May 21

Much like with HTC, U.S. Customs may decide to freeze shipments, with no guarantees of an expedient review

In June 2011, DailyTech carried a column entitled “Can Microsoft and Apple Kill Google’s Android with Lawsuits?”

I. Motorola — Next on the Banned List

Was the title a provocative one? Surely, it was.

But it also sounds strangely prophetic, as news [PDF] has just arrived that a second member of the “elite three” of top Android manufacturers has been picked off.

This time the ban — set in place by the U.S. International Trade Commission and scheduled to be enforced by U.S. Customs in 60 days — is on Motorola Mobility Inc.’s (MMI) handsets and comes courtesy of Microsoft Corp. (MSFT). The new ban from the U.S. International Trade Commission comes just weeks after U.S. Customs began to enforce a punitive and sweeping ban on imports of HTC Corp. (TPE:2498) Android handsets, sending the phonemaker’s shares plunging.

After being slapped with an unfavorable preliminary ruling late last year, the official ruling found that Motorola infringed on one patent — U.S. Patent No. 6,370,566 — which covers scheduling meetings.

Motorola
Here’s the feature that led to the ban. [Image Source: Microsoft via Engadget]

Much like the ruling against HTC this is a seemingly trivial item; one that Motorola and Android operating system developer Google Inc. (GOOG) could easily work around. The big question is whether a workaround will do anything to prevent a ban.

After all, HTC removed all infringing features from its phones months ago, but U.S. Customs inexplicably opted to seize all its products anyways. A month has gone by with no indication from customs when they are going to bother to review the handset shipments to confirm that the infringing features are gone, allowing them to be released to market.

II. ITC Warns That Bans are the Realm of Customs, Carry Little Guarantees

DailyTech has been in contact with an spokesperson for the U.S. International Trade Commission who placed the exclusion order (preliminary injunction). The ITC says the bizarre delay is the responsibility of U.S. Customs and is out of its hands, writing:

Please be aware that it is Customs, not the ITC, which enforces the exclusion orders and inspects shipments at the border.

[T]he USITC is not involved in the Customs process. That said, you should know that under USITC rules, HTC can file at the USITC for a ruling on its modified devices. It has not done so. But be aware that obtaining such a ruling would constitute another formal proceeding, and not necessarily a rapid proceeding.

Motorola released an understandably grim statement on the ITC exclusion order, commenting:

Microsoft started its ITC investigation asserting 9 patents against Motorola Mobility. Although we are disappointed by the Commission’s ruling that certain Motorola Mobility products violated one patent, we look forward to reading the full opinion to understand its reasoning. Motorola Mobility will not experience any impact in the near term, as the Commission’s ruling is subject to a $0.33/per unit bond during the 60 day Presidential review period. We will explore all options including appeal.

Droid RAZR MAXX
Motorola is fighting the ban on its handsets, much like HTC. [Image Source: Verizon Wireless]

Microsoft released a respectively gleeful statement from its deputy general counsel David Howard, who writes:

Microsoft sued Motorola in the ITC only after Motorola chose to refuse Microsoft’s efforts to renew a patent license for well over a year. We’re pleased the full Commission agreed that Motorola has infringed Microsoft’s intellectual property, and we hope that now Motorola will be willing to join the vast majority of Android device makers selling phones in the US by taking a license to our patents.

With HTC’s products seized indefinitely by U.S. Customs’ arbitrary enforcers, one has to wonder how many months will go by once the Motorola ban takes effect before Customs bothers to check if Motorola has changed its product.

III. Could Samsung be the Last of the Android Rebels?

It’s quite possible that within a couple months there could be only one major Android handset manufacturer on the U.S. market — Samsung Electronics Comp., Ltd. (KSC:005930).

Samsung building
Samsung could soon be the only Android phonemaker not banned in the U.S.
[Image Source: Flickr]

Much like HTC, Motorola is in a precarious financial position. Google was supposed to acquire Motorola Mobility and relieve its short term financial misfortune. But China has held up the acquisition process, leaving the company on its own for now.

But if Motorola Mobility is going down based on the financial fallout of an import ban, it can lease do more damage to Microsoft than HTC could to Apple. Unlike HTC, Motorola is a large company with many patents. Using those patents, Motorola secured an injunction in Germany banning the sale of Windows and the Xbox 360.

A U.S. federal court ruled that it was illegal to enforce that injunction, threatening Motorola with huge fines. But if Motorola feels in danger of going bankrupt, it may call the court’s bluff and use its “nuclear option” in Germany.

Thus Microsoft may join Apple in successfully removing another major competitor from the market, but if it succeeds it will pay a much dearer cost.

