Oh, I had my hopes up about this news story too. Vodafone has launched a new service called Mobile Earth, which lets you view any address on full-colour maps or high-resolution aerial photos, much like the Google Maps website. You can also calculate the best routes between addresses and see the results on a map, or search for more than 400,000 points of interest. Cool!
Except they’re all in Germany. Yes, sadly it’s Vodafone Germany who have launched the application, which has been made by a firm called LocatioNet. It’s a Java application that you download to the handset, although the actual maps are stored on a central server, so you don’t have to worry about running out of room for your photos, games etc.
Fingers crossed it – or something like it – comes to Vodafone UK and the other operators soon. In the meantime, have a look at this online demo to see how it works.
Got a few old handsets kicking round the house waiting to be thrown out or sold? You might think twice after reading this story on S60 User Experience. It’s about a company that bought a bunch of phones on eBay, and then checked if they could retrieve personal information from them about the previous owners.
“Bank accounts and passwords. Business plans. Personal messages. Calenders. Contacts. And then some. Some of the devices were re-set to factory settings before they were sold second hand, as described in the user’s manual. But it was still possible to dig up the personal information.”
Cripes. So what are we supposed to do? Okay, so in most cases, the person buying your phone on eBay won’t have the technical expertise or inclination to try and dig out this kind of information if you’ve done a factory-settings reset. But still, it is worrying. Those old Nokias may have to stay in the cupboard until they’re antique enough to be flogged to a trustworthy museum…