Tag Archive | "Voice"

U.S. Samsung Galaxy Tablets Will Not Have Voice Capabilities


With all the good news I heard today about the Samsung Galaxy Tab, I forgot to mention the bad news.  Samsung just confirmed in the Q&A that voice capabilities were straight-out removed from the Tab for the US market.  Basically, this means that you won’t be making phone calls on the Galaxy Tab. This is very disappointing.  This definitely removes some of the value for me.

Overall, I would think this would make swallowing a 2-year contract a bit more difficult for some.  I also have to wonder about what affect this will have on the cost to.

Does this news mean your less likely to buy the Galaxy Tab? Let us know below!

Source: Engadget

U.S. Samsung Galaxy Tablets Will Not Have Voice Capabilities originally appeared on AndroidGuys.




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25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel


While I can’t say that I frequently use the voice search feature of Android, apparently there are a lot of people that do. According to the latest post in the Google Mobile blog, one of every four searches from an Android phone is by voice. (In case you flunked math 1/4 = 25%)

That’s a pretty large number and I personally would’ve never guessed it to be that high. Google realizes this and has launched a new youtube channel almost dedicated to new uses for voice search. Check out the video and link to their channel after the break. But before the break, did you know TalkAndroid has a YouTube channel?: youtube.com/talkandroid (and Facebook and Twitter)

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25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel



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25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel


While I can’t say that I frequently use the voice search feature of Android, apparently there are a lot of people that do. According to the latest post in the Google Mobile blog, one of every four searches from an Android phone is by voice. (In case you flunked math 1/4 = 25%)

That’s a pretty large number and I personally would’ve never guessed it to be that high. Google realizes this and has launched a new youtube channel almost dedicated to new uses for voice search. Check out the video and link to their channel after the break. But before the break, did you know TalkAndroid has a YouTube channel?: youtube.com/talkandroid (and Facebook and Twitter)

Read More…

25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel



View full post on Google Android News Android Forums

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25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel


While I can’t say that I frequently use the voice search feature of Android, apparently there are a lot of people that do. According to the latest post in the Google Mobile blog, one of every four searches from an Android phone is by voice. (In case you flunked math 1/4 = 25%)

That’s a pretty large number and I personally would’ve never guessed it to be that high. Google realizes this and has launched a new youtube channel almost dedicated to new uses for voice search. Check out the video and link to their channel after the break. But before the break, did you know TalkAndroid has a YouTube channel?: youtube.com/talkandroid (and Facebook and Twitter)

Read More…

25% of Android searches are by voice, Google launches new YT channel



View full post on Google Android News Android Forums

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Google Shows off Voice Search in New Series of Videos


What you say is what you search. Or at least that is Google’s latest tagline in promotion of their voice search capabilities for smartphones. In a new series of videos the search giant is showing off some of the various situations where voice easily outdoes text entry for searches. Voice searching is something that is in its fledgling stages of catching on, and Google has already made a larger push into voice as an input method with the release of Voice Actions for Android. It looks like Google wants to push the interaction method even more.

Maybe you have your hands tied up while working on the sink:

Or that moist hot tub is making it a bit hard to interact with your phone’s touchscreen:

The videos also include some YouTube trickery to allow you to click the very links that show up in the search results featured in the videos. So what do you think? Are any of you big users of voice search who find themselves in these sorts of situations or do you prefer good old fashion text?

[via Google Mobile Blog]

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Verizon: Bing Not on ALL Future Handsets, Google Voice Search Available With Android 2.2


bing-androidThere’s hope yet! Verizon’s caught wind of all of the commentary going around the blogosphere (from writers and readers alike) regarding Bing on their Android devices. Namely, the Samsung Fascinate was launched with Bing preloaded as the default search engine with no apparent way to change it. I can vouch for others’ professed difficulty in getting Google search installed onto the device as I tried finding it in the market with no luck, and downloading the .APK file from XDA proved to be a waste of time as I was met with errors installing it (the same file is said to install just fine on other Galaxy S devices, though they already have Google Search installed.)

