May 4, 2023 by Arnold Zafra

How about this? – A text message that expires on both your phone and the receiver’s device as well. Sounds cool, right? The patent-pending technology was announced recently by a company called X Sigma partners and is currently available at the Apps Store. But soon, it will also be available for BlackBerry and Android devices.

In brief, here’s what TigerText can actually do:

“For the first time, you have complete control over what happens to your texts after you hit the send button. It brings safety and peace of mind to anyone who sends messages that are intended to remain private.”

TigerText lets you send text messages that delete off on your phone and the receiver of your text messages after a set period of time.  The text messages that you sent disappears from the phones and are not stored on any server. That means that you can’t retrieve the text messages anymore after it’s lifespan expires.

It practically answers your need to keep your text messages private. I mean, you can even set the lifespan of your text into as less as one minute, well if you think that it’s enough time for your recipient to read your text, why not?  Talk about giving you peace of mind, right?

The TigerText app also features an easy-to-use interface, making sure that you don’t have to learn another set of new applications methodology. It’s similar to the text messaging app of your iPhone.

The app is available now from the Apps Store for free. If you use it now, the first 100 messages that you will send or the first 15 days  of your usage will be free. After that, it will cost you $1.49 per month for every 250 text messages. Or if you want unlimited texting, you can opt to pay $2.49 per month.

Filed Under: Mobile, Software Tagged With: iPhone app, tigertext

Symbian Hard at Work to Make S^4 at Par with iPhone and Other Platforms

May 4, 2023 by Arnold Zafra

Ironically, while  the iPhone, Android and BlackBerry mobile platforms have been pretty much covering the smartphone market, previously major players such as Palm and Symbian are now trying to catch up with them. Symbian for one has recently released S^3 which signals the mobile platform’s transition into the free, open-source route.

And now, even while fans are still awaiting for Symbian ^3 phones to come out, Symbian is already hard at work on its latest version – Symbian S^4.

The folks at Fierce Wireless checked out the latest iteration of what use to be the most popular mobile platform, Symbian S6 and unfortunately were underwelm by what the new Symbian platfrom has to offer. Basically, the new Symbian S64 looks and acts a lot like the iPhone and Android. Although Nokia informed Fierce Wireless that what was demoed during the Mobile Web Congress is still a work in progress. It is by no means the final look and feel of Symbian ^4.

Symbian S^4 will be a completely redesigned  mobile platform which was built from the ground up including a new programming language in place. Previous Symbian OS were built on C++, but now it is based on Qt. So this means that old apps written for old versions of Symbian including S^3 will not run on the new Symbian S^4.

It’s still a long way to go before we see if Symbian will be able to reclaim its lost glory and whether there will be new cool phones to run on Symbian S^4.

Filed Under: Mobile Tagged With: symbian S^4

Scribd Rolls Out “Send to Device” Feature

May 3, 2023 by Arnold Zafra

Mobile devices are really the new norm in cloud storage services. Aside from SugarSync’s latest feature that lets you send files via email attachment, Scribd, also a file management service in the cloud is rolling out almost the same feature. Scribd just launch its “send to device” service that will allow you to make your documents stored on Scribd accessible via smartphones and e-readers.

It’s a pretty clever idea really and very timely especially since both smartphones and e-readers are getting the massive usage lately. So, if you’re a Scribd account holder you can now practically send any Scribd document be it your own or those readily available on the Scribd site to your mobile devices with a click of a button. What’s good about this feature is that you can send practically any file, from MS Word to PDFs and access them on your e-reader or smartphones. The service works for free and for-purchase books and chapters from major publishers.

To use this feature for your own documents, make sure to set these documents to DRM-free status and allow downloads. And if the documents that you are sending out are not supported by your smartphones or e-reader, don’t fret out because Scribd is also planning to roll out a series of new mobile applications for Android and iPhone that will let you read files that you transferred from Scribd.

Sounds good? Actually yes, saves you some bucks if you get the Amazon Kindle or other e-reader just to get your book reading fix  via a mobile and portable device.

Filed Under: Media, Mobile Tagged With: e-readers, ebooks, file management, smartphones

Mobile Phone is the New Social Connector

May 2, 2023 by Arnold Zafra

Ruder Finn, an independent PR company published some interesting findings of their new study – Mobile Intent Index. The study measures, well mobile phone users’  intent for accessing the Internet via their mobile devices.

According to the report, the average time spent by Americans on the mobile Internet is 2.7 hours. And what do they do during those times?  To socialize, manage their personal finances and push their advocacy.

