Wednesday, 20 May 2009

The SAMMI Shakers at Tech-Ed

Last week, I had the opportunity to attend the Microsoft Tech-Ed conference as a drum circle facilitator with a team from Samsung Mobile Innovator (SAMMI), to showcase a new application they developed for the Samsung Omnia phone. When I told my drum students at U.C. Santa Cruz that I had to be absent from class, there were groans of disappointment. But when I let them play drums on the Omnia phone, they gave me their full support. In fact, I had to practically pry their curious fingers from the phones so we could get on with our lessons!

When it comes to instruments, I love acoustic ones that tremble and move the air. I don’t like electronics or synthesized drum pads, so I wasn’t really expecting to enjoy playing music on a cell phone. But this application produces the sounds of twenty-seven percussion instruments, triggered by an accelerometer. This makes it possible for people to easily play drum circle music.

My interest is in how different cultures create and drive states of consciousness in groups of people through music toward certain goals. And my practice reaches from teaching traditional music of the African Diaspora to leading large groups of players in rhythmic learning experiences and celebration drum circles. Through drumming, I seek out paths toward learning, healing, and elevating the spirit in myself and others.

Something came full circle for me while preparing for the event. Twenty years ago, I entered the corporate culture of Silicon Valley as a drum circle facilitator. In a task-oriented industry full of technical thinkers from around the world, companies realized that their outcomes were hindered by a lack of relational skills, and teambuilding was the answer. I witnessed that a community gathered in a circle, playing rhythmic parts joined around a common pulse could synchronously engage each member toward a common outcome of creating something expressive.

I was much moved working with the group from Samsung Mobile Innovator, who for our musical purposes, were named the SAMMI Shakers. In the time I spent with them practicing our music for our performance at the conference, I saw that they are working hard and doing wonderful things with a fiery and elevated sense of purpose. They embody the genius and technical savvy of engineers but also the relational skills to navigate across multiple maps of the world. Samsung Mobile Innovator supports developers in writing, testing, marketing, and selling new applications for Samsung smartphones. At the Tech-Ed conference booth, I watched them meet with everyone from old-school engineers to high-level architects and executives. They listened, assessed the language, knowledge, and skill levels, and joined with them in thinking together. Samsung Mobile Innovator creates a world you want to belong to. And when we played music together on the Omnia, they were competent and creative. They had rhythmic expertise and they found joy in it.

And far from feeling my work was archaic, I felt quite inspired. There are many things you can do in an ensemble setting if you have a group of people with Samsung Omnias running this application. I had a vision of being up in the Sierras or on an island, all alone and wanting to connect with somebody. And I imagined dialing up some satellite and connecting with a stranger in Korea and weaving drum beats. I imagined dialing up my siblings, playing some beats while we sang Happy Birthday to my folks and even sending pictures of ourselves standing on the moon while we did it. And I thought maybe I could hook up with Yo-Yo Ma and collaborate on a new ringtone that makes Brian Eno jealous.

Samsung Mobile Innovator has built these tools and is putting out these examples of things you can do. They are motivating and supporting people to do anything they can imagine and helping them code it. This is how a drum circle works! I’ve held in my hand a new tool for learning, healing and elevating the spirit. So now I am right along with them deeply curious to see how the larger community expands the Omnia, this little handheld incarnation of their brainchild.

Most Respectfully and Yours in Rhythm,
Don Davidson

Friday, 15 May 2009

Shake, snap, up, down, start and stop...

This isn't the voiceover to an 80s aerobics video, but the six pre-defined events that make up the Samsung Motion UI.

The latest i8910 HD DevPack (v0.2) that we published today incorporates all six of these into the enulator together with a GSensor control that allows developers to feed X,Y,Z axis data through the emulator and view the results on screen. See below:



We think that this makes it the most impressive S60 5th Edition device emulator around.

Beating the Samsung drum!

One of the most popular videos on our YouTube Channel is the G-Sensor Drumkit example which shows an i7710 and the i8910 both running our Percussion example application. The example uses the Samsung S60 GSensor API on supported devices to play sound samples when the phone is shaken.

Well someone asked for a copy of this neat app on the YouTube comment wall, and we thought, why not! (If you’re out there DannitPictures Hello!).

We’ve provided a SIS file signed by Samsung that should install on recent Samsung S60 3.2 and 5th Edition devices.

Look the code, install the file, and get playing now.

Tuesday, 12 May 2009

Shining a Spotlight on our nomadic members

This month's Spotlight on Samsung Mobile Innovator is GyPSii.

In a relatively short space of time they have become a major player in the mobile value-chain. Apart from having a really neat product which allows you to stay connected with your friends and generate contentt while you're on the go, their success can also be attributed to their open and collaborative approach to the eco-system, particularly through OpenExperience (OEx), GyPSii’s recently announced Application Programming Interface Service.

The decision to have an open API is definitely paying dividends. Indeed, since this Spotlight was authored, they have announced a further innovation with the launch of GyPSii CONNECT. This web-based service allows GyPSii users to automatically update and share their status, newly-created places and friends in real time across other social networks. Currently they have SNS players Twitter and Facebook on board, but something tells us at SAMMI this list will continue to grow.

Friday, 8 May 2009

Everything you ever wanted to know about Samsung Home Update

Firmware is one of the BIG topics on our discussion boards. In response our writer Ben Morris has prepared a Technical note which goes through the Samsung Home Update service.

The Technical note includes:
  • An Introduction to the Samsung Home Update service
  • List of countries and regions supported (this list also includes the links)
  • Instructions on how to use the service
Technical note: Home Update service for i8510

Thursday, 7 May 2009

Accolades for i8910

If you haven’t already seen it, check out the review from Phone Arena for the i8910. These guys are thorough reviewers, covering every aspect of the phone’s hardware, software and UI. Fortunately (and if modesty permits, not that surprisingly) they love our first S60 touch-enabled device giving it a resounding yes vote with a score of 9.0 out of ten.

In addition to detailed explanations of the i8910’s features and specifications, they also have some great pictures, screenshots, and even a 360 degree view of our latest Symbian device.

Friday, 1 May 2009

i8910 DevPack and go for the weekend

The Symbian team at Samsung Mobile Innovator have even more reason than usual to celebrate the arrival of the UK long weekend…

Today after months of planning, coding and testing the first ever Samsung DevPack is is available to download, in Alpha version, from our website. The pack features everything you need to target our flagship Symbian device - the i8910 HD. This is also the first S60 based touch enabled device from Samsung.

We will be adding more functionality to this pack in the coming weeks, but for now the DevPack contains:
  • Emulator for testing and debugging applications. The Emulator includes Samsung i8910 bitmaps (skins), key mappings, and customisations required to reproduce the i8910 look and feel and device behaviour on the Emulator (this version - alpha only)
  • Example programs (this version - alpha only)
  • Documentation (this version - alpha only)
It's only been up for the afternoon and already we’ve had 65 visits so it's great to see that there's interest out there. Please post your feedback below.