Anywho, the second piece to this puzzle was a rumor that Bing would be on all future Verizon handsets as it is on Fascinate, something our friend The Droid Guy said he had good authority on. There was a reason I hadn’t entertained the rumor just yet, and this statement from Verizon is it:

“…that is not true. We have a relationship with Microsoft and Bing is the search engine on our multi-media phones but we have never said it would be exclusive on all of our devices.”

Samsung-Fascinate

Be careful in noting the wording, however: they’re only going to install it as default on their “multi-media” phones. My first question: what does Verizon consider a multi-media phone? How is the Samsung Fascinate not a smartphone just as much as the Droid X or Droid 2? That’s another story for another day, however. So the Droid Guy wasn’t completely wrong, but if we assume Verizon only considers phones with the Droid name smartphones (because the Fascinate does everything those phones can do, and probably more), then is it safe to say that any non-Droid Android on Verizon’s network won’t be coming pre-installed with Google Search and Maps?

That question will be answered over time, I suppose, but Verizon’s got another trick up their sleeve to cap this story off. According to them, once the Fascinate receives its upgrade to Android 2.2 (and it will), users will be able to download the new Voice Search app that Google introduced a while back for all Froyo devices. With that should come the traditional Google Search we all know and love. It still doesn’t explain why Google Search was blocked in the first place, but we’ll roll with it.

[via Engadget]

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Google Voice App gets updated with new Widgets!


If you are a fan of Google Voice, you are gonna love this little addition.  Google just updated it’s Voice app with 2 new widgets to make call and voicemail message managing a little easier.

One is the Inbox widget which gives you a quick view to your recent voicemail messages and text messages.  Click on the message and it will bring you to your voicemail box.

The other one is a Settings widget.  It adds 4 quick hotkeys – one acts a quick link to open up the Google Voice app, the next one allows you to quickly compose free text messages, after that is a quick toggle to change which calls go through Google Voice, and the last, and probably the most useful, allows you to set DND so that calls to your Google number go straight to your Google voicemail.

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Review: Voice Band for iPhone


It can take lots of time, patience and determination in order to produce a listenable song with this app, which transmogrifies your voice into the sound of various musical instruments. But Voice Band definitely puts a unique spin on mobile music creation.




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Voice of a Geek: An Interview With Dee Bradley Baker


The many faces of Dee Bradley Baker, a GeekDad exclusive image. (c) Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved. Photo by Joel Aron.

Dee Bradley Baker needs no disguises.

By voice alone, the actor leaves Fletch and his list of aliases in the dust, and his credits are stacked with geek power: From roles in the Halo and Gears of War franchises to regular parts in animated standouts like Batman: The Brave and the Bold to GeekDad favorite Perry the Platypus on Phineas and Ferb.

Baker’s also the voice of Captain Rex and every other clone trooper on Cartoon Network’s Star Wars: The Clone Wars, which is how he wound up at Star Wars Celebration V this month in Orlando – though you get the sense that as someone who meticulously re-marked his Star Wars soundtrack as a kid to match the movie sequences, Baker probably would have been here anyway.

In an enthusiastic interview at the convention, the father of two talked about his career, raising his kids and being a geek (and >ahem!< a GeekDad fan!) as well as teasing some neat insights into the next season of Clone Wars and Nickelodeon’s upcoming cartoon spinoff of its animated Avatar: The Last Airbender series.

Before we even sat down, we started chatting about geekdom and fatherhood, and the conversation was off and running before I had my recorder switched on, which is why the interview starts right in the middle of things:

Dee Bradley Baker: I’m a middle-aged dad, which means I have no social time or life to speak of, and so I connect with my buddies with my Xbox. We play, actually, two of my favorite games which I’m on, which are Gears of War 2 and Left 4 Dead 2. I’m three new creatures on Left 4 Dead 2, so we kill me while catching up a little bit.

GeekDad: So, how many kids do you have?

DBB: Two. I have five-year-old and 10-year-old daughters. And actually, we watch a lot of my cartoons. My 10-year-old loves Clone Wars and Phineas and Ferb, and my five-year-old loves Phineas and Ferb as well.

