Monday, April 9, 2012

iphone - Google News: Fresh iPhone 5 rumors: Modified chip, new body, bigger screen - CNET

iphone - Google News
Google News
Fresh iPhone 5 rumors: Modified chip, new body, bigger screen - CNET
Apr 10th 2012, 05:07


Fresh iPhone 5 rumors: Modified chip, new body, bigger screen
CNET
The next-gen iPhone is going to be a really big deal and include plenty of design tweaks, according to reports. by Brooke Crothers April 9, 2012 10:03 PM PDT Follow @mbrookec More next-gen iPhone rumors surfaced today pointing to a modified Apple chip, ...
Remains of the Day: Mongering rumorsComputerworld

all 2 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: New Best JAILBREAK and UNLOCK iPhone 4S/4 and iPad iOS 5.1/5.0.1 Easy Untethered - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com

iphone - Google News
Google News
New Best JAILBREAK and UNLOCK iPhone 4S/4 and iPad iOS 5.1/5.0.1 Easy Untethered - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
Apr 9th 2012, 14:41


International Business Times

New Best JAILBREAK and UNLOCK iPhone 4S/4 and iPad iOS 5.1/5.0.1 Easy Untethered
The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
By now coa Great news for all iPhone enthusiasts, appleUnlOcker.com have released the latest iPhone UnlOck and untethered UnlOck method capable of UnlOcking the latest iPhone 4/4S ios 5 5.1. It is available to download now at Apple Solution Dot Com ...
iPhone 5 Release Rumors: Will Next Apple Phone Feature Face Unlock, Camera ...International Business Times
Untethered Jailbreak and Unlock iOS 5.1/5.0.1 iPhone 4S, 4, 3GS, iPad 2 and ...PR Web (press release)
Unlock and Jailbreak iPhone 4/4S iPhone iOs 5.1 Best Solution Online TodayThe Boundary Sentinel (blog)
Robot Reviews (blog) -IBTimes.co.uk -The Australian Eye (press release)
all 111 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Real Software to Unlock and Jailbreak iPhone 4/4S,3G iOS 5.1 Untethered - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com

iphone - Google News
Google News
Real Software to Unlock and Jailbreak iPhone 4/4S,3G iOS 5.1 Untethered - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
Apr 9th 2012, 14:22


The Star-Ledger - NJ.com

Real Software to Unlock and Jailbreak iPhone 4/4S,3G iOS 5.1 Untethered
The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
By now coa You can fiind the best tools to Unlock iPhone 4s/4/3gs on iPhoneJAILBREAKUNLOCK.ORG Is very simple to Unlock iPhone 4s/4/3gs with the help of this tool.I managed to Unlock iPhone 4s/4/3gs and I have to say that is working great.

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iphone - Google News: iPhone users get elitist over Instagram for Android launch - Digitaltrends.com

iphone - Google News
Google News
iPhone users get elitist over Instagram for Android launch - Digitaltrends.com
Apr 10th 2012, 00:38


Digitaltrends.com

iPhone users get elitist over Instagram for Android launch
Digitaltrends.com
Shortly after it became known that Android users could download and beginning posting to Instagram, iPhone users made their disappointment known. There have been complaints about the feed being flooded with low quality Android-taken photos, ...
Done with Instagram? Here Are Six Great Alternatives for the iPhoneLifehacker
Insta-Rich: $1 Billion for InstagramWall Street Journal
Facebook buying photo-share app Instagram for $1BSeattle Post Intelligencer
International Business Times AU -CNET (blog)
all 1,814 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Analyst cuts AAPL rating on iPhone subsidy backlash, estimates $1B earnings miss - Apple Insider

iphone - Google News
Google News
Analyst cuts AAPL rating on iPhone subsidy backlash, estimates $1B earnings miss - Apple Insider
Apr 10th 2012, 00:38


AppAdvice

Analyst cuts AAPL rating on iPhone subsidy backlash, estimates $1B earnings miss
Apple Insider
By Mikey Campbell BITG Research's Walter Piecyk cut his rating of AAPL stock from "buy" to "neutral" in a note to investors on Monday, saying that telecoms are growing weary of paying high subsidies for the iPhone with returns that don't match Apple's ...
Apple Gets Rare Downgrade on Doubts It Can Keep Selling iPhone for $600CNBC.com
Analyst: If iPhone subsidies end, Microsoft could gainTechFlash
Apple: BTIG Cuts to Hold; iPhone Subsidies Could Dry UpBarron's (blog)
Fox Business -Ottawa Citizen -AppAdvice
all 42 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: New iPhone app aims to sweeten dreams - The Guardian

iphone - Google News
Google News
New iPhone app aims to sweeten dreams - The Guardian
Apr 9th 2012, 23:05


