Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Like Apple, Google Now Has Devices That Come in Three Sizes




From top: the Nexus 4, Nexus 7 and Nexus 10.
With the addition of its new iPad Mini, Apple offers touch-screen devices in three sizes. Now Google is matching that by introducing a tablet that is meant to compete directly with the larger iPad.
Google on Monday unveiled the Nexus 10, a 10-inch tablet it developed with Samsung, and a new phone, the Nexus 4, that it made with LG. Google also said it would upgrade its seven-inch tablet, the Nexus 7, to include a cellular data connection.
Google’s Nexus line of devices shows off Google’s latest mobile software.
“We’re building pretty sensational world-class products here,” said Hugo Barra, director of product management for Android at Google, at a news conference in San Francisco on Monday. “You don’t find anything even remotely like that out there.”
Also on Monday, Microsoft held a press event in San Francisco to talk about the imminent release of Windows Phone 8, its new mobile operating system, which it announced in June.
Google, Apple, Microsoft and Amazon.com are all building devices in part to recruit customers to use their other services and buy apps, music, books and other content from them.
The Nexus 10 tablet includes a high-resolution display and the newest Android software, which has a feature that allows the tablet to be shared by setting up separate user accounts, something the iPad does not have.
Most notably, the 10-inch screen size will allow Google to go after the market that Apple created with the 9.7-inch iPad: people who are buying full-size tablets instead of laptops. The iPad has been Apple’s most quickly adopted product ever, with 100 million tablets sold to date. Clearly, that market is a juicy target for Google, as well as for Amazon, which recently introduced a bigger 8.9-inch tablet.
With the Nexus 10’s starting price of $400, $100 less than the cheapest iPad, Google has a good chance of selling plenty of tablets, said Jan Dawson, a research analyst with Ovum. But Google would still not pose much of a threat to Apple because it has been selling its tablets at cost, Mr. Dawson said. Google’s goal is to build market share and profit from ads and content sales.
“Neither Google nor Samsung can afford to do that for long with the Nexus 10,” he said. “The more they sell, the more money they lose.”
The Nexus 4 phone has a few features that the last Nexus phone did not. Among them are wireless charging by setting the phone on a small charging station, faster processing, an improved screen, typing by moving a finger instead of pressing individual keys and panoramic photo-taking.
Google also had news about Google Play, its store for apps, books, music and videos, which has lagged other online stores because it has not offered as comprehensive a selection.
Its music service finally signed a deal to bring the catalog of the Warner Music Group — with Green Day, Madonna, Neil Young, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and hundreds of other acts — to its Google Play store. This means Google’s millions of Android users will have an essentially complete catalog of MP3s to buy.
Google also recently signed deals with Time Inc. for magazines and 20th Century Fox for movies, filling other major holes in its offerings.
At its event, Microsoft said Windows Phone 8 would appear on new smartphones made by Samsung, Nokia and HTC starting next month. It also talked about some new features, like Data Sense, a tool that allows people to see how much data apps are using, so they can close data-guzzling apps and avoid exceeding their data plans.
Microsoft has spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing and promoting its Windows Phone operating system since releasing it two years ago. But despite some rave reviews from critics, Windows Phone 7, the previous version, has been unpopular among consumers, with only about 2.5 percent of the American market to date.
Nokia, the Finnish phone maker, has staked its future on Windows Phone. It formed a partnership with Microsoft to ship Nokia Windows phones. But sales of its Lumia handsets featuring the software have been slow.
Terry Myerson, Microsoft’s corporate vice president for Windows Phone, said in an interview that he felt it was the right moment for the software, because it was getting strong support from manufacturers and carriers, and was coming out at the same time as Windows 8, Microsoft’s new desktop and tablet operating system. The architecture of Windows Phone 8 has been rewritten to share the core software in Windows 8, and many features will work between the operating systems, he said.







