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    Mobile tech under Obama 10/11/2008 08:49:00

    During the next four years, mobile technology will undergo change you can believe in
    We've just elected a new president. Barack Obama starts a four-year term starting January 20. There's no way to know how America and the world will change during this time. But we can see how mobile technology will change.
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    In search of the smartphone laptop 27/10/2008 10:02:00

    Palm tried it with Foleo and failed; will Apple do better?
    In the past two years, mobile phone and laptop companies have unveiled breathtaking innovations -- from 24-hour battery laptops to dual-screen laptops to "augmented reality" mobile phone applications.
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    Two more handy iPod/iPhone add-ons 24/10/2008 08:47:00

    Who says gadgets have to be expensive? Here are two simple and effective iPhone/audio accessories that will enhance your ownership of portable audio devices.
    Who says gadgets have to be expensive? Here are two simple and effective iPhone/audio accessories that will enhance your ownership of portable audio devices.
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    5 reasons why the Android phone isn't game-changing 24/09/2008 09:54:00

    An impressive open-source base phone, but won't become game-changing until another carrier starts to support the device
    T-Mobile, HTC and Google launched the "world's first Android-powered mobile phone" today and proudly announced that this phone was going to be "game-changing". But after reading details on the phone, the service and some of the new applications, I'm left wondering where the game is actually changing.
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    I want my mobile social address book 22/09/2008 09:12:00

    We have the technology. We even have the data. So why are we still using business cards?
    Business cards are as obsolete as fax machines. And like fax machines, business cards have us still using paper to move electronic data from one digital system to another.
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    iPhone hackers go too far, get shut down by Apple 07/08/2008 10:51:17

    Apple shut down a hack that opened Unix developers to iPhone, but the creators brought the punishment on themselves
    I was all set to give this week's column over to a new register-direct implementation of a JavaScript interpreter that's many times faster than all currently available implementations. It's not exactly growing hair on a billiard ball, but a nitro-boosted JavaScript will put a shine on AJAX and keep my most beloved language on track to becoming the gold standard for dynamic languages.
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    Is your mobile phone trying to kill you? 04/08/2008 09:05:46

    Don't look now, but your mobile phone is out to get you. This deadly device can cause accidents, give you cancer or even kill you, according to a rising chorus of alarmist reports.
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    Mobile phones and the digital divide 30/07/2008 08:09:42

    Whether you're building an application for the 3G iPhone in the United States or trying to figure out how to deliver health information via SMS (Short Message Service) to a rural community in Botswana, the mobile space is diverse and exciting in equal measure. It touches on more fields than you could throw a phone at: anthropology, appropriate technology, electronics, programming, telecommunications, geography, literacy, gender and poverty to name a few. It's this diversity that makes it so exciting. Yet, at the same time, it's this same diversity that presents us with many of our greatest challenges. In many ways, the mobile world -- particularly in the ICT4D (ICT for Development) field -- is fragmented and often misunderstood.
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    Is the iPhone dev deal fair? 24/07/2008 10:42:39

    Apple won kudos for its ADC program for iPhone developers, but its confidentiality rules could be a deal-breaker
    Apple apparently chose the best possible template for its iPhone developer programs: its own Apple Developer Connection for OS X. Why it then made the iPhone SDK confidential even for those who download it for free poses a puzzling contradiction in the company's seemingly open approach to development.
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    I returned the iPhone 3G after only 6 days! 22/07/2008 12:17:25

    Why did I give up?
    I have no excuses - I should have known better than to let my gadget envy get the better of me. But, with all the new way cool features added to the iPhone 3G and the fact that my existing AT&T plan allowed me to upgrade at US$199, I decided to join the other crazies in line last Saturday afternoon and spend 2 hours to get my hands on a new iPhone 3G. I've spent more than 20 hours since then trying to get it to do what I needed it to do (i.e., synchronize with Outlook, stay charged up for more than a day, not die when I touch a button, etc.) and then I spent another 3 hours yesterday trying to return it. For more about why I now feel like a moron, read on...
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    For some, the longest week in iPhone history 21/07/2008 09:21:50

    Long lines, delayed activations, short supplies ding Apple image
    With the iPhone 3G launch now a week behind us, it's time to look back and see how the second coming of the iPhone turned out.
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