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Men prefer Android – Women, iphone.

By | Droid, iPhone | No Comments

The iPhone and devices running Google Android are the most desired smartphones in the U.S., but men tend to prefer Android while women gravitate toward Apple’s iOS, a new survey has found.

Nielsen on Wednesday released the results of its October survey of mobile phone users. It found that the iPhone was “most desired” among likely smartphone upgraders in the U.S., ahead of Android.

But Android found its greatest share when the results were viewed by gender: 32.6 percent of male respondents said they wanted an Android smartphone, while 28.6 percent of men opted for the iPhone.

Women, on the other hand, strongly prefer the iPhone, with 30.9 percent opting for Apple’s handset, while 22.8 percent of women said they want a device running Google Android. For both men and women, BlackBerry came in third while Microsoft’s Windows Mobile took fourth.

In terms of age, the iPhone led in all demographics except ages 35 to 54. In that range, 27.4 percent of “likely smartphone upgraders” said they would choose Android, more than the 26.3 percent who said the iPhone.

Nielsen 1

Among users planning to get a new smartphone, current smartphone owners preferred the iPhone with 35 percent choosing Apple, versus 28 percent for Android. Consumers who own “feature phones” were less decisive, with 25 percent unsure what they would buy.

Nielsen 2

Nielsen also found that the iPhone has edged Research in Motion’s BlackBerry platform in terms of market share. The survey shows Apple with 27.9 percent of the market, while BlackBerry holds 27.4 percent. That contrasts with a report also released on Wednesday, which found that the BlackBerry had overtaken the iPhone in terms of mobile browser usage in the U.S.

In October, Nielsen revealed that sales of all devices running Google Android had exceeded the iPhone for the first time. However, Wednesday’s new survey shows total market share among users, rather than current sales.

Google Earth 6 – The latest update includes 3D trees.

By | Google | No Comments

Google on Monday released Google Earth 6, an improved version of its virtual globe software.

Now almost a decade old — the software was called Keyhole Earthviewer before it was acquired by Google in 2005 — Google Earth has finally grown some 3D trees.

Techweb’s David Berlind gets a hands-on demonstration of Google’s newly re-written spreadsheet app, with improved performance and increased productivity, including real-time collaboration. See the new visual voicemail feature in action on a recently upgraded Blackberry Bold emwave’s Heartmath is a great little program that lets you monitor your heartrate, and then it translates that into a coherence score. This score measures your physio-emotional state, and helps you get all of that in balance.
Techweb’s David Berlind gets a hands-on demonstration of Google’s newly re-written spreadsheet app, with improved performance and increased productivity, including real-time collaboration.

Fittingly, the Google product manager who made the announcement is named Peter Birch.

“In Google Earth, while we and our users have been busy populating the globe with many thousands of 3D building models, trees have been rather hard to come by,” wrote Birch in a blog post. “All that is changing with Google Earth 6, which includes beautifully detailed, 3D models for dozens of species of trees, from the Japanese Maple to the East African Cordia to my personal favorite, the cacao tree.”

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Google Earth now has more than 80 million trees, mainly in urban areas like Athens, Berlin, Chicago, New York City, San Francisco and Tokyo. Google has also been working with nature and conservation organizations such as the Green Belt Movement in Africa, the Amazon Conservation Team in Brazil, and CONABIO in Mexico to create tree models where forests are threatened.

Trees can be toggled on or off by enabling or disabling the 3D building layer.

The sixth iteration of Google Earth also brings better integration with Street View. In previous versions, Street View felt like a separate viewing and navigation experience. Each panorama seemed like an island of imagery. Now Google Earth users can glide down from orbit, select a Street View landing point, and ease right into ground-based navigation.

Google has also simplified the process of finding and accessing historic image sets, such as Warsaw in 1935 or London in 1945, which were introduced in Google Earth 5. When users visit areas with historic image data, they will be informed of this by a message in the application status bar. Clicking on this message will allow users to browse the imagery.

Google Earth 6 is available for free; Google Earth Pro, a version for professionals who need access to GIS data import capabilities and other advanced features, sells for $399 per user, with volume discounts. Google also offers a version of Google Earth for enterprise customers.