GeekDads gotta stick together, you know. Image: Jim Carchidi

DBB: I am a geek dad, believe me. I’ve got my iPad with me; I’ve got my iPhone 4; I’ve got my Xbox. I love technology and I want to feel like I’m living in the future, and these devices help me feel that way.

GD: When you talk about being a geek dad and having those kinds of interests, does it just happen that you get this work and a lot of it has that geek appeal … or do you naturally gravitate to those projects?

DBB: The way that I’ve followed my life is actually more of the latter. When I was a child, I thought I was going to be a paleontologist because I loved dinosaurs. I loved monster movies and sci-fi, and then Star Wars came out, and I was completely out of my mind with that, with Close Encounters, and then I thought maybe I was going to go into special effects makeup, which I thought was awesome. But really, instead of drawing monsters or studying dinosaurs, I just continued doing things I liked to do. I didn’t really target how it was going to pay off. And so, because I just followed these things that I liked, it led me to producing sounds for these things, and being involved with them in that way. It’s from a pattern of me continually doing things that I really loved to do, and then trying to get money while doing that. And it’s led to this.

I mean, I cannot tell you how ecstatic I am to be involved with Star Wars. I twittered yesterday about how sad it is that a kid now can’t see Episode V and not know up until that moment when Darth Vader says, “I am your father” how it rewrites those two movies with one sentence. They can’t know that surprise now, and I think that’s a little sad. You go to a movie, and you’ve seen it already. The trailer shows you the whole thing, you’ve read all the reviews, you can pretty much know every single twist. But back then, when I saw that, I remember sitting in that theater in Denver, where I saw it, and just the electric feeling of right up to that moment.

GD: So, as far as showing your daughters Star Wars, how have they been exposed to it?

DBB: I started showing my now 10-year-old the Star Wars stuff … and started with Episode IV when she was probably about seven or eight. I thought she’d be OK for it then. When she was nine, I had shown her IV, V and VI, and then I and II, but I was holding off on III, because that one, that’s pretty rough. That’s pushing the border. You want to protect your kids, you want to be a good dad, and even though I make this stuff, I don’t just throw everything at them. And we’re watching that episode – and she’s a sharp kid: She’s watching it, and halfway through it, she said, “Daddy, I don’t think I want to see the end of this movie. I think I’ll wait ’til I’m 10.” And I said OK, that’s good. I’m very proud that my kids can tell me things like that, and that she can see that coming. But also, I mean, she had been watching the television series … and it’s established that the clones are heroes, and that Anakin is a hero, and in Episode III, everything falls apart, and it goes south, and the good guys become bad, and frankly, that’s a lot for a little kid to handle. You’re establishing what’s good and what’s bad and just the foundation for them to have a bigger perspective on the world, but I don’t need to shoehorn that into her childhood. I want her to have a childhood, which I think is harder and harder for kids to have these days. I was very proud of her for that (decision), and I felt very good about it.

GD: (As a parent), you’ve got to know your kids.

DBB: The main thing is that you’re present. That’s what it gets down to, to me. People, they kind of conjure a lot of fear about the media or about video games, and fo rme it’s about, “You know what? Just parent your kids. Don’t let the device babysit your child. You’ve got to be present. If you’re present, you can talk them through stuff, and they can tell you if they’re uncomfortable, and you can check their reactions.

Right now (my) kids are working through Nickelodeon’s Avatar series, which I’m very proud of and which – it’s something that’s really important to me: Clone Wars means a lot to me, and Avatar means a lot to me too – I did all the creatures in that. Well, the new Avatar, they put out an audition and they wanted a flashback for the younger Avatar – who is now a girl – from when she was this little fireball five-year-old. I had my 10-year-old audition for it, and it was just two sentences, and, well, my five-year-old said, “Daddy, I want to audition. I want to try this, too,” and so I let her give it a shot. And she booked it. And the name of the series is The Last Airbender: The Journey of Korra – and my daughter’s name is Cora. It was just kind of an odd serendipity. To have her involved, with her playing a namesake, the heroic character of the show, that’s pretty cool. Pretty wonderful.

