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Top 5 Ways To Backup and Safeguard Your Mobile Data

How much information have you got stored on your mobile phone? Think about it – your contacts, addresses, important and memorable texts, hundreds of photos and tunes, and now, of course, dozens of apps. Losing your phone is now more costly than buying a new one – your whole life’s stored on it.

Backing up your mobile data is therefore essential. But how do you do it?

Easy – you read the following guide on the top 5 ways to backup and safeguard your mobile data!

 

How the Spotify Phone will impact Starbucks in 2010

Music streaming service Spotify has hit a winning streak. Not content with winning awards for its Web-based music-streaming service, it’s also set to take the mobile world by storm, firstly with a Spotify app for Android phones (above, and in the video below) and the iPhone, and now with a dedicated Spotify phone.

Most companies are happy enough with just a smartphone app to add to their Web app, but Spotify figures that it might as well go the whole hog and build an entire phone around its service. And why not? If Twitter and Facebook can do it, then surely the world’s most talked about music streaming service can too?

But a Spotify phone won’t just shake up the mobile phone world – it’ll shake up Starbucks, too. Read on after the jump to see how…

 

Remarkable 3G and 4G devices to become reality by 2014

A new report by Strategy Analytics predicts that 3G and 4G mobile technology is set to find its way into 20 different mobile device types that are anything but mobile phones. From laptops to cameras, GPS devices to portable game consoles, every type of mobile device is set to become 3G-enabled as the technology and its cost shrink inexorably.

By 2014, the company predicts over 100 million of these always connected devices will have been bought, leading to a golden age of mobile technology that’s set to transform every type of gadget you currently own.

 

Why is buying a mobile phone so hard?

I’ve always thought buying a new mobile was unnecessarily complicated, but things just seem to be getting worse! I’m currently with T-Mobile on a monthly contract for a SIM with Web n Walk Plus, which I use in my unlocked Nokia E90. I love my E90, but it’s become slow, doesn’t have a touchscreen, and, worst of all, has started to act – flaky! It no longer sends individual texts – it sends three at a time. It refuses to call out, and doesn’t like accepting calls too much either.

Now, all of this could be due to the network rather than the phone (though that’s unlikely, as my girlfriend’s also on T-Mobile, and she has no problems), but even if it is, it’s got e thinking that I want a new mobile, even if I don’t need one!

So, I went shopping – and ended up with a headache! Here’s why after the jump.

 

Sony Ericsson hints at a PSP phone for 2009

Sony Ericsson had rather a successful MWC this year, with the 12 megapixel Idou being very favourably received, and the new Sony Ericsson W995 marking the first of a new range of phones from the company that it’s calling “Entertainment Unlimited”

Entertainment Unlimited phones are the start of a new strategy for Sony Ericsson that will see the launch of the mythical PSP gaming phone in 2009 and will hopefully solve the financial problems the company has been having of late.

 

Nokia readying new class of phone for MWC?

Rumours are circulating that Nokia may be working on a new class of mobile phone that will be announced at this year’s MWC. Based on the form factor of the E90 communicator, and beginning with the launch of the Nokia N97, the Finnish mobile phone giant could be about to unleash a new range of netbooks on us that literally are multimedia computers, and will enable us once and for all to unshackle ourselves from our desktops.

“Where’s the evidence?!” I hear you cry. Case for the prosecution after the jump.

 

Sony shows it can beat the iPhone

If there’s one thing I’ve noticed since the launch of the iPhone, it’s how few phone companies have been prepared to take on the iPhone at its game. All the iPhone “killers” out there from the major phone companies are really nothing of the sort – they’re just touchscreen phones that pretend they’re iPhone competitors, but they don’t really go for the throat.

Before you start protesting and throwing examples of your favourite phone at me as a demonstration of how wrong I am, Sony have very kindly come up with all the proof I need – and it’s not even a phone!

 

Windows Mobile “will be dead by 2011″

In an intriguing article, long-time technology pundit Bob Cringely has made a compelling case for the death of Windows Mobile. He is, as he admits, no expert on mobile phones, but this counts in his favour as he has no bias towards one platform or another.

Analyzing the current mobile phone market and some of the announcements that have been made this year, he predicts that Apple’s iPhone will become the dominant smartphone platform, Google’s Android will be second, and Symbian and RIM fighting each other for third place. Windows Mobile, meanwhile, will simply wither on the vine and eventually be killed off by Microsoft.

 

Nokia follows Nintendo as Android takes over the World

The Nokia E90 Communicator smartphone

If you take a look at the mobile phone news these past few months, there’s one thing that’s been dominating global coverage: smartphones, and in particular, a confusing plethora of new models, applications and features that have suddenly swarmed onto the market.

Traditionally seen as ugly phones for business, smartphones are set to become the big thing in the mobile phone market for 2009, with no fewer than five key smartphone platforms (all of which, of course, are incompatible with each other!)

There’s fierce competition between smartphone manufacturers, not just to attract users, but also developers, as the more applications a platform has, the more likely it is that other developers will develop applications for that platform: success breeds success.

Which reminds me of another, similarly competitive market: games consoles, which has seen some spectacular winners and losers over the years. What’s more, if you compare the different strategies of the different console platforms, you’ll find them remarkably similar to the strategies currently being employed by the different smartphone platforms.

So is Nokia really following Nintendo’s strategy? It certainly is, while Android is set for nothing less than world domination.

Read on after the jump to see why.

 

No more Walkman phones from Sony Ericsson?

Leaked pictures of the Sony Ericsson Remi have emerged, which show a super-thin (10mm) candy bar phone that has overtures of Sony Ericsson’s old T610 phone. Looking rather stylish in a minimalistic kind of way, the Remi (which is currently a codename, and not the final name of the phone) will be a mid-range phone, and quite highly specced, with HSDPA and a 3.2 megapixel camera .

In fact most of the features are already on the Sony Ericsson W890, as the Remi is pretty much exactly the same phone, just without the Walkman branding. All of which leads me to wonder quite why the Walkman branding has suddenly been dropped…