9/16/2007

A Offline Gmail Client: Report

Filed under: — Aviran Mordo

A report from India’s Hindustan Times indicates that Google is prepping an offline version of Gmail.

It’s claimed that a client has already been designed, is in testing, and runs (not surprisingly) on Google Gears. Google has previously offered an offline version of Google Reader using the Gears browser plugin.

Company patents playlists, sues everyone

Filed under: — Aviran Mordo

A company called Premier International Associates has filed suit against a slew of tech companies over infringement on two of the company’s patents. Microsoft, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, Dell, Lenovo, Toshiba, Viacom, Real, Napster, Samsung, LG, Motorola, Nokia, and Sandisk are named in one of the two suits filed this week, while Hewlett-Packard, Acer, Gateway, and Yahoo are named in another. All of the above companies are accused of violating Premier’s patents for an electronic “List building system”—the older of which was applied for in 1997 and issued in 2001.

The patents describe what essentially comes down to a playlist. “A plurality of works can be collected together in a list for purposes of establishing a play or a presentation sequence. The list can be visually displayed and edited,” reads the “725″ patent. Both of them describe ways to graphically display an arrangement of songs from CDs or any manner of media that can then be played back sequentially or out-of-order.

First Look: 16GB iPod Touch

Filed under: — Aviran Mordo

I’m an iPhone fan who can’t get an AT&T signal at home, so I was hoping the iPod Touch would be the perfect compromise. Based on its specs (Wi-Fi, mobile Safari, the Multi-touch interface, and twice the iPhone’s storage capacity at 16GB), it sure looks like it would be. But I’ve been testing a $399 16GB iPod Touch for a couple of days now, and based on a number of hardware and software issues I’ve encountered, it looks like Apple still has some work to do.

Don’t get me wrong, the Touch is an amazing piece of technology. Mobile Safari is the best portable Web browser around, Cover Flow works great on a device with limited storage capacity, and the new iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store is extremely slick for a first generation product. But in these first two days, I’ve run into a screen anomaly that makes dark movies scenes difficult to watch, software bugs that halt music playback when browsing pages in Safari, and an issue that harms sound quality on many in-ear headphones.

If Apple can work out most of those kinks, it will have produced the first portable video player I’d actually want to own. Until they do, I’d recommend taking a wait-and-see approach with the Touch.

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