(Note: Nickelodeon announced the spinoff will be called The Legend of Korra in a July 21 press release, and Baker has confirmed he’s working on it, too.)

DBB: But here I am (at Celebration V), in the middle of this thing that was just my dream as a kid, to be involved with Star Wars. I drew a lot of monsters and creatures, and I wanted to send them to George Lucas and say, “I’d like to design your next Cantina bar creatures,” but I never did. I’ve still got the drawings, though. My folks made me a Jawa costume for the Halloween after Star Wars opened in ‘77. In ‘78, when it was re-released, I was hired by the local cinema to be the Jawa: to dress up all summer long, and I could frighten people with my Jawa sounds and my Jawa outfit and watch Star Wars Episode IV all summer long and get paid with movie passes.

I really feel like I am living the dream of the thing that I loved so much as a kid. It’s ridiculously exciting. We saw the first two episodes of the new season of Clone Wars – just mind-blowingly good. It’s a prequel of the “Rookies” episode, which is all clones. One of my favorites. And it’s showing them getting their training and getting certified as clones, and in the second half, they’re attacked by Ventress, and Kamino gets this major attack, and there’s this big battle, and it’s incredible, just to be such an integral part of this thing.

Dee Bradley Baker’s birthday is coming up on Aug. 31: You should give him a Twitter follow and a Perry-style “Prrrrrghhht!”

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Leaked G2 ROM includes Google Voice widget


A couple of days ago the software for the upcoming T-Mobile G2 leaked into the wild. After some ambitious folks over at DroidDog managed to get the ROM operating on a Nexus One we see just what the Sense-free G2 will bring to the table. The ROM is loaded with just about every Google app and widget currently available as well as a Google Voice widget we have yet to see. The widget gives you one-click access to your inbox, message composition, GV settitngs, an on/off switch, and shows how much money is left in your GV account. News of this widget comes on the heels of the recent phone call integration into Gmail. It looks as if Google may be trying to take Google Voice to new levels in the near future. Coincidentally this news comes almost exactly one year after Google had to defend against claims that it was squashing VoIP services on Android. More pictures after the break.

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Leaked G2 ROM includes Google Voice widget

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Google Add Extra Voice Control to your Android 2.2 Device!


When I got my hands on the T-Mobile MyTouch 3G Slide and had a chance to play with the enhanced Genius features, I kept wondering why we couldn’t all have the cool features of sending email and text messages using just our voice.  The guys over at Google obviously have some form of telepathy and heard my thoughts.

Google today announced in a press conference in San Fransisco that they have released an updated voice service for all devices running Android 2.2 and above.  the new enhanced voice control add-on for Android now includes Voice Actions that allow you control more features of your Android device than previously permitted.

Quoted from Google announcement today:

Voice Actions are a series of spoken commands that let you control your phone using your voice. Call businesses and contacts, send texts and email, listen to music, browse the web, and complete common tasks, all just by speaking into your phone

I played around with the application a little this afternoon and I can say that’s its working very well on my Google Nexus One. Accurate voice recognition and command detection seemed to be the order of the day and most of my attempts at sending emails, text messages and navigation commands went through without a hitch.

Mike LeBeau, the lead engineer for Voice Actions, show you how it all works in this video:

Google have added quiet a few extra command to the existing voice search facility in Android, they include:

  • send text to [contact] [message]
  • listen to [artist/song/album]
  • call [business]
  • call [contact]
  • send email to [contact] [message]
  • go to [website]
  • note to self [note]
  • navigate to [location/business name]
  • directions to [location/business name]
  • map of [location]

If you’ve already got Android 2.2 on your device, when you get a chance, head over to the Android Market and download the updated Voice Search application.

You can click or scan the QRCode below from your phone to head over and download it now.

What other features do you think Google could add to Android to make our every day lives more exciting?

View full post on AndroidSPIN | Your No.1 source for Everything Android.

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Google Voice Actions


Today Google introduced Voice Actions for Android. Voice Actions are a series of spoken commands that let you control your phone using your voice. Call businesses and contacts, send texts and email, listen to music, browse the web, and complete common tasks, all just by speaking into your phone.

