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Archive for November, 2006

YouTube Mobile!

November 29, 2006 Leave a comment

mobiletv0011.jpg

“A deal between YouTube and US mobile firm Verizon Wireless will see the popular video-sharing website extended to mobile phones.  

Users who subscribe to Verizon’s Vcast service will be able to view content on the YouTube website via their mobiles.  

The trial, which will begin in December, will also allow users to post video clips from their phones more easily.  

It is likely that similar tie-ups will follow as mobile operators look for a slice of the social-networking pie.  

More than 100 million video clips are viewed every day on the YouTube website.”  

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6190984.stm  

As
Mobile News Picks informed you before: http://mobilenewspicks.wordpress.com/2006/11/09/youtube-on-your-mobile-why-not/

iPod Future!

November 29, 2006 Leave a comment

ipod

Today, I see 2 things missing from our everyday iPod.

First thing is Bluetooth!  

The features and services Bluetooth will add to iPod is massive; from data transfer to socializing in public places… From purchasing new content to sharing what you have… But the main killer feature for me will be Bluetooth Headphones!  

Right now you can find 3rd party solutions like this: http://www.ipresents.co.uk/music/2005/11/icombi-ipod-bluetooth-headphones.html And I think they are pretty cool solutions; but an integrated Bluetooth will expand in many other ways… On the other hand, I am well-aware of the fact that; launching with the basic, then expanding the market with secondary and 3rd party products and then coming up with ‘innovative’ features is a strategy horse every technology company rides. They’re still making money over headphones and all the other wires, right? So unless a competitor goes Bluetooth (or spreads the rumour to do so), we’ll keep on tucking the wires through our shirts…  Second missing feature, which has a little more time, is a DVB-H Receiver! 

DVB-H stands for Digital Video Broadcasting – Handheld, meaning Mobile TV. To research and keep yourself updated about DVB-H; http://www.dvb-h.org/ is a good link to start. Mobile TV today on handheld devices such as mobile phones are the primitive versions of what we will see in the future. Even with 3G the service provided is multi-casting, the source sends a single signal to every user. If 30 people in my office building tries to connect to the Mobile TV a carrier provides today; the nearest base station will have to host 30 separate video streaming signals in once.  

When time comes for broadcasting (ex: DVB-H) to mobile; the signal will be on the air and only thing you will need is a receiver to pick it. Right now Mobile Phone Companies are preparing themselves for it. For example Nokia launched its Nokia N92 from Nokia N Series Multimedia Devices, the world’s first mobile device with a built-in DVB-H receiver.

So, dear iPod, as a user, I am demanding DVB-H in the next iPods, asap please J

Editor, Mobile News Picks

November 2006

Important! Believe in 2.5G!

November 27, 2006 Leave a comment

m7

“There’s a danger that the MMS market will go nowhere, and mobile content companies should not just focus on 3G to fulfil and stimulate demand. Stephen Kendall-Lane, Chairman of Kendall Wood International, thinks that the real opportunities for MMS and video on your mobile lie within the existing 2.5G mobile phone market, because there are currently around 1.5 billion mobiles in use at the present time. At least 80% of these are GSM users – most of whom, he says, will eventually have to upgrade to GPRS.  

…It emerges that there is much scepticism about MMS and particularly about the application of video on 2.5G phones. However, Kendall-Lane’s technology proves that you can have quite high quality video clips on even a bog standard GPRS phone. It may not be a broadband experience, but it works well. 

If your phone runs on the Symbian platform – 60% of GPRS mobiles do – Kendall-Lane can send you video via MMS. Otherwise it is still possible to send you – the end-user – information about the video clip you are downloading, or even additional information, while it is in the process of doing so. What you in fact get is an instant slideshow-like experience, helping to keep you sufficiently interested while the downloading process is completed. You then get a short video clip of, say, a movie you’d like to watch or even other footage. 

