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Samsung taking Bada open source in 2012?

Samsung invited the world to adventure with its own smartphone OS, Bada , almost two years ago and so far most of us have turned down the offer. Of course, that trip could look more appealing if a Wall Street Journal rumor is true and the company is planning to open source it for use by developers and other manufacturers alike next year

Samsung invited the world to adventure with its own smartphone OS, Bada , almost two years ago and so far most of us have turned down the offer. Of course, that trip could look more appealing if a Wall Street Journal rumor is true and the company is planning to open source it for use by developers and other manufacturers alike next year

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Samsung taking Bada open source in 2012?

ComScore calls Android top dog, Apple pulls further ahead of RIM

According to ComScore, out of the 82.2 million people in the US with a smartphone (up ten percent from last quarter ), Android came in first as the biggest platform yet again, capturing a whopping 41.8 percent of the market like a boss. In a not-so-close second, Apple was able to snag 27 percent, followed by RIM in the third place spot with 21.7 percent — down 4 percentage points from last quarter. Pulling up the rear is Microsoft with 5.7 percent, and lastly Symbian with a grim 1.9 percent — both down when compared to the previous three months.

According to ComScore, out of the 82.2 million people in the US with a smartphone (up ten percent from last quarter ), Android came in first as the biggest platform yet again, capturing a whopping 41.8 percent of the market like a boss. In a not-so-close second, Apple was able to snag 27 percent, followed by RIM in the third place spot with 21.7 percent — down 4 percentage points from last quarter. Pulling up the rear is Microsoft with 5.7 percent, and lastly Symbian with a grim 1.9 percent — both down when compared to the previous three months.

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ComScore calls Android top dog, Apple pulls further ahead of RIM

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ComScore: Android grows larger than ever among US subscribers, Apple belittles RIM

The latest ComScore results from the last quarter are in, and the US mobile device wars were hotter than ever as 13% more people reported owning a smartphone. Google conquered most users’ territory with Android climbing just over five percent (now totaling 36.4%) and still claiming first for mobile software platforms. Apple’s iOS destroyer took second place (at 26%) partially due to RIM’s S.S.

The latest ComScore results from the last quarter are in, and the US mobile device wars were hotter than ever as 13% more people reported owning a smartphone. Google conquered most users’ territory with Android climbing just over five percent (now totaling 36.4%) and still claiming first for mobile software platforms. Apple’s iOS destroyer took second place (at 26%) partially due to RIM’s S.S.

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ComScore: Android grows larger than ever among US subscribers, Apple belittles RIM

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Samsung tries its hand at poaching disgruntled Symbian devs for Bada

We can’t help but feel like this is one sinking ship coming to the aid of another, but for what it’s worth, Samsung has apparently started emailing Symbian developers in India with a very simple message: “if you’re unhappy about what’s going on, give Bada a shot.” Sammy, of course, is referring to Nokia’s decision to slowly phase out Symbian over the course of roughly 150 million additional shipped handsets — not a small quantity, granted, but the platform’s still got a definitive expiration timeline attached to it now that’s undoubtedly going to sour devs who want a mobile platform that they know will be around for the long haul. Though Bada doesn’t have the global traction that Symbian enjoys, it’s definitely geared to target some of the same low-end market segments Symbian was starting to gun for over the past couple years… so we suppose we see some synergy.

We can’t help but feel like this is one sinking ship coming to the aid of another, but for what it’s worth, Samsung has apparently started emailing Symbian developers in India with a very simple message: “if you’re unhappy about what’s going on, give Bada a shot.” Sammy, of course, is referring to Nokia’s decision to slowly phase out Symbian over the course of roughly 150 million additional shipped handsets — not a small quantity, granted, but the platform’s still got a definitive expiration timeline attached to it now that’s undoubtedly going to sour devs who want a mobile platform that they know will be around for the long haul. Though Bada doesn’t have the global traction that Symbian enjoys, it’s definitely geared to target some of the same low-end market segments Symbian was starting to gun for over the past couple years… so we suppose we see some synergy.

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Samsung tries its hand at poaching disgruntled Symbian devs for Bada

Samsung’s Bada 2.0 to move to ‘web-centric’ apps, getting ad framework and multitasking

We’re still hesitant to call Bada a “smartphone platform” in the same breath as Android and iOS — but despite our best attempts to write it off, Samsung’s homegrown handset platform keeps chugging and expanding to new hardware. A developer event in South Korea appears to have yielded the first details on what Bada 2.0 will bring when it launches next year, and needless to say, it adds a bunch of smartphone-worthy stuff to the mix: an honest-to-goodness ad framework of some sort, better support for apps that use web technologies, multitasking, NFC capabilities, and an brand new SDK that’ll support Mac and Linux. We’re still going to see a whole lot more hardware — and a more cohesive story — to justify why even low-end “smartphones” should be using Bada over Android, but it’s an interesting development nonetheless