Daily Mail

New iPhone app aims to sweeten dreams
The Guardian
Participants will download a specially designed iPhone app that turns their phone into a "dream factory". Placed on the bed, the phone can detect when a sleeper is not moving, which signifies the onset of dreaming. It then plays a carefully crafted ...
iPhone app Dream:ON lets users influence dreams with soundscapesDaily Mail
To sleep, perchance to dream: iPhone app could let sleepers control dreamsDeadline News

all 148 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: An iPhone Case Ready for a Dunking - New York Times (blog)

iphone - Google News
Google News
An iPhone Case Ready for a Dunking - New York Times (blog)
Apr 9th 2012, 22:30


New York Times (blog)

An iPhone Case Ready for a Dunking
New York Times (blog)
By ROY FURCHGOTT Many iPhone waterproof cases turn the sleek device into a oversized lump with all the elegance of a 1950's diving bell. Not so with the LifeProof iPhone case, which claims to be the slimmest waterproof case for the iPhone, ...

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iphone - Google News: How to unlock an AT&T iPhone - CNET (blog)

iphone - Google News
Google News
How to unlock an AT&T iPhone - CNET (blog)
Apr 9th 2012, 21:19


ABC News (blog)

How to unlock an AT&T iPhone
CNET (blog)
Now, it won't unlock just any iPhone; there are stipulations you'll have to meet before being freed from the carrier. The requirements, according to a statement issued to CNET, are: " ...that a customer's account must be in good standing, their device ...
Finally! Unlock your iPhone: Legit, via AT&TComputerworld (blog)
AT&T off-contract iPhone unlock in 4 easy stepsSlashGear
Unlocking Old iPhones: Should Business Users Bother?InformationWeek
USA TODAY -ABC News (blog)
all 126 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Lumia 900 gets the girls like the iPhone, AT&T ad alludes - CNET

iphone - Google News
Google News
Lumia 900 gets the girls like the iPhone, AT&T ad alludes - CNET
Apr 9th 2012, 22:10


VentureBeat

Lumia 900 gets the girls like the iPhone, AT&T ad alludes
CNET
Just like that other sexy phone does. by Chris Matyszczyk April 9, 2012 3:06 PM PDT It was always the unspoken truth of the iPhone that it had a mesmerizing effect when placed on a bar. Yes, Apple employees forgot to pick up prototypes from the bar on ...
Nokia and Microsoft Take on the iPhone — By Going LocalMashable
Move over iPhone: AT&T to spend up to $150M on Lumia 900 campaignVentureBeat
If an iPhone wannabe lands on Easter, does it make a splash?Fortune (blog)
InformationWeek -South Asian News Agency
all 753 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Next-gen iPhone, iPod touch may include an A5X "variant," but why? - Ars Technica

iphone - Google News
Google News
Next-gen iPhone, iPod touch may include an A5X "variant," but why? - Ars Technica
Apr 9th 2012, 20:52


TIME

Next-gen iPhone, iPod touch may include an A5X "variant," but why?
Ars Technica
By Chris Foresman | Published April 9, 2012 3:40 PM Apple is purportedly testing a next-generation hardware platform for the next iPhone revision expected later this year. While the external design is still being worked out, test mules using an iPhone ...
iPhone and iPod Touch Rumors Collide in Apple RumorpocalypseTIME
New iPhone to debut in October, Foxconn employee saysCNET
iPhone 5 Release: Apple Tests Prototype In Old Cases, Features Include A5X ...International Business Times
9 to 5 Mac -SlashGear -Tom's Guide
all 76 news articles »

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iPhone: PAX East 2012: Ms. Splosion Man Gets Reworked for iOS

iPhone
PAX East 2012: Ms. Splosion Man Gets Reworked for iOS
Apr 9th 2012, 20:59

Austin-based developer Twisted Pixel has demonstrated an uncanny knack for creating wholly original and distinctive play experiences, and one of its best recent creations -- last year's Xbox Live Arcade download, Ms. Splosion Man -- is coming to iPad and iPhone this summer via a reworked and expanded port that adds more than touch controls.

