Archive for the ‘Communication’ Category

Over-the-air downloads come to BlackBerry

Online music provider 7digital is bringing over-the-air music downloads to recent BlackBerry phones, such as the Storm, Bold, and Tour. The rumors have been circulating for several months now. On Tuesday the company is set to launch its application–developed by DevelopIQ–on the BlackBerry App World store, as well as on the 7digital Web site.

A screenshot of the 7digital BlackBerry app.

(Credit: DevelopIQ)

After installing the free app, BlackBerry users will be able to buy and download more than 6 million songs from all four major labels and all the big independents, all in unprotected MP3 format. The app adapts automatically to the speed of the user’s connection–when connecting over a wireless data network, it will download a relatively low-quality version of the song. Then, when the user enters the range of a previously known Wi-Fi network, it will automatically–in the background–update the MP3 with a higher-quality version (320kbps in most cases).

7digital is based in the U.K. and is fairly well known in Europe–it powers the download store for free streaming service Spotify, among other partnerships–but has been relatively obscure in the United States. That’s changing Tuesday as well: the company is launching its online music store in the U.S., bringing more competition to the likes of iTunes and Amazon. Standard pricing for songs and albums will be 77 cents and $7.77 respectively, which is a play on the company’s name (although variable pricing means that some popular material will cost more). The company also offers a free digital locker service, which backs up all your downloads in case you lose them.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13526_3-10367606-27.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

Vonage app available for iPhone, BlackBerry

Voice over Internet Protocol service provider Vonage on Monday announced that it has launched its first mobile apps for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and BlackBerry devices.

Dubbed Vonage Mobile, the company’s free VoIP app enables users to place international calls from their mobile devices. iPod Touch owners can do so by placing calls through Wi-Fi. BlackBerry owners will transmit calls over the cellular network only. iPhone owners will be able to place calls from Wi-Fi or through AT&T’s network.

According to Vonage, its app will help users save up to 50 percent on international calling charges levied by carriers. After downloading the app, users need to enter an international number. They can also select a call recipient from their existing iPhone or BlackBerry contacts list. Those who receive calls will see the user’s cell phone number on their caller IDs. Charges will be taken against the user’s credit card, which they need to input when they first start using the app.

For now, Vonage is offering per-minute rates. The company said in a statement that by the end of the year, it will offer the Vonage World plan to users. Vonage World for home users currently allows them to make calls to more than 60 countries for $24.99 per month.

Vonage’s app launch comes on the heels of controversy over whether Google’s similar Voice app should have been denied access to Apple’s App Store. The debate still rages on.

Vonage’s new mobile app is available now in Apple’s App Store and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry App World. Both versions are free.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-10367280-17.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

The price of universal broadband

Bringing universal broadband to all Americans is not going to be cheap.

The Federal Communications Commission said Tuesday it could cost more than $350 billion to wire America with high speed Internet access.

The FCC has been given the responsibility of coming up with a national broadband policy to ensure every American has access to broadband. And on Tuesday a task force at the FCC led by Blair Levin, former chief of staff to chairman Reed Hundt, issued its initial report on forming this plan. The final report is due to Congress in February.

The FCC task force has been hosting workshops and hearings. And it will continue to do so over the next few months. But what it has concluded at this early stage is that bringing true broadband to all Americans is going to cost a lot.

While it would only take about $20 billion to blanket the country with broadband service with speeds between 768 kbps to 3 Mbps service, the FCC has questioned whether those speeds will be enough. Instead, it is recommending more aggressive network build-outs that would increase the speed of these networks to about 100 Mbps or faster. This will likely push the price tag of the entire network expansion to more than $350 billion. And if all consumers are given a choice of broadband provider, these cost estimates would be even higher.

There are a lot of factors that make building universal broadband expensive. It’s much more expensive to build infrastructure in rural areas. Not only are capital expenditures more expensive in rural areas, but the operating expenses are higher, driven by transport and transit. Universal Service Fund recipients have made progress bringing broadband to rural America, but the fund faces systemic and structural problems.

So who is going to pay for this expensive infrastructure? The government will pay for some of it. Congress has already allocated $7 billion as part of the economic stimulus package. And more tax payer money is likely to be used in the future. Exactly, how much is uncertain.

But the bulk of the money used to build these networks will likely come from private industry, Levin said at the meeting held Tuesday in Washington, the Wall Street Journal reported.

“Most of that ecosystem is funded by the private sector,” Levin said. “We expect that to continue. Where can the government play a role in ensuring and improving the role of that ecosystem?”

The FCC believes these faster networks are necessary because broadband users are expected to use more bandwidth intensive applications in the future than they use today. For example, the average consumer today uses the Internet for Web browsing, email and instant messaging, and entertainment, but in the future they will be streaming video, video teleconferencing and electronic medical monitoring. These services and applications will require significantly more bandwidth.

If the FCC establishes regulation and policy to encourage these faster speed connections, the agency will have to figure out how to measure the quality of these connections. Today no such quality assurance is in place. And the FCC said in its report that actual broadband speeds lag advertised speeds by at least 50 percent, which means people are often paying for speeds that they do not get.

