O2 Wallet available now on iPhone and Android: Time to pay your debts

O2 has unleashed its mobile payment app, O2 Wallet, into the app vestibules of the iPhone, Android and BlackBerry. What does it do and why should you download it? Read on, you pioneer of digital payments, you.
O2 Wallet is going toe to toe with the likes of Barclays PingIt, acting as your mobile money centre. From the app, you can manage accounts, check your balance and – crucially – send and receive up to 500 UK monies to friends with nothing but their phone number.
Not an O2 member? Not to worry: you can still use O2 Wallet.
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Saving the PlayBook: The Verdict

I’ve spent the final couple of weeks utilizing RIM’s seemingly ill-fated PlayBook, to see just how ill-fated it actually is. At just £169, with new software program, a raft of new apps and all the correct accessories, can it finally be noticed as a viable tablet option to the new iPad? I’m at the end of the journey now, so I need to have to make a decision…
In case you’ve missed the journey so far, here’s how I’ve broken up my time with the PlayBook:
- Saving the PlayBook: OS 2. rescues RIM’s tablet
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Two years ago, Android made 40 times more from ads than app sales
The Google v Oracle trial has exposed a lot of hidden details about the inner workings of Google, not least of which was today’s Blackberry-esque mockup of a 2006 prototype Google Phone.
But today also revealed equally juicy income figures for the fiscal fans. Right now in court brought details on the drastic gap in Android’s app and ad income. Android’s 2010 revenue forecast revealed $ 158.9 billion from advertisements and a mere fortieth of that, $ three.8 million from apps.
The big rift was expectable, but this is the 1st likelihood we’ve had to see the actual numbers. Google provides developers 70% of an apps purchase value, and carriers and payment processors get 25%. Google only keeps five%.
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Angry Birds Space lands on BlackBerry PlayBook: Windows Phone still nowhere in sight

Nicely here’s a turn up for the books. When you’re searching at what is predominantly a two horse race, who comes third does not usually matter – but that is not genuinely the case when you’re talking mobile platforms. Case in point? Rovio has made the controversial choice to launch Angry Birds Space on the BlackBerry PlayBook ahead of Windows Telephone. Is it one more sign of Microsoft’s platform struggling to gain momentum?
When Angry Birds Space first launched, Rovio produced the bold claim that it had no plans to port the game to Windows Telephone. At the time we asserted that the decision was a nail in the Windows Telephone app catalogue’s coffin, but even then we wouldn’t have predicted this: the astronomical sequal has created its way to RIM’s struggling PlayBook tablet rather.
Saving the PlayBook: The last-ditch test
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Apple shows off iPhone’s use in the enterprise world
April 20, 2012 at two:28 pm

If you want a lot more convincing before ditching your BlackBerry, Apple just posted a new page on its site that highlights the iPhone’s use in the enterprise marketplace. The information-packed page shows how the iPhone is utilised in the enterprise setting to organize days, manage projects, setup meetings, read mail, set calendar appointments, keep contacts organized, and more. In typical marketing fashion, Apple highlighted particular apps on the App Store like “MicroStrategy,” “OmniFocus” for iPhone, “GoToMeeting,” “TripIt,” and a lot much more.
More than the last year, Apple made a dent in the enterprise market—a place formerly dominated by Microsoft and RIM. Apple has continued to supply much better working tools than the competitors do. For example, Apple’s new iMessage provides BBM-like messaging, which is a service hugely adored on the BlackBerry. Nevertheless, the iPhone’s ease of use is beginning to make it a No. 1 choice for IT departments.

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BlackBerry 7 declared most secure mobile OS

You don’t often read the words RIM and “good news” in the same sentence any more, unless there’s a “no” or a “not” in between somewhere, but the gang in Waterloo can justify some high-fives following Trend Micro’s latest report on mobile operating system security. According to Trend, BlackBerry 7 is the most secure of the big four OSes.
Trend looked at a number of security-related features, including authentication, application security, data protection, and manageability. In the corporate world, these remain critical factors in selecting mobile devices for users — particularly in an era where data breaches have become increasingly common.
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Pebble E-Paper Smartwatch: iOS and Android Goodness
April 12th, 2012
There are fairly a handful of smartwatches now obtainable to geek up your appear. The Pebble watch was created by the same individuals who produced the inPulse watch for Blackberry, and it looks like a really nice way to link a watch with the smartphone in your pocket.

Pebble has a 144×168 black and white e-paper display and operates with each iOS and Android phones. It connects to your telephone via Bluetooth, and offers wrist-based notifications like caller ID, e mail, calendar alerts, Facebook and Twitter messages, and permits you to remote manage your music player.
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Pebble E-Ink Smartwatch Connects to Your iOS or Android Phone
Pebble alerts you when you can an e mail, telephone call, and more. Photo: Allerta
Smartwatches haven’t truly caught on with mainstream buyers — but that may alter with Allerta’s new wrist-worn creation. The maker of the inPulse smartwatch for Blackberry has unveiled Pebble, an e-ink smartwatch that connects to iOS and Android devices.
