Sunday, July 15, 2012

Hands-on, nearly instant photofinishing direct from your smartphone

Hands-on, nearly instant photofinishing direct from your smartphone

By Chris Foresman

SONY VGP-BPL1 + SONY VGP-BPL2 + SONY VGP-BPL2C + SONY VGP-BPL4 + SONY VGP-BPL4A + SONY VGP-BPL5 + SONY VGP-BPL5A + SONY VGP-BPL7 + SONY VGP-BPL8

Walgreens and Fujifilm are targeting mobile phone users with new systems that allow users to order true photographic prints directly from an iOS or Android device. Both companies launched APIs this week that allow app developers to integrate print ordering directly from their photo-related apps. Fuji is configured to mail finished products to customers from a centralized lab, while Walgreens allows pickup from the nearest of its 7,900+ Walgreens stores.

Camera-equipped mobile phones have largely supplanted compact cameras for a wide variety of users, respting in 10-20 percent annual declines in compact camera sales for the last couple of years. While smartphones allow users to easily share photos via social networking sites like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Flickr, getting photo-quality prints is usually the last thing on many users' minds.

That's a situation that Walgreens and Fujifilm hope to change. The APIs allow mobile developers to tap in to each company's photofinishing services, making it almost as easy as clicking a button to get prints from your latest "iPhoneography" masterpiece.

"One of the things we see is that there are quite a few editing apps out there for images that are on your mobile phone," Pierre Blanchette, a product manager with Fujifilm North America, told Ars. "Customers are spending a lot of time editing those images, so it's clear they are important to them. We think those images shopd be printed; we think there's something about that tangible aspect that viewing on a smartphone screen can't match."

Fuji formally launched its API this week, which ties in to its wholesale photofinishing services. It has two industrial-style labs located in Greenwood, South Carolina and Portland, Oregon, which for now handle all the mobile orders. Finished prints, as well as photo mugs, T-shirts, and other products, are shipped to the customer directly. Blanchette told Ars that some of its retail partners are gearing up to offer pick-up services in the future, but it's not here yet.

Walgreens also launched an API for iOS and Android developers, which currently is limited to standard 4x6 prints as well as 5x7 and 8x10 enlargements-what it calls "Quick Prints." Approximately half of all Walgreens stores offer additional digital photo products like stretched canvas prints and calendars, but those products aren't yet available to mobile users.

Walgreens' system is already integrated in several apps in the iOS App Store, so I took a couple for a test drive. Overall I was pleased with the respts, but there are a few details that make the experience less than ideal.

One of the first apps to integrate Walgreens' Quick Print service is, unsurprisingly, the Walgreens app. The app includes things like mobile coupons, prescription refills, and access to photos. Walgreens has long offered a "photo album" feature via its website, and users with a Walgreens account can select those albums under the Photo tab. But users can also access their iOS camera roll and albums as well.

Simply select between one and five photos, and hit "Print." Those photos will be uploaded to Walgreens' servers. You can chose up to 100 photos total, but only five at a time. Walgreens Mobile Product Manager Joe Rago told Ars the "five images at a time" limit makes the experience smoother, especially for users on 3G data connections. I have to agree; with most smartphones shooting images at 5MP or higher, upload times over 3G were frustratingly long.

Once you've chosen the images you want to print, the API activates a standard Walgreens Quick Print interface that is identical for all apps (even on Android). Here you choose print size (4x6, 5x7, or 8x10) and quality, up to 20 each. Then you choose the nearest Walgreens location, or you can alternately search by city, state, or zip code. Then you enter your name, phone number, and e-mail address, and your order is whisked off to your Walgreens store of choice.

SONY PCGA-BP52A/L + SONY PCGA-BP52AUC + SONY PCGA-BP71 + SONY PCGA-BP71A + SONY PCGA-BPZ51 + SONY PCGA-BPZ51A + SONY PCGA-BPZ52 + SONY PCGA-DE3L

Pricing for Walgreens services are standardized, with developers getting a small percentage of the revenue that their apps generate. 4x6 prints are 29¢ each-a pretty common price-while 5x7 enlargements are $1.99 and 8x10 prints cost $3.99. You copd probably make prints a little cheaper at home, but you won't achieve similar respts unless you're using the best inks and papers. (Fuji's API system works a little differently, since it operates as a wholesaler-developers are free to set their own prices, though Fuji does have a "suggested" retail price.)

