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Linux phone pioneer acquired (LinuxDevices)
LinuxDevices takes a lookat Wind River's acquisition of Korean firm Mizi Research. "Foundedin 1999, Mizi was among the first wave of companies attempting tocommercialize embedded Linux. From the beginning, the company took aninterest in Linux on handsets, as well as PDAs. It began offeringGPL-licensed Linux BSPs (board support packages) for Samsung system-on-chipprocessors targeting smartphones in 2003, and later that year released MiziLinux 2.0, a full software stack targeting phones and other mobiledevices. Samsung first experimented with the stack in 2003, and Mizicollaborated with an unspecified partner in 2004 on a low-cost handsethardware/software reference design."
OneApp
Microsoft on Tuesday announced OneApp, a software application for feature phones. Feature phones, which are essentially low-end mobile phones without any smartphone features, are widely used in both established and emerging markets. OneApp will give users access to mobile applications most often found on smartphones, including social networking, messaging and banking apps.
Neutralizing the Smartphone Security Threat
There are many common, but inaccurate, assumptions about the security and privacy of smartphones and other handheld converged devices. For many corporate employees today, mobile phones and PDAs have replaced PCs. Enterprise workers are now performing the same functions they previously carried out on their desktop PCs on much smaller devices, virtually anywhere and anytime.
The Long March of Androids to the Enterprise
T-Mobile's Tuesday announcement that it will offer a new Android smartphone in August has raised interest in the possibility of greater competition for enterprise adoption. The new Android-powered smartphone, the myTouch 3G, will come loaded with features -- but they are not likely enough to meet the enterprise expectations for security and task integration set by BlackBerry smartphones.
Creating Order from Chaos with Evernote
When he parks his car, author Timothy Ferriss snaps a photo of the nearest cross streets with his camera phone. In business meetings, he'll often take pictures of sketches and notes made on a whiteboard. When he's out for dinner, he'll whip out the phone again to capture an image of the label on the wine he's drinking. He never knows when he'll want to recall the data later.Ferriss, a productivity expert, blogger, and author of the best-selling book The 4-Hour Workweek, then ships those photos to what he calls his "augmented brain," which exists not in his head, but on the Web.He is one of a growing number of people using a Web-based service and software application running on smartphones and PCs called Evernote that is quickly becoming a receptacle for much of the ephemera that otherwise gets cluttered and sometimes lost in a person's busy life.At first, Ferriss resisted the suggestion from readers of his blog that he try the application. "I have this philosophical stance where I tend to avoid accumulating new gadgets and software because usually they create more work than they are meant to prevent," Ferriss says. But when a few reader suggestions turned into dozens, he decided to try it. "At first it wasn't clear what the appeal was. But the more I used it, it became really clear why they liked it."Word Recognition in PhotosFounded by Stepan Pachikov, who co-founded handwriting recognition software company Parascript and is a former vice-president of Silicon Graphics, Evernote is designed for people struggling to become more organized. A February survey by the National Association of Professional Organizers, a trade group, found that 96 percent of some 400 adults said they could save time every day if they were better organized. "No one remembers everything as well as...