Greg Sterling has tried the new Vlingo app for Android and posted his impression on the Internet2Go Blog.
Microsoft
ARM’ed and Less Dangerous: Mobile Speech Made Easier
According to a guest blog post on ARM’s Web site, the next generation of the mobile CPU maker’s flagship chip will be better suited to perform audio (and voice) processing.
Microsoft’s Hawaii Project: Leveraging Its Cloud for Mobile
Last Friday, Microsoft Maven Mary-Jo Foley issued this report providing a few details about Microsoft’s initiatives to marry its cloud-based resources with application development efforts involving Windows Mobile.
At Avaya: ACE is the Place for RC
Aspirationally, Avaya’s Agile Communications Environment (ACE) is the essence of Recombinant Communications (RC) packaged as enterprise software.
Microsoft’s New Developer Resources for Azure, Bing Maps and Office Communications Server
Though coverage of Apple, with its new iPhone to be introduced at its WorldWide Developer Conference (WWDC), is expected to dominate tech news today, Microsoft is laying the foundation for greater recombinance at Tech-Ed 2010 in New Orleans.
Bing Mobile Turns to Tellme for Spoken Driving Directions
In a blog post, Microsoft’s Justin Jed highlights two new features that ship with the latest version of the Bing App for Mobile.
The Inversion Continues: Google Docs Gets more “Office-like”
Google has made some major updates to Google Docs.
Microsoft Kin, Made by Sharp, To be Sold and Supported by Verizon in May
Microsoft, with two significant partners, has made itself hip again by unveiling two phones under the “Kin” brand.
Microsoft and Yap Support Talk to Text on Sprint’s Blackberries
Partnerships are “recombinance personified.” So it is with a new service from Microsoft and Yap that enables Blackberry users on the Sprint network to dictate both SMS text messages and email.
Peace on Earth: Amazon and Microsoft to Share Patents
Microsoft reveals that Amazon.com is paying an undisclosed sum and entering an agreement by which each company provides “access to the other’s patent portfolio” which “covers a broad range of products and technology, including coverage for Amazon’s popular e-reading device, Kindle™”.