Thursday, May 10, 2012

LG Optimus Elite brings Google Wallet to Virgin Mobile


Virgin Mobile's first phone to support Google Wallet goes on sale next week.
 
 

Optimus Elite
LG's Optimus Elite goes to Virgin Mobile.
(Credit: Pocketnow)
 
Following in Sprint's footsteps, Virgin Mobile is getting Google Wallet thanks to the LG Optimus Elite.
The Android 2.3 Gingerbread smartphone is Virgin Mobile's first phone with support for Google Wallet and NFC, or near field communication, a short-range communication protocol similar in concept to Bluetooth.
The silver LG Optimus Elite, which also features a 3.5-inch touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera, and a 800MHz processor, goes on sale May 15 for $149.99, but preorders begin today.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

3G/4G Performance Map: Data speeds for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon

May 8, 2012 12:30 pm  

3G/4G Performance Map: Data Speeds for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon
 
In our April 16 article “3G and 4G Wireless Speed Showdown,” we reported the results of our exclusive 13-city tests of the four national wireless services: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon. Our study is the largest and best-known independent test of wireless service in the United States.

Here, in Part Two of our story, we drill deeper into the massive amounts of data that we collected over six weeks in February and March of this year. Whereas the first article reported the 13-city average speeds of the carriers, in this story we detail the carriers’ performance in each of the ten testing locations we visited in each city.

We’ve assembled a full-page map showing all 127 of our testing locations in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. When you zoom in on a particular city, you’ll see ten blue map markers—one for each place we tested. Click the pin, and you’ll see our full testing results for that location.

T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 21 service dominated the 3G testing, earning the highest marks for upload speed and download speed in 11 of the 13 cities we studied. The exceptions were Chicago (where AT&T captured the best download and upload speeds for 3G) and Dallas (where AT&T took the lead for 3G downloads, and Verizon won for 3G uploads).


3G/4G Performance Map: Data Speeds for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon
We saw three major patterns in our 4G test results. In five cities (Atlanta, Boston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and San Francisco), AT&T swept the 4G upload and download competitions; in four (Denver, New Orleans, San Jose, and Seattle), Verizon swept both; and in the remaining four (Chicago, Dallas, New York, and Washington, D.C.), AT&T won for downloads and Verizon prevailed for uploads. Notably, in two of the cities where Verizon ruled (Denver and Seattle), AT&T doesn’t offer 4G LTE service.

webpage and Video Load Times

In addition to the speed results, you can see the results of our “behavioral” tests, which are meant to closely approximate the wireless usage of real people. At each of our testing locations, our field researcher loaded a 100KB static webpage and viewed a 1-minute video while connected to each of the 3G and 4G services of the carriers. For each one, the researcher logged the time the webpage took to load, as well as the time necessary to stream the video.

In Video: Demystifying Spotty Cell Phone Coverage

You can see a lot of variance in the performance scores from location to location within our testing cities. The same service may deliver radically different results in two locations in the same part of town. Or two different wireless services might produce very different connection speeds and call quality at the same location.
That’s because a number of variables are constantly affecting the quality of the wireless service you get—factors such as nearby physical structures, your distance from a cell tower, whether you’re connecting from indoors or outdoors, the time of day, and the total number of users connecting to a nearby cell tower at the same time.
Such variables are important to remember when you’re selecting a cell service. Keeping them in mind is also key when you’re choosing a device, because some phones and tablets do much better than others in challenging cellular environments.
In this video we drove around San Francisco to demonstrate how some of these conditions can affect your wireless coverage.
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Quick Facts by City

Atlanta: T-Mobile had a strong showing in Atlanta on the 3G side, with average download speeds at 4.53 mbps and uploads at 1.93 mbps. In 4G, AT&T showed the fastest average download speed of any carrier in any city we tested, at 11.60 mbps. Verizon had its next-to-worst 4G download showing in Atlanta, at 6.24 mbps on average.
Boston: T-Mobile clocked the fastest 3G speeds in Boston, while AT&T won on the 4G side. Both AT&T and Verizon delivered solid download averages, at 8.60 mbps and 7.24 mbps, respectively. Sprint’s WiMax service performed unusually well in Boston, averaging 3.90 mbps for downloads.