Twisted Pixel announced the upcoming release on the first day of the PAX East gaming convention in Boston this weekend, and while it had a playable build of the game available at its booth, it wasn't representative of what to expect from the final release. Jay Stuckwisch, 2D artist and community manager at the studio, explained that the PAX East build was a rough demo essentially ported over from the Xbox Live Arcade version of the game, and that the final release will include unspecified "new gameplay functions" that will be revealed prior to its expected summer release.

Still, I was able to get a sense for how the game will control on iOS devices. In the side-scrolling game, you play as the titular heroine, a science experiment gone wrong who has the ability to explode herself up to three times between recharges to blast upwards and outwards through challenging stages. In the iPad version at PAX East, you used a sliding directional pad to move left and right, plus you could swipe upwards to climb a ledge once dangling from the edge, while tapping elsewhere would make you 'splode. The frame rate ran a little slow on the build, but Stuckwisch noted that the level was quickly ported just to give fans an idea of what to expect, and that the game would be fully optimized for the platform.

Luckily, Twisted Pixel has some very good company for its first iOS release -- it's being assisted on the project by Iron Galaxy Studios, the Chicago-based company that brought Scribblenauts Remix to the App Store last fall. And with luck, it won't be the last we see of Twisted Pixel on the App Store; last year's The Gunstringer for Kinect could work splendidly on a touch screen device. But Ms. Splosion Man is the studio's iOS focus for now, and we can expect what will likely be a universal release to launch this summer.

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iphone - Google News: Apple's Stock Downgraded on iPhone Subsidy Concerns - The Mac Observer

iphone - Google News
Google News
Apple's Stock Downgraded on iPhone Subsidy Concerns - The Mac Observer
Apr 9th 2012, 19:14


All Things Digital

Apple's Stock Downgraded on iPhone Subsidy Concerns
The Mac Observer
He also expressed doubt about Apple's ability to wrangle US$600 per iPhone in emerging markets where carrier subsidies are few and far between. The analyst removed his 12-month price target of $600 on AAPL, a price the stock surpassed earlier this year ...
Apple Gets Rare Downgrade on Doubts It Can Keep Selling iPhone for $600CNBC.com
Apple: BTIG Cuts to Hold; iPhone Subsidies Could Dry UpBarron's (blog)
Analyst Cuts Apple Rating on Prospect of iPhone Subsidy RevoltAll Things Digital
Ottawa Citizen -BGR
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iPhone: PAX East 2012: Getting Wooded Revenge with Jack Lumber for iOS

iPhone
PAX East 2012: Getting Wooded Revenge with Jack Lumber for iOS
Apr 9th 2012, 19:49

Owlchemy Labs first original game, Snuggle Truck, was defined in large part by its reaction to controversy, as the first version -- dubbed Smuggle Truck -- dealt with illegal immigration and generated a small media firestorm and initial App Store rejection. The studio's new effort, titled Jack Lumber, isn't likely to yield criticism for its premise, though it might trigger anger: and it'll be directed squarely at one seriously maniacal tree.

I had a chance to try out the just-announced game at the PAX East gaming convention in Boston this weekend, and the upcoming summer iOS release starts with a little grim humor. The protagonist's kindly grandma is seen sitting in her rocker, minding her own business, when all of a sudden a tree falls on her -- and then mocks you from afar. Now it's up to you to hunt down the evil tree and turn it into firewood, a task made all the more interesting by the fact that you're a supernatural lumberjack.

Each game begins with a cinematic of Jack thrusting lightning bolts from his spirited axe towards the forest, which sends several logs into the air and kickstarts the action. As the timbers spin speedily through the sky, you can press and hold the iPad or iPhone screen at any time to slow down the action and start slicing wood. Basic pieces must be cut down the middle; hitting anywhere else on the log will kill the sluggish effect and end your scoring chance. The goal is to cut through as many pieces of wood on the screen without messing up or running out of time.

As you progress through the waves of skyward logs, you'll encounter other pieces that vary the experience, such as ones that can be cut sideways, others that can only be cut from one direction, and some that add time to the clock. You'll also have to dodge animals found in the mix, though you'll occasionally be rewarded with a screen-clearing bomb to detonate. Owlchemy Labs founder Alex Schwartz explained to me that the game will take the form of a narrative campaign where you'll go from forest to forest, collecting animals along the way as you hunt down the dastardly evergreen.