… So the big question is: if video is possible on a 2.5G, why is everyone negating it for 3G? The market potential is so much bigger with 2.5G phones, and there are high growth markets like India and China ready for it and in the waiting. Hang on though, there’s potential in Europe too! Some independent research, according to Kendall-Lane, shows that the EU market has around 60 million Smartphone end-users, and a third of those are likely to access video content at a rate of around 60 clips per year.  Most of the research focused on the 3G market, but it demonstrates the potential for the 2.5G market. It also shows where things aren’t quite working. For a number of reasons 40% of those interviewed had not accessed video. Of those who did access video on their 3G phones, around 11% never access video again because of a poor video experience. All of this needs to change; MMS is said to be the most important mobile application, but Kendall-Lane also claims that we’re only just at the beginning of the mobile revolution. This is why the technical hassles of downloading content to a phone have to be taken out of the process. End-users want an instant, trouble-free experience. This includes informing customers about the price, size and expected duration of a download, enabling the end-user to make an informed choice. When this is not done, customers are lost. If the download time is lengthy, then it is important to give them something to watch in the interim.

If the future lies in being able to deliver to the mass market, not the top 10% or 20% but to 80% of end-users, then it is vital for the industry to overcome its core problems, particularly its cynicism about the video on 2.5G phones – and they need to develop a pricing framework which allows content providers to receive a viable share of the price charged to end-users. Only then will creative content emerge to attract the customer.  Rather than frightening off end-users by always charging them for the cost of downloads, the customer should be able to receive video via MMS without charge. If you give them a taster of the experience for free straight to the phone, then they should also have the opportunity to download more video content from a server and pay for it. The content could also be sponsored, reducing the price to the end-user.  The whole interaction between end-user and content provider should be permission-based. Too much damage to the industry has been caused by those sending out unsolicited messages for which customers have no choice but to pay for what they receive, even though it may be unwelcome. So permission-based marketing is vital, and it establishes a benchmark for ensuring that customers only pay for what they wish to access and receive.

Content providers and the mobile phone network operators therefore need to ask: what do customers really want? At the end of the day it is about Customer Relationship Management: using technology in the right way to deliver what the customer really, really wants. If a customer wants to receive video content to their mobile phone as a message, then the mobile networks should ensure that this happens, and they should not leave the customer to suffer the hassle of downloading content….” 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/Nov2006/3964.htm

Mobile Wallet; Another Approach…

November 22, 2006 Leave a comment

m ticket

“Mobile phones are closer to becoming smart wallets, following agreement among mobile operators on an approach to near field communications (NFC).   NFC is a short-range wireless technology like RFID tags, which are used to track stock by retailers.  The tags inside phones could have personal information stored in them and so could act as car keys, money, tickets and travel cards. Mobile firms representing 40% of the global mobile market back NFC.  Alex Sinclair, chief technology officer of the GSM Association, which represents the mobile industry, said: “Interoperability and standardisation are the fundamental requirements for mobile market success.  

“NFC opens up a wide range of possibilities and we are committed to ensuring the mobile industry works together to realise its potential.”  There are two elements to NFC technology, which is sometimes called “contactless” applications – a tag, which is inside the phone and can store data and transmit it wirelessly, and a reader, which can access the information stored on tags.   A mobile equipped with NFC technology could, for example, buy a concert ticket over the phone which would then hold those details, together with the details of the phone user, on the tag inside the handset. An RFID device at the concert would then “read” the concert ticket details on the tag when the phone is passed close to it.  NFC technology could also be used to exchange data between phones, such as photos and music. Mobile phones are seen as powerful tools for NFC technology because they are able to download new pieces of information – from topping up a travel card, to new songs, ticket information and electronic keycard data etc.  … … 

No timescale for the development of NFC technology has been given. Fourteen mobile network operators are working together to develop NFC applications.  

They are Bouygues Telecom, China Mobile, Cingular Wireless, KPN, Mobilkom Austria, Orange, SFR, SK Telecom, Telefonica Móviles España, Telenor, TeliaSonera, TIM, Vodafone and 3.  The 14 firms are part of the GSM Association, which represents 700 mobile operators around the world. ” This news is picked from and details continue at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6168222.stm  

For more info: http://www.nfc-forum.org/home

Aussie Mobile Wallet; One Step Ahead!