Of course, it’s possible that pressure from Google and others could push U.S. Customs to avoid repeating the punitive ban on HTC’s products with Motorola. U.S. Customs could face steeper criticism in contributing to Motorola’s device due to lack of an expedient review, given that Motorola is an American company (unlike HTC) and it would be costing American jobs.

Ultimately, the best possible outcome for the Android alliance is for U.S. Customs to review the devices and impose no ban — but there’s no assurances that will happen. In short, this is a dark day for the Android rebellion, but whether their movement has truly been crushed by the Microsoft and Apple empires is yet to be seen.

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May 18

Steve Jobs was firm opponent to larger smartphones or smaller tablets, said Android was making a mistake

Late Apple, Inc. (AAPL) CEO Steven P. Jobs once infamously launched into a rant about why Apple only offered two size screens in its mobile lineup — a 3.5-inch smartphone and a 10-inch tablet.

He commented, “The reason we wouldn’t make a 7-inch tablet isn’t because we don’t want to hit a price point, it’s because we don’t think you can make a great tablet with a 7-inch screen. The 7-inch tablets are tweeners, too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete with an iPad. [Increasing screen resolution on small devices is] meaningless, unless your tablet also includes sandpaper, so that the user can sand down their fingers to around one quarter of the present size.”

“There are clear limits of how close you can physically place elements on a touch screen before users cannot reliably tap, flick or pinch them. This is one of the key reasons we think the 10-inch screen size is the minimum size required to create great tablet apps.”

But with Mr. Jobs’ passing, it appears Apple is finally on the verge of following in Android’s footsteps and giving many of its customers what they want — a larger screen.

Reuters has offered confirmation from unnamed sources that the Wall Street Journal’s report regarding a 4+ inch iPhone was accurate. The sources confirm that Apple placed a large order on displays that “will measure 4 inches from corner to corner.”

The Reuters report suggests that orders were placed with both South Korean and Japanese display providers, suggesting Apple is looking for a quick turnaround — all signs pointing to hardware for a soon-to-launch product.

A 4-inch display would give the iPhone 30 percent more space and would help Apple keep up with Android and offer options for users with larger, less pixiesque fingers.

Of course these are just rumors, but it sounds like pretty much everyone is sure that Apple will be bumping its screen size after long admonishing Android for its diverse lineup of larger screen smartphones and mini-tablets.

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May 18

Customs ban remains in effect, government hasn’t revealed when it will bother to review HTC’s changes

Apple, Inc.’s (AAPL) U.S. Patent No. 5,946,647 covers data-tapping — creating actionable links in a text document, and displaying a menu of options, such as to call or save a phone number.

While questions of prior art surround the patent, Apple has thus far been successful in convincing the courts of the patent’s validity. However, despite Apple suing all the major Android manufacturers and despite the feature being in all stock Android browsers/messaging apps, it’s only been able to use the patent to pick off the smallest and weakest of Android “big three” — Android’s HTC Corp. (TPE:2948).

Even as Apple’s decision to “beat up on the little guy” has drawn ire, HTC has moved to try its best to restore its products. The Verge confirms that its testing of the Evo 4G LTE — a new handset on preorder at Sprint Nextel Corp. (S) — and the One X — a handset coming to AT&T, Inc. (T) — reveals that both devices no longer carry the infringing browser and messaging app bulids.

HTC has developed modified versions of these apps. It cleverly creates a settings menu that allows users to directly associate a data type with a specific app. This allows documents to be marked up in such a way that it skirts Apple’s patent description, given that rather than a menu coming up, a click directly launches the app.

The workaround is dubbed “App Associations”.

App associations
HTC has removed the infringing feature from its smartphones via a new feature dubbed “App Associations”. [Image Source: The Verge]

The big question is whether HTC’s hard work will do any good. After all, even before The Verge’s verification, HTC insisted that all of the handsets that had been held up at Customs featured the modification.

According to HTC, U.S. Customs officials have refused to inspect its product or consider lifting the ban after a month of inaction. With the AT&T and Sprint left in a quandary about how to fulfill preorders, HTC is desperate to get the ban lifted.

But the U.S. International Trade Commission and Customs have offered no clue that Customs officials might be ready to review HTC’s seized shipments. Thus HTC finds itself in the position of a prisoner left forgotten in a holding cell.

Customs does not have clear-cut publicly available rules regarding how and when it bans products, so HTC is at the mercy of these bureaucrats. And right now they seem perfectly content to enforce a ban that benefits Apple, despite compelling and clear-cut evidence that HTC no longer is offering the contended feature.

That questionable policy is certainly not sitting well with Android fans and customers who preordered. But it’s a pleasing development to Apple’s well-heeled, polished legion of lawyers and the company’s most zealous fans.