Fruit Ninja's influence is felt, but it's not necessarily a dominant one. By making you slow down the action and string together log slices, Jack Lumber does seem to have a fresh feel of its own, based on my quick demo on the show floor. And it's already a lot of fun, though Owlchemy plans to spend another two months or so tweaking and expanding the experience. We'll no doubt see and hear more about the game leading up to its expected summer release, which Schwartz says should be a universal app.

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iphone - Google News: iPhone and iPod Touch Rumors Collide in Apple Rumorpocalypse - TIME

iphone - Google News
Google News
iPhone and iPod Touch Rumors Collide in Apple Rumorpocalypse - TIME
Apr 9th 2012, 18:21


TIME

iPhone and iPod Touch Rumors Collide in Apple Rumorpocalypse
TIME
By Jared Newman | @OneJaredNewman | April 9, 2012 | + What's better than a blog post based on a single sketchy iPhone rumor? A blog post about three iPhone rumors, of course, with a side of iPod Touch speculation for good measure.
Foxconn employee says Apple placing orders for next iPhone to debut in OctoberApple Insider
New iPhone to debut in October, Foxconn employee saysCNET
iPhone 5 Release: Apple Tests Prototype In Old Cases, Features Include A5X ...International Business Times
9 to 5 Mac -SlashGear -Kotaku
all 68 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Analyst: iPhone 5 to have 4-inch screen, unibody construction - ZDNet (blog)

iphone - Google News
Google News
Analyst: iPhone 5 to have 4-inch screen, unibody construction - ZDNet (blog)
Apr 9th 2012, 16:39


ZDNet (blog)

Analyst: iPhone 5 to have 4-inch screen, unibody construction
ZDNet (blog)
By Adrian Kingsley-Hughes | April 9, 2012, 9:30am PDT Now that the iPad 3 is out and news about it is starting to die down, it's time for the iPhone 5 rumors to kick up a notch. Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White has been on a tour of China and ...
Apple's next iPhone predicted to have redesigned 'sleek' unibody caseApple Insider
Apple: iPhone 5 Debut Could Be 'Extraordinary," Says TopekaBarron's (blog)
'Unibody' iPhone 5 said to debut in OctoberRegister
BGR -TheStreet.com (blog) -Cult of Mac
all 55 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Nokia and Microsoft Take on the iPhone — By Going Local - Mashable

iphone - Google News
Google News
Nokia and Microsoft Take on the iPhone — By Going Local - Mashable
Apr 9th 2012, 17:57


VentureBeat

Nokia and Microsoft Take on the iPhone — By Going Local
Mashable
Windows Phone just got a big boost from the Nokia Lumia 900, the first phone on the platform to boast an ultra-fast LTE network connection — something you can't get with the iPhone. The Windows Phone camp also has a plan to attack Apple's iOS platform ...
Move over iPhone: AT&T to spend up to $150M on Lumia 900 campaignVentureBeat
If an iPhone wannabe lands on Easter, does it make a splash?Fortune (blog)
Nokia Lumia 900: Wisdom Of Easter Launch QuestionedInformationWeek
South Asian News Agency -AdAge.com -CNET
all 724 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Five charged for taking teen's kidney in return for iPhone, iPad - CBS News

iphone - Google News
Google News
Five charged for taking teen's kidney in return for iPhone, iPad - CBS News
Apr 9th 2012, 16:30


CBS News

Five charged for taking teen's kidney in return for iPhone, iPad
CBS News
(AP) BEIJING - Authorities have indicted five people in central China for involvement in illegal organ trading after a teenager sold one of his kidneys to buy an iPhone and an iPad. The case has prompted an outpouring of concern that not enough is ...
Chinese teenager trades kidney for iPad, iPhoneGloucester County Times - NJ.com
Teen buys iPhone with kidney in China, five chargedNational Post
A Kidney for an iPhone and an iPad!Forbes

all 792 news articles »

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iphone - Google News: Apple Gets Rare Downgrade on Doubts It Can Keep Selling iPhone for $600 - CNBC.com

iphone - Google News
Google News
Apple Gets Rare Downgrade on Doubts It Can Keep Selling iPhone for $600 - CNBC.com
Apr 9th 2012, 14:47