November 20, 2006 Leave a comment

qpay

FORMER Telstra employee and now enthusiastic entrepreneur Greg Walter leans forward as he demonstrates the fruits of years of labour on his Motorola phone.

 

He SMSs the word “surf” to a 04 number. A moment later the phone rings and he’s asked to enter his PIN. He does so and a small donation has been sent to Surf Life Saving Queensland.

 

It sounds simple but Mr Walter claims to have stolen a march on e-commerce’s global golden child PayPal by introducing an Australia-wide mobile-phone-based payment system, called Qpay.

 

Mobile commerce has made several false starts, with tests in
Europe and Japan using RFID chip “e-purses” implanted in new phones.

 

But Mr Walter says his system is simpler and can be used by anyone with a mobile phone.

 

Mobile payment systems are not just for those with an interest in surf-lifesaving. Mr Walter imagines a teenager who doesn’t have a credit card but who can order a pizza or top up his prepaid mobile phone in moments with the money in his Qpay account.

 

The system is a perfect match for people worried about giving away credit-card details over the phone or internet, he says.

 

“Our system is designed to overcome their fears about security,” he says. “The fact that the authentication is visible to the user gives it a psychological advantage.”

 

He quotes research from analyst Paul Budde that claims that 45 per cent of consumers don’t have a credit card and 75 per cent of those that do, don’t want to use it online.

 

But the real call for secure mobile micropayments is coming from merchants. It is cheaper than EFTPOS. It is a quick way to enable an ordering system – a clothing manufacturer can put “text ‘Tee’ to ” at the bottom of an ad and attract instant impulse buyers.

 

Mr Walter says merchants will use the system to encourage people to impulse buy off a billboard or TV ad.

 

In the future, using passive scanning technology, a shop could even identify you by your mobile phone and send texts with special offers.

 

“Merchants want to sell, the end user wants to buy stuff,” says Mr Walter. “You can give e-cash to a friend. You can buy something when you see it. There are unmet needs in the marketplace waiting for an answer. We hope we have it.”

 

Competition is hotting up in this sector overseas… … …” 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.smh.com.au/news/mobiles–handhelds/mobile-merchant-dialling-for-deals/2006/11/06/1162661616414.html

Flying Alarm Clock! What!?! Yes It Is!!

November 17, 2006 Leave a comment

flying clock

(Mates, I know it is not that ‘mobile’ we’re talking about; but when I came across this funky cute thing, I thought it would be appropriate as a Friday candy! Cheers, editor ;) )   

“You’ll have to get up when this little baby starts, because it takes off and flies round the room, making a really annoying noise like a mosquito, so you’ll have to find it first, before you can turn it off.   Even if you hit the snooze button, it will take off again, so it will undoubtedly get you out of bed, though of course it might smash the place up a bit before you catch it, and if you sleep with the windows open you might find yourself running round the garden in your jimjams (no way to wake up) and may frighten the neighbourhood dogs. 

There’s also a slight danger that if you are a really heavy sleeper, and the things flies around the room without waking you up, eventually it will run out of juice, so it could wake you up by dropping on an exposed body part, such as the head, though I suppose you’d at least be awake. Or unconscious, possibly!” 

This gadget is picked from and details continue at: http://www.boysstuff.co.uk/product.asp?id=13583

Telstra Warns 1st Half EBIT To Fall 17%-20%

November 15, 2006 Leave a comment

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“Telstra repeated Tuesday that first half earnings are likely to drop significantly on year as it implements its transformation strategy, but second half profits are likely to improve substantially. 

“We are expecting fiscal year 2007 to be the year of the largest transformation spending for operating and capital expenditure,” Chief Executive Solomon Trujillo told shareholders at the group’s annual general meeting in
Melbourne.
 

“As a result, we expect our first half EBIT to fall by 17% to 20%,” he said, adding second half EBIT is expected to rise 37% to 40%. 

Last month, Melbourne-based Telstra downgraded its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization growth forecast to between 2% and 2.5% a year for each year through June 30, 2010, from a previous growth forecast of between 3% and 5% a year, due to recent rulings from the competition regulator.  


