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Tag Archive | "Korean Internet"

The (New) Other Tablet(s)


If 2010 was the year of the iPad, 2011 is going to be the year of the other tablets.

Overseas, if you are willing to pony up £600 in the UK or upwards of $539 in The States you can get a Motorola Xoom – the first Honeycomb / Android 3.0 tablet (Plus the cost of a data connection). As Google’s flagship Honeycomb tablet it’s pretty slick. Other manufacterers have their own iterations in the works as well, The HP slate, running Palm’s old OS and Windows among them.

Here in Korea it’s a two horse race between iPad and Samsung’s 7 inch Galaxy Tab, with a 10.1 inch already shown at The Consumer Electronics Show in January and nowrumours of an 8.9 inch version coming as early as the end of the month.

Beginning late February the Galaxy Tab was introduced by LG U+ (LG Telecom) at various rates including essentially for free if you sign up for a data / voice plan over W55000 a month. The data plans are by no means generous with 2 and 4GB monthly free or with unlimited use if you go for the W55000/mnth plan.

The LG U+ model with models

However according to this ETNews article the plans (with 2 or 3 year options) compare favourably to those offered by SK Telecom.

I’m not entirely sure, but comparing Samsung’s micro sites for the product it looks like The LG version runs CDMA 3G, which after all makes sense considering it only has a CDMA network.

The big news is KT’s offering. It seems KT and Samsung have gotten over their tiff over KT selling iPhone. (Indeed SK Telecom will start selling iPhone 4 and iPads from March 16th)  KT will be offering a Wi-Bro / Wifi version of the Galaxy Tab. Rather than having to carry around a Wi-Bro modem (Like KT’s Egg) the Wi-Bro (Mobile WIMAX) radio is built in. And although from that article it is hard to discern, (My Korean is not that good OK?) it looks like the 3G radio is dispatched altogether in favour of the Wi-Bro, meaning voice calls will be VoIP. Confirmed via Yonhap.

The KT Model with a Model.

KT is offering the Galaxy Tab at various rates with various plans and discounts etc.

It comes at an interesting time when this week KT announced that all the metropolitan areas in Korea now have Wi-Bro coverage (previously it had only been Seoul and the part of Gyeonggi down to Suwon) and that you will also have Wi-Bro coverage Along most of Korea’s main highways.

But the bigger big news is that FINALLY Samsung will reease a WiFi only version of the Galaxy Tab for those of who don’t need yet another contract with one (or more) of the Telcos listed above. And unlike the SK Telecom, KT or LG versions won’t set you back W995,000!

Instead the wifi version is set to retail at just over a third less at W600,000.

Wihch is interesting.

Considering that the 10 inch WiFi version of the current and next iPad versions will sell at W500,000.

But I do so want one. The form factor is great, my iPad is starting to really bug me when I am reading on it for long periods, and in the subway it is near unusable unless I am sitting down, holding it any other way becomes quite tiresome after about 3 or 4 stops. The Galaxy Pad is much more hand friendly and as I said in my iPad2 post the iPad is becomeing more and more content creation friendly while reading on the Galaxy Tab’s 7″ TFT display will still be a pleasant enough experience.

Add in support for Gingerbread (it’s coming, Samsung seems to have turned it’s ire towards Google after suc a promising start) and probably HoneyComb (or at least a pairded down version thereof) and the Galaxy tab makes for a better proposition. I doubt my iPad will see more than two more software updates before becoming obsolete anyway.

Samsung has promised the WiFi version by the end of 2011 Q1 (i.e. by the end of March) and preorders are being taken on it’s website (although I can’t find where) and through it’s retail stores (though the shop clerks at Samsung Digital Plaza seldom know what you are talking about and will point you towards SK Teecom if you go asking about a Galaxy Tab.

From Yonhap.

Samsung Electronics started to receive pre-orders for the WiFi-only Galaxy Tab at the price of 600,000 won (US$536) this week through its online Web site and retail shops in South Korea. It did not disclose the launch date.

So expect a review of the Galaxy Tab WiFi version sometime this month, But I can’t disclose the review date.

Posted in TechComments

Time to Say Goodbye to IE6


Look, when even the maker of the product says it is decrepit, washed up, bad at what it does and a giant gaping hole in computer security, it is probably time to say goodbye.

Microsoft has launched the Internet Explorer 6 Countdown, a site aimed at promoting downloads of its newest version of Internet Explorer (number 8 by all accounts) and ridding the world of IE6. Its aim is to reduce use of IE6 worldwide to just 1%.

It currently stands at 12%.

Read the full story

Posted in TechComments

SNS Stealing a March on E-mail in Korea


New figures from local consulting company SCOTOSS show how Koreans are continuing to move away from traditional media toward the internet. More than that, they indicate an online shift is also under way: from e-mail to a greater use of SNS sites, in particular Facebook and Twitter.

Read the full story

Posted in TechComments

All That Cast Global Blogger


Great News! Nanoomi.net has released its very own Android App and it’s available now on SK Telecom’s T-Store!