Financial Post

Apple Gets Rare Downgrade on Doubts It Can Keep Selling iPhone for $600
CNBC.com
Apple received its first downgrade in nearly six months from Wall Street after an analyst doubted wireless carriers will keep offering giant iPhone subsidies, hurting profit margins for the tech juggernaut and world's largest company.
Apple: BTIG Cuts to Hold; iPhone Subsidies Could Dry UpBarron's (blog)
Analyst says iPhone subsidies can't last, cuts Apple to holdNew Mexico Business Weekly
Apple downgraded as carriers prepare to stunt iPhone growthBGR
Financial Post -San Francisco Chronicle
all 20 news articles »

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iPhone: An iPhone 4S User’s Weekend with the Nokia Lumia 900

iPhone
An iPhone 4S User's Weekend with the Nokia Lumia 900
Apr 9th 2012, 16:51

Welcome to your Nokia Lumia 900

Despite having an iPhone since the original model launched in 2007, curiosity sometimes drives us into the arms of competing products -- especially ones as well-hyped as Nokia's new Lumia 900, which many predict could be the first real shot Microsoft's Windows Phone platform has for success.

While curiosity may kill the cat, it certainly didn't do us any harm after swapping our iPhone 4S for the new Nokia Lumia 900 last weekend. It's a big launch for the Finnish cell phone giant, whose brand has waned significantly here in the United States, but also for Microsoft, whose Windows Phone platform has yet to gain traction against iOS and Android after nearly two years.

 

Windows Phone Start screen

Why Windows Mobile?

This isn't our first time straying from iOS -- we dabbled briefly with the original Palm Pre at launch and have fondled a number of Android-based handsets as well. webOS was promising but poorly managed, where Android borrows so much from iOS it's hard not to agree with Steve Jobs branding it a "stolen" product in his official biography.

That's why Windows Phone 7 platform has piqued our interest -- Microsoft has created an entirely new concept with its tiled "Metro" interface, which looks and feels like nothing else on mobile. All that's missing is the right hardware to make it attractive to the masses, which finally arrived this month with the Nokia Lumia 900.

 

Nokia Lumia 900 front

Enter Lumia

Nokia has always been known for slick hardware, and the Lumia 900 is no exception. The basic look has been borrowed from the Nokia N9 its more recent cousin, the Lumia 800, but features a larger 4.3-inch 480x800 AMOLED display with ClearBlack technology. Not only does that promise deep, rich black levels, but also a screen that's much easier to see outdoors.

Nokia Lumia 900 back

An 8MP rear camera with dual LED flash and Carl Zeiss optics also records video up to 720p, while a 1MP front camera allows for video chat. Available in cyan or black (with a white model arriving later this month), the Nokia Lumia 900 is topped off with 16GB of internal storage and uses AT&T's rapidly expanding 4G LTE network for fast data speeds.

 

Nokia Lumia 900 lock screen

Friday, Part One: A Strange New World

Our journey begins as it usually does: With a small cardboard box delivered by FedEx. We wasted no time tearing into the box and extracting the handset, then it was time to pop the micro-SIM out of our iPhone 4S, which would effectively be relegated to a Wi-Fi only iPod touch for the remainder of the weekend.

The Lumia 900 boots up in just under 30 seconds, which feels like greased lightning compared to nearly 50 seconds for the iPhone 4S. While we were able to make phone calls, our data, MMS and visual voicemail was completely MIA. The solution was revealed over the course of a few calls to AT&T, where they swapped our unlimited iPhone data plan to unlimited 4G LTE. Since AT&T LTE doesn't yet exist in our area, there was no need to swap out SIM cards, and we can easily return to the iPhone 4S (but only at the usual HSPA+ speeds) without a problem, despite warnings to the contrary from Ma Bell's overly cautious tech support reps.

Nokia Lumia 900 capacitive buttons

All Windows Phone devices include three capacitive buttons at the bottom of the screen for Back, Start/Home and Bing Search, similar to those made popular by Android. A hardware camera button is also standard for WP devices, and on the Lumia 900 it resides on the right side, below the power/lock button and volume rocker. The lock screen echoes most modern smartphones, showing the time and date as well as any calendar events coming up, with antenna, Wi-Fi and battery levels at top (these are hidden once the screen is unlocked, but a swiping down from the top briefly reveals them). Once you unlock the device by sliding up, that's where the similarities to iOS or Android end.