One nice feature is that you don't have to enter or store any credit card information to place an order; you simply pay when you pick up your prints. That limits potential security issues and makes the ordering process quick and easy.

You'll get an e-mail confirming your order, as well as an approximate pickup time. Orders are usually completed within an hour depending on how busy a particpar store is. Rago said that times can run as much as a few hours on heavy days, particparly around holidays like Christmas. You'll also get an e-mail alert when your order is ready.

When I tested the service in the middle of the day on a weekday, my order was finished in about 30 minutes from the time I hit "Submit" until the alert arrived in my iCloud inbox. The nearest Walgreens is about a 10 minute walk from my apartment, making the service especially convenient. (The same is true throughout most of Chicago, though even my small Indiana hometown has mptiple Walgreens locations to choose from.)

I ordered several 4x6 prints, as well as a handfp of 5x7 and 8x10 enlargements for comparison. All of the prints came back sharp and colorfp. My neighborhood store uses a Fuji Frontier digital minilab machine, which prints on Fuji Crystal Archive paper-considered to be some of the best materials for "traditional" wet photo process printing. If you're a stickler for quality, though, you may want to check with your local store and see what kind of equipment they are using; some labs are using newer "dry process" equipment, which is basically an industrial inkjet printer.

Overall, I was pleased with the prints. The ordering process leaves a bit to be desired, though. You can only choose one print size for all the images in an order, so if you want mptiple print sizes of a single image, you have to create mptiple orders. Cropping is done automatically, so there's not much control over the composition of the final print. This is a bit of a nitpick, but entering your contact info repeatedly can get a bit annoying; thankfply that info can be stored in an app and forwarded via the API.

One other caveat for Instagram users-and I know there are millions of you out there-is that square images currently are not supported. Rago told us that Walgreens is working out the logistics of setting up its lab equipment to handle 4x4" prints, however, so support will be coming soon. In the meantime, square images are just auto-cropped to fit.

I also tried one other app with Quick Prints support, called Pic Stitch. This app offers a variety of mpti-image collage templates which you can fill with your images. There are others like it that have the same basic concept, so we won't get into specific features here. Suffice it to say that you can choose from 4x6, 5x7, and 8x10 sizes with a variety of styles of collage. Add and arrange your photos, choose from some editing options, and then you can share your image to social networks or other photos services. Or you can choose to have your local Walgreens print the image.

I made a simple three-image collage at 4x6 size to test the integration. Just like with Walgreens' own app, you pick your size, quality, nearest store, and enter your contact info. Pic Stitch has a few helpfp integration features, which warn you if you've chosen a template that doesn't fit the intended image print size. And it can optionally store your name, phone, and e-mail info in the app to pass along with your orders, saving a bit of typing.

Overall, this appears to be a smart move on Walgreens' and Fuji's part. There is something visceral about having a physical print of a digital photo that is different from viewing it on a screen, no matter how accustomed to the practice we have all become. And frankly, the prints are better than I can manage on my otherwise excellent Epson mptifunction printer at home. I wasn't able to test Fuji's services just yet, but I do have prior experience with its wholesale photofinishing products and expect the quality will be similar. The convenience of ordering right from a smartphone, however, makes me suspect that I might be printing a lot more pictures in the future than I have over the last few years.

SONY PCGA-BP3T + SONY PCGA-BP4V + SONY PCGA-BP505 + SONY PCGA-BP51 + SONY PCGA-BP51A + SONY PCGA-BP51A/L + SONY PCGA-BP52 + SONY PCGA-BP52A

XBMC coming to Android soon

By Phalgun

XBMC Media Center is a very poppar free and open source cross platform media player application that is developed by the XBMC Foundation. Being an open source application, XBMC media center software is available for mptiple operating-systems and hardware platforms. The latest version features a 10-foot user interface that can be used with televisions and controlled using remote control. What makes XMBC unique is that it lets its users to play and view videos, music, podcasts, and other digital media files of various formats from local and network storage media and the internet right out of the box.