Another issue that must be dealt with is how the FCC will encourage more competition to give consumers choice, especially when it comes to these higher speed services. At least half of Americans today only have access to one provider that can offer Internet speeds for video streaming and two way video conferencing.

While wired broadband is critical, the FCC also noted in its report that wireless broadband access is also becoming increasingly important. By 2011, smartphones, which are more like mini-computers than phones, will overtake sales of traditional cell phones. Smartphone users generally use a lot more wireless data services, which means that carriers will have to keep beefing up their networks to provide more capacity.

While some of the biggest carriers, such as Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel are already building the next generation of wireless networks, which increase speeds and network capacity, the FCC noted that there is still a need to make more wireless spectrum available.

The CTIA, the trade association for the wireless industry, sent a letter to the FCC this week saying the government needs to identify more airwaves that can be used for commercial use.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-10364590-266.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

5 apps get you tweeting from the desktop

What’s better than posting tweets from Twitter.com? Just about everything.

Third-party Twitter apps are typically more powerful, crammed with managerial features that get you quickly viewing, sorting, replying to messages, and retweeting in a click or tap. They automatically shorten URLs to fit Twitter’s character limit, and help you post pictures through other services, like TwitPic and yfrog. Most of these desktop apps manage multiple Twitter accounts, are customizable, and are more attractive than Twitter online. They also tend to succeed in posting your tweets during times when Twitter’s site famously fails.

Convinced yet? Good. We’ve rounded up five desktop applications that help you post tweets and retweets to Twitter. Four run on the Adobe AIR runtime environment (Windows | Mac | Linux), which you need to download before you install the Twitter apps. But enough of the technical details–get tweeting!

Source :

http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10363810-12.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

Global broadband connections on the rise

One in five households worldwide will be wired up to the Internet by year’s end, according to new estimates from Gartner.

The number of households with fixed broadband connections is expected to reach 422 million across the globe this year, a jump of 10.5 percent over 382 million in 2008, the analyst firm said Friday. This number will further swell to an estimated 580 million by 2013.

Over the next four years, global broadband services revenue will also help offset declining voice revenue and account for 40 percent of the consumer fixed voice, Internet, and broadband services market worldwide, which is estimated to be worth $347 billion.

At the end of 2008, 21 countries had broadband connections in at least 50 percent of homes, Gartner reported. The disparity in broadband adoption was significant in Asia, where the region was home to both the world’s highest penetration of 86 percent in South Korea and the lowest at 1 percent in Indonesia.

Asian households, according to Gartner, will remain among the world’s most connected over the next four years. Broadband penetration for South Korea is forecast to reach 93 percent in 2013, while Hong Kong and Singapore will see 80 percent and 78 percent, respectively, of their households wired up to the Web.

Outside of the region, the Netherlands, Canada, and Denmark are expected to boast high broadband penetration rates of 88 percent, 81 percent and 78 percent, respectively.

In terms of growth, however, Brazil, Russia, India, and China will account for nearly half, or 47 percent, of the increase in consumer broadband connections over the next several years, Gartner said. China, alone, is expected to contribute 31 percent toward the total worldwide increase.

According to Gartner, fiber-based services will grow steadily over the next few years, with FTTH (fiber-to-the-home), FTTP (fiber-to-the-premises) and Ethernet connections accounting for about 20 percent of the global consumer broadband market by 2013.

Much of the growth will take place in developed markets such as Japan, South Korea and the United States. An exception to this is China, which is expected to account for the most number of new FTTH/FTTP/Ethernet connections, Gartner noted.

DSL connections, on the other hand, will remain the major contributor to worldwide household broadband connections. Traditional DSL access is expected to drop a few percentage points to just under 60 percent of all connections by 2013. DSL connections will see a 98 million increase within four years, led mostly by growth in emerging markets, according to Gartner.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-10361744-94.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

Twitter confirms new round of funding

Yes, Twitter’s mega-cash infusion is real. CEO Evan Williams confirmed on the company blog Friday that Twitter has raised a new round of investment from Insight Venture Partners, T. Rowe Price, and existing investors Institutional Venture Partners, Spark Capital and Benchmark Capital.

Williams says it’s “a significant round.” He didn’t say just how close it was to the roughly $100 million that the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. Nor did he say whether this values Twitter at $1 billion.

“It was important to us that we find investment partners who share our vision for building a company of enduring value,” Williams wrote in the blog post. “Twitter’s journey has just begun and we are committed to building the best product, technology, and company possible. I’m proud of the team we’ve built so far and I’m confident in the future we’ll build together.”

Before the end of the year, Twitter is expected to start rolling out paid corporate accounts to businesses who see use the service for marketing, promotion, and customer service.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10361763-36.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

BlackBerry sales and profit disappoint

BlackBerry maker Research In Motion said Thursday it sold fewer BlackBerry phones than analysts had expected, and the company’s quarterly earnings were hurt by a legal settlement.

The company said earnings fell 4 percent in the second fiscal quarter due in large part to charges associated with a legal settlement.