Lumia 900 apps list

Sliding this screen left reveals the Application List, an alphabetical view of everything installed on the handset. Once you've installed more than 40 apps, the list gets separated by the first letter of its name; tapping on a letter calls up a grid for quickly jumping to any letter of the alphabet. Apps can be pinned on the home screen or deleted entirely -- and that includes the apps that come preinstalled, unlike so many Android smartphones where you're stuck with them. (Kudos to MSFT for that!)

 

Lumia 900 Nokia Collection

Friday, Part Two: Apps and Marketplace

Five AT&T-specific apps come preinstalled: AT&T Code Scanner, AT&T myWireless, AT&T Navigator, AT&T Radio and AT&T U-verse Mobile. Aside from Radio, all of these are available to iPhone users as well. Nokia apps don't come preinstalled, but are available in their own section of the Windows Phone Marketplace and include exclusive apps such as ESPN, Creative Studio (for editing photos) and Nokia Drive, Nokia Maps and Nokia Transit for free turn-by-turn navigation.

Microsoft Office is also along for the ride (the mobile version, anyway), allowing users to view and edit Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents saved on your device, a SkyDrive account, Office 365 or SharePoint; OneNote notes are also included. Even with the Lumia 900's big, bright 4.3-inch screen, tweaking an Excel document is a bit of a chore -- but it's even worse on the iPhone 4S using third-party apps.

Windows Phone Marketplace

At first, our Lumia 900 felt a bit desolate and uninviting -- after all, all the apps we have installed on our iPhone 4S is what makes it feel like home. So we headed into the Windows Phone Marketplace -- currently 70,000 strong and growing -- in search of friendly faces that might make us more comfortable in this strange new world. To do so, you'll need a free Hotmail or Live.com account; thankfully we've had an old Hotmail account from eons ago, so we logged in and started shopping.

Thankfully, we found quite a few familiar titles and immediately began downloading them. Popular free iOS apps such as 1Password, Amazon Kindle, Amazon Mobile, Best Buy, eBay, Evernote, Flixster, iHeartRadio, IMDb, Netflix, Shazam, Spotify, USA Today, Vimeo and The Weather Channel are all present and accounted for. Pulse News is also on Marketplace, but sadly this version won't sync with your Pulse.me account, so news sources have to be added manually.

Windows Phone Skype app

Ironically, Microsoft-owned Skype is beta testing a Windows Phone app as this is written; while it didn't show up in Marketplace on the device, we were able to find it on its web-based equivalent and install from there. (Apps purchased from windowsphone.com get pushed to your device similar to iTunes in the Cloud.)

With a lot of the usual suspects out of the way, it was time to dig in and find third-party equivalents for other favorites. We were able to find decent replacements for iOS apps such as Google Voice (GoVoice), Tapatalk (Board Express), Instapaper (InstaFetch) and Read It Later (MetroPaper); others such as Google Reader client Reader2Go wound up being admirable replacements for apps like Reeder.

There were a few disappointments, however -- we really missed Path, one of our favorite photo sharing apps which has yet to arrive on Windows Phone. Despite decent WP equivalents, we also longed for Echofon, Beejive, Hulu Plus and YouTube (the latter has a Marketplace app, but it's just a shortcut to the mobile website).

One very large advantage of Microsoft's mobile Marketplace is the ability to try paid apps before buying them -- simply tap the "Try" button and the app downloads to your device so you can put it through its paces before committing hard-earned money to it. There's simply no excuse for Apple not to have this after five generations of iOS, but hope springs eternal with iOS 6 likely incoming later this year.

Windows Phone Plex app

Speaking of paid apps, we have to put in a plug for the Plex app, one of our favorites and a recent arrival on Windows Phone. This media server client is a favorite on iOS and Android, and well worth the $4.99 on Windows Phone, which features a gorgeous UI unique to WP that makes the other mobile apps look positively antique by comparison.

 

Windows Phone linked inboxes

Friday, Part Three: Welcome to the Social

Now it was time to get our various email accounts up and running, including iCloud, Gmail and Yahoo as well as IMAP email for our own domain. Of course, being a Microsoft OS, Windows Live (i.e., Hotmail) and Outlook get the best treatment here, including push email, with Gmail being the only non-Microsoft service to take advantage of it. Other account options include Nokia Mail, AT&T Address Book, LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter, but any POP or IMAP email account will also work; only AOL/AIM seemed to be strangely absent from the party.

One of Windows Phone's little niceties is built-in support for Facebook and Twitter -- while there are official native apps for both available in the Marketplace (and a few third-party choices as well), the services are so well integrated into the operating system that you may never touch them most of the time.