To use Voice Actions, you tap the microphone button on the Google search box on your home screen, or press down for a few seconds on the physical search button on your phone to activate the “Speak Now” screen.

You can speak any of these commands to perform a Voice Action on your phone:

  • send text to [contact] [message]
  • listen to [artist/song/album]
  • call [business]
  • call [contact]
  • send email to [contact] [message]
  • go to [website]
  • note to self [note]
  • navigate to [location/business name]
  • directions to [location/business name]
  • map of [location]

Both Voice Actions and the new Google search widget require Android 2.2 (Froyo), and will be pre-installed with the new Droid 2 phone from Motorola and Verizon. Voice Actions are currently available for U.S. English speakers.

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Google Voice Update Brings Direct Access Numbers for Speedier Dialing, Eliminates Free Calling Trick


This image has no alt text

googlevoiceGoogle Voice just got an update on Android and Blackberry to include a feature called “direct access numbers.” The service now assigns a unique outgoing call number to each person you dial, skipping the need to forward the number you were dialing to Google Voice’s servers. This new feature makes connecting outgoing calls quicker by skipping the server altogether and forgoing your phone’s data connection. And while this addition definitely enhances the way the app functions, making it feel more like placing a traditional telephone call, it comes with one major caveat.

Many have been using a little “hack” though Google Voice to place unlimited voice calls regardless of how many minutes they have on their service provider plan (given the plan includes an unlimited “favorites” option like T-Mobile’s “myFaves”). The trick works (or worked) like this: You place your incoming Google Voice number as one of your unlimited minutes contacts and the outgoing Google Voice number as another. Now as long as you use Google Voice to place and receive calls, all are theoretically free no matter if the contact is in your favorites list or not. Now that the outgoing Google Voice number is no longer static, this clever work around has gone bye bye.

If you have been using this trick and don’t want to lose your precious, loophole, free unlimited calling you might do best to avoid the latest Google Voice update. If you downloaded the latest version not knowing you would lose this functionality, well there may be something of interest to you over at this web page. Don’t say we never give you nothing.

[via Google Mobile Blog, thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

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Google Voice announces faster dialing for Android and Blackberry


Google Voice

According to the Google Voice Blog, there has been a major update to the way Android and Blackberry users make calls from their mobile devices. Here’s how it works, taken from the official post:

Until today, the Google Voice app had to make a request to the Google Voice server every time you wanted to make a call to send us the phone number you wanted to dial. Then the call would be connected via a Google Voice access number. With direct access numbers, we assign a unique phone number to every person you call. This means that we no longer need to use your data network to access the server each time you make a call, so calls will be placed much faster.

Anyone who has ever placed a call through Google Voice on these platforms know what they’re talking about. This is great, and truly innovative. I know that it used to be that I would have to wait upwards of 5 seconds to place a call through Google Voice, while my phone connected to data, sent the info to Google’s servers, let the servers translate the number being dialed into the Google Voice equivalent, shoot the information back and place the call. Now, I can make the call in (what seems to be) less than a second.

It should also be mentioned that this is built into the native Google Voice app for Android, while Blackberry users will need to go to m.google.com/voice from their device.

Don’t have a Google Voice account to try this out on? It’s simple (For US users)… simply go to google.com/voice and set up an account. If you get a chance to try it out, let us know what you think in the comments below.

[via Google Voice Blog]

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Google Voice announces faster dialing for Android and Blackberry

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MicDroid for Android gives you the ability to tune your voice and sound like a star


Apple users have had an app for some time called “I am T-Pain”, that allows them to record and modify their voices. Now Android users can join in on the fun with MicDroid. This is a new app that is showing great potential. In case you are not familiar with MicDroid, this app lets you record your voice speaking or singing. You can then use settings to change the key, pitch and sample rate to adjust your voice, making you sound like a rock star.

Ok so you won’t really sound like a rock star but it does offer a wealth of settings to amuse yourself and your friends. You cannot use the app in real time as of yet but maybe in the future. For now record away and sing like the chipmunks’ if that’s what you’re into. As a bonus you can set your masterpieces as ringtones or even email them to your friends. Hmmm, prank emails anyone :) .

