The end of Time Warner + AOL... White MacBook gets bolder... Windows 1, Linux 0

By Angela Gunn and the Betanews Staff | Published May 28, 2009, 8:38 AM

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Stand by for smartphone mission creep leap

Today's WSJ article on midrange smartphones getting social-networking capabilities is just the tip of the iceberg. You may personally wish you didn't have to know about Twitter, Facebook, and such, but not only will the rest of the world not shut up about them, soon your phone won't either.

The manufacturers certainly see where the money is (isn't that easier when there's so little money around?), and the providers your mobile provider works with are hustling to bulk up their offerings. Good Technology, for instance, announced yesterday that they've acquired Intercasting Corporation. That combines a major enterprise push mobility provider (the guys who very likely make your e-mail and data accessible through your mobile phone; they were part of Motorola until earlier this year, and when Visto acquired the division it changed its name to match) and the purveyors of the ANTHEM platform, which specializes in mobile social networking and has deals in place with the usual MyTwitFace suspects.

We talked yesterday about how information currently wanted to be particulate, real-time, and connected to the reputation of the source. It only makes sense that smartphones are going to be a big part of that, and today's news fragments start to fill that picture in. I'm concerned, though, that I'm not hearing more from the power-management guys where these things are concerned, as I mentioned above.

For instance, the Sidekick LX 2009 I tested last week had some sweet social-networking apps integrated into the operating system. The alerts were great. The interface was great. The go-everywhere functionality was great. And the battery life was horrid. With my Twitter feed set to update regularly, my battery drained in about 14 hours. I was warned by T-Mobile that that might happen, as users of other smartphones are warned about similar apps on other handsets.

But warnings aren't going to be enough. No one who uses a mobile phone these days is going to accept radically diminished battery life as the price for any feature -- not even social-networking-anywhere access. Keep an eye on developments in this space, but don't get too excited until you see big movement from the guys who keep the juice flowing.

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Comments

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Angela, "MyTwitFace" is the funniest thing you've ever said on this website.

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Agreed. Quite the, um....imagination. ;)

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"ATDT 1964 (a buzzy blast from the past)"

Why do I get the feeling, that when the machines take over...

Arnold Schwarzenegger and John Connor finish shooting at each other...

and the human race is enslaved by robots...

...this video will be playing in a Matrix-like machine-museum next to a taxidermy-stuffed Keanu Reeves, under a sign that says "Origins of Life."

Just kidding.

G.C. Hutson
Sadien, Inc.
http://www.sadien.com

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Howdy GC! Hey, could be worse -- could be those Jon-and-Kate people. Or Octomom. Or... oh, dear, this is NOT the tangent my brain needed to go on this morning... help...

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Howdy m'am. (How did you know I was a redneck??)

Personally, I envision an Epcot-like Disney ride, where mechanical versions of Jon-and-Kate, Octomom, Donald Trump, Paris Hilton and the characters from 90210 describe how the machines took-over the human race during a single, 3-hour season finale of American Idol.

G.C.

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Why are we getting last years news?

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What, that AOL thing didn't make you all nostalgic for 2008? Or 1998? :-) Fixed with thanks.

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Tuning out the tablet: Time to give the endless speculation a rest

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AOL's spinoff from Time Warner to shed 2,500 jobs

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Don't forget to upgrade to Firefox 3.6 beta 3 today

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