Part of the ALL THAT series of Apps we have talked about before, Nanoomi’s All That Cast Global Blogger App is the ONLY app in SK Telecom’s T-Store where the content is sourced from foreign bloggers living and writing about Korea.

Admittedly there are a number of similar blog/content aggregation apps available for Android. What sets Global Blogger apart is the fact that the featured authors have lovingly read and recorded the content of their posts for users to listen and read along with.

Featured bloggers include Korean Literature in TranslationZen Kimchi Food Journal, Mini Bomb EnglishTammy’s Korean Cooking and Tatter in Translation – a collection of Korean posts translated from TNM’s stable of Korean Power Bloggers. Video from Eat Your Kimchi is also included! (Oh, and there are also posts from your’s truly, The Chosun Bimbo as well!)

How to get the App:

You have a couple of options – some easier than others. If you have an Android handset and you are on SK Telecom, you can download Global Blogger from the T-Store.

If you have an Android handset on KT Show or LG you can download the T-Store app from here.

Once you have the T-Store app on your phone it’s a matter of searching for 올댓 캐스트 글로벌 블로거. The T-Store will ask you for your name and foreigner number before downloading. After numerous tries, enter your name as it appears on your Alien Registration Card – but for me it seemed to work only in lowercase…? Go figure.

Alternatively on a PC you can register for the T-Store (in Internet Explorer), download the SK Telecom PC-Android App manager and sync with your phone.

After a couple of days we have 122 downloads and a 5 star rating.

So if you love Nanoomi.net like we do, support us by downloading our app.

Go. Download. Now!

Posted in Media, TechComments

Samsung at CES 2011


First up the big news that I have been personally waiting for – a Wi-Fi only version of the Galaxy Tab coming (to America at any rate) in Q1 – so sometime in the next 10 weeks.

Apparently the people at Samsung America haven’t quite figured out the “cute model handling your product” play just yet, instead we have Trevor giving us the details:

Of course no word on price or exactly when before the end of March this thing will be out in The States – let alone Korea, but if the first model is anything to go by then the 2 launches should be closely loinked.

As to whether a wi-fi only version of the Galaxy Tab will do well in Korea is another question entirely, with some noting that, if it weren’t for the phone capability the Galaxy Tab really has little else going for it. (Someone mentioned it works well for reading comics).

Note to the Android 3.0 “Hummingbird” was also previewed at CES and is supposed to be a Tablet only version of Android – will the Galaxy Tab have the chops to upgrade later in the year…?

Sticking to tablets – but with more of the Windows & variety Sammy has done something very interesting with its new PC 7 sliding series:

Again no models.

There was some talk of this a couple of months ago on Engadget with a render showing the keyboard directly below the bezel of the screen – no one cottoned on to the fact that the screen also tilts up creating a more traditional notebook form factor.

Questions I would have and one comes to mind immediately – is how sturdy is the sliding-tilting mechanism. We have all had the “Floppy Nintendo DS” syndrome where the top screen looses it’s staying power and flops all over the place. But then in saying that Samsung is known for its sturdy, if not rock solid aluminum (ala Apple) construction.

The second question is of course what’s under the hood? No word in the video of course – but I’m guessing some sort of high end Atom for mobility and battery – is it a touch screen? Has to be right – especially when in tablet mode, but there’s a distinct lack of a track pad in front of the keys when the slider is out…? Surely Samsung doesn’t want us to be reaching up and touching the screen all the time…?

Already predicted a long time ago here at The Chosun BImbo – Samsung’s answer to the iPod Touch – The Galaxy Player.

Unfortunately no official Sammy USA video for this one – instead some right geeza from the UK innit:

Two interesting things from that minute of footage – the fact Samsung is touting it as an INternet connected device – as opposed to an MP3 player, and secondly that it is supposedly optimized for VOIP - can you see the ear speaker at the top of the device – VERY Galaxy S-like.

The guvna’ in the video says it’s already available here in Korea – might have to have a look around again and find out exactly how much it gores for. Like the Galaxy Tab Wi-Fi only version this, with a lack of a cellular radio in it, should actually be quite cheap comparative to their cellular connected predecessors

And still on the Android / Froyo Buzz it’s the successor to the Nexus One (My recently purchased phone) The Nexus S. Here’s Trevor again:

Samsung and The Google have struck up something of an interesting partnership considering only a year a go Samsung was calling Android rubbish and touting it’s own Bada operating System – now the two are so close (10,000,000 Galaxy S phones later) that Samsung has the pleasure of putting out the first Android 2.3 phone, and the second official development platform for Android as well.

Gadgets aside CES always gives Samsung a chance to shake it’s real money maker – TVs This time Trev is replaced by….a young Forest Whitaker:

Cool. But can I stream a torrent to it?

As always all of this gadget goodness may or may not make it to Korea (which is odd) or in various different iterations over the next year.

Have a look around Engadget for more coverage of Samsung and CES in general

Posted in TechComments

WikiLeaks Challenges Online Journalism


Ringmedia is a premier K-blogger, who posts on Korean media and Internet industry at ringmedia.net.  The original post was translated dyouknowwhat, a talented sophomore from Cornell.

