Posts tagged CES 2010

How Did AT&T Hold Up at CES 2010? Root Wireless (and TiPb) Report!

root_wireless_ces

One of the more interesting conversations the Smartphone Experts team had at CES 2010 was with Root Wireless, who monitors the performance of Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile in the US. Their overall message is that there’s no single best carrier, because it varies so much from place to place, but they did try to determine which carrier survived CES the best.


Here’s the bottom line:

  • AT&T started out providing the fastest service, but quickly fell to 4th place.

  • Verizon better maintained its consistency of service, performing particularly well on the event’s busiest days.

Loading its proprietary Root Mobile™ crowdsourcing application on smartphones purchased off-the-shelf from each of the ‘Big Four’ carriers, Root Wireless conducted stationary tests at a fixed location immediately adjacent to the Las Vegas Convention Center, constantly running Root Mobile from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., January 5-8. The linear tests determine data transmissions speeds, cell tower hand-off rates and network connection failures, as monitored and reported by Root Mobile. It is noteworthy that the findings differ from others data transmission speed tests conducted using PCs, precisely because Root Mobile is engineered to determine wireless consumers’ real-world experience using smartphones, not PCs. Also worth keeping in mind: Results reported here are local to the Las Vegas Convention Center. Root Wireless network mapping software has confirmed that all network performance is local; it varies from neighborhood-to-neighborhood, from service provider to service provider.

CrackBerry Kevin shot some video at Root Wireless’ booth, so if you’re curious for more (and the techies among you should be!) go check that out on CrackBerry.com.

My experience after the break!

Now make no mistake, there were a lot of iPhones at CES. Tons of BlackBerrys too spread over all the carriers, and a few DROIDs here and there, but the iPhone and AT&T definitely had one of the most visible presences at this convention. For my part, I brought my Rogers iPhone 3GS with me (and yes, it was very expensive). That meant I roamed between AT&T 3G and T-Mobile EDGE (something several Americans told me they wished they could do!).

Anecdotally, not just at CES but at the airports in between, I would walk down a hall and lose all signal on one network and have to wait for my iPhone to roam back to the other. Same in Vegas, the hotel had zero T-Mobile EDGE, but fine AT&T 3G, while the Convention Center was AT&T fail and solid T-Mobile EDGE. Sympathetically, I don’t know how you Americans suffer through any of your GSM/HSPA carriers (and Dieter might add Sprint to the list, given his MiFi failures during the show).

Fake Steve was right, you live in one of the most technologically advanced countries in the world, and quite often you can’t connect a call or pull any data. And worse, even when a cell tower gives you 5 full bars of signal, there’s no telling wether the backhaul has any actual bandwidth left behind it. (Imagine having a powerful WiFi router lit up at home, but your cable or DSL modem was dead behind it).

O2 is apparently suffering now as well, so you’re not alone, but it’s going to take massive investment and brilliant innovation (including solid 4G coverage) to ride the upcoming tsunami-like data demands.

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

How Did AT&T Hold Up at CES 2010? Root Wireless (and TiPb) Report!



Cocoon Grid-It and Fastback — TiPb @ CES 2010

Screen shot 2010-01-17 at 11.21.07 PM

At CES 2010, Cocoon Innovations went from dipping a toe into iPhone waters with their new, windowed, messenger-style netbook bag to diving straight in with the secret-in-the-turtleshell Fastback cases.


The netbook case has a transparent pocket to showoff your iPhone or iPod touch, and inside features their really interesting looking Grid-It organizer, which can also safely and snuggly stow your iPhone or iPod inside.

The Fastback is an iPhone case that opens in the back to reveal an ample amount of storage for a headset, cards, etc.

Video after the break!

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Cocoon Grid-It and Fastback — TiPb @ CES 2010



Case-Mate Go Bare for iPhone — TiPb @ CES 2010

Case-Mate Go Bare for iPhone

After being Barely There last year, at CES 2010 TiPb wanted to know how much slimmer Case-Mate could go — turns out they could go Bare. You read that right, one of the big products on display for Case-Mate in 2010 was their entry into the iPhone skin market, and the twist is their version doesn’t require any application liquid, you just peel and apply.

Video of the skin being applied, after the break. And if you’re the guy who made a living selling the tiny little squirt bottles, please don’t comment spam us — we’re just the messenger….