Windows Phone Me hub

On the home screen is a "Me" tile which calls up a portal where you can post a message to one or all social networks at once, check in and set chat status for connected services. Tap "add photo" to make this tile a photo of yourself, and the Profile column also displays your last Twitter activity. Swipe left to Notifications and you'll see recent activity from friends, while What's New likewise shows your own posts.

Windows Phone People hub

A People hub (which exists as a live tile on your home screen) displays contacts from any or all of your combined services, tweets and recent callers. We used a Mac App Store app called Contacts Sync for Google Gmail to push our iCloud contacts to Google, which then carried over into Windows Phone with ease along with calendars and email.

Even better, Windows Phone linked our contacts to the same people on Facebook and Twitter to avoid seeing the same people listed multiple times. This a feature similar to Synergy from webOS which always gave us pause -- after all, we don't want Facebook friends we don't know in real life clogging up our contacts list! Thankfully, Windows Phone includes a "filter my contact list" option in the People hub for choosing which services you want to display contacts from -- an awesome feature.

 

Windows Phone Connector for Mac

Saturday: Multimedia Syncing

The next morning, it was time to focus on getting music and photos onto our Nokia Lumia 900 so we'd feel even more at home with it. Streaming music apps like Spotify are handy, but we were already starting to miss the convenience of iTunes Match, which allows any iOS device to access to an entire music collection.

The folks in Redmond likely knew this would be an issue for Mac users locked out of their Windows-only Zune world, so they dropped a little nugget called Windows Phone 7 Connector into the Mac App Store. This free Mac app allows Windows Phone devices to sync music, videos, photos and podcasts from iTunes just by plugging your handset into the computer with a USB cable. (Yeah, no wireless sync, but beggars can't be choosers.)

Windows Phone photo albums

Windows Phone Connector for Mac can sync photos from either iPhoto or Aperture (pick your poison in Preferences) including entire projects, albums or Faces, as well as music playlists, artists or genres. Syncing Movies & TV Shows is a bit clunkier, since all of your media is shown in one ginormous list rather than grouped by TV show or genre, for example. Ringtones can also be synced, but they need to be MP3 files under 40 seconds which have been specifically tagged as "ringtone" (lower case, no quotes) in the Genre column -- sadly, no sync is available for existing iTunes Tones.

Last but not least, Windows Phone Connector for Mac allows users to browse media already on the device, which can be selectively previewed, imported to your Mac or deleted from the handset entirely -- convenient for photos and video shot with the Lumia 900, although these get automatically imported into iPhoto or Aperture when a device is connected anyway.

Windows Phone Zune player

Microsoft has clearly learned valuable lessons from that whole Zune fiasco, which continues to live on here as a music service now that the company has given up on producing MP3 players that support it. We didn't tinker around with Zune much since all of its music is still bathed in copy protection, but a 14-day free trial of Microsoft's unlimited Zune Music Pass is available with the Lumia 900 (the subscription costs $9.99 per month or $99.90 for 12 months).

Throughout the second day with the Lumia 900, we also stumbled across a number of cool options tucked away. For example, at first all of our individual email accounts showed up as separate tiles on the home screen. Thankfully all of your inboxes can be unified into one simply by tapping the three dots at bottom right, tapping Linked Inboxes and choosing which accounts you want to include. Very handy!

 

Windows Phone camera roll

Sunday: The Rest of the Story

Easter Sunday gave us a chance to put the Lumia 900 camera through its paces shooting photos and video with family. Unfortunately, the camera is a bit of a weak spot for Nokia here, despite the 8MP sensor which on paper would seem to match wits with the iPhone 4S. It's a bit of a surprise, considering Nokia devices usually feature better cameras, but clearly they had to cut corners somewhere to get this device to $99.99 with two-year agreement.

We didn't have too many complaints with photos and video shot outdoors, especially when the sun was poking out. Colors were rich and contrast was quite good, but there was an overall decrease in saturation and contrast in cloudier situations. Indoors it was a mixed bag, with noticeable grain and noise compared to the iPhone 4S. The Lumia 900 also seemed to be more challenged by situations with mixed color balance. All in all, it's a decent camera more in line with the iPhone 4 than the iPhone 4S which seems to have been carried over as-is from the previous Lumia 800 sold overseas.