Market Link

[via pocketnow]

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MicDroid for Android gives you the ability to tune your voice and sound like a star

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Google Voice: Out of Beta


A little over a year ago, Google released an early preview of Google Voice, their free, web-based platform for managing communications. Google Voice attracted more than a million subscribers while it was still in invite-only private mode.

Google Voice features one number to ring all your phones, voicemail that works like email, free calls and text messages to the U.S. and Canada, low-priced international calls and more.

The only catch was you had to request and receive an invite to try it out. Today, Google has opened up Google Voice to the public, no invitation required.

According to PC World, there are two major issues with Google Voice. First, Google Voice right now does not allow numbers to be ported, forcing you to adopt a new Google Voice number. If you want to people to reach you exclusively on a Google Voice-issued number, you need to abandon your number and get a new one.

Second, the voicemail to e-mail transcription doesn’t work very well. C/Net says other, smaller services, like 3jam can port your number, so they think there’s a good chance Google will be able to offer that, too.

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Google Voice now out of Beta and open to the public


Google Voice… perhaps you’ve heard of it? Well, if you’ve been refreshing your inbox for your invite or even searching around on ebay for one, your wait is over. Google has taken it’s voice service out of invite-only beta, and released it to the general public.

For those of you not familiar with the service, it allows you to choose a phone number from almost any area code, and then route that number to any of your phones… cell phones, home lines, businesses, wherever. You can set time conditions for when to ring which phones, have different voicemail greetings depending on who calls, get messages transcribed and sent via SMS or email, and even send and receive free text messages… just to name a few features.

While the service – which was once GrandCentral, but got scooped up by Google in 2007 for just over $50 million, just one year after release – may have had it’s ups and downs during the beta test period (to include being the stumbling block that caused the now-infamous rift between Google and Apple), the service is now easy to use and intuitive. It is also a free, centralized service on Android phones, with seamless OS integration. According to Google, their voice service is over 1 million users strong, but you can believe that number will start to go up exponentially, now that it is available to the public. Full announcement via Google Voice Blog can be read here.

[via TechCrunch]

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Google Voice now out of Beta and open to the public

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New languages come to Android Voice Search


Google Search by Voice in Italian (Android)

French, German, Italian and Spanish speakers can now enjoy using Google Voice Search in their native tongue on their Android. Searching by voice is by far the quickest way to search for something, rather than inputting character after character.

Google have been working hard to bring Voice Search to more languages after initially only releasing it for English, Mandarin Chinese and Japanese. Google have spent weeks getting people to read popular queries in every day places which will make it easier to use in the real world. One downside to the service is that, if you speak one of the languages with an accent, then it might not be recognized.

So how do you get this? Well if you have Android 1.6 or higher then you already have the Search by voice application installed. It will recognize the language if you have the Language and keyboard setting set to one of the new languages.

If the application isn’t installed, you can install it from the Android Markets of the new language.

Now that Google Maps Navigation is available in 11 more Countries, you will be able to integrate the Voice Search with it perfectly.

[via Google Mobile Blog]

For more information on Android and the current Android mobile phones, check out our Android Guides

New languages come to Android Voice Search

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Business Tariff For HTC Desire Serves Up Unlimited Data, Text, and Voice Minutes on T-Mobile UK


T-Mobile has just sweetened the pot, pairing up the hottest handset in Europe with an unlimited data, text messaging, and voice minutes plan (something you don’t see every day on European carriers). The catch? You need to be a business user. But if you qualify, you’re on your way to all the unlimited goodness you want for £35 a month. And for the cherry on top you’ll get the Desire free.

They are even going so far as to knock down the cost to £20 for the first three months. I will call this one a deal if I ever saw one, too bad that pesky “business user” qualification will keep many from being able to take advantage of it (unless you can obtain a VAT number long enough to successfully complete the purchase online).

[via Eurodroid]

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Google Voice for Students


Google Voice Icon

If you are one of many who have been anxious to get your hands on an invite to Google Voice, it looks like Google is going to be helping you out- if you also happen to be a student. All you need is your school email address to register, and you get bumped to priority status. To get an invite, just visit google.com/voice/students and enter an email address that ends in .edu.