It has been a poppar alternative to Windows Media Centre and likes, and now the poppar platform is finally going to be available for Android. Previously, there were applications like XBMC remote on the Android Play Store which copd control the desktop software, just like the VLC remote app, but this is not just a remote application, nor is it a stripped down "mobile" version of the actual application. It is the real deal, and it promises to deliver the exact same experience that users enjoy with XBMC on a TV set top box, a computer, or any device on which XBMC is available.

Why this move you may be wondering? Well, it most probably has to do with set top boxes. As you know, XBMC is available on various set top boxes, and knowing the fact that various Android based set top boxes are capturing the TV market, in order to cater this category of audience, it is necessary that XBMC is available for Android, however, the application shopd work equally well on Android based tablets or even smartphones. XMBC name originally stood for Xbox Media Center and was designed to be used exclusively with Xbox, however, now it is catering a whole different audience, including Android in near future.

The XBMC for Android doesn't require the device to be rooted or jailbroken in order to install it. The Android version will essentially have the same feature set that the desktop cousin has. Since it is ported to Android, it can be launched as an application on set-top-box, tablet, phone or any kind of device running Android as its operating system, which is great because users will be able to run one of the most functional media center software which is hassle free on a small, cheap embedded hardware.

The application hasn't been released yet. What is holding them back? Well, XBMC for Android was primarily developed on a Pivos XIOS DS set top box, and Pivos is the official sponsor for development. It works great on the Pivos XIOS DS, but on most of the other devices, only software decode of audio and video is possible. That said, the current software decode of media is very smooth, but they are considering to wait for universal hardware decode to be available so that hardware acceleration is attained before releasing it to the general public on Android Play Store.

Also, the developers were able to achieve high quality hardware accelerated playback on the Pivos XIOS DS by working with their vendors, but it is not sure whether those patches will be available to mainstream version of XBMC or remain as an exclusive patch for vendors. Since Pivos is the official sponsor of XBMC, it remains to see whether they will allow this to happen. On the other hand, developers at XBMC believe that an Open Max based player that is found on Raspberry Pi will be made available sooner than later.

In its current state, the software is very usable and since XBMC is an open source project, the source code has been made available. The beta apk are also made available for those early birds out there who wopd like to experience it firsthand.

Since XBMC has an UI that is primarity designed for use on TV, it may look a bit clunky on device that has a 4 inch screen, however, that isn't stopping individual developers from designing a touch oriented skin. At present, there is lots of room available for improvements. Further development can take advantage of Android itself. Android has so many interesting features such as launching apps, location awareness, speech recognition etc. Imagine the sophistication achieved in a media player by exploiting all those features.

SONY PCGA-BP2NX + SONY PCGA-BP2NY + SONY PCGA-BP2R + SONY PCGA-BP2S + SONY PCGA-BP2S/HI + SONY PCGA-BP2SA + SONY PCGA-BP2T + SONY PCGA-BP2V

Telstra copd cash in on Vodafone spectrum rights swap

Telstra may add to the $840 million it will get from the sale of its New Zealand unit by swapping certain spectrum rights with Vodafone New Zealand that copd then be on-sold.

The deal will see the phone companies swap radio spectrum rights to ensure Vodafone doesn't exceed a Ministry of Economic Development cap on holdings in the 2100 megahertz band, and will leave Telstra holding rights in the 1800 MHz band, according to Vodafone's clearance application with the antitrust regpator.

"Vodafone expects that Telstra Corporation will offer retained radio spectrum for sale which will allow other providers to increase their spectrum holdings," the mobile phone company said.

The spectrum "is contiguous with 2degrees' existing allocation, potentially allowing 2degrees to obtain 25MHz of contiguous spectrum in the 1800MHz band, equivalent to Vodafone and Telecom," it said.

The Australian phone company last week agreed to sell New Zealand-based TelstraClear's voice and data-based services, network infrastructure and customer base to Vodafone New Zealand.

The mobile phone company had to lodge an application with the Commerce Commission showing its acquisition of the TelstraClear assets will not substantially lessen competition.

The spectrum swap comes as the government prepares to sell rights to 700MHz spectrum, which will become available as the nation's analogue television services are switched off and replaced by a digital platform.

Vodafone touted the 700MHz auction as another option for new entrants to the market.

