Aigo N500 Maemo Based Phone/MID Device Lands In China |
Unless you’re a MID addict you may not have heard of Aigo, but with the company actually having shipped products rather than merely flaunted concepts we’re liable to give them a little extra rope. That makes this new MID – the Aigo N500 – particularly interesting, since it runs Maemo just like the Nokia N900.
Source: http://www.slashgear.com/aigo-n500-maemo-phonemid-hybrid-...
The World Is Yet To See More Wonders: General Motors Would Launch Urban Mobility Vehicles in China
General Motors plans to launch a trio of urban mobility vehicles which would run on electric. This was an announcement made in Shanghai. General has chosen Shanghai as the perfect place for the runabouts because China is the largest automobile market in the world. The so-called Electric Networked Vehicles looks like a vacuum cleaner but it [...]
China media steps up Google rhetoric
Chinese state media launches a fresh volley of articles attacking the “politicization” of Google after media reports suggest the Internet giant may soon officially pull out of China.
China Alarmed by Security Threat From Internet
While much of the rest of the world frets about Chinese cyberspying abroad, China is increasingly alarmed about the threat that the Internet poses to its security and political stability.
Letter From China: As China's Rulers Confront Generation Gap, They Grow More Flexible
The country’s 350 million or so people under 30 are Web-savvy, increasingly outward-looking and accustomed to nonstop growth and the material benefits it brings.
By 2011 only 10% of Nokia's devices would be based on Maemo
By 2011, smartphones based on the Symbian S60-platform will account for 55% of Nokia’s total handset shipments, followed by Symbian S40 feature phones at 35% and Maemo-based devices at 10%. Nokia also plans to launch Maemo 6-based products in the second half of 2010 according to Michael Hsu, general manager of Nokia Taiwan.
Bad News: Firefox for Maemo (N900) Without Adobe Flash
Firefox for Maemo 1.0 RC3 may signal that we’re one step closer to getting a full-fledged Firefox browser on a mobile device, but the app has also taken a step back since RC2 emerged two weeks ago, shedding support for the Adobe Flash plug-in that Mozilla said in a blog post “degraded the performance of the browser to the point where it didn’t meet our standards.”


