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T-Mobile issues firmware update for G1

news
Feb 4, 20092 mins

Company adds voice search to phone running Google's platform

T-Mobile began pushing out an update that adds a couple of new features and fixes some glitches in the G1, its phone that runs Google’s Android software.

The most notable new capability is voice search. Once G1 users get the firmware update, they’ll notice an icon for a microphone in the Google search bar on the home screen. When users hit the button they’ll hear a “speak now” prompt, after which they can say their query, said Jeff Hamilton, a software engineer for Android, in a blog post.

[ Read InfoWorld’s take: The cross-platform option: Web apps for smartphones. Or learn about how to turn smartphones into desktops on the go. ]

If voice search doesn’t properly interpret the query, users will be able to hit a “down” arrow next to the search box to find other suggestions, one of which might be correct, he said. G1 users will also be able to dial phone numbers and search in their contacts lists using voice commands.

The voice command capability follows the introduction of Google’s voice search application for the iPhone in November.

Another minor addition with the Android update is the ability to save attachments sent via MMS. Users will also start seeing notifications when new software updates are available, including for applications in the Android Market. Phone users will also be able to report offensive comments in the Market as spam.

The update fixes a few glitches as well, such as one that automatically ended an instant messaging session when users turned their Wi-Fi connection on or off. Another glitch caused reminders for calendar items not to be delivered.

T-Mobile started pushing the update out Monday and expects all customers to receive it in two weeks.

On a T-Mobile Forum hosted by the operator, an administrator said the update is not related to “cupcake,” the name of another update that will include a wider range of new capabilities and bug fixes.

nancy_gohring

Nancy Gohring is a freelance journalist who started writing about mobile phones just in time to cover the transition to digital. She's written about PCs from Hanover, cellular networks from Singapore, wireless standards from Cyprus, cloud computing from Seattle and just about any technology subject you can think of from Las Vegas. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Computerworld, Wired, the Seattle Times and other well-respected publications.

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