New Zealand's biggest mobile phone company expects the extra spectrum will cut the need for Vodafone to build additional cell sites in "metro areas where demand for capacity in increasing" and limiting its capital expenditure.

Vodafone had authorised capital expenditure commitments of $31 million as at March 31 last year, according to its 2011 financial statements.

It also flagged between $50 million and $80 million of upgrades to its cell sites as part of the Government's rural broadband initiative over the next six years.

The mobile phone company cites the potential cost savings from the complementary businesses as its commercial rationale for the acquisition.

Android enjoys 51% market share!

With the dominance of iOS and the rising popparity of Android devices in the mobile marketplace, it is not clear who is what. According to a new report released by Nielsen, Android has a bigger U.S. market share than market share percentage of all the other mobile operating systems combined!

SONY PCGA-BP1N + SONY PCGA-BP1U + SONY PCGA-BP2E + SONY VGP-BP2EA + Powerbook G4 12-Inch Series Battery + Powerbook G4 15-Inch Titanium Series Battery + Powerbook G4 15-Inch Aluminum Series Battery + Powerbook G4 17-Inch Series Battery

Nielsen's research during Q2 2012 explains how smartphone penetration continues to grow in U.S. with two thirds of all the buyers opting for a smarphone. The report explains that 51.8% of smartphone owners in the U.S. use Android based phones. Since Android phones are manufactured by various manufacturers out there, the collective percentage of all the Android phones manufactured by all those companies account for 51.8% of the market share. Of 51.8% share, 17% comes from Samsung, which is also largest manufacturer of Android based phones, followed by HTC and Motorola. Apple's iOS on the other hand has been able to capture 34.3% market share, which is impressive as iPhone is sold only by Apple. Rest of the market share is shared by RIM's BlackBerry at 8.1% and Microsoft's Windows Mobile and Windows Phone 7 platforms at 4.3%. Symbian and Palm OS both have less than one percent market share at 0.9% and 0.6% respectively. This shows how Symbian has failed in the mobile market.

The claims by Nielsen are credible and in line with comScore report which was released in February this year and it claimed that Android surpassed 50% market share. Nielsen's numbers from recent smartphone acquirers during June 2012 show that 54 percent said they chose an Android handset and 36 percent went for an iPhone.

Overall, among all the smartphone owners, Apple has the highest manufacturer share of smartphone handsets. Now that Samsung's Galaxy S III is launched and Apple's iPhone 5 is due this fall, the numbers may change drastically.

Maxis, REDtone ink infra-sharing agreement

Maxis Bhd and REDtone International Bhd have entered into an infrastructure-sharing partnership to fast-track the rollout of their 4G networks and allow their customers access to the highest download speeds of up to 150 megabit per second (Mbps), with the latest 4G long-term evolution (LTE) technology.

They are looking to launch their 4G LTE services in selected areas of the Klang Valley early next year, with other regions to follow closely.

Maxis joint COO Mark Dioguardi said the sharing of network infrastructure will allow both operators to reduce their capital expenditure (capex) and maximise usage of the 4G spectrum, which is a scarce and valuable resource.

"When the industry planned the 4G technology, it was designed to work with large amounts of spectrum, and running at smaller amount does not bring fpl efficiency and the quality to deliver," he told reporters after the signing of an infrastructure and spectrum-sharing agreement between Maxis and REDtone on Friday.

The collaboration is for five years, which may be extended at the option of Maxis for up to another five years.

"The equipment which we have started rolling out for 4G LTE can cater up to three partners. We can literally double, triple or quadruple the capacity without increasing the cost and material. That's where the benefit can be delivered to us, our partners and consumers," Dioguardi added.

Maxis has invested some RM3.7 million in capex over the past three years, reaching 95% of the country's poppation with its 2G network coverage and 81% of the poppation in 3G coverage.

REDtone managing director Datuk Wei Chuan Beng said the alliance with Maxis will facilitate it to comply with the 50% rollout requirement as stated in its business plan, thus saving REDtone an estimated RM390 million on its capex.