3G/4G Performance Map: Data Speeds for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon
Photograph by Robert Cardin
Chicago: AT&T finished first in average 3G download speed (3.45 mbps), despite the fact that its 3G numbers weren’t great in Chicago compared with its performance in other cities. AT&T also had the fastest average 4G download speed (9.70 mbps). Dallas: AT&T’s best numbers came in Dallas, with an average 3G download speed of 3.73 mbps and an average 4G download speed of 10.22 mbps. Meanwhile, T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 21 service registered 13-city worsts for average download rate (2.62 mbps) and average upload rate (0.45 mbps).
Denver: Verizon had the top marks in average 4G download speed (6.68 mbps) and average upload speed (3.70 mbps). T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 21 service rolled past its rivals on the 3G side, with solid averages for downloads (3.59 mbps) and uploads (1.53 mbps).
Las Vegas: AT&T delivered an excellent average download rate of 11.15 mbps, the third-highest rate for any carrier in any city. T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 21 was the fastest 3G service, though its download average (3.11 mbps) ranked as the lowest city-winning mark for 3G download speed in our study.
Los Angeles: We recorded the fastest average 3G download speeds in our study in Los Angeles, where T-Mobile won with a robust 4.78 mbps. AT&T had the best 4G scores in L.A., although its average download speed of 6.62 mbps was the second-slowest winning download speed in our tests.

3G/4G Performance Map: Data Speeds for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon
New Orleans: T-Mobile’s HSPA+ 21 service proved fastest among the 3G field in the Big Easy, with averages of 4.49 mbps for downloads and 1.70 mbps for uploads. Verizon’s winning average 4G download speed (8.46 mbps) was the second-highest city score for the service in our tests.
New York: In New York we found a wide gap between the best 3G download average (3.30 mbps for T-Mobile) and the best 4G download average (11.35 mbps for AT&T)—an 8.05-mbps difference.
San Francisco: AT&T posted the best average 4G download speed, producing an impressive 10.71 mbps, while Verizon turned in a solid 8.40-mbps download average. AT&T’s 3G service performed very well in San Francisco, delivering the company’s second-highest average download rate at 3.47 mbps; but T-Mobile was faster, with downloads averaging 4.08 mbps.
San Jose: Verizon 4G clocked average speeds of 7.66 mbps for downloads and 6.52 mbps for uploads, compared with 4.74 mbps for downloads and 2.5 mbps for uploads from AT&T LTE. T-Mobile delivered a winning average 3G download rate of 4.61 mbps.
Seattle: T-Mobile turned in the top 3G download speeds (averaging 3.87 mbps) in Seattle, while its 4G HSPA+ 42 service generated a surprisingly fast average download speed of 7.46 mbps, the carrier’s 13-city high. Verizon posted its best 13-city mark for 4G downloads (10.87 mbps on average), making it easily the fastest 4G service in town.
Washington D.C.: T-Mobile had the fastest average 3G download speeds (4.14 mbps), handily beating AT&T, whose 3G scores in D.C. were the worst from the carrier in our 13 test cities. AT&T, however, won on the 4G side with an average download speed of 8.52 mbps.
For details on how we conducted the testing for our 13-city study, see “Methodology in a Nutshell.” And, again, for a close-up look at the individual charts for each city, see our full-page testing locations map.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Opinion: Why is Samsung so hot right now?

Fri May 4, 2012
Samsung unveiled its latest flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S III, at Earls Court in London on Thursday.
Samsung
Samsung unveiled its latest flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S III, at Earls Court in London on Thursday.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Jenkins: Samsung's strategy different to its main rival, Apple
  • The South Korean company has a phone to suit pretty much every potential customer
  • But Samsung's scale could turn out to be a weakness as well as a strength, says Jenkins
  • "In some respects, Samsung reminds me of Sony in the years before it all went wrong"
This summer, Earls Court in London will be the venue for Olympic volleyball, but last night Samsung hired this vast space to launch a single product -- its new flagship phone, the Galaxy S III. (We really liked it incidentally, check out our hands-on preview here).

