Thunderdome

« Back to the top page
IDG News Service

Week in smartphones: Motorola Droid debuts, iPhone after AT&T, BlackBerry Storm2 blows in

Network World Staff, Networld World11.02.2009
Tags
Comments 0
Like the story? Get Alerts of big news events. Enter your email address

Here's our weekly roundup of smartphone news, from the Motorola/Verizon Droid’s formal announcement to pricing info on the new BlackBerry Storm2 to a Palm Pixi preview to word about what might be beyond the exclusive Apple iPhone-AT&T deal:

Verizon takes a run at iPhone with its Motorola Droid smartphone

Wednesday's formal unveiling of the Motorola Droid smartphone on Verizon's network was an anticlimax, given most of the details had been leaked days earlier.  Nevertheless, it's the boldest, most open iPhone challenge yet. The announcement in New York revealed a handset almost exactly the size of Apple's wildly successful iPhone, but with a sliding QWERTY keyboard. And it's the first smartphone to run the new Android 2.0 operating system

Google gives GPS a whirl 

Computerworld reported that Google released a beta version of Google Maps Navigation for Android 2.0 devices. "This new feature comes with everything you'd expect to find in a GPS navigation system, like 3D views, turn-by-turn voice guidance and automatic rerouting," wrote Keith Ito, a Google software engineer, on a blog post . "But unlike most navigation systems, Google Maps Navigation was built from the ground up to take advantage of your phone's Internet connection."

Sprint plans to release Palm Pixi in mid-November

Sprint said it will release the second Palm webOS device, the Palm Pixi smartphone, on Nov. 15, priced at $100, after $150 in rebates. he Pixi offers a full, exposed QWERTY keyboard, and a multi-touch screen that is smaller than the one featured on its sibling, the Palm Pre, whose keyboard slides out vertically. The 3G phone lacks Wi-Fi, which is featured in the higher-end Pre.

Nokia to pull plug on N-Gage gaming system

Nokia has finally decided to kill off its N-Gage gaming platform after years of shifting the strategy behind it with little success. Nokia introduced N-Gage in 2003 as a standalone handheld gaming device, which developed a small but enthusiastic following. Nokia later discontinued the device and instead came up with a plan to develop phones that would support the N-Gage platform. After a delay, it began introducing phones that could play N-Gage games in early 2008.

Verizon BlackBerry Storm2 Coming on Oct. 28 for $179.99

Verizon Wireless formally announced its newest BlackBerry smartphone, RIM’s Storm2 9550. The touchscreen mobile device, which RIM actually announced the week before, will run on CDMA and GSM networks.

Mobile phone shipments looking up

The mobile phone market grew 5.6% in the third quarter vs. the second quarter, the first increase since the economy headed south, according to an IDC report. Not that the market is out of the woods entirely, since shipments actually fell by 6% from Q3 last year.

Verizon-Apple iPhone deal in the future?

The Wall Street Journal reported that Apple will likely ditch its exclusive deal with AT&T next year and allow Verizon to offer subscribers iPhones as well. The Journal reports that a Broadpoint AmTech analyst wrote to clients that such a deal would make up


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Respectful debate is welcome, but comments that are defamatory, indecent, abusive, or in violation of any law will be removed.