Contrary to what we may have believed all along, mobile phone users do not access the Internet via mobile phones for educational purposes or for creative expression.  The study also found out that usage by gender and age differ. That is men access the mobile web to “escape” while women to “make others laugh.” Now that seems rather vague, right?

Another interesting finding of the report is the fact that immediacy is the major factor why users access the Internet via mobile.

“Our survey data shows that people use their mobile phones out of necessity for instant access to the Web whether it’s to conduct business with the most recent information or advocate on the spot on issues of pressing concern and breaking news,” said Marty McGough, director of Ruder Finn Insights

The study also highlights the fact that mobile phone apps are continously increasing with 61% of the respondents saying that they have downloaded an application at least once per month, and 36% of the respondents saying that they have downloaded applications from social networking sites at least once per month.

As a mobile connector, mobile phone access is used primarily to:

  • Instant message – 62%
  • Forward e-mails (58%), content (40%) and photos (38%)
  • Post comments on social networking sites – 45%
  • Connect to people on social networking sites – 43%

Interesting findings, right? So, which of these connectivity features do you do on your mobile phone?

Filed Under: Internet, Mobile Tagged With: mobile internet, mobile phones

More Shoppers Will Go Mobile by 2015

May 1, 2023 by Arnold Zafra

It looks like e-commerce is taking a new route these days – via mobile phones. That is more shoppers are doing their daily shopping fix using their mobile phones, says ABI Research’s latest “Mobile Commerce” study which focused on mobile online shopping and mobile payments for virtual goods.

According to the report, mobile shoppers are projected to spend as much as $119 billion on goods and services via their mobile phones. Although the increase is quite significant, overall however this only amounts to 8% of the total e-commerce market. ABI’s report include global forecasts for e-commerce, mobile online shopping as a subset of e-commerce, virtual goods as well as mobile payments for those virtual goods.

ABI’s senior analyst Mark Beccue said that mobile online shopping is getting more common among online shoppers.

“In the United States, mobile online shopping rose from $396 million in 2008 to $1.2 billion in 2009. While definitions of ‘mass market adoption’ vary, a more than threefold increase in one year indicates significant consumer interest.”

Interestingly while the U.S. mobile shopping industry is steadily growing, its current condition still fall way too short of the mobile shopping industry in Japan which reached more than $10 billion in 2009. Europe’s mobile shopping market is steadily growing as well and is expected to surpass the US market by the end of 2010.

Does this mean that U.S. online shoppers don’t use their mobile phones as much as their Japanese or European counterparts before?  It seems that it’s not really a problem on the consumers part though.

The report also noted that interests toward smartphone is only starting to build up. Plus support for mobile commerce is websites is also just starting to get a headway recently.

Filed Under: Internet, Mobile Tagged With: mobile commerce, mobile shopping

Symbian OS Goes Open Source with Symbian^3 (S^3)

April 30, 2023 by Arnold Zafra


Symbian OS, one of the biggest mobile platform thanks to Nokia has just gone open-source with its latest iteration – Symbian^3(S^3).  This latest version is touted as a “feature complete” mobile platform with major features such as increased usability and advanced interface, faster networking capability, 3D graphics support and 2D acceleration engine and more.

As early as now, members of the Symbian community such as device manufacturers, network operators, hardware and software developers and other stakeholders have started engaging with Symbian S^3 with the first device sporting the new platform expected to be released in Q3 this year.

So as mobile phone users, what should we expect from the newly open-sourced Symbian S63 platform? There are several innovations actually such as:

  • HDMI support  – lets  you watch 1080p movies from your phone to your LCD TV
  • music store integration embedded within the radio –   allows you to identify a song, learn more about it and purchase it directly via a “buy now” button
  • more efficient memory management – lets you to run more apps in parallel providing you with faster multi-tasking experience
  • new 2D and 3D graphics architecture – takes full advantage of hardware acceleration for delivering faster and more responsive user interface.
  • 4G networking architecture – balances individual application needs such as bandwidth, latency and jitter.
  • one click connectivity – simplifies the process of connecting to the Internet and allows you to configure platform-wide behavior.
  • usability enhancements – allows adoption of a direct “single tap” interaction mode to make it easier to do common tasks on your device, include multi-touch gestures.
  • enhanced phone homescreen – supports multiple pages of widgets and simple flick gesture navigation

Symbian Foundation hopes that interested parties will continue to create more compeling products and services now more than before as Symbian S^3 is now easier to deploy and accessible to all.

Filed Under: Mobile Tagged With: symbian S^3

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