Hiring such a large space and filling it full of tech heads from all over the world was a sign of extreme confidence from the Korean electronics giant, and you only have to take a look at its last set of figures to see where the bravado is coming from. Net profit for the quarter was 5.05tn won, up 81%, and the main driver for this success was Samsung's Galaxy range of phones.

The Galaxy range has certainly been selling like hot cakes. This week, trend-watchers IDC put the company ahead of the competition in its latest state of the market analysis.
What's interesting to me is how different Samsung's strategy is to its other major smartphone competitor, Apple. There is only one iPhone released every year, and design-wise, each one has been broadly the same as the previous model, with the same size screen.

Samsung Galaxy S III primed for release

 
Read more: Samsung unveils Galaxy S III smartphone with face, voice recognition
In contrast, Samsung has a bewildering number of different models that, viewed together, make almost no sense at all to the casual observer. This might seem like a recipe for confusion, but it also means that that Samsung has a phone to suit pretty much every potential customer. Want something pocketable that's cheap? There's a Samsung Galaxy for that. Need lots of power, a massive screen and a stylus to draw pictures with? Samsung Galaxy can help. And on it goes.

Apple is fantastic at making a product that's very aspirational, and it makes an enormous amount of money on every iPhone, but in terms of simply shifting a lot of phones and achieving huge scale, it's Samsung that has the winning strategy.
 
Both Apple and Samsung are so successful in fact, the battle for the top smartphone slot is starting to look like a two-horse race.

But it won't necessarily always be this way. HTC was the darling of the mobile industry a while back until Samsung arrived to eat its lunch. The transformation in the company's fortunes was rapid, and there's every possibility that Samsung could see an equally rapid turnaround at some point in the future -- in mobiles, you're only as good as your last hit product.

There's also a chance that Samsung's scale could turn out to be a weakness as well as a strength. In some respects, Samsung reminds me of Sony in the years before it all went wrong. There are lots of divisions that don't appear to communicate with each other very well, making a vast number of different products, most of which are decent, but not outstanding.

Read more: New Samsung 'not for everyone'
There's a desire to be the number one player in every category Samsung is in, which is laudable, but probably unachievable. Does Samsung really need to be the number one maker of cameras in the world? Or MP3 players? Probably not. I can't help but wonder whether its smartphone profits are covering up some deeper organizational problems. Then again, it seems to be working for now, so it may all turn out fine.
If a company was to snatch the smartphone crown from Samsung, which would it be? One answer might be Nokia, which may seem like a crazy thing to say following its latest set of disastrous financial results. But there is still a chance that it might not be game over.

Nokia's flagship mobile running Microsoft's Windows Phone, the Lumia 900, has recently appeared in America to decent critical acclaim. In the U.S., Android doesn't have quite the same grip on the market that it does in the UK in particular, so there's an outside chance Nokia could sell enough handsets to convince developers deal with the platform's biggest problem -- a lack of apps.

If that happens, the launch of Windows Phone 8 could open the whole field up again.

Hands on: Samsung Galaxy SIII review

04/05/2012 12:10pm

The Samsung Galaxy SIII was launched to major fanfare the worldwide Samsung Unpacked event at Earls Court, and What Laptop Tablet & Smartphone were there to get hands-on.

Samsung has upped the size of the Galaxy SIII to 4.8-inch and included a 1,280 x 720 AMOLED display, which looks stunning. On first impressions, the SIII’s screen wasn’t as vibrant as the recently released HTC One X, but viewing angles were excellent, and visuals sharp.
Samsung Galaxy S3
Elsewhere, there’s a quad-core processor running the show, which keeps the Ice Cream Sandwich toting handset running smoothly. This really shows when shooting on the 8MP camera, where shutter lag is abolished, and burst mode can fire off 20 shots, and quickly chooses eight of the best to display. There’s also a larger 2100mAH for longer battery life.

Quality of the photos was hard to gauge as the handset was tethered to a table, but even in low light shots were sharp and well focussed with a minimum of fuss.

We used the photo editor to make some crops, trims, and apply effects to our photos, which were all carried out in the blink of an eye.

However, there were still significant loading times when loading apps and games, which still left us waiting over five seconds for Cut The Rope to launch.