This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Case-Mate Go Bare for iPhone — TiPb @ CES 2010



TiPb Presents: iPhone Live! #83 — CES-travaganza


Join PreCentral.net’s Dieter, AndroidCentral.com’s Phil, and Rene for iPhone 4, CES roundup, Palm Pre/Pixi Plus, Nexus One, iTablet, and all the week’s news and opinions. Listen in!

Credits

Thanks to the the iPhone Blog Store for sponsoring the podcast, and to everyone who showed up for the live chat!

Our music comes from the following sources:

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb Presents: iPhone Live! #83 — CES-travaganza



ZAGGbox, ZAGGsparq, App Space — TiPb @ CES 2010

zaggbox

ZAGG, the makers of Invisible Shield, have diversified in a big way with their ZAGGbox video recorder, ZAGGsparq battery charger, and AppSpace service.

ZAGGbox pulls in all your analog video (including HD via component), gives you fast switching via a unified remote, and renders iPhone-compatible video you can send right to your device.

ZAGGsparq is a massive battery charger that re-charge an iPhone 4 times before it runs out of juice, and since it has 2 USB ports, it can charge your Bluetooth or any other compatible gadget at the same time.

AppSpace is an application discovery engine where you can go online to try and sort through the App Store’s massive catalog and find more of the stuff you like. It also supports Android, with BlackBerry, Palm, and Symbian coming soon.

Video of all three, after the break!


[YouTube video link]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

ZAGGbox, ZAGGsparq, App Space — TiPb @ CES 2010



iType Physical Keyboard for iPhone Gets the Ultimate Test — TiPb @ CES 2010

ion_itype2

Ion’s iType is a full sized — full. sized. — keyboard for the iPhone or iPod touch that comes bundled with an App Store app for easy text input. Output is another story — given the iPhone’s app sandboxing, you have to email or copy and paste the text into other apps. Ion is open to letting other apps use their hardware, however, so if Apple doesn’t get it together and offer standardized keyboard dock and BT protocols, and something like a Finger App to share document content, we’re hoping third parties can get at least part of it done themselves.

They also make a piano/synthesizer style iDiscover keyboard as well.

But enough philosophy, let’s get physical with the keyboard. And who better to try perform the ultimate typing test than our best frenemy CrackBerry Kevin. He puts it through its paces in the video below. Check it out after the break, and let us know what you think.


[YouTube video link]





This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iType Physical Keyboard for iPhone Gets the Ultimate Test — TiPb @ CES 2010



Evernote’s CEO Opens Up About Evernote’s Future [VIDEO]

href=”http://api.tweetmeme.com/share?url=http://mashable.com/2010/01/11/evernote-ceo-interview/&service=bit.ly”> width=”51″ height=”61″ src=”http://api.tweetmeme.com/imagebutton.gif?url=http://mashable.com/2010/01/11/evernote-ceo-interview/” align=”right”/>

src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/evernote-ceo-260.jpg” class=”alignright”>Social note-taking tool href=”http://evernote.com” >Evernote has been on a roll. In the last month, the company has href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/15/evernote-funding/”>raised $10 million in funding, launched an href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/16/evernote-android/”>Android version, and most recently, href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/30/evernote-2-million/”>surpassed 2 million users. /> id=”more-180997″> /> At CES 2010 last week, I had the opportunity to sit down with Phil Libin, the CEO of Evernote, to discuss the Evernote phenomenon. How did he get Evernote to two million users in just a few years? Why do half of Evernote’s users have the iPhone app? How does the company intend to improve its retention rate? And how in the heck does someone create over 80,000 different notes? I asked him all of these questions, plus many more.

We filmed the entire 12 minute interview, so be sure to watch the whole thing and let us know what you think of Evernote and the discussion surrounding it in the comments.

classid=”clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000″ width=”640″ height=”542″ id=”viddler_Mystalic_11″> name=”movie” value=”http://www.viddler.com/player/8e8b877/” /> name=”allowScriptAccess” value=”always” /> name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true” /> src=”http://www.viddler.com/player/8e8b877/” wmode=”opaque” width=”640″ height=”542″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowScriptAccess=”always” allowFullScreen=”true” name=”viddler_Mystalic_11″ />

/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/337088-Evernote” >Evernote

Tags: href=”http://mashable.com/tag/business/”>business, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/ces/”>CES, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/ces-2010/”>CES 2010, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/evernote/”>evernote, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/interview/”>interview, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/video/”>video





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