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BlackBerry App World will see carrier billing by 2010. Jim Balsillies, RIM’s co-CEO, made the announcement in a keynote yesterday at RIM’s BlackBerry’s Developer Conference.
Carrier billing would make it easier for BlackBerry customers to purchase applications on their phones. As it stands, BlackBerry users have to enter PayPal credentials, which some say inhibits spontaneous purchases.
Meanwhile, RIM made a handful of announcements aimed at fostering development for its app store. The company introduce the new BlackBerry Theme Studio, for customization of the BlackBerry UI. Also, the company said it would include a new advertising service for developers, which will make it easier to integrate ads with applications.
While RIM has made no official announcements as to the total inventory of BlackBerry App World, the number is believed to be quite low relative to Apple’s 100,000 applications at the App Store. Current estimates put the number at around 2500 available apps on BlackBerry App World.
Today marks the last day of RIM’s Second Annual BlackBerry Developer Conference in San Francisco. The conference began on Monday.

Remember when Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, and proclaimed, to much applause, that they patented the hell out of it? Well, apparently Apple likes to boast about its own patents, but when it comes to dealing with other’s they’re not so willing. That is, if you believe Nokia: the largest phone manufacturer in the world has sued Apple for patent infringement.Nokia claims that Apple’s iPhone, all models, infringes on ten Nokia patents covering GSM, UMTS, and wireless LAN standards. “Nokia has already successfully entered into license agreements including these patents with approximately 40 companies, including virtually all the leading mobile device vendors, allowing the industry to benefit from Nokia’s innovation,” the company writes in a press release.

“The basic principle in the mobile industry is that those companies who contribute in technology development to establish standards create intellectual property, which others then need to compensate for,” said Ilkka Rahnasto, Vice President, Legal & Intellectual Property at Nokia, “Apple is also expected to follow this principle. By refusing to agree appropriate terms for Nokia’s intellectual property, Apple is attempting to get a free ride on the back of Nokia’s innovation.”

The company claims it has invested nearly 40 billion USD in research and development over the past two decades, which resulted in about 10000 patent families. The press release reads as if Nokia tried to enter into a patent agreement with Apple – like it did with those other 40 companies – but that Apple refused.

I’m not a particular fan of patent lawsuits, but this does kind of feel like what goes around comes around. Apple shouted its iPhone patent portfolio off the rooftops a few times (during launch, when the Pre came out), so it’s kind of hypocritical not to pay up for other companies’ patents.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. The lawsuit is filed in the state of Delaware, and of course hasn’t started yet. We’ll see whether there’s any merit to Nokia’s claims. It of course reeks a bit of “if you can’t beat them, sue them”, too.

Source: OSNews / by Thom Holwerda

The suspense over Verizon Wireless’ release date of the Droid phone is building, with Droid devotees getting a teaser on a Web site referring to a date as early as next week.

Visitors to the DroidDoes.com site see a series of foreign-looking symbols in a count-down timer type fashion. Folks at Phandroid.com did some sleuthing and figured out the dates to mean midnight Oct. 27 going into Oct. 28.

Exactly what form such a release takes is unclear. Verizon’s TV ads refer to a November date, which is what has been widely expected in the blogosphere.

A Verizon spokesperson was not immediately available. Historically, neither Verizon nor phone maker Motorola have specified a price or date for commercial availability.

In its advertising and marketing, Verizon touts the Droid as the best smartphone yet, seemingly admitting that previous attempts didn’t meet the bar. Thus far, Verizon hasn’t had a real strong contender in the smartphone category to answer the iPhone. The first Storm touch-screen device from Research In Motion (RIM) was a disappointment, although the upcoming Storm 2 is expected to solve a lot of software and other problems.

The Droid noise in commercials and online is giving Droid maker Motorola a much-needed boost. Visitors online who sign up for more information receive an e-mail saying: “You don’t need a smartphone, you need a supergenius in your pocket. A phone that listens better than the person on the other end of the call.” And just to be sure, there’s a reference to the 10,000+ apps in the Android Marketplace: “Apps of every shape and size.” Of course, the ad doesn’t mention the 85,000 or so apps in Apple’s popular App Store.

The e-mail message for Droid wannabes ends with: “You know there’s no phone like that. And it ticks you off. But there will be. Droid is coming.” The Droid site also touts the apps, the network, multitasking, hi-res, 5 megapixels, tunes, directions, speech recognition, video and Android 2.0 among the features.

Verizon of late has focused on “there’s a map for that” and the “iDon’t” themes when it comes to Apple’s iconic iPhone, available only with AT&T in the United States. The Droid marketing appears the most aggressive thus far from the carrier in answer to the iPhone.

Source: Wireless Week  / by Monica Alleven