Sunday, May 6, 2007

Windows Mobile




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More phones can be BlackBerries

The firm behind the popular handheld BlackBerry will make the device's software more widely available.Research in Motion (RIM) plans to roll out software that will allow multimedia mobile phones running on a Microsoft platform to work like BlackBerries.The facility will widen the choice of handsets available for Blackberry devotees who want to use its applications, such as wireless e-mail.But it will only work on mobiles with the latest Windows software.There are currently few models available running Windows Mobile 6.0, the latest version of Microsoft's platform, but the numbers are expected to increase this year.Customised The software is designed to broaden access to Blackberry functions, especially to those who do not want to switch devices to get them.Once the software is installed, the Windows layout and icons are replaced with the BlackBerry interface, customised to the particular handset.A user would be able to switch back and forth between the two platforms, the company said.The Canadian firm said it did not know yet whether downloading the software would incur an added charge, or if it would be included with subscription to the BlackBerry service, which generally costs between $30 (£14.90) and $50 a month.RIM said it was working closely with a number of mobile phone operators, including AT&T, to make the software available on handsets, possibly by September. BlackBerries Technology News by BBC News
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Microsoft aims to double PC base

Microsoft software will sell for just $3 (£1.50) in some parts of the world in an attempt to double the number of global PC users.The firm wants to bring computing to a further one billion people by 2015.Governments in developing countries can purchase the cut-price software, if they provide free PCs for schools.Other companies and organisations are also trying to boost computer literacy in developing countries, notably the One Laptop per Child project.The OLPC are in the final stages of developing a low cost, durable laptop, designed to work specifically in an educational context.Five million of the laptops will be start to be delivered to developing nations this summer.The eventual aim is to sell the machine to developing countries for $100 but the current cost of the machine is about $150.The first countries to sign up to buying the machine, which is officially dubbed XO, include Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Rwanda, Nigeria, Libya, Pakistan and Thailand.Business driveThe Microsoft initiative was launched by Bill Gates in Beijing under the banner of its Unlimited Potential scheme, a program aimed at bridging the digital divide.The scheme aims to bring the benefit of computing technology to the remaining five sixths of the world's population, who currently live without it. "Bringing the benefits of technology to the next five billion people will require new products that meet the needs of underserved communities," said Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. One of the first products, that is hoped will reach the next billion people is the Microsoft's student Innovation Suite.The package includes Windows XP Starter Edition, Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007, as well as other educational software.The $3 package will start to be sold to governments in the second half of 2007."This is not a philanthropic effort, this is a business," Orlando Ayala of Microsoft told the Reuter's news agency.In may developing countries, pirated versions of Microsoft software are sold very cheaply.Governments will be required to provide free computers to schools, capable of running Windows, to be eligible for the discounted software.The scheme is one of many launched by organisation and big business to address the digital divide.Besides the OLPC scheme, chip maker Intel has developed the Classmate PC, while its rival AMD has launched a scheme called 50x15 that aims to put computer technology in the hands of half of the world's population by 2015Microsoft Technology News by BBC News

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