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Google Voice app for Android is here

google+voice+logo Google Voice app for Android is hereGoogle Voice, previously called Grand Central, is rolling out the Android app for the service. The main function of this app is to make it easier to use your Google Voice phone number by automatically routing outbound calls through Google and to the recipient.
The Android application is being released this morning, this is the most complete and takes over the native dialer, address book and call log. Users won’t be bothered with accidentally dialing numbers through the device phone number.
The app also allow users to access the core features of Google Voice. Listen to/read voicemails and text messages (all voicemails are automatically transcribed as well), access call history, send SMS messages and place international calls at low rates.

The Google Voice Android app can be downloaded at m.google.com/voice starting today. OR Open Android Market and search for ‘Google Voice’.

via Techcrunch

Run Android on your PC now

For those of you wanting to get a taste of Android OS without buying one of those Android devices, here we are, Few guys have developed a hack to run Android on x86 based devices. This hack can be burned to a CD and used easily.

The new LiveCD will allow people to get a look at Android before it hits the shelves inside a netbook.

The version was reportedly ported form an Asus Eee 701 netbook that was running Android. The software is said to be easy to install as well with users only needing to grab the ISO file, burn it to a CD and boot with the CD they made for install.

With a LiveCD, there’s no need to install the OS, so you can test-drive the software without writing it to your system’s hard disk. The LiveCD can also run under virtualisation such as VirtualBox or VMware or the other thing by the Vole.

More About Live Android

HTC Hero UK launch delayed

htc+hero+amazon+product+page HTC Hero UK launch delayedAccording to the latest reports from various sources, the launch of HTC Hero in UK has been delayed to first week of August. While the Amazon product page of HTC Hero shows July 24 as the release date, while the latest tweet from Devicewire says that HTC Hero wont be launched till Aug first week.


Devicewire Tweet: Bad News – HTC Hero launch date delayed. Now due in to stock during the first week of August .

HTC Hero was earlier scheduled for July 15 launch.

Android "Donut" update to focus on Social Networking

android+donut+update Android "Donut" update to focus on Social NetworkingThere are still no big details about the next Android update, termed as “Donut” and other future releases “Eclair and Flan.” The previous update was called “Cupcake.”
However according to an article on the WSJ, Google VP of engineering, Andy Rubin says the social element will be a big focus in the upcoming update.

The word is that the social push will pull caller ID images from social network sites such as Facebook and use profile pictures which of course the BlackBerry and Palm Pre already does.

Yet another significant extra could be the inclusion of carrier billing for mobile applications bought in the Android Market; as yet the only payment option is Google Checkout but using this way a user can purchase all in a single swoop.

via Phone Review

HTC Hero Review

htc hero orange HTC Hero ReviewHTC Hero reviews are flooding the web, I have chosen some points from the Stuff.tv and Engadget reviews to go through how this latest Android phone from HTC will fare.

HTC Hero Review

At first glance, it comes across as a lighter, slimmer lovechild of the G1 and Magic. Just like the G1, the Hero has an angled mouthpiece, but like the Magic, it dispenses with a QWERTY keyboard in favour of a 3.2in capacitive screen.

Where the G1 felt like a clunky brick and the Magic was no great shakes in the design department, the Hero feels comfortable and light in the hand, and the Teflon coating makes it tough and rugged.

Just like the Magic, the touchscreen is iPhone-rivalling – it’s fast, responsive and a joy to use, with the trackball at the bottom giving extra navigation options.

Features boost
Many of the features that were lacking on the Magic have been rectified on the HTC Hero – there’s now a 3.5mm headphone jack, as well as A2DP Bluetooth and the camera has been upped to a respectable 5MP with autofocus.

There’s the same dedicated search button below the screen, which will perform a contextual search of whichever screen you happen to be in – for example, Twitter, email or the web.

Seeing Sense
But it’s the all-new user interface that’s got us most excited. Dubbed HTC Sense, it’ll be rolling out on all HTC handsets beginning with the Hero and it gives the user a whole host of options to make your handset ultra-customisable.

The concept is that your handset is a blank slate and, like on Nokia’s N97, you decide which live, widget-based apps you want to add to one of your seven – yes, seven – homescreens.Instead of launching an app every time you want to check your Twitter feed, emails, weather or stocks, you simply choose from the HTC or Android widgets and drag and drop them onto one of your screens.

Customise your widgets
The huge time and effort that has gone into widget design – there are 12 different clock styles for instance – means that you’ll never have a phone exactly the same as anyone else.

You can rig up a homescreen for all your multimedia apps – for example, one for business use, one for all social networking and one for weather and transport information. It’s a synch to flick between them too.

Another neat touch is that your contacts screen contains all information on how that particular mate has been communicating – you’ll see their SMS, call history, emails, Facebook updates, Twitter and Flickr feeds all in one place.