The handset itself will be available in blue and white, with Samsung keen to point out that nature inspired its design. The back is smooth, but made of thin plastic, which helps keen the Galaxy SIII down to a paltry 133g, but it doesn’t feel anywhere near as solid or well-manufactured as the HTC One X, which weighs 130g.
Samsung Galaxy S3
With handsets becoming extremely similar in specification, Samsung has been keen to push software as a differentiator, and there are loads of features to enjoy.

S Voice is a Siri for Samsung, which brings a host of voice commands, such as ‘Hi Samsung’ to wake the handset up, but was equally as finicky to use in the noisy Earls Court. The SIII also monitors your face, preventing it from locking while you’re reading on screen.

Samsung Galaxy S3
There are other nifty additions too: if someone sends you a message, just put the phone to your ear and it will call them. It’s a simple feature, but tangibly beneficial.

Elsewhere, there’s a heap of proprietary Samsung software, which will be of dubious use, unless you convince all your friends to buy in as well.
Samsung Galaxy S3
All Share Play lets you send media to different supported devices, and you can buy a separate dongle. What’s more, you can wirelessly charge using a separate peripheral, and even monitor your health.
In short, the Samsung Galaxy SIII has delivered nearly everything we expected, with a few extras. There’s no doubt it will be a success this year, and puts Samsung back onto the smartphone podium in this Olympics year.

The Samsung Galaxy SIII will be out on May 29, but if your contract isn’t up, follow our guide on how to upgrade your Samsung Galaxy SII to Ice Cream Sandwich.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Samsung cloud service to launch with Galaxy S3, says report

Samsung logo
Samsung


Samsung is reportedly planning to roll out a cloud-based service alongside the Galaxy S3 on May 3.

Korean site Maeil Business (via The Verge) claims that the electronics giant is planning to challenge Apple's iCloud with its own equivalent dubbed S-Cloud.

iCloud allows users to store data remotely and access it via an iPhone, iPad or Mac computer. The report states that Samsung's rival service will not impose any of the content restrictions of its Apple counterpart, and will offer 5GB of storage.

Microsoft is allegedly on board to ensure wide availability of the service, which is expected to be compatible with Samsung smart televisions, tablets, smartphones and PCs.

Media content including movies, music and TV shows could also be served to S-Cloud subscribers. It is yet to be confirmed whether the service will be free or premium.

Samsung previously confirmed that it will launch a new Galaxy product, widely tipped to be the S3 smartphone, at Earls Court Exhibition Center in London on May 3 at 7pm.

Top 10 ways to protect your privacy and avoid the government’s prying eyes

Be careful what you do online. The government is proposing web snooping plans to monitor, record and understand every site you visit, every email you send, and even every phone call you make.

These plans have been met with howls of derision and dissension, with everyone from the inventor of the web Sir Tim Berners-Lee and the co-founder of Google, Sergey Brin, bemoaning this growing censorship from governments.

To help, we has put together a list of ways to help you avoid the prying eyes of the government, and any other nefarious sorts, so you can stay safe online. And it's just in time for the security industry's annual Infosec bash in London. Perfect.

Honorary mention: Wear a tin foil hat
A tin foil hat will solve all your security concerns

The tin foil hat is a terrible way to keep the sun off, but in some circles it's the best way to keep the heat away.
As protection against gloating alien proctologists, black op helicopters, 'the Man', internal voices and talkative dogs, it is unbeaten.

It is also very cheap. All it needs is a few sheets of tin foil - we recommend using new sheets as opposed to the one off the grill - a few careful folds and a head to fit it on.
Any good conspiracy theorist or paranoiac will have measured themselves for such headgear at some time in their lives, and while some will favour a bowl or pointed style others, while others may opt for the pirate or cowboy.

Because tin foil hats have become the source of some derision, we would suggest that the simpler style you choose the better.

The important thing, however you style your hat, is that you keep it on at all times when you are not under some other form of other protection.

This will ensure that no government brain-wave penetration signals can read your thoughts, steal your ideas and tell you over and over again that "You Love the State, You Love the State, You Love the State".


10. Get off social media sites
binoculars
Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare: such sites are a trove of personal information (including occupations and even your religious views), as well as photos of family, friends and acquaintances.

There's even information on events you've been too and events you're going to, making your life one giant open diary to the surveillance services, as this video on The Onion demonstrates excellently (embedded below).