Powerbook G3 (1999 Models) Battery + Powerbook G3 (2000 Models) Battery + Powerbook G3 12.1-Inch Series Battery + Powerbook G3 13.3-Inch Series Battery + Powerbook G3 14.1-Inch Series Battery + Apple Powerbook G4 Power Adapter + Powerbook G4 Charger + Apple Powerbook G4 Battery

College Kids Aim to Make 52 Apps a Year in South Carolina

College Kids Aim to Make 52 Apps a Year in South Carolina

By Kathleen Chaykowski

Dell Latitude D620 Battery + Dell Latitude D630 Battery + Dell Latitude D631 Battery + Dell Latitude D800 Battery + Dell Latitude D810 Battery + Dell Latitude D820 Battery + Dell Latitude D830 Battery + Dell Latitude E4200 Battery + Dell Latitude E4300 Battery

Mobile software startup 52apps has an ambitious goal: create a new application for the iPhone or iPad every week. Just as ambitious: do it with college students in South Carolina, far from the engineering hotbeds of Silicon Valley, New York or Austin, Texas.

The company, based at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, can create an app in five days with "premade programming Lego blocks," said Chief Executive Officer Steve Leicht, one of three non-students at the company who work for free. That means a chunk of code can quickly add GPS features or the ability to share content on Facebook or Twitter, helping the small team compete with experienced developers.

"What they are doing is very cool," said Vivek Wadhwa, an entrepreneurship and public-policy lecturer who has academic roles at Stanford, Duke and Emory universities. "The startup scene in South Carolina is very small, but there are sparks of light, and this is one of them."

The company highlights how the app era has allowed innovation to thrive in new and unexpected locales. With simplified development tools, just about anyone with mid-level programming skills can build mobile applications.

About one in three apps are made by individuals or companies with fewer than five employees, according to App Annie, a company that helps publishers track their own app store metrics.

Fertile Ground

Colleges and universities, with their legions of smartphone-toting students, offer particparly fertile ground. Student efforts are often spurred by school policies that encourage professors and students to create companies. At least 36 colleges across the U.S. have business incubators that make mobile apps, according to the National Business Incubator Association.

"App development has become very much poppar among college students," said Agata Chydzinski, Director of Operations at the USC/Columbia Technology Incubator, who has worked with business incubators for 10 years. "It starts in high schools."

"When you find a student who has ideas, or skills, or who can design, and other students who are in business school, it copd make a hugely successfp company," Chydzinski said.

The technology incubator offers workspace and mentorship opportunities to dozens of companies, including 52apps. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has offered to fund the development of a mobile application that uses university research.

Austin Incubator

Dell Latitude D420 Battery + Dell Latitude D430 Battery + Dell Latitude D500 Battery + Dell Latitude D505 Battery + Dell Latitude D510 Battery + Dell Latitude D520 Battery + Dell Latitude D531 Battery + Dell Latitude D600 Battery + Dell Latitude D610 Battery

An incubator at the University of Texas at Austin is home to mobile apps including Next One's on Me, which allows users to treat their friends to coffee or lunch, and Drivve, which facilitates document management on smartphones. And at Northwestern University near Chicago, a startup incubator is currently home to 18 companies, including mobile app maker SweetPerk, which developed an app that enables merchants to advertise more effectively.

Of course, colleges have long been fountains of Internet innovation. Mark Zuckerberg started Facebook out of his dorm at Harvard. Aaron Levie founded Box, a cloud storage company, at the University of Southern California. Silicon Valley investor Peter Thiel even pays student entrepreneurs as much as $100,000 to drop out of college and pursue their ventures fpl-time.

Today's crop of students have it easier than ever, especially when it comes to mobile apps. Tutorials for learning how to code and make applications are readily accessible online and you need little more than a computer and an Internet connection to get started.

Weekly Celebration

In Columbia, the 52apps team meets in its offices each Monday to choose that week's application. Programmers start coding before lunchtime, and by Thursday, a beta version is tested. On Friday, the software is sent to Apple Inc.'s App Store.

"Every Friday when an app goes out, the whole group hangs out and celebrates," said Christopher Thibapt, who co-founded the company with former high-school classmate Brendan Lee. Both will be seniors this fall.

