Saturday 26 February 2011

Viral News

News spreads - Protests in London yesterday, sadly
not very widely reported by any news broadcasters
It seems today that Chinese Whispers doesn't really exist, because due to the rapid growth of the internet nothing gets lost in translation because of all the translation tools available, most notably Google Translate et al.


I thought I'd dedicate this post to the recent civil unrest that's been happening in the Middle East, not the political side of it - although it is very important - but the technology side.


Newspapers are becoming more redundant because only in the last few years news travels very far very quickly with the help of the Internet - namely Twitter. The first I heard about the Tunisian unrest was through Twitter's @BBCBreaking news feed and then "tweeted" by thousands of others. It was then relayed on the news later that evening unless you watch the 24-hour news.


But governments in the East don't like it... it makes them suspicious, creating fears that other countries are spying on them and spreading hate about them. I was annoyed to hear that all lines of communication had been severed with the outside world - mainly by the Egyptian and Libyan government. I have some extended family living in Cairo so we never heard from them to see how they were. Communications (mostly) are back up and running.


This was censorship that went a little too far, as the governments had taken their money, their homes, their families and finally their free speech as you are now seeing with Mr Mubarak in Egypt and Col. Gadaffi in Libya, and previously done in China and Zimbabwe.


People will always find a way round the censorship. In Egypt people set up illegal DNS servers which gave the few people that knew what they were doing to get the word out to the rest of the world before foreign news journalists could report it which in most cases was pre-recorded as it was too dangerous to report live.


The governments should realise that even trying to cut all communications to the outside world, they can't silence everyone as there's always a way round it.

Thursday 17 February 2011

Androids to rule the world? Google, I mean.

Android to rule the world. All hail the Androids.
Google are going to take over the mobile world with their Android system.


Not really.


Although interest in the operating system has increased as Android now hold 38% of the market, parallel to Apple's iOS. RIM's Blackberry OS only hold 19% of the market, making up 95%. That's over a third of the market each held by Google and Apple.


The only problem with the Android OS is that a lot of the time it has to be adapted to each handset and not just a single platform like the iOS, so a ROM that works on one handset may not work on another. The upside to this is that because Android is open-source it can be adapted to work on other handsets, including Windows handsets.


Windows, Symbian and other phone operating systems make up the other 5% of the market.


It may seem like we can see less of the Symbian system as Nokia have now merged with Microsoft, but to be honest the change in the uptake of Windows Mobile 7 will be negligible, as it's not the most popular operating system on mobiles... or computers depending on who you are

Are netbooks shortlived?

Are tablets on the rise?
Since the iPad, I've seen less and less of them. The tablet market is starting to boom a bit, first with the iPad, then Samsung's tablet, then you've got RIM jumping on the bandwagon with their tablet PC. Educational computer company RM have recently made the RM Slate which is being rolled out to schools that want it.

Less netbooks are being made it looks like, as hardware and software manufacturers are keen to stay on the tablet trend. Because let's face it, there's only so much you can flog the netbook. They have a hardare limitation - 1.66GHz Intel Atom processor and 1GB of RAM, whereas tablets don't so there's a much freer market for expandability.

In my opinion, netbooks are a little shortlived. They're slow and only have the most basic version of Windows 7 (Windows 7 Starter), or Linux, if you want a different interface and don't want to do much like install programs - some of them require a little programming know-how. The tablet has a proprietry OS (Apple iOS4, Android, Windows Tablet) and apps can be made specifically for them, although only through the App Store for the iPad.

Okay, I'm being a bit cynical, as netbooks do have their uses when you're on the move but the problem comes with internet access on the move. On a netbook you have WiFi, however the problem arrives when you try to find a WiFi hotspot, especially a free one. Depending on where you are there probably isn't one. One of the only ways of getting internet access on the move like this is with a dongle from a mobile broadband provider, but it's impractical as it's sticking out and can easily break. The tablet in most cases has a space for a SIM card on a mobile broadband contract as well as WiFi so even if you are outside a WiFi hotspot zone you can still get internet.

I want your opinions - Netbook or tablet?

Wednesday 16 February 2011

London will receive free WiFi, no, seriously

Free WiFi to the masses soon
Yes. FREE.


But don't go and cancel your broadband just yet! This free wi-fi is only available to you for fifteen minutes. Yup, you read right, only for fifteen minutes a day


The Cloud service bought by BSkyB at the end of January will allow anyone with a wireless device - iPhone, Blackberry, phone with WiFi, tablet or laptop - to connect up to the cloud and use 15 minutes of no-hassle free internet.


The Cloud isn't the only public WiFi network though, BT have released their Openzone which allows BT customers to use their WiFi device on their public network at a small-ish fee. O2 have released free public WiFi to the masses as well in partnership with local businesses.


Without sounding ungrateful, I do think that 15 minutes isn't much time to do anything, especially if your device is slow to load and has a small screen.


What are your opinions?

My first post

Hello all,


This is my first post; one of many. I'll be creating a post at least once a week with some of the latest tech news from around the world.


Enjoy!