Of course, the simple thing to do is simply leave these sites. Get off, ensure your data is deleted, and never return.

Never update a status, never reveal personal information, never let the wider powers know where you are, who you're with, or what you're thinking.



9. Don't open unknown emails and ignore odd friend requests
spam-spam-spam 
On this issue, it's also vitally important to avoid all suspicious forms of communication, including emails, texts and, worse, friend requests from complete strangers.

The motives may be harmless - perhaps the stunning blonde really does fancy you and wants to meet up, but it's unlikely.

What's likely happening is some Russian gangster has thrown together a program that churns out thousands of fake accounts that spin out spammy links in an effort to infect your computer, steal your credit card details, and live a life full of caviar and vodka.

Or, if we're really getting paranoid, the innocent, fun sounding-filly wanting to befriend you is actually Agent Lewis Smith from Langley, tasked with tracking potential dissidents, and what better way to do this than pretend to "Like" your inane statuses on Facebook? It's a trap, run for it!

8. Avoid smartphones and go back to basics with a feature phone
Nokia 3310
Proving there's still life in the classic Nokia 3310 yet, another easy way to protect your personal data is to use a feature phone instead of a smartphone.

Putting aside fancy encryption, intelligent passwords and a careful approach to apps, the feature phone is so basic it can help protect you because it doesn't actually store certain key bits of information, like passwords and emails, and doesn't really allow you to visit even the most basic websites.

Well, there is WAP, but that's too slow for even the most committed ne'er-do-well.

While many won't want to give up the fancy features housed in a Apple, Android or Windows powered smartphones, using a phone that just does that - makes phone calls - is perhaps the safest option.

Although with the government considering monitoring phone records, perhaps no phone is the best bet.


7. Use encryption technologies to lock your data down
Digital encryption key
If you want to protect your data from others, one of the best ways is to use encryption so the content is scrambled, even if snoopers intercept or steal it.

There are two separate issues to consider with encryption; protection of communications and protection of data at rest.

Encryption of communications is already used when you visit a site using HTTPS, which creates a secure channel over the open internet via the SSL or TSL protocols.

Encryption of files means no-one can read your data if they hack your PC and steal documents, or somehow access data stored in the cloud on repositories such as Dropbox or an FTP site.

Many encryption tools are available that allow you to encrypt files uniquely, or in groups (such as creating an encrypted ZIP file). The danger, though,  is if you lose or forget the key, you lose access to your own encrypted files.

Of course, routinely encrypting all your information could arouse suspicion that you have something to hide, and the government can compel anyone to hand over encryption keys under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA), but you're only likely to find yourself in this situation if you're suspected of criminal activity.

6. Turn off GPS connectivity on your smartphone
satellite
GPS is a great technology, no doubt. It enables you to find out exactly where you are, within detailed maps, to help you find your way when lost in a big city, or strange surroundings.

However, such data is also a goldmine to the authorities, as it would enable them to monitor your movements, work out where you've been, who you've been visiting, and make it a doddle for them to pick you up.
The simple answer is of course to just turn off your GPS connection (you may get lost a bit more, but that's a small price to pay for liberty and security).

Then again, with mobile phone signal triangulation technology also able to pinpoint your location to the powers-that-be, perhaps there really is nowhere to hide.
 
5. Don't have a physical hard drive
SanDisk micro SD card
When they knock down your front door, to quote The Clash, how you gonna come? With your hand on your hard drive or eating your microSD?

As any good script kiddie knows, the first thing any would-be snooper wants is your hard drive. Computer forensics can quickly reveal all your online secrets.

So when Forbes spoke to infamous Anonymous hacker Kayla in early 2011, she had an interesting take on protecting her secrets: she claimed to have no physical hard drive, instead booting her computer from a microSD, which she intended to "chew into a million pieces" in the event she got busted.

It's a neat take on staying anonymous online. One can only wonder whether the two British teenage men that were arrested later that year on suspicion of being Kayla, had taken the '16-year-old girl's' advice.

4. Turn off cookies and turn on private browsing modes
cookies
The words "cookie monster" carry more than one connotation. As well as the blue monster on Sesame Street, cookies are the tools used by websites to monitor internet users' movements, and can indeed be a monster when it comes to electronic privacy.