It’s then up to you how you want to get in touch with them. This is a brilliant touch and dispenses with the need to launch loads of separate apps to see what your mates are up to.

Flashy browser
Web browsing is also a seamless experience, with pages neatly reflowing and full Flash browsing supported (take note, iPhone). From what we’ve seen, the Hero coupled with the Sense interface is the first phone to fully capitalise on Android’s massive potential, while live widgets, Flash support and a 3.5mm jack give it an edge over the iPhone.

If Android can get together a decent app store that doesn’t lag behind Apple’s, then the Hero could be our new favourite handset. The HTC Hero will be available in July, no word yet on carriers and we’re told it’ll be available in white and black/brown models on launch with possibly more to follow.

According to Engadget HTC Hero review:

  • The beveled edges along the back makes the handset sit comfortably in the hand, and while the teflon coat doesn’t necessarily feel revolutionary, it’s going to make a world of difference after a couple of months riding in our grubby pockets. It’s certainly solid, but much more so than other “brick” phones.
  • The Sense UI (or as HTC terms it, “user experience”) riding a capacitive touchscreen offers a people-centric approach to managing your information that is absolutely dreamy at first blush — though it shares a lot of TouchFLO heritage. In fact, HTC promises to have a very similar Sense-branded experience for Windows Mobile.
  • The on-screen keyboard also seems quite useable with a nice simulated haptic forced-feedback bounce when you strike each key in either landscape or portrait mode (which can naturally be deactivated). HTC has built its own touch keyboard from the ground up, and in our brief couple of tests we’d say it’s probably the best touchscreen typing experience we’ve ever felt. It never lags behind, and has great colorful visual cues for its auto-corrected words — green means it’s suggesting a correctly spelled word, red means we’ve gone off the beaten path, and the T9-style multiple suggestions are heavenly.
  • This intuitive one-hander isn’t shy with the specs either as we’ve already seen in the official press release. Our only concern is possible sluggishness from the Qualcomm processor that cause the graphic transitions to stutter a bit and results in screen rotations that feel dangerously uncomfortable.
  • We were told that the device we saw was running pre-production firmware so there’s still time to tweak — though not much with a July European launch.
  • The Hero is not a “Google Experience” device. As such, you won’t find the Google logo anywhere (no big deal) but you also won’t be downloading any firmware updates over the air — sideloading only kids. Not a deal breaker but an annoying and seemingly arbitrary limitation nonetheless. There’s still a small lack of clarity of how updates will work with HTC’s “mods” living on top of basic Android — even if they’re able to port in new Android versions seamlessly, we imagine there will be some breakage.
  • For a device without a physical keyboard, the Hero seems a little thick up against its HTC Magic, Nokia N97, and iPhone 3G counterparts, but not overly so.
  • HTC has confirmed that whichever (unspecified) carrier gets the phone in the US will have a modified version, both in software (carrier-specific services) and in hardware chassis tweaks. Just don’t take our teflon away, ok HTC?
  • Battery is the same larger slab that’s in the myTouch, and HTC also claims to have done some vague, unspecified things OS-side to improve battery life as well. “Heavy users will be able to get through a day.”
  • The camera is responsive and seems to do a fine job at autofocus, but wasn’t astonishingly great at first glance.
  • The phone will be available for free on T-Mobile UK — if only we could be so subsidy lucky in the US.

CanvasM offering applications on Android for Airtel

CanvasLogo CanvasM offering applications on Android for AirtelCanvasM Technologies Limited, the joint venture of Motorola Inc. and Tech Mahindra, is offering two mobile applications ‘Weather Channel’ and ‘In Mobile Search’ on Google’s Android platform for HTC handsets.

Airtel will be launching the Android based HTC Magic handsets in India and is expected to hit the market later this month.

Weather Channel application provides weather updates and forecasts to users from its current location for the same day as well as for the next three days. It’s a location-based application that works on global positioning system (GPS).

In-Mobile Search, the utility application, helps users in searching information stored on the handset such as contacts, images, audio/video files and other details from a single interface.

It searches information by query string and also allows to view images and play audio/video files without using any external applications.

Apart from these applications, CanvasM has bundled and integrated several third-party mobile applications such as City Search, Buddy Finder, Location Minder and Em-Flash for Airtel’s HTC Magic handsets.

All about HTC Hero

large hero all All about HTC Hero
The HTC Hero may well be the most anticipated Android handset to debut. If you are anxiously waiting to get your hand son one, you only have to wait a few more days.

The Hero will hit the UK on 21 July and it will sell for £439. The original release date was expected to be July 15; we aren’t sure exactly what has changed.

With its 3.2-inch HVGA display, the HTC Hero is optimized for Web, multimedia and other content while maintaining a small size and weight that fits comfortably in your hand. It also boasts a broad variety of hardware features including a GPS, digital compass, gravity-sensor, 3.5mm stereo headset jack, a 5 mega-pixel autofocus camera and expandable MicroSD memory. HTC Hero also includes a dedicated Search button that goes beyond basic search, providing you with a more natural, contextual search experience that enables you to search through Twitter, locate people in your contact list, find emails in your inbox or search in any other area in Hero.