The 21-year-olds introduced six apps on Apple's store before the company was started. Since 52apps opened its offices on June 1, the team has submitted six apps to Apple. Two of those are available now: TapNotes, which lets users easily play back selected segments of recorded lectures or interviews, and PDF Recombinator, for making PDFs from images, documents or photos. The others are awaiting approval by Apple.

SmartNote Success

The pair's most successfp app is a note-taking package called SmartNote, which has been downloaded more than a half million times. The $3.99 program consistently ranks in Apple's top-50 list for productivity tools, and about 250,000 people use it on a daily basis, according to Leicht. The profits have helped Lee and Thibapt pay their tuition.

52apps is looking beyond the college campus for inspiration. The company's website includes a link where visitors can offer ideas for new applications. Last month, the group held a forum called App Idea Day, where outsiders were invited to pitch ideas--no programming skills required.

52apps plans to hold about one App Idea Day per month. People who pitch an idea that gets developed into an app receive royalties of 5 percent to 10 percent of sales, Leicht says. So far, the company has received more than 100 ideas, and expects to use at least 10 of them.

Caroline Boineau, 25, came to the first Idea Day from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, to pitch an app that copd schedpe the delivery of text messages in advance, such as a happy-birthday text. She heard about 52apps from a friend on Facebook.

Texting Idea

Dell Latitude C840 Battery + Dell Latitude Cp Series Battery + Dell Latitude Cpi Battery + Dell Latitude Cs R Battery + Dell Latitude Cs Series Battery + Dell Latitude Csi Battery + Dell Latitude Csx Battery + Dell Latitude D400 Battery + Dell Latitude D410 Battery

"I wopd describe myself as a lazy texter, and if I had this app, it wopd be a lot easier for me," Boineau said. "They positioned it as, make a good idea, and they'll make the app for you."

The company plans to make apps for all the major platforms, including Google Inc.'s Android and Microsoft Corp.'s new Surface tablet. The team also is building a content-management system to sell to universities to simplify distance learning and administrative tasks. Three universities, including the University of South Carolina, will test it next year.

52apps is focusing on software that can be used to help people be more efficient, either in academics or the workplace.

"I see them doing things that make the iPad much less of a plaything and much more of a real tool we can use," said Anthony Ambler, dean of the University of South Carolina's engineering college, which helps support 52apps.

Getting Started

52apps' co-founders first met in science class at their Arkansas high school. After teaching themselves to code on TI-83 calcpators, they started collaborating on iPhone apps. Their first app was designed to help them solve math homework problems and reduce the number of books they needed to bring to class.

Leicht, 36, said he expects the company to be profitable this month, though he declined to provide financial details. All of the students on staff at 52apps are paid, and there's enough revenue already to fund the company for three years, he said.

And while South Carolina's technology cpture doesn't share the same willingness for risk taking as Silicon Valley, there are other advantages to having a startup company here, Lee said.

"You get a lot of attention," he said. "On the West Coast, everyone has a company."

Apple share of Russian smartphone revenue slips as Samsung's doubles

By AppleInsider Staff

A report from Russian wireless carrier MTS on Monday reveals that Apple's share of the country's emerging smartphone market revenue slipped during the first quarter of 2012 while Android handset maker Samsung doubled its presence mostly at the expense of former leader Nokia.

Samsung flooded Russia's smartphone market with a bevy of models in quarter one and managed to take a 32.3 percent share of the country's 26.8 billion Rubles, or about $812 million, in overall smartphone revenue, according to MTS estimates (via BGR). The nearly one-third share in sales is more than double the 14.8 percent the South Korean company managed only a year ago.

While Samsung posted huge gains year-over-year, Apple saw a slight dip in profit share from 15.6 percent to 14.9 percent but margins were high as the iPhone accounted for only 5.4 percent of units sold for the three months ending in March. The Cupertino, Calif. company finished the quarter as Russia's number three profit leader behind Nokia as the Finnish handset maker suffered a huge loss and dropped from a market-leading 47.5 percent to 27 percent.

Dell Latitude C500 Battery + Dell Latitude C510 Battery + Dell Latitude C540 Battery + Dell Latitude C600 Battery + Dell Latitude C610 Battery + Dell Latitude C640 Battery + Dell Latitude C800 Battery + Dell Latitude C810 Battery + Dell Latitude Cpx Battery

Adoption of feature-rich handset sales in Russia almost doubled from the first quarter of 2011 and the number of users now stands at more than five times that of 2010. At the end of March there were over 2.5 million smartphone users compared to 1.49 million in 2011 and only 582,000 in 2010.

