Canon App Allows Printing from the iPhone, Touch

Canon
by Tony Hoffman
The Canon Easy-PhotoPrint for iPhone (Canon iEPP), a free application that allows you to print photos from your iPhone or iPod touch on a compatible PIXMA printer via a local Wi-Fi network, is now available in the iTunes App Store.

The Canon iEPP app lets you select from a wide range of paper sizes and paper types, from card-size (2.2 inches by 3.4 inches) up to letter size. You can choose multiple photos from your iPhone or iPod touch Photo Albums and print up to 20 copies. It will also let you print bordered or borderless photos. When you launch the Canon iEPP, it will automatically find printers on a wireless network. You can start your iPhone camera directly from Canon iEPP, and instantly print captured photos.

Printers compatible with the Canon iEPP currently include the PIXMA MP990, PIXMA MP640, and PIXMA MP560 All-In-Ones. (Canon had hinted that the app was on the way at the launch of those MFPs in August, so we’re glad people who bought them can now take advantage of this functionality.) If you don’t have one of those models, don’t worry; there are other ways of printing from your iPhone or touch.

Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Will Debut on 3 LG Electronics Smartphones.

mobileMicrosoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5 will also roll out on three LG Electronics smartphone models in coming weeks, and eventually 13 devices made by the company by the end of 2010. Other manufacturers, such as HTC and Sony Ericsson, have announced this week that their upcoming smartphones will include Windows Mobile 6.5, which comes with features such as increased touch-screen functionality and Windows Marketplace for Mobile, Microsoft’s mobile applications store.
LG Electronics announced on Sept. 3 that it would launch three smartphones within “the next few weeks” equipped with Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5, and would release 13 Windows phones in total by the end of 2010. By doing so, LG joined other smartphone makers planning to port the operating system onto their devices.

Microsoft previously announced that Windows Mobile 6.5 would be available on Oct. 6. The three LG phones will be introduced in Europe, the United States and Asia before expanding globally at a later unspecified date; the models will include “a full touch-screen device, a touch slider with QWERTY keyboard and a QWERTY bar-type handset.”

The LG phones will also include the LG Application Store, which will feature 2,000 downloadable applications. There was no word on how that would interact – or conflict – with Microsoft’s own mobile-applications store, Windows Marketplace for Mobile.
In what has become a busy week of announcements surrounding Windows Mobile 6.5, HTC and Sony Ericsson also announced smartphones for fall 2009 that would feature the new version of the operating system. Those phones, the HTC Touch2 and Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X2, will also include functionality such as Flash-supporting Internet Explorer Mobile and expanded touch-screen support.

The HTC Touch2 is slated to debut on Oct. 2, with broad availability in “a variety of European and Asian markets in early Q4 2009,” while no firm date was given for the rollout of the Xperia X2.

Microsoft is taking several steps in an attempt to make headway against Apple’s iPhone, the Palm Pre, RIM’s BlackBerry line, and other smartphones that have a substantial foothold on the mobile marketplace. In addition to Windows Marketplace for Mobile, which will debut in October with 600 applications for consumers and businesses, Microsoft is also planning a broad debut of Windows Mobile 6.5 on phones manufactured by HTC, LG Electronics, Samsung, Hewlett-Packard and Toshiba. Networks that support the operating system will include AT&T, Bell Mobility, TELUS and Verizon Wireless.

Although Microsoft has updated a number of interface features in Windows Mobile 6.5, ranging from improved touch capabilities to customizable widgets, rumors abounded in August that Redmond was planning yet another release for the fourth quarter of 2010, Windows Mobile 7, that would include functionality designed to let the operating system compete against the Apple iPhone and the Palm Pre.

Microsoft also plans on differentiating itself in the market, and perhaps obtaining more developer loyalty, by suggesting that applications designed for Windows Mobile be sold at higher prices than the Apps for the Apple iPhone.

Although smartphone sales increased industrywide by 27 percent in the second quarter of 2009, Microsoft has found its own share of the smartphone operating system market steadily eroding, falling during that period to around 9 percent. If its initiatives in the mobile realm fail, the company risks missing out on an expanding market that may see mobile application downloads approach nearly 20 billion per year by 2014.

LG Promises Windows Phones for U.S. Customers.

Hot on the heels of Microsoft setting an Oct. 6 launch date for Windows Mobile 6.5, LG said Thursday that the company will soon launch two unnamed new Windows phones for “early adopter customers” in both the U.S. and other markets.

The two new phones join the GW550, which LG recently launched abroad. The three new phones – one with a full touch screen, one with a sliding QWERTY keyboard and the GW550, a BlackBerry-style QWERTY phone – will feature Windows Mobile 6.5 and LG’s 3D “S-Class” user interfaceLG, which the company launched in February. Like HTC’s Touch Flo3D and Samsung’s TouchWiz, S-Class replaces much of Windows Mobile’s native UI with LG’s own designs.

LG will also produce 10 more Windows phones by the end of 2010, the company said in a press release.

The phones will be compatible with LG’s own app store, which LG said may have 2,000 applications by the end of the year. As Windows Mobile phones, they’ll also work with Microsoft’s Windows Marketplace for Mobile. The U.S. versions will probably also have a third app store on board designed by the wireless carriers.

LG currently only has one Windows Mobile phone in the U.S. market – the Incite for AT&T, which hasn’t received very strong reviews. But the company has a long-standing and strong relationship with Verizon Wireless, and LG smartphones for Verizon could shake up the market a bit.

LG promises more news in the upcoming weeks, but, following the usual practice, information about U.S. releases will probably be issued by the carriers.