Now you can starting enjoying all those awesome features of Google Voice right on your Android phone. Grab the Google Voice app and see what all the fuss is about.

Scan the app here or click this link to be taken to Android Market on your Android device.

Source: Google Voice Blog.

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BlackBerry Mobile Voice System 5.0 Demo



We’ve been hearing about BlackBerry Mobie Voice System for quite some time now, and with the announcement from WES, we know things are moving along and it will be available later this year. If you’re not sure just how exactly MVS works you’re not alone. Isaac cleared things up a bit for us, but some things are just better seen then read. The team at BlackBerry has done up a demo video to show off MVS and shows just what goes down. Its a cool 5 minutes that helps to better understand what MVS is all about. Check it out and let us know what you think in the comments.

CrackBerry.com‘s feed sponsored by ShopCrackBerry.com. BlackBerry Mobile Voice System 5.0 Demo

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Nokia owners can use own voice for navigation


Nokia owners can use own voice for navigation
Nokia has unveiled a free app that allows mobile phone owners to personalise turn-by-turn navigation with their own voice.

Read more on Network World

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Virgin Mobile: Prepaid Voice & Data


Sprint Nextel, through its Virgin Mobile brand, has announced new prepaid plans that begin at $25 a month for both voice and data.

Starting on May 12, three new Beyond Talk plans will include unlimited messaging, email, data, and web, as well as 300 minutes ($25), 1,200 minutes ($40), or unlimited minutes ($60) of talk time. BlackBerry data service can be added for an additional $10.

Virgin Mobile’s new handset allows data-driven plans without a monthly fee:

  • The Blackberry Curve 8530 smartphone features include a full-QWERTY keyboard, optical track pad, Wi-Fi connectivity, dedicated media keys, and 2 MP camera. The Blackberry Curve 8530 smartphone will be available for $299.995at retail and at www.virginmobileusa.om at the end of May.
  • The LG Rumor Touch at $149.99 is the first full touch interface handset from Virgin Mobile and is only available without a contract on these plans. Customers can use all the data they want and message all of their friends easily and simply with a Beyond Talk plan. It has an external memory drive that can store up to 16GB of data.
  • The LG Rumor 2 QWERTY launched last year, also only available without a contract from Virgin Mobile. For $89.99, it allows customers to message quickly and easily with preloaded apps like the Ultimate Inbox, threaded messaging and Connect social networking. The popular Opera Mini web browser is included as well.
  • The Kyocera Loft QWERTY for $69.99 suits message-savvy customers with an embedded instant messaging and email application, and message threading for SMS and MMS in a single inbox. The camera phone includes the networking features mentioned above as well as a Google Maps and other navigational applications.

Broadband2Go, launched last year under the Virgin Mobile label, targets the needs of the high data-using crowd that doesn’t want to sign a long-term contract. It uses a $99 USB dongle and offers 10-30 days of data (using Sprint’s EVDO network) for a flat $10-$60.

Prepaid Reviews covers the beat with the latest news and reviews on prepaid plans and phones.

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With Own Voice for Ovi Maps your wife can tell you where to go


With Own Voice for Ovi Maps your wife can tell you where to goIs your wife jealous that you listen to a strange woman’s voice on your Nokia smartphone telling you where to turn, but you refuse to listen to anything she has to say? Now, thanks to the new Nokia Own Voice for Ovi Maps you can have your wife record her voice 53 times to generate a new voice pack for Ovi Maps navigation. The great thing is that all the recording occurs right on your device too with the free application from Nokia.

I doubt I would ever record my own voice and then want to listen to myself guide me when I drive, but you could have fun with this and record your kids voices or maybe your mother. Nokia is also allowing you to share your Own Voice pack with others via Facebook and Twitter so I am sure you will be able to find a voice you like to listen too. Maybe we will get some celebrities or other stars to record an Own Voice pack. There have been 10 million downloads of Ovi Maps so there should soon be a ton of voices to choose from and I think this is a great option provided by Nokia, don’t you? Whose voice do you plan to use for your navigation?

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