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May 18

Unlimited data will still be available to customers who purchase phones at full price

Verizon Wireless made quite a few enemies earlier this week when it announced that it would be killing grandfathered unlimited data plans when customers upgraded to new LTE phones. In its place will be new family shared data plans that Verizon Wireless has yet to price or fully explain ahead of its summer launch.

Now, in a statement to the New York Times, Verizon Wireless has clarified its position on unlimited data:

Customers will not be automatically moved to new shared data plans. If a 3G or 4G smartphone customer is on an unlimited plan now and they do not want to change their plan, they will not have to do so.
When we introduce our new shared data plans, Unlimited Data will no longer be available to customers when purchasing handsets at discounted pricing.
Customers who purchase phones at full retail price and are on an unlimited smartphone data plan will be able to keep that plan.
The same pricing and policies will be applied to all 3G and 4GLTE smartphones.

So what’s the takeaway from all of this? Unlimited data for most customers who upgrade is dead. The only way to keep your grandfathered data plan is to keep your current phone forerver, or buy a new smartphone at full cost instead of the subsidized pricing that most Americans take advantage of when signing a new two-year contract.

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May 18

Hesse says iPhone deal is enough to carry through

After nearly purchasing MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS), America’s third largest carrier — Sprint Nextel Corp. (S) — says it’s out of the merger/acquisition game for now, despite suggestions that more mergers might be necessary for its survival.

Sources say Sprint examined purchasing Deutsche Telekom (ETR:DTE) subsidiary) T-Mobile USA, which AT&T, Inc. (T) unsuccessfully tried to purchase last year (AT&T’s bid was crushed by the U.S. Department of Justice). But ultimately Sprint decided against merging with T-Mobile USA — America’s fourth largest carrier. Similarly the deal with MetroPCS fell through in the eleventh hour.

Sprint CEO Dan Hesse says a merger just wouldn’t be practical, commenting, “Clearly, the time is not ideal based upon where our shares are currently trading.”

He did, however, leave the door open to a takeover bid, but said that care would be necessary, remarking, “Sometimes something might happen where you might see synergies decrease.”

Dan Hesse
Dan Hesse says Sprint is all mergered out. [Image Source: The Verge]

Speaking of decreasing synergies, Dan Hesse has been in hot water with investors over his expensive bid to acquire Apple, Inc.’s (AAPL) coveted iPhone. Docked part of his pay, Mr. Hesse has been forced to defend the deal which gives Apple billions of dollars. The deal is not expected to turn a profit until at least 2015, despite relatively promising iPhone sales.

The carrier is in the midst of an LTE rollout, but has been left without a crucial flagship handset after Apple succeeded in banning its rival HTC Corp.’s (TPE:2498) products from being imported into the U.S. Sprint’s former LTE partner LightSquared, whom the company cut ties with following the U.S. Federal Communication Commission’s rejection of its satellite LTE bid, recently went bankrupt.

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May 17

Apple is sure to see a much greater benefit from this iPhone relationship than Sprint

Apple’s iPhone is a huge seller both worldwide and in the United States. At first, the smartphone was exclusive to AT&T’s wireless networks in the U.S. Just over a year ago, Verizon jumped onboard. And with the launch of the iPhone 4S, Sprint was finally able to provide Apple’s popular smartphone to its customers.

When the deal was first announced, it was reported that Sprint would purchase 30.5 million iPhone over the course of four years (at a cost of $15.5 billion USD). It was also reported that Sprint wouldn’t make any money on the arrangement with Apple until at least 2014.

Fast-forward to today, and Sprint CEO Dan Hesse is now pushing back that profitability date until 2015. Hesse still stands by his assertion that “carrying the iPhone will be quite profitable;” shareholders are just going to have to wait a bit longer than they originally envisioned.

[Source: TechnoBuffalo]

For anyone that questions Hesse’s decision to make a deal with Apple, he simply tells them to take a look at embattled T-Mobile. T-Mobile recently announced that it would be laying off an additional 900 workers in the U.S. and has lost contract customers for 10 straight quarters.

T-Mobile is also the only one of America’s “Big 4″ wireless carriers that doesn’t have the iPhone.

In other Sprint news, TechnoBuffalo has learned that the wireless carrier will end early upgrades for customers effective June 1. The program allowed customers to upgrade to a new phone within 10 to 14 days of their originally scheduled upgrade date.

Granted, waiting an extra two weeks isn’t going to be a deal breaker for most people, so we doubt that many Sprint customers will cry themselves to sleep over this move.

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May 17

The folks over at Google just love their Google+ social network and more and more Google+ features have been creeping into Gmail lately as well. Today, Google is bringing even more of Google+ to its email client. With this update, Google is especially focusing on adding a deeper integration with Google+ circles. You will now, for example, see profile photos from people in your circles when you select a circle in the left sidebar. You can click on those images to search for email from a specific contact. In addition, if you really take your Google+ circles seriously, you’ll be happy to hear that you can now use circles as search filters in Gmail as well. Say you want to just see emails from your “friends” circle, you can now just type circle:friends to find them.