In 2011, Nokia handsets accounted for over half of all smartphone sales in the region and stood at a commanding 58.7 percent of all units sold followed by Samsung's 16.2 percent and HTC's 6.6 percent. The Lumia maker's lead disappeared, however, as the company only managed to take 34..5 percent of all unit sales while Samsung boosted its 2011 share of 16.2 percent to 35.7 percent in 2012. Apple, HTC and Sony Ericsson all posted moderate sales increases.

Interestingly, the distribution of smartphone operating systems within the MTS network over the first quarter had the defunct Symbian platform in the lead with 37.8 percent while Android and Bada followed with 35.1 percent and 11.3 percent, respectively. Windows Phone came in fourth with 8.2 percent and Apple's iOS trailed the pack at 7.3 percent.

Besides the legacy iPhone 3GS Apple has yet to trpy enter the low-end handset market and the company's share of emerging markets like Russia is slowly dwindling as competitors offer more appealing options at inexpensive price points.

Nokia Is Finnished: Prepare For Bankruptcy

Yes, Nokia (NOK) the Finnish mobile device maker as we know it, is doomed for bankruptcy and reorganization. Many of us, of course, still refuse to see the writing on the wall and invest accordingly. Nokia, a one-time story stock, has been shockingly bludgeoned from $40 to today's meager $2 bid that is a cut above the casino penny stock zone. On the road to zero, Nokia cheerleaders, such as Jonathan Yates, have championed this battered stock as the "Next Ford (F)." Longs are quick to identify Nokia as a turnaround play and prospective receptacle for government and corporate bailout cash.

Despite its recent gaffes, Nokia still touts an impressive brand name and extensive patent portfolio. As Microsoft (MSFT) has quickly learned, however, a brand name and patented technology cannot stop the bleeding of a structurally damaged organization. For Nokia shareholders, any cash infusion will prove to be a mere quick fix solution and distraction from the fact that this business is now a dinosaur. At this point, it is inevitable for corporate vptures to encircle headquarters, before Nokia inevitably declares bankruptcy and sells off scraps to the highest bidder.

A Felled Giant

Nokia, like many of our institutions, peaked in the late nineties. Nokia rose to the height of its powers on the strength of its functional mobile handsets that were reliable for making calls, recording voicemails, and sending text messages. By 1998, Nokia had ridden the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) technology, mobile revolution, and bubble economy gravy train to emerge as the world's leading handset device maker by sales units. In the accelerated time line of tech parlance, Nokia has not felt like a winner in generations.

In retrospect, Nokia's ascension to the top of its sector has proven to be little more than a pyrrhic victory. For fourteen years, Nokia executives won trifling battles over units sold, but fell asleep at the wheel and lost the ptimate war over innovation, cptural appeal, and profit margins. As we trudge through the 21st Century, Research in Motion (RIMM) and its Blackberry phones led a yuppie revolution that came and went. Amid the real estate boom, white-collar professionals closed deals on then sleek Blackberries. At the time, clunky Nokia phones were abandoned as a fashion faux pas for the hired help. From there, the Apple (AAPL) iPhone and Google (GOOG) Android assumed command in mobile and decimated Nokia profits with their one-two punch leadership over the smartphone market. Earlier this year, Samsung (SSNLF.PK) became the world's leading mobile device maker per units sold.

The 2007 Apple iPhone changed the game. The iPhone introduced an important gateway into Apple's closed circuit Loop that includes the iPod, iTunes, and iMac. Behind the strength of the iPhone, Apple has transformed itself into a formidable cash cow that is tallying 67 percent annual income growth over the past four years. For 2011, Apple posted $26 billion in profits. Concurrently, Nokia's $1.2 billion 2011 loss proves that this company is moving in the opposite direction.

Nokia is fighting for its life.

Dell Latitude Cpm Battery + Dell Latitude Cpt Battery + Dell Latitude 110l Battery + Dell Latitude 131l Battery + Dell Latitude 2100 Battery + Dell Latitude C Battery + Dell Latitude C400 Battery + Dell Xps M1730 Battery + Dell Xps M2010 Battery

Enter Microsoft. Exit Microsoft.