Trujillo told shareholders that provided there are “no further material adverse regulatory rulings”, Telstra expects free cash flow to improve in the year to June 2008 when compared to the 2007 financial year…. … … “
 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20413.php

Aussie Mobile Cricket TV!

November 13, 2006 Leave a comment

cricket

The final countdown has begun for what is destined to be the biggest sporting event this summer.

For 42% of the Aussie population, cricket conjures up images of lazy days spent in front of the TV, according to a recent survey conducted by 3 mobile to mark the launch of its 24 hour Cricket TV Channel with exclusive content. 

Unfortunately for most however, almost three-quarters of respondents will be tied to their desks at work, wishing they were at the game when the 3 mobile Ashes Series kicks off at the end of the month. Just 5% are planning to take a sickie in order to be glued to the TV and only 6% will be heading to the pub with mates. With demand exceeding supply, the majority of people surveyed were not lucky enough to have secured tickets to the first match either… 

Whether at work, on the beach or on the couch at home, for only $5 per month fans can get our Bumper Pack which provides unlimited:

  • 24/7 Cricket TV, including LIVE and exclusive Channel Nine coverage of all 3 mobile Ashes Series, Twenty/20 and One Day International matches
  • Archive footage from 1982 onwards Channel Nine’s The Cricket Show
  • Day highlights and full replays
  • Exclusive video highlights for all 3 mobile Ashes Series, Twenty/20 and One Day International matches
  • LIVE Scores
  • Fixtures and ladders
  • SMS alerts at every wicket and other key match events
  • Latest news
  • Match previews and reviews
  • Plus unlimited access to our Sports, Info and Entertainment Packs
  • Cricket TV is available throughout 3’s Broadband Zones…

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/Nov2006/3893.htm

Nokia: “The Future of TV Will Be Personal”

November 13, 2006 Leave a comment

nokia mobile tv Personalisation and interactivity will be the key drivers of mobile TV according to a new report commissioned by Nokia and conducted by Dr Shani Orgad from the London School of Economics. The report examines the future impact of mobile TV on the broadcasting and advertising industries. The report predicts that the introduction and adoption of mobile TV will ultimately give way to a more personal and private TV experience than that of traditional broadcast TV, with big implications for users, content providers and advertisers. Users will be able to receive content anytime, anywhere, choose what is most relevant to them, and even create and upload their own television content, while content providers and advertisers will be able to tailor their offerings more specifically to the user.  “For mobile TV to become more than just television on the move, it will have to build on existing channels, programmes, and ways of watching television and using the Internet.” said Dr Shani Orgad. “Mobile TV will become a multimedia experience with an emphasis on personalisation, interactivity and user-generated content.” According to the report, the current trend of user generated content, as seen by the phenomenal growth of YouTube, will be a key feature of mobile TV…  Introducing the five second ad spot : …The report also reveals that advertisers are currently experimenting with five and seven second-long ad spots to be better suited to the ‘snacking culture’ of mobile TV viewing. What will people watch? :  The report predicts that mobile TV programming will be a combination of original content from broadcast television and new content made specifically for mobile. It is expected that the most popular genres and programmes on mobile TV will be news, entertainment (soaps, reality shows, comedy, animation), sport, music and children’s programmes. Moreover, the content will be tailored with the mobile viewer in mind:

  • Much shorter and more concise news bulletins
  • User interactivity in the plots of reality TV shows and game shows
  • Growing importance of user-generated content
  • New distribution formats: in China, for instance, the movie Kung Fu Hustle was made into ten segments for mobile TV

New TV content: The mobile TV viewing experience is also likely to see new programme formats emerging. These include:

  • Talking heads and close ups – due to the small screen size, broadcasters will need to focus on talking heads, where viewers will be able to watch close-ups and see the details, rather than capturing a wide screen.
  • ‘Snackable content’ – mobile TV content will need to be suitable for ‘snacking’.
  • Mobisodes – mobisodes are fragmented and small made-for-mobile episodes that cater to bite-sized portions of content on the go.
  • Visual spectacle – programmes will need to emphasise visual spectacle over conventional narrative and be image-orientated.
  • Local content – content should be relevant for the here-and-now of viewers.