Photos and video taken in Windows Phone can be automatically uploaded to SkyDrive, the 25GB cloud storage included free with every Hotmail or Live.com account. While it may not be as convenient as iCloud's Photo Stream, it makes a great way to make sure your precious memories are backed up, and the free SkyDrive app in the Marketplace lets you view or delete them as needed. (Photos can also be viewed or shared from live.com on any web browser.)

Windows Phone signal & battery levels

While many reviews have dinged the Lumia 900 battery life, we were more impressed than disappointed, especially considering how hard we've been working it over the weekend. We suspect once 4G LTE lights up later this year in our area, it might be a different story, but for now the Lumia 900 gets us through the day a bit better than the iPhone 4S where battery life is concerned.

A quick road trip for Easter breakfast also gave us a chance to try out Bluetooth with our car's SYNC -- like Windows Phone, another Microsoft product. We had no problem pairing the two, but when we started streaming music from the Zune player, it cut in and out every few seconds and finally locked up SYNC completely until we forced a reboot by shutting the car off and turning it back on. SYNC reconnected to the Lumia 900 and Bluetooth streaming worked without a hitch after that.

Heading to Grandma's house for Easter dinner also gave us a chance to put the free Nokia Drive app through its paces (even though we know the route by heart, of course). While AT&T would probably prefer that we use their TeleNav-powered Navigator app, which requires a subscription -- new users get a 30-day trial, and a $1.99 day pass option is also available.

Nokia Drive app

While Nokia Drive is considerably more bare-bones than most of the iOS turn-by-turn navigation apps available, it worked equally well and we didn't miss a lot of the clutter and feature bloat -- which includes the huge downloads required for maps. Nokia Drive allows you to download maps by state (and includes this option for all continents), which means you can download only places you intend to travel while still having everything available on the go should you need it, assuming you have the foresight to download prior to entering areas without coverage. Nokia Drive also features a far wider range of international languages for its navigation instructions, which isn't much of a surprise given the company's products are far more popular abroad than they are here. On the downside, Drive doesn't connect with your contacts, so you have to type in addresses from memory. (Boo!)

We also stumbled across Microsoft Tellme, a Bing-powered, Siri-esque voice search service triggered by holding down the Start/Home button. While Tellme didn't understand us quite as well as Siri does, it seemed to be a bit more reliable than Apple's virtual assistant and at least on par with what Google includes with Android. We found it paid to be more precise with requests -- for example, searching for a nearby park required us to specify "Diamond Community Park" when simply "Diamond Park" failed to work.

Windows Phone Internet Explorer

Of course, it can't all be wine and roses -- we weren't that thrilled with Internet Explorer, the mobile web browser included with the Lumia 900. Web pages seemed to download slower than Mobile Safari and there was simply no contest when it came to text rendering, which was often chunky and almost out of focus in Internet Explorer, especially when viewing full pages.

We also missed having our favorite bookmarks, but thankfully a quick trip to the Marketplace turned up Xmarks, which we already pay $12 per year to keep bookmarks in sync between Safari, Chrome and Firefox on the desktop. After logging in, we were able to see all of our bookmarks and open tabs; tapping on any of them opened in Internet Explorer. Not perfect, but much better than trying to remember all those URLs!

Windows Phone keyboard

The Windows Phone software keyboard is a step up from the one included with older versions of Android and even the stock one included with Ice Cream Sandwich, with large, tall keys on an expansive screen, but occasionally we'd accidentally type extra keystrokes while trying to tap a prompt just above the keyboard. This seems to be some kind of calibration with the screen which will hopefully get cleared up with a software patch. Overall, we're still partial to the iOS keyboard but this is a close second.

Lumia 900 Start screen

By the third day with the Lumia 900, we were more confident to leave the house without also bringing our iPhone 4S along for the ride. All in all, using Windows Phone on the Lumia 900 has mostly been a joy -- it's easily the most interesting mobile OS to come along since Palm's now-defunct webOS, and it handily trumps even that.

While it remains to be seen if Nokia, Microsoft and AT&T have a hit on their hands, we plan to keep ours, which was purchased at a no-commitment price ($449.99 plus applicable sales tax) so as to not disrupt our existing iPhone contract. With 4G LTE finally arriving in Northeast Ohio in the next few months, we'll likely get more use out of the Lumia 900 -- at least until a presumably LTE-equipped iPhone 5 arrives, that is.

Follow this article's author, J.R. Bookwalter on Twitter

 

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