RIM

For the quarter that ended August 29, the company said it earned $475.6 million, or 83 cents a share, compared to profits of $495.5 million, or 86 cents a share, for the same period a year ago.

Revenue rose to $3.53 billion from $2.58 billion a year earlier.

Analysts had expected earnings of $1 a share on revenue of $3.62 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.

Even though sales were strong and revenue was up, RIM reported it shipped slightly fewer devices than what analysts had expected. The company said it shipped about 8.3 million BlackBerry devices during the quarter, adding about 3.8 million new subscribers. Analysts had expected the company to add about 4 million new subscribers on shipments between 8.5 million and 8.6 million.

But what really hurt the company was a charge of $112.8 million related to the settlement of a patent dispute with Visto Corp. Excluding this charge, RIM said it would have earned $588.4 million, or $1.03 per share for the quarter.

RIM said it expects revenue between $3.6 billion and $3.85 billion for the third fiscal quarter that ends November 28. And the company expects earnings per share to be in the neighborhood of between $1 and $1.08.

Analysts expect RIM to introduce a new version of its touch-screen Storm later this year on Verizon Wireless’s network. This devices is supposed to compete head to head with Apple’s iPhone. But RIM has other competitors in the touch-screen arena as it approaches he holiday season. There are also other devices, such as the Palm Pre and handsets from HTC and Motorola that use the Google Android software.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-10361155-266.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

Gmail outage hits ‘small subset of users’

Gmail was unavailable Thursday morning for what Google said was a “small subset of users,” the latest outage from a company that prides itself in running advanced computing systems.

On the Google Apps status dashboard, the company said at 7:29 a.m. PDT that it was aware of the problem. However, using IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) to access e-mail through software such as Outlook or Thunderbird still works, the company said.

Even a small subset can be a lot of people, though, as carping on Twitter indicates.

Gmail outages hit Google itself sometimes, providing extra incentive to improve reliability. One company spokesman, Adam Kovacevich, said on Twitter, “Gmail down (for Googlers too).”

Google had Gmail outages in February, April, and very widely on September 1.

Gmail was working for me Thursday morning, but slowly and without access to my contacts at 8 a.m. PDT. By 8:13 a.m., it was behaving properly.

Updated 9:15 a.m. PDT – Many users are reporting that their e-mail is back to normal, but there are still problems with Gmail contacts. Google posted the following advisory at 8:29 a.m. PDT.

“The Gmail issue should now be resolved for most of our users. There still might be issues with your contacts. For Gmail users: Use www.google.com/contacts to access your contacts For Google Apps Customers: www.google.com/contacts/a/yourdomain-name.com.”

The Google Apps status dashboard flagged the Gmail problem Thursday morning.

The Google Apps status dashboard flagged the Gmail problem Thursday morning.

(Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)
Source :

Another $100 million for Twitter?

That business plan had better be close on the horizon, because according to the Wall Street Journal, Twitter has some new investors on board: Mutual fund T. Rowe Price, Insight Venture Partners, and a handful of others have reportedly pumped $100 million into the microblogging phenomenon.

TechCrunch reported last week that Twitter was putting together a round of funding at around a $1 billion valuation. But that report suggested that the company would do so by raising about $50 million–half of what it actually has, per the WSJ, in a deal expected to close Thursday.

Twitter still doesn’t make significant revenue. But its founders have said that paid corporate accounts, in the form of a sort of “analytics dashboard,” are imminent. Advertising isn’t out of the question either, despite what some of the company’s executives have said in the past.

The company’s initial round of Series B funding last year valued it at about $80 million, but soon added to the round in a deal that upped the valuation well into the hundreds of millions.

Source :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10360818-36.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

AT&T takes the phone out of iPhone

Three weeks ago, I got a call on a friend’s iPhone while in the middle of a desert; cell phone coverage had come to Burning Man. By contrast, several calls I made last night to my parents from my San Francisco apartment were dropped and a subsequent connection became garbled.

That happens daily when I try to converse on my first-generation iPhone in my apartment and in certain other neighborhoods. I’ve come to anticipate that if I can even make a call it’s likely to be short-lived or poor quality.

Frustrated by the numerous interrupted calls, I decided to try to find out why my iPhone service is so poor that it’s easier to have a Web video conference over AIM with my boyfriend because neither of us can use our iPhones (his is 3G) reliably inside either of our homes.

This is not a new problem. AT&T was criticized when traffic from attendees at the South By Southwest conference in Austin, Texas, overwhelmed the network earlier this year. And there were widespread complaints about dropped calls and spotty service after the launch of the iPhone 3G a year ago.

I wondered why, a year later, the service still seemed unreliable. I called AT&T (on my reliable landline at work) to find out. AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel blamed the problem on the increasing amount of data traffic iPhone users are creating, which CNET News and others wrote about earlier this month.

“We lead the industry in smart phones,” he said. “As a result, we are having to stay ahead of what is incredible and increasing demand for wireless data services.”

Full Story  :

http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-10358156-245.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

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