New prime times: Broadcasters are likely to see a new midday prime time with mobile TV according to the report. This is backed up by consumer trials of mobile TV in Europe which revealed heavy usage of mobile TV during the day as well as during the more traditional early morning and late evening prime times…” 

You can download the full report (24 pages, pdf file) from: http://www.nokia.com/NOKIA_COM_1/Press/Press_Events/mobile_tv_report,_november_10,_2006/Mobil_TV_Report.pdf  This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20378.php

Telstra Sale Progress Satisfactory

November 10, 2006 Comments off

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“Australian Finance Minister Nick Minchin said Thursday the government’s sale of part of its holding in Telstra was “progressing satisfactorily” with a late surge in applications by retail investors. 

The retail offer for the Telstra share sale, known as T3, closes later Thursday and Minchin said the applications already received have exceeded the targeted A$8 billion size of the offer. 

“The government will increase the size of the T3 offer to meet the demand from the institutional shareholders in Telstra, who also want to buy their minimum guaranteed entitlement,” Minchin said during Senate question time…. … About A$4 billion of shares have already been allocated to clients of stockbrokers and financial planners and a further A$400 million to Japanese investors.  

An institutional offer will open Nov. 15 and close Nov. 17 for existing shareholders. The government may also offer T3 shares to institutional investors who don’t currently hold the stock.  

“The government is not focussed on maximizing the size of the offer,” Minchin said.  

“In fact, there are good reasons to prefer that a number of those (non-shareholder) investors will have to buy shares on the market rather than meeting their demand fully in T3.”… 

…The T3 shares are due to begin trading on the stock exchange Nov. 20.  

-By Barbara Adam, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-6208-0901; barbara.adam@dowjones.com
-Edited by Graham Morgan”
 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20327.php

Ready to Take Off, Please Turn Your Mobile ON!

November 9, 2006 Leave a comment

EMIRATES

“The airline, Emirates has signed a deal with AeroMobile to offer in-flight mobile phone coverage. AeroMobile, has developed an aircraft system which controls the power output of all mobile phones down to the minimum level allowing their safe use onboard aircraft. The Dubai-based airline expects to launch the service on board one of its Boeing 777s as early as January 2007, once all necessary approvals have been granted. 

AeroMobile’s aircraft system includes a number of features that will allow users to talk or text discreetly and maintain the privacy of other passengers. This includes the ability for cabin crew to control the system at any time, plus select operating modes appropriate to particular flights. For example, crew may disable voice service and select text only operation mode for overnight flights.Passengers will be instructed and encouraged to switch phones to silent or vibrate mode at all times throughout the flight. Up to five calls may be made at at any one time, the same number as for the current in-seat phones used regularly by Emirates’ passengers…  

…Passengers must continue to follow the instructions of the cabin staff at all times regarding the use of mobile phones and other portable electronic devices.” 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20322.php

YouTube On Your Mobile? Why Not?

November 9, 2006 Leave a comment

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“VERIZON Communications, the No. 2 US telecommunications company, is in advanced talks with YouTube to bring the web site’s videos to mobile phones and television sets, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

A deal may give Verizon a marketing edge over its rivals in the wireless and cable industries, furthering the company’s efforts to expand into internet and entertainment services, the Journal reported.

Under the terms being discussed, customers of Verizon Wireless – Verizon’s joint venture with Vodafone Group Plc – would be able to view some YouTube videos on their mobile phones through the carrier’s premium V Cast service, the Journal said.

Verizon also would offer YouTube videos as an on-demand feature of a TV service it is launching throughout the nation, according to the paper…. ” 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,20721349%5E15320%5E%5Enbv%5E15306,00.html

South Korea; Far Ahead!

November 6, 2006 Leave a comment

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South Korea pushes mobile speeds By Richard Taylor

South Korea is well known as a nation of broadband addicts and soon the speeds people enjoy at home will be available while they are out and about.  

In Seoul a technology with the formidable name of High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) is behind this boost to wireless speeds. It piggybacks on the 3G cellular networks, but HDSPA has been especially tweaked to give speeds which are about three to four times faster than regular 3G.  In South Korea it is in much wider use than most other places, and consequently it is one of the first places in the world where people are actually beginning to use it.  

