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Posts tagged with “Mobile”




What is Twitter?



Founded in July 2006, Twitter is a social networking and micro-blogging site that allows users to post their latest updates. Twitter allows users to post text updates ("tweets") of up to 140 characters via SMS, instant messaging, email, Twitter’s website and third party applications. Users have their own profile page that displays their latest updates. In addition, users can become “friends” with one another, or simply be a “follower.” Other than reading another person’s profile page, a user can also receive others’ updates through text messages, RSS or third party applications.

Twitter itself is a free service, though users may have to pay text messaging charges to their phone carrier.

A relative new comer to the world wide web, recent statistics show they are gaining in popularity, for example:

March 2008
Total Users: 1+ million
Total Active Users: 200,000 per week
Total Twitter Messages: 3 million/day

The service was started by Obvious Corp, who also started Odeo. In April 2008 Twitter launched Twitter Japan in partnership with Digital Garage.

You can find out more and sign-up at the Twitter.com website.

August 2nd, 2008 / 0 Comments / Trackback


First preview of Google's Android phone


The device allows owners to unlock it by drawing on the screen, and includes a built-in compass to help with navigation

Owners of the new Google-powered mobile phone will be able to unlock the handset by drawing a secret shape on the screen.

The new 'signature unlocking' tool was among the features revealed during a recent sneak preview developers conference event.

Other highlights include a built-in compass that will allow people to orientate maps as they use their phone to scout out a restaurant or venue, and a customisable homepage that lets people bookmark their favourite web pages.

The device - which is unlocked by drawing a shape only the owner knows on a nine-square grid - will also include a magnifying tool, to make zooming in on web content easier on a small screen, and a mobile version of the game Pac Man.

Demonstrating the device at a developers' conference in San Francisco, Andy Rubin, who heads up the project at Google, declined to give a release date, but said that the first phones powered by Google's Android operating system will appear in the second half of the year.

June 1st, 2008 / 0 Comments / Trackback