Advertising Relearned for Mobile


SAN FRANCISCO — Say you are in a strange city and need a hotel for the night. You pull out your phone, search for hotels and see a nearby one listed at the top of the rankings, with a little phone icon that says, “Call.” You tap it, reach the hotel and ask for a room.
James Best Jr./The New York Times
As more of us have access to the Internet and apps through our cellphones and tablets, advertisers are looking for new ways to reach us there.
A Google search for a hotel produced a Sheraton ad.
And just like that, Google made money. That icon was a so-called click-to-call ad, and the hotel paid Google for it when you called.
As more of us have access to the Internet and apps through our cellphones and tablets, advertisers are looking for new ways to reach us there.
Some mobile ads remain just miniature versions of ads on Web sites, an echo of the early days of the Internet, when advertisers essentially slapped print ads online. But increasingly, advertisers are tailoring ads to phones by taking advantage of elements like their ability to track location, make a call, show maps with directions and add calendar alerts.
The stakes are significant for an industry in the mobile world. Advertisers will spend a relatively small amount of money on ads on phones and tablets this year — $2.6 billion, according to eMarketer, less than 2 percent of the amount they will spend over all. Yet that is more than triple what they spent in 2010.
“An ever-growing percentage of our ad buy is mobile because that’s where the consumer is,” said Chris McCann, which has run mobile ads urging people to call or walk into a nearby store. “It’s the future for us.”
Coming up with ads that exploit the smaller mobile screen requires inventiveness from many parties — advertisers; digital publishers like Google, that sell ad space; and mobile ad networks like Millennial Media.
“What we’re trying to do is think about the on-the-go user,” said Jason Spero, leader of global mobile sales and strategy at Google, which dominates advertising online and is far and away the leader in mobile advertising. “What does that user want when she’s sitting in a cafe or walking down the street?”
A big challenge for the tech companies is that advertisers pay less for mobile ads than for those online, largely because consumers are less likely to make a purchase on their phones. Though people click on mobile ads more than on desktop ads, advertisers wonder whether that is because of what they call the “fat finger effect” — accidental clicks on tiny touch screens.
And while users’ actions can be tracked across Web sites online, it is hard to know whether someone sees a cellphone ad for an offline business and then walks in — so it is difficult for advertisers to judge how effectively they are spending their money.
As Google sells more mobile ads, the average amount it earns from each ad has dived. Facebook’s value on Wall Street was halved on fears that it was not making enough money on its mobile users. Apple’s mobile ad network, iAd, has been slow to gain traction.
Despite the problems, though, there is evidence that mobile advertising is becoming a meaningful business, and in some cases a bigger business than online advertising.
Facebook executives the company earned $150 million from mobile ads, 14 percent of its total revenue. Pandora reported that in the second quarter that ended in July 58 percent of its revenue, or $59 million, came from mobile ads. Twitter executives have said that on certain days, the social network earns a majority of its daily revenue from mobile ads.
Mobile ad networks, which show ads across mobile apps and Web sites, have created new and thriving businesses. The biggest are Millennial Media, Google’s AdMob and Apple’s iAd.
Google earns 56 percent of all mobile ad dollars and 96 percent of mobile search ad dollars, according to eMarketer. The company said it is on track to earn $8 billion in the coming year from mobile sales, which includes ads as well as apps, music and movies it sells in its Google Play store. But the vast majority of that money comes from ads, it said.
“Whoever does mobile best, they’re going to be the next Google, so people are asking, ‘Is Google going to be the next Google?’ ” said Chris Winfield, co-founder of BlueGlass Interactive, a digital advertising agency. “It still is Google’s to lose.”

Microsoft to developers: We have a gift for you. It's an SDK!


Microsoft made the SDK, along with a free version of Visual Studio Express 2012 and Blend 5, available to MSDN subscribers and to the public for download on October 30.
The public is available for download from Microsoft's Web site. The MSDN version of Windows Phone 8 SDK is here.
Microsoft made the announcement at its Build 2012 developer conference, which kicked off in Redmond at Microsoft headquarters, on October 30. The Day 1 keynote headliner was CEO Steve Ballmer, who actually did his own demos and accessed his own real accounts on stage as part of his address.
Ballmer announced that since Windows 8 became generally available on October 26, Microsoft has sold (This number doesn't include any additional sales of Windows 8 that is preloaded on new PCs.)
Ballmer and other Microsoft execs also announced coming availability of more Windows 8 apps, including a new Twitter client being developed by Twitter itself. This client will be out sometime in "the coming months," Ballmer said. Other developers who have committed to new Windows 8 apps, as announced today, 
build2012logo

New York Web sites remain offline following Sandy





New Yorkers check out damage from Hurricane Sandy in Manhattan's Carl Schurz Park on the Upper East Side. Many trees were downed by the storm, though flooding in the park had receded by today.
(Credit: Shara Tibken/CNET)
Hurricane Sandy may have passed the Mid-Atlantic region, but its effects are still being felt online.
The storm knocked out power and caused severe flooding across the Northeastern United States. New York City power companies on parts of lower Manhattan yesterday, shutting down Web sites without redundant servers. Many of those data centers remained down today, and power provider Con Edison said power likely won't be restored to Manhattan for about four days.

With no 4G LTE support, new Nexus devices irk early adopters




In all fairness, the Nexus series of smartphones have never been top-selling devices. Google has long struggled with the selling of their own handsets and except for the Galaxy Nexus T-Mobile was the preferred carrier of choice for day one support. While I'm sure they appreciate T-Mobile's willingness to play ball, the fourth place provider is not going to deliver the desired impact. In a related note, the Nexus 4 that T-Mobile is offering is touted as 42Mbps-capable whereas the one listed in Google Play is 21Mbps.
It's worth noting that just because AT&T supports the new phone doesn't necessarily mean they will advertise the fact. All this in mind, Google will shoot themselves in the foot if they do not ultimately offer a Verizon or Sprint version of the Nexus 4. That is, provided, if they ever hope to see large scale adoption of their Nexus line.
It's the same issue with the  with data connectivity. At $299, the no-contract 32GB is a good pickup to be sure. Just think, however, how much more appealing it would be if it was 4G LTE support instead of the 3.5G speeds of HSPA+.
I'm trying to justify Google's decision to skip 4G LTE for the Nexus 4 but the best I can come up with a "lesser of two evils" analogy. It seems they would rather see hardcore fans and early adopters grumble about not getting access instead of potentially larger crowd moan about poor battery life. It's a bitter pill and I don't want to swallow it.
Instead, I have the answer: Google is thinking globally here. We should consider that the Nexus 4 is being released to a number of markets on November 13 and not just in the United States. Factor in the fact that many of said markets operate on fully deployed GSM/HSPA networks and it makes more sense. At $299 unlocked and without a contract, this is going to be the handset to beat, even without 4G LTE.
Well, that is until CES arrives in a little over two months.

Gmail rolls out new pop-out window for composing emails




Google is , including a pop-out email-composition box rolling out today.
The new pop out box works like a chat box -- you can write more than one email at a time and minimize a message box if you want to finish the email later, according to a blog post by product manager Phil Sharp.
"How many times have you been writing an email and had to reference something in another message? Saving a draft, opening the old email, and then reopening your draft wastes valuable minutes. The new compose pops up in a window, just like chats (only larger)," Sharp writes.