But the Koreans do not rest on their laurels, they have other technologies in their sights for high-speed mobile broadband.  Hotspots
Seoul is just starting to roll out Wibro, which stands for wireless broadband…. (for details pls visit link below)
 

Mobile features There are lots of other cool mobile stuff going on here too, especially in the new generation of handsets.  You can take your pick from 10-megapixel camera phones, to bespoke phones with elementary mixing for budding teenage DJs.  

If you have got more serious musical inclinations, a fancy candybar phone should see you right, with a whopping 8GB in its hard drive – enough for 2000 tracks. Also competing for your attention on the handset is a virtual pooch, who responds according to affection you bestow, and if you happen across a similar phone owner you can cross-breed a puppy and then give it up for adoption to another user.  

Then there are the handsets with built-in motion sensors, so you can play games, make music or enhance the core functions of the phone – like speed dialling by waving your arms in the air.   Arguably less gimmicky is a phone with a built-in breathalyser, which checks you are not over the limit if you have been out drinking.  Trailblazing TV

Outshining all of those have got to be phones with great hi-res screens, where you can watch several dozen channels of TV content in amazingly decent quality.   The pictures come courtesy of a technology called DMB – Digital Multimedia Broadcasting – which is now being watched by over a million Koreans since its launch last year.  

Depending on the handset you can pick up either a free terrestrial service or a premium satellite offering. Definitely a trailblazer for the rest of the world to watch in awe.  It should come as no great surprise that the Koreans are already thinking about 4G networks which will deliver blisteringly fast speeds.  

In a recent display of mobile muscle, a few Samsung execs were given a taste of things to come – a 100 megabit stream of data whilst moving at 60 kph.   That is enough for video on demand, a live broadcast, and web surfing simultaneously. And that is not all – when they were stationary it was 10 times faster, enough for 32 HD channels of streaming video at the same time.” 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/click_online/6113138.stm

Credit Cards Going Mobile! Finally…

November 3, 2006 Leave a comment

shopwindow.jpg

“The credit card network, MasterCard says that it has started conducting a consumer trial in
Dallas, Texas, of Near Field Communications (NFC)-enabled mobile phones with MasterCard PayPass capability. Up to 500 participants from the 7-Eleven Speak Out wireless program are getting NFC-enabled Nokia 3220 mobile phones and instructions on how to wirelessly enhance them with MasterCard PayPass payment functionality, via Giesecke & Devrient (G&D)’s new secure chip management solution.
 

Once these steps have been taken, participants will then be able to use the phones to make purchases at any of the 32,000 merchant locations worldwide that accept MasterCard PayPass. The trial will run for approximately six months. 

“Mobile commerce has traditionally been held back by both business and technology considerations, making it more of an inconvenience to use a mobile phone for a purchase than to simply pay using cash,” said Dan Schatt, senior analyst, Celent Communications. “MasterCard’s latest initiative involving over-the-air personalization is game-changing because little if anything must be done by the consumer to use their mobile phone as their wallet. We’ve already seen the tremendous value other countries are deriving from contactless mobile commerce, and we expect this initiative to have a significant impact on the way U.S. goods and services are paid for at the point of sale in the future.” 

PayPass offers consumers a convenient alternative to cash that allows for small-ticket purchases to be completed quickly, securely and easily. Consumers no longer need to fumble for cash and coins, swipe a card, or sign a receipt for any PayPass purchase under US$25. Users simply tap their PayPass-enabled phone, card, or device on the PayPass reader at participating merchants and they are on their way… 

… There are a number of PayPass-related programs currently under way in thirteen countries around the world. PayPass rollouts and trials have been announced in the
United States,
Canada,
United Kingdom,
Japan,
Korea,
China,
Thailand,
Turkey,
Lebanon,
Malaysia,
Australia,
Taiwan and the
Philippines, with more programs and rollouts anticipated this year.”
 