HTC Sense
Built on a culture of innovation and a passion to enhance peoples lives, HTC shapes the mobile experience around the individual. Debuting on the HTC Hero and available on all new HTC devices moving forward, Sense delivers on three basic principles: Make it Mine, Stay Close and Discover the Unexpected.

Specification

Processor Qualcomm® MSM7200A™, 528 MHz
Platform Android™
Memory ROM: 512 MB
RAM: 288 MB
Dimensions (LxWxT) 112 x 56.2 x 14.35 mm ( 4.41 x 2.21 x 0.57 inches)
Weight 135 grams ( 4.76 ounces) with battery
Display 3.2-inch TFT-LCD touch-sensitive screen with 320×480 HVGA resolution
Network HSPA/WCDMA:
- 900/2100 MHz
- Up to 2 Mbps up-link and 7.2 Mbps down-link speeds
Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE:
- 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
(Band frequency and data speed are operator dependent.)
Device Control Trackball with Enter button
GPS Internal GPS antenna
Connectivity Bluetooth® 2.0 with Enhanced Data Rate and A2DP for wireless
Wi-Fi®: IEEE 802.11 b/g
3.5 mm audio jack
Camera 5.0 megapixel color camera with auto focus
Audio Supported Formats MP3, AAC(AAC, AAC+, AAC-LC), AMR-NB, WAV, MIDI and Windows Media® Audio 9
Video Supported Formats MPEG-4, H.263, H.264 and Windows Media® Video 9
Battery Rechargeable Lithium-ion battery
Capacity: 1350 mAh
Talk time:
- Up to 420 minutes for WCDMA
- Up to 470 minutes for GSM
Standby time:
- Up to 750 hours for WCDMA
- Up to 440 hours for GSM
(The above are subject to network and phone usage.)
Expansion Slot microSD™ memory card (SD 2.0 compatible)
AC Adapter Voltage range/frequency: 100 ~ 240V AC, 50/60 Hz
DC output: 5V and 1A
Special Features G-sensor
Digital Compass

Skip long IVR calling menus using Fonolo for Android app

fonolo+logo Skip long IVR calling menus using Fonolo for Android appAre you frustrated of waiting and listening to IVR calling systems and want to jump the queue. Fonolo has come with a really interesting Android application which lets you, dial directly to over 500 N A companies with just few clicks.
With Fonolo, callers can navigate a company’s phone menu visually and reach any point in that menu with a simple click. Fonolo then rings the user’s phone and connects the two parties. Fonolo continues to expand its directory, which now includes 500 North American companies.
You can Deep Dial directly from Android-powered mobile phones, using the “Fonolo for Android” application.
Deep Dialing allows users to skip dreaded phone menus (also known as IVR systems) and get to the right person or department, ending the aggravation of “Press one for this, press two for that.” Fonolo’s free consumer service is now even more powerful.
Today’s release adds features such as call recording, “Quick Tones” and Deep Dialing access to more than 500 companies.

Update*: Call Recording and Quick Tones are only available in Web app, not in Android app.

Download Today Fonolo for Android application from Android Market.

Chinese chipmaker Rockchip to launch CPU for Android

rockchip Chinese chipmaker Rockchip to launch CPU for AndroidARM could be getting a bit of competition in the ultra-low voltage CPU market with Chinese chip maker Rockchip getting in on the act.

According to an article over on PMP Today, the company has designed a range of new processors for the next generation of Chinese smartphones – with the most notable being the RK2808, a processor expressly designed for devices running Google’s Android mobile platform.

The company, which has previously specialised in mobile internet devices, hopes that its new processor will bring improved multimedia capabilities to Android-based devices to address what it calls “poor multimedia functions, which [are] recognised by the industry.”

The company is looking to launch the first Android-based handset with the RK2808 chip on-board some time after October – with an Android-based PMP device acting as the testing ground before Rockchip wets its feet in the new mobile ‘phone market. With support for mobile TV functionality and the ability to play back up to 720p content, it could prove a winner.

via bit-tech.net

Acer Android Netbook to come in August

acer android netbook Acer Android Netbook to come in AugustAcer is expected to launch its previously announced dual-OS netbook, with both Windows XP and Android, in August 2009, while Quanta Computer and Compal Electronics both set to benefit from the orders, according to a Chinese-language Apple Daily report.

Since Acer still needs to pay licensing fees for Windows XP on the netbook, the product is unlikely to be priced lower than XP-only models.

In additional news, Asustek Computer and Micro-Star International (MSI) are still developing Android-based netbooks, but have no plans launch related netbooks in 2009, added the paper.

via Digitimes

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