Admittedly not all cookies are bad, but some cookies can collect your personal data and track your browser hobbies to see how best to target you with advertisements and for who knows what other reasons.
Since this is entirely legal, it's up to consumers themselves to address their cookie settings, and disabling them is a sensible option if the practice concerns you.

However, new legislation that will be enforced from next month, will force firms to gain explicit permission from web users to install cookies on a machine when visiting a site, so that should offer some protection to the public.

While we're on the subject of web browsing, using private browsing options is also a good idea. Private browsing stops others from seeing your online history and also ensures no cookies are left behind at the end of your browsing session.

3. Consider using a proxy to stay hidden
Ninja in black outfit
Proxies are not only a good way to protect your anonymity online, they are also a way for people in many regions to avoid state-sponsored censorship of the web.

Web proxies can allow users to bypass some of the filters and blocks put in place by governments who are looking to block access to certain content or restricted web access altogether.

Free speech groups such as Reporters Without Borders have long recommended their use as a means of protecting citizen journalism and access to international media reports.

They're also a great way of protecting your data online, as they help to thwart tracking and data-harvesting attempts. Those who are feeling particularly eager to protect their data can take the idea step further by using Tor, a free network which bounces a user's connection multiple times and provides even strong protections - see number one.

Users should beware, however, as authorities are growing wise to the practice and in some cases have taken measures to block access to such networks

2. Be paranoid with your bank details
Mobile phone and credit card
Online banking has revolutionized the way many of us handle our accounts, but it has also made financial fraud easier than ever.

Some journalists that have covered cyber crime refuse to even use online banking services, having seen just how insidious criminals can be.

You don't need to go that far to protect your data. To combat the threat, however, it might not hurt to become a bit, well, paranoid with how you guard your information.

For starters, you can avoid phishing attacks by never clicking on a link embedded in an email or alert message and instead manually typing in the URL or opening a bookmark for your bank's online management site.
What's more, if your banking site asks you to submit unusual information such as your mobile carrier or national insurance number (or social security number for our US readers), close the window and scan your system for malware such as Zeus, then call your bank on the phone and alert them to the situation.

1. Use the Tor network to stay underground
china-secrets
Surfing the web doesn't just leave a breadcrumb trail for snoopers to follow, it's more like leaving them a series of brightly flashing beacons.

Those that wish to remain anonymous online - and that's something that matters to political dissidents and victims of abuse, as much as teenage hacktivists - need a better way of surfing the web, without making their activity easy to follow.

Here's where Tor comes in. Tor is client software that routes internet traffic through a vast sea of network servers, which encrypt and re-encrypt data as it is bounced through multiple layers of Tor's so-called "onion routing" network.

The Tor Browser Bundle provides a quick and easy means of accessing the Tor network, preventing anyone watching your internet connection what sites you've visited and stopping those sites knowing your location.
Tor is not perfect - repressive regimes do their utmost to stop citizens accessing the anonymous network. Nor is it the only anonymous browsing system available. But if you're serious about ensuring your online privacy, it's the best place to start.

Verizon plans to push Windows Phone the same way they did with Android

HTC Trophy
Smart Window Phone


Carriers have no doubt tried to push its more popular phones onto customers, such as higher-end Android devices like the Galaxy Nexus, Droid RAZR, etc, and the iPhone, but what about Windows Phone? AT&T certainly has done their part with a huge marketing campaign that was created around the launch of the Nokia Lumia 900, so what’s Verizon’s plan? The carrier has only launched one Windows Phone since it was introduced, the HTC Trophy, but fret not Windows Phone fans as the company’s CFO, Fran Shammo, announced at an earnings call this morning that more Windows Phone devices will be headed onto the carrier later this year.

The carrier has expressed their interest at pushing Windows phones devices onto the masses the same way that the company did with the Android platform, with Shammo being quoted as saying, “We are fully supportive of that with Microsoft. … We helped create the Android platform from the beginning and it is an incredible platform today, and we are looking to do the same thing with a third ecosystem.” No word on which Windows Phone handsets will be arriving on Verizon, but it will certainly be interesting to see what the carrier can do to help bolster Windows Phone adoption rates.