Archive for May 23rd, 2008

On Wednesday, AllAboutNgage broke a story about the downfalls of the anti-piracy methods implemented on Nokia N-Gage handsets.

The method, in short: When you buy a game, you get an activation code. Upon use, this activation code is locked to the device’s unique IMEI code. If you bust your handset under warranty, Nokia can transfer the games to your new one. Upgrade to a new N-Gage handset, however, and you’re stuck buying everything all over again.

This revelation spread around the community like wild fire, and N-Gage users were none too happy. While it theoretically put a stint on piracy, it also burned any devoted fans of the platform willing to drop a few hundred bucks on an additional handset. Blogs were written, and upset comments commenced.

After a few days of silence, Nokia has announced that N-Gage games will be transferable in the future. No word yet when or how the change will come, but they say that they are working on an “intermediate solution” that should make things a bit less restricting “until a final solution is ready to be deployed.”

While keeping piracy rates down may be necessary to win over publishers, punishing the customer with unmanageable and ridiculous DRM restrictions is not the way to do it. It is one thing that, time after time, consumers simply won’t stand for.

Via Mobilecrunch

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Apple was added to Goldman Sachs conviction buy list this day. Company analysts believe Apple will do well when it launches its third-generation iPhone later this year. Sales of the popular phone are expected to sell better than Apple sale projections. The company has set its sales goal of iPhones at 10 million units this year.

Analyst David Bailey raised his target on the stock from $185 a share to $220. Bailey believes Apple will be able to expand its subscriber base by 80% because of international sales. This year Apple has aggressively opened new markets.

“We continue to anticipate Apple to beat its 10 million unit goal for calendar year 2008 driven by broader global distribution and the availability of third-party applications, which should keep Apple well ahead of the competition,” Bailey wrote in a note dated Might 22.

Bailey predicts that iPhone shipments will increase to 11 million units this year. Last year Apple sold 3.7 million iPhones.

In the last three months, Apple stock has been up 42%. In late morning trading, Apple stock was selling for around $180.50.

Via Mobilecrunch

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