How useful these features are for you probably depends on how actively you use Google+. We have, however heard from many of our readers that this incessant focus on adding Google+ to just about every aspect of the Google experience is taking a toll on people’s patience. Instead of focusing on the fundamentals of the Gmail experience, for example, it feels as if Google is getting sidetracked left and right by Google+. As Y Combinator’s Paul Graham rightly noted earlier this year, “GMail has become painfully slow.” Adding more Google+ features to it is probably not making it any faster.

At least one new feature today, though, isn’t fully dependent on Google+ and actually quite useful (though it’s also integrated with it). When you search for an email address now, the search results will highlight your contacts’ details as well, including phone numbers, Google Chat status and email address. If you contact has a Google+ profile, this information will stay up to date automatically.

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May 17

Want to keep your tweets among your tweeps and hidden from any old Google searcher? Twitter has some tips for you.

The microblogging company’s @Support account on Wednesday tweeted out a link to a help center page for Twitter users want to keep their posts a bit more anonymous on Google. Given Twitter’s high rank in Google Search, it’s likely that your profile there will be among the top results for your name.

The first suggestion for more anonymity? Change your username or listed actual name on Twitter. So, for example, if you use a profane @ handle, but your given name is listed in your profile settings, that could be a problem during your job search as recruiters Google you to see what comes up.

You can also protect your tweets in your accounts settings but that may not be a perfect fix, as Twitter points out. All tweets posted before you went private will still remain public in search engines (including Twitter’s own search).

Additionally, Google caches old search results, meaning that your old information can still hang around there — even if it only links to an error page.

Eventually, Google will update its search index and refresh to your new privacy settings. But if you want certain posts removed sooner, Twitter does suggest another option. First, copy the URL for the dead status page you would like removed. Then go to this Google page, which explains how to create a removal request for an outdated link or page. You’ll then be directed to another page, where you can paste in the link and submit your request, but you may need a Google account to do so.

Check out Twitter’s full list of tips for demurring from Google Search here.

Twitter and Google have been feuding ever since Google’s integration of Google+ into its regular search results back in January, which Twitter called “bad for people” — since news increasingly breaks on Twitter before being reported on other outlets.

Is it better to have your Twitter profile and activity be a prominent Google Search result, or to protect your anonymity? Let us know in the comments.

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May 17

Is your smartphone bulging with apps? A new report says you’re not alone. But while there are more than a million apps available to both iPhone and Android phone users, the mainstays haven’t changed.

On Wednesday, research firm Nielsen released updated figures on the changes in smartphone app use during the past year. In that period, the average number of apps per smartphone has jumped from 32 apps to 41, among people who use an iPhone or an Android phone.

Despite the explosion of new apps, smartphone users still prefer Facebook, YouTube and Gmail. They’re spending about the same amount of time with apps as they did a year ago, however — 39 minutes per day compared with 37 minutes in 2011.

Check out the infographic below to see more of Nielsen’s numbers.

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May 17

Washington University researchers have managed to rewire the nerves of a paralyzed patient, allowing him to use his hands again.

Ida Fox, case study leader and assistant professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Washington University, along with a team of researchers, have connected undamaged nerves to damaged nerves in order to help a patient regain movement in his hands.

A 71-year-old male patient was in a car accident in 2008 that crushed the C7 vertebrae in his spinal cord. This allowed for some movement in his elbows, shoulders and arms, but completely cut off communication between brain signals and hand movements, meaning that his hands were paralyzed.

To solve this problem, Fox and the team of researchers decided to use nerve transfer therapy. This means that nearby nerves that had not been injured in the accident could be cut, connected to a damaged nerve, and then used to stimulate activity in the hands again.

To do this, Fox cut an undamaged nerve that was responsible for the brachialis, which is an arm muscle that helps bend the elbow. This nerve was reattached to the damaged nerve responsible for hand movement, and this was enough to activate small movement in the patient’s hands once again. However, the patient had to relearn how to use the nerve in a different way over time.

“The brain has to be trained to think, ‘OK, I used to bend my elbow with this nerve, and now I use it to pinch,’” said Fox. “We’re not changing any of the biomechanics; we’re just changing the wiring. So it’s more of a mental game that patients have to play with themselves.”

As it turns out, the patient was able to write a little bit and feed himself after months of physical therapy.

This method of nerve rewiring could be used to treat patients with C7 and C6 vertebra injuries because the nerves are attached to the spinal cord directly above the injury. However, those with C5 to C1 vertebra injuries could not benefit from such a surgery because of the location of the nerves.

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