We’re still hesitant to call Bada a “smartphone platform” in the same breath as Android and iOS — but despite our best attempts to write it off, Samsung’s homegrown handset platform keeps chugging and expanding to new hardware. A developer event in South Korea appears to have yielded the first details on what Bada 2.0 will bring when it launches next year, and needless to say, it adds a bunch of smartphone-worthy stuff to the mix: an honest-to-goodness ad framework of some sort, better support for apps that use web technologies, multitasking, NFC capabilities, and an brand new SDK that’ll support Mac and Linux. We’re still going to see a whole lot more hardware — and a more cohesive story — to justify why even low-end “smartphones” should be using Bada over Android, but it’s an interesting development nonetheless

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Samsung’s Bada 2.0 to move to ‘web-centric’ apps, getting ad framework and multitasking

Samsung Wave shipping with infected microSD card?

Did you get a Samsung Wave today , or perhaps early last week ? You might not want to connect it to your computer, just in case. We’re hearing anecdotal reports that the 1GB microSD card shipped with certain German units includes a nasty surprise: it automatically installs the trojan Win32/Heur using the file “slmvsrv.exe.” While we’re not sure exactly what the virus does or if it’s widespread, there’s no point in finding out the hard way, right?

Did you get a Samsung Wave today , or perhaps early last week ? You might not want to connect it to your computer, just in case. We’re hearing anecdotal reports that the 1GB microSD card shipped with certain German units includes a nasty surprise: it automatically installs the trojan Win32/Heur using the file “slmvsrv.exe.” While we’re not sure exactly what the virus does or if it’s widespread, there’s no point in finding out the hard way, right?

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Samsung Wave shipping with infected microSD card?

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Samsung Wave brings Bada to Europe today, everyone else told to wait

Samsung’s Wave (otherwise known as the 8500 ) may not be coming to Vodafone UK until June 1st , but it’s available somewhere in Europe starting today. According to a new release from the outfit (seen in full after the break), today marks the first day in which its first Bada -equipped smartphone is available in Europe, with Germany, France and the UK mentioned in particular. We’re also told that the “complete Bada SDK 1.0.0 will be available for download shortly,” and while pricing details weren’t discussed, the Wave should ride to Southeast Asia, China, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America in short order

Samsung’s Wave (otherwise known as the 8500 ) may not be coming to Vodafone UK until June 1st , but it’s available somewhere in Europe starting today. According to a new release from the outfit (seen in full after the break), today marks the first day in which its first Bada -equipped smartphone is available in Europe, with Germany, France and the UK mentioned in particular. We’re also told that the “complete Bada SDK 1.0.0 will be available for download shortly,” and while pricing details weren’t discussed, the Wave should ride to Southeast Asia, China, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America in short order

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Samsung Wave brings Bada to Europe today, everyone else told to wait

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Samsung Wave hits Vodafone UK on June 1, free on £25 a month plans

The UK is about to get its first taste of Samsung’s Bada OS courtesy of the Wave , which is launching with Vodafone on June 1. Already announced amid the carrier’s list of “coming soon” devices, this Super AMOLED-sporting phone has now been slapped with pre-order availability and some pricing info. Should you opt for Voda’s

The UK is about to get its first taste of Samsung’s Bada OS courtesy of the Wave , which is launching with Vodafone on June 1. Already announced amid the carrier’s list of “coming soon” devices, this Super AMOLED-sporting phone has now been slapped with pre-order availability and some pricing info. Should you opt for Voda’s

Samsung releases Bada SDK for developers who want to ride the Wave

Samsung still hasn’t managed to get the Wave or any other Bada handset to market yet, but it’s doing the right thing by offering developers the software development kit first. Granted, with a planned June release Samsung isn’t managing the same sort of massive lead-time that Microsoft has with its Windows Phone 7 SDK, but a few weeks of pressure-free coding are better than none. The first public SDK for Bada was just made available yesterday, and inside developers will find an Eclipse-based IDE, a phone emulator, and tutorials

Samsung still hasn’t managed to get the Wave or any other Bada handset to market yet, but it’s doing the right thing by offering developers the software development kit first. Granted, with a planned June release Samsung isn’t managing the same sort of massive lead-time that Microsoft has with its Windows Phone 7 SDK, but a few weeks of pressure-free coding are better than none. The first public SDK for Bada was just made available yesterday, and inside developers will find an Eclipse-based IDE, a phone emulator, and tutorials

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Samsung releases Bada SDK for developers who want to ride the Wave

Mobile World Congress : Samsung Wave S8500

With Mobile World Congress happening right now in Barcelona, expect a plethora of new mobile phone tech to bombard us over the coming week.

With Mobile World Congress happening right now in Barcelona, expect a plethora of new mobile phone tech to bombard us over the coming week.

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