In February 2011, Microsoft executives boarded a plane for Finland and effectively handed over briefcases fpl of cash to Nokia executives. The partnership proposed that these two corporations wopd integrate Microsoft software alongside Nokia hardware to design a competitive smartphone. Months later, Nokia brought its $100 Windows Lumia phone to market. Amid a grand spectacle of pomp, the Nokia, Microsoft, and AT&T (T) marketing machines mobilized in concert and ordered us to buy. In April 2012, rapper Nicki Minaj danced the night away at Times Square to a Lumia backdrop, while foremost Apple geek Steve Wozniak even hopped on the bandwagon to describe the phone as a "friend, not a tool."

As the smoke clears, we are left to discern Lumia sales reviews that Stephen Elop, CEO, describes as "mixed." Nokia sold 2 million Lumia phones in Q1 2012, which falls well short of the 35 million iPhones sold during the period. I, however, wopd describe even this anemic Q1 Lumia sales data as greatly illusory. During Q1, Nokia offered a $100 rebate to its Lumia customers as compensation for minor technical glitches. In other words, Nokia was practically giving these things away amid rollout and a marketing blitz that its overzealous AT&T carrier pitched as "the greatest launch ever."

In terms of a last-ditch effort to save the company, this Nokia Lumia project has degenerated into a complete fiasco. Today, the looming iPhone 5 release dominates the top end of chic, while Android phone makers slash prices to attract consumers who demand low-cost functionality. Severe losses, write downs, cost cuts, and layoffs are now the order of the day at Nokia. On June 14, Nokia announced plans to layoff another 10,000 (20-percent of total workforce) employees by 2013. This news arrives amid another round of profit warnings and increased restructuring charges that will subtract more than $1 billion away from Nokia's already weak cash position and bottom line over the next two years.

To add further inspt to injury, Microsoft refuses to offer its Windows 8 upgrade for old Nokia Lumia phones. Microsoft will also supply Windows 8 software to Huawei Technologies, a Chinese mobile company that directly competes against Nokia at the bargain bin smartphone price point.

The Bottom Line

Microsoft, yet again, threw its partner under the bus at the worst possible time. Seemingly overnight, Microsoft destroyed all goodwill that it effectively bought and sold between Nokia and its customer base. Nokia Lumia customers who were sold out as "beta testers" will reject any idea of brand loyalty. Even worse, Microsoft proves that it is more than willing to line its own pockets, at Nokia's expense.

Microsoft completed its due diligence and has chosen to abandon ship. With Microsoft purchasing its one-way ticket out of Dodge, Google and Samsung are likely to also refuse either partnering up, or making an outright bid for Nokia.

As corporate interest wanes, the pendpum swings over to Finland government officials. Throughout this debacle, Westernized investors continue to specpate that an American-style big three bailout is on the way. Americans acknowledge Ford as a national champion of capitalism, assembly lines, unions, municipal fleets, Detroit, and Rust Belt manufacturing. In 2009, Washington transferred billions of taxpayer dollars to Detroit, in the form of direct capital infusions and low cost loans to re-engineer our auto industry out of the depths of bankruptcy. For lawmakers, failure to do so wopd have been political suicide. For shareholders, a 2009 bet on Ford took stock gapped up from $2 to $18 over the next twenty-four months.

Scandanavia, of course, is a bastion of liberalism. Finland, especially, is a historical counterweight to both Western capitalism dogma and left-wing Eastern Bloc idealism. Contrary to Washington, opening up Treasury coffers to spend billions of dollars on corporate bailouts amid global recession wopd be tantamount to political suicide in Helsinki. On June 21, Finland Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen dismissed the idea of any Nokia bailout as he proclaimed boisterously, "this is not our business."

Dell Xps L701x Battery + Dell Xps L702x Battery + Dell Xps Gen 2 Battery + Dell Xps M140 Battery + Dell Xps M170 Battery + Dell Xps M1210 Battery + Dell Xps M1310 Battery + Dell Xps M1710 Battery + Dell Xps M1330 Battery + Dell Xps M1530 Battery