Recently, the “investigative” social media site WikiLeaks and the arrest of the founder Julian Assange have become a hot issue.

WikiLeaks made the headlines again by disclosing U.S. State department diplomatic cables in November 2010. It currently does not have a website, because many governments have blocked WikiLeaks for fear of indiscriminate disclosures of information. Although media censorship is quite common(?) in South Korea, the fact that the U.S. government blocked the website and tried to arrest the WikiLeaks founder shows that even in western countries where freedom of the press stands strong, WikiLeaks has touched a nerve.

Read the full story

Posted in MediaComments

Mapping Social Networks


Arch Nemesis Neils Footman recently posted on local Korean efforts (clones) at entering the social network space. They have already coined a Konglish-like acronym – SNS or Social Network System – which to me sounds redundant because of the synonymous use of network and system, but that’s another post.

What I want to mention here is two things – firstly the near total dominance of the planet and secondly a couple of visualizations of social networks and their place on the interenet and in our world.

If facebook were a country it would be the third most populous one on the face of the earth. With some 500,000,000 users, only India and China have more people.

You will have seen this image that came out from Facebook itself, where every point of light on the map represents a user online on Facebook:

But perhaps more interesting has been the insidious spread growth of “The Facebook” over the last year, from June 2009:

With well known holdouts South Korea with Cyworld, Brazil and India with Google’s Orkut, The originator – Friendster in the Philippines and Hi5 in parts of Latin America and south East Asia, and of course the big one – QQ in China.

Come 2010 and it’s a different story:

For a start there are a lot fewer social networks as a whole, and despite holdouts in Brazil, Russia and China, pretty much everywhere else is that blue, that aids the colour blind (and TIME man of the year) Mark Zuckerberg go about his daily plans for world domination.

Yet attempting to map Internet (Social) content – rather than the internet itself – is not new. My favourite daily comic XKCD first made an attempt in 2007:

Note the size of then dominant Myspace while the “Icy North” is predominantly made up of the oldest of players on the Internet Microsoft, Yahoo! and AOL.

Recently XKCD updated the map:

Click here to embiggen

Note how Facebook is now huge and has satellite states Farmville and Happy Farm attached while the other social networks have also disapperaed. Note too that rather than just Social networks the second map is more broadly “community” oriented, based on the total number of interactions – playing, sharing, tagging etc, rather than just numbers of members – which aren’t necessarily a good indication of the health of an online community.

XKCD’s map inspired perhaps the most accurate cartographic representation of these sorts of things by (again my favourite) info-graphic maker, Flowtown.

Click here to embiggen.

This one reverts back to the number of members as a measure of size and harkens back to XKCD’s previous map showing the “receding glaciers” of AOL and Microsoft Windows Live. Friendster is still putting up a fight with 115 million members, but the growth of Chinese Habbo and on the other side Twitter squeezing in on each side of Facebook is interesting. In the real world a merger between at least Facebook and Twitter might be on the cards.

Other interesting additions are the Isle of Apps and the iPhone App Volcano while the rising Island of Buzz might yet prove wishful thinking.

The most compelling part though? The “Google Information Gathering Outposts” all over the map. Nothing could be more true than that.

Posted in Culture, TechComments

Google Zeitgeist Here and Abroad


As an ever increasingly connected world, and as one that now relies on Google more than our own brains (mostly) as a receptacle for knowledge, looking back on the year’s most searched-for terms is always a good way to get the pulse of the people, as well as start pondering what will happen next year as we find ourselves in those odd few days between Christmas and The New Year.

For your reading pleasure, I’ll look at Google International results, then focus on what Koreans have been searching for on the increasingly ever-popular (in Korea) Google.

Read the full story

Posted in TechComments

The World is Watching…


Leave the car at home on the 11th.

Shakespeare once said that brevity is the Seoul soul of wit. In modern times, nowhere is this more apparent than with Twitter. It is amazing how, with just 140 characters, biting satire and political commentary can now wing its way around the world faster than you can say interfering paternal state propaganda.

The G20 summit is in Seoul next week and in preparation the city and central governments have been preparing Seoulites for the inevitable delays and inconveniences, which is pretty swell as governments go.

But along with warnings about traffic have come some interesting and, some might say, insecure messages along with some totally nonsensical ones.

Reminding that Seoul will have the eyes of the world on it next week, the city’s denizens have been asked to NOT throw away unsightly (and malodorous) food waste, NOT to drive – as noted above, and NOT be afraid to speak to foreigners.

Read the full story

Posted in Media, PoliticsComments

Samsung Galaxy Players (YP-G50 / YP-MB2)


Samsung has come out with its answer to the iPhone, namely the Galaxy S. Samsung has come out with its answer to the iPad, namely the Galaxy Tab. And now, here is their answer to the iPod Touch, The Galaxy Player:

Want!

That’s right it’s the Galaxy S sans the phone. And I want!

Read the full story

Posted in TechComments

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    Photos on flickr