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20211.php

Premiums SMS Complaints Surge

November 2, 2006 Leave a comment

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“Customer service, contracts, and premium rate SMS messages were some of the leading causes of complaint to Australia‘s Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman in the year to June 2006.   Complaints to the Ombudsman increased by 11.0% to 87,593 over the previous year, with the fastest rate of increase among internet services, followed by mobile and landline services.Ombudsman John Pinnock said the customer service complaint category had increased dramatically across all three technology types. “One of the key reasons for this is the failure of providers to tell dissatisfied customers that they have a right to bring their complaint to us,” Mr Pinnock said… 

“Premium rate SMS complaints most commonly relate to products such as horoscopes, jokes, ring-tones and chat services,” Mr Pinnock said. “They are characterised by numbers with the prefix 19 and are billed at rates much higher than a standard SMS message”” This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20173.php

‘Clever Brake’ from CityRail

November 2, 2006 Leave a comment

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“The NSW government today announced plans to spend $200 million on a digital train radio system using the abandoned OneTel network.

RailCorp has reached an agreement with the receiver of telecommunications company OneTel to buy necessary digital bandwidth to provide coverage of the state’s train network, Minister for Transport John Watkins said.  

The new system would meet the Waterfall Special Commission of Inquiry recommendation that “all train drivers, signallers and supervisors of trackside work gangs in NSW be able to communicate using the same technology”, he said.  

The digital technology would allow CityRail to monitor a train’s location and automatically activate its brakes in an emergency.”  

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,20681757%5E15319%5E%5Enbv%5E15306,00.html

Google Buys Wiki’s

November 1, 2006 Leave a comment

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“GOOGLE has continued expanding its online empire, buying pioneering group JotSpot, which specialises in “wiki” collaborative web pages.

Unlike Google’s grand $US1.65 billion ($2.15 billion) stock deal to acquire online video-sharing website YouTube announced three weeks earlier, the JotSpot takeover was disclosed informally in a blog…  

Earlier this year the
California, company launched JotSpot 2.0, saying it was a leap forward in the evolution of the way people share and edit websites.
 

JotSpot 2.0 is a “wiki” that enables people to make joint calendars, spreadsheets, photo galleries and virtual filing cabinets.  

The term “wiki” was inspired by the Hawaiian word “wiki-wiki” for “very quick,” and is used in internet parlance to refer to a site that allows visitors to make changes to content.  

The popular online encyclopedia Wikipedia is the seminal example of a wiki.  

JotSpot will move its 27 employees to Google’s campus.”  

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,20681811%5E15306%5E%5Enbv%5E,00.html

Ringtones and iTunes Saving Australian Music Market

November 1, 2006 Leave a comment

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“Bernard Fanning and Augie March may be the hot tips for glory at this weekend’s ARIA awards, however business information analysts IBIS World say mobile ringtones and Apple iTunes will be the real stars – and saviours – of the Australian music industry in 2006 and beyond.

With CDs likely to be virtually obsolete within 10 years, and the revenue growth predictions for the recorded music industry steady at 2.1%, IBISWorld General Manager (Australia), Mr Jason Baker, said digital music distribution holds the key to the industry’s future survival and success.

“Apple iTunes launched this time last year in Australia and mobile ringtones are driving the resurgence in the recorded music industry, with iTunes expected to grow the legitimate downloads market in this country by tenfold,’ said Mr Baker.

“This year we’ll spend about AU$30 (US$23) million on digital downloads. Next year this figure will almost double and by 2010, it is forecast we will be spending an incredible AU$200 (US$154) million on our favourite downloadable tracks. Over the same period, the ringtone market is expected to post double digit growth, compared to low single digit growth for the total recorded music industry.”

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/20122.php

Leash The Boy! :)

November 1, 2006 Leave a comment

ionkids.jpg

 “The ionKids system allows you to monitor up to four tagged objects at once. Children, seniors, pets or anything you might lose and want to keep safe. The system consists of a base unit, a handheld device that allows parents to monitor up to four tags simultaneously and a Wristag. Tag holders can be purchased seperately and can be clipped onto belt loops or lanyards; Wristags can be locked on chidlren’s wrists. ionKids lets you set a variable zone around the base unit so you will know when your child wanders to far. If you can’t find them, use the locating device and let it show you where to go to find them.”

This news is picked from and details continue at: http://www.ion-kids.com/