Entries Tagged ‘smart-phones’

16 Aug
2008

Samsung Software to Boost Smartphone Memory

Posted by Mike

Samsung smartphone users will soon enjoy extended internet surfing and music playing capability on their unit. This is after they get a hold of Samsung’s software that is said to boost smartphone memory.

The new software, as Samsung brags, would optimize data transactions within its memory chips as it interacts with the smartphone’s operating system. The software will work on Windows Mobile, Symbian, Linux or even a real-time operating system. It will boost smartphone memory by improving the efficiency of the smartphone’s embedded flash memory.

The software uses file systems such as UniFS, PocketFS, and RFS. It can perform standard smartphone operations such as reading, writing, creating, and deleting files. Samsung also claims that using their new software will even lengthen the lifespan of modern flash drives like UniStore, PocketStore, XSR, and FSR.

Samsung stressed that their software would also aid developers as it will shorten software design times. According to the manufacturer, the software is a perfect fit for programs that deal with video and images.

As Samsung is known for its other products like digital cameras, TVs and other electronic devices, many suspect that this software will soon find its way on other platforms.

Source: Information Week

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2 Jul
2007

It’s What Computers Will Become

Posted by Ruel

Would an entry about Apple’s latest mobile phone be out of place in this blog?

Everybody knows that most, if not all, of my ranting on this page are about computers. Even the cartoons that are occasionally posted here deal with the everyday goofs and frustrations that one might have had or is continuously having with his PC. So why feature something that has a different feather?

Not Just the Birds

Every electronic gadget wants to mirror the functions of a PC. As almost every human activity is assisted or dictated by Information Technology, it’s only natural for consumers to choose devices that would save them from being tied to their computer. Thus, mobile phones of today are not only made for placing and receiving calls. In fact, those two functions seem to be last things that cellular phone makers have in mind whenever they are revising or coming up with new designs.

An excellent example would be the iPhone. The only thing that makes it primarily a mobile phone instead of a miniature PC is its name. Nomenclature aside, one might need a few guesses before he realizes that it’s a cell phone. While Apple is billing it as such, 85% of its manual deals with its computer-like features. Nothing much has been documented about its call functions.

Consumer Demand

The evolution of the mobile phone to a mini PC is the result of the growing demand to be always connected to the Internet. While many saw laptops as the solution or answer for such desire, its bulky architecture has turned off a sizeable number of users who wants their e-mails to be accessible at just a touch of a button. You can’t do that even with an 11-inch notebook. The boot up process just takes too much time. On the other hand, handheld devices, such as smart phones and PDAs, can conveniently connect the user to the Internet in just a few seconds without impeding mobility.

It’s Still What It Is

Despite the fact that many of the mobile phones in the market today pack PC-like functions, its limitations as a miniature computer makes its bid to be an alternative computing device quite ambitious. iPhone’s graphics may be stunning, but it certainly cannot process heavy multimedia tasks that requires extensive video power. Its size also prevents it from using today’s latest processors which are needed in various computing activities. If you’ll analyze it closely, what you actually have is a mobile phone-cum-Web browser. It’s quite erroneous to claim that it’s a computer in the strictest sense of the word.

Foreboding

While I may not agree with the N95’s slogan: “It’s what computers have become,” I do agree that the mobile phones of today will shape the ultimate form of the PC in the next 10 years. Time will come when you’ll be buying anti-spyware programs or registry cleaners not just for your desktop, but for your mobile phone as well. It’s what computers will become.

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