Sunday, October 31, 2010

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


MWC 2011 - Flights and Hotels Still Cheap Top
A little note to those today playing with the thought of attending the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February 2011. If you think about going, make sure you book your flight and hotel soon. So far, flights are still available for reasonable prices and hotel and hostal rooms can still be hade for double digit prices. If previous years are any indication it won't hold for long and prices are likely to go up significantly soon. Of course as every year I will be at the Wiley booth (my publisher) on one of the days to talk to readers and friends. Would be great to meet you there!
 
Opera Mini Browser Now Native on Symbian Top
I've been an Opera Mini web browser fan ever since it has first appeared as a Java application on the first Symbian phones as even on mid-range phones it makes browsing lightning fast. Another reason for me using it is that it keeps my costs for mobile data down when I travel abroad as it uses a network side compression server. But even on high end phones, the mini's compression techniques have its advantages as no matter how powerful the device is, compressed data is still downloaded and rendered much more quickly. Try browsing with a normal browser in a train with a patchy network outside or just GPRS or EDGE coverage and the advantages are even more profound. Over the years, Opera has added native mini's for Android and the iPhone but so far, it always remained a Java application on Symbian. Not that I particularly minded, as the speed was just stunning, despite a Java interpreter between the browser and the phone. But now Opera seems to have changed its mind and now also offers a first native beta for Symbian. I gave it a try on a current Symbian^3 phone and it looks almost exactly identical to the Java version. Once loaded I'd say it's hard to spot the difference. As Opera mentions in the press release, the native version starts much faster than the Java version, I'd say it's up and running in a second. Spectacular! Scrolling through a page via the touch interface is a tick smoother than with the Java version. And another good feature: With the online bookmark synch option, getting the bookmarks and the six start page pans for quick access to the Symbian app is done in a few seconds. Very nicely done, Opera, thanks a lot!  BTW: No need to go to an appstore to get it, just open any browser on the mobile device, head over to www.operamini.com and download it right from there. Via IntoMobile
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


MWC 2011 - Flights and Hotels Still Cheap
A little note to those today playing with the thought of attending the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February 2011. If you think about going, make sure you book your flight and hotel soon. So far, flights are still available for reasonable prices and hotel and hostal rooms can still be hade for double digit prices. If previous years are any indication it won't hold for long and prices are likely to go up significantly soon. Of course as every year I will be at the Wiley booth (my publisher) on one of the days to talk to readers and friends. Would be great to meet you there!
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Opera Mini Browser Now Native on Symbian
I've been an Opera Mini web browser fan ever since it has first appeared as a Java application on the first Symbian phones as even on mid-range phones it makes browsing lightning fast. Another reason for me using it is that it keeps my costs for mobile data down when I travel abroad as it uses a network side compression server. But even on high end phones, the mini's compression techniques have its advantages as no matter how powerful the device is, compressed data is still downloaded and rendered much more quickly. Try browsing with a normal browser in a train with a patchy network outside or just GPRS or EDGE coverage and the advantages are even more profound. Over the years, Opera has added native mini's for Android and the iPhone but so far, it always remained a Java application on Symbian. Not that I particularly minded, as the speed was just stunning, despite a Java interpreter between the browser and the phone. But now Opera seems to have changed its mind and now also offers a first native beta for Symbian. I gave it a try on a current Symbian^3 phone and it looks almost exactly identical to the Java version. Once loaded I'd say it's hard to spot the difference. As Opera mentions in the press release, the native version starts much faster than the Java version, I'd say it's up and running in a second. Spectacular! Scrolling through a page via the touch interface is a tick smoother than with the Java version. And another good feature: With the online bookmark synch option, getting the bookmarks and the six start page pans for quick access to the Symbian app is done in a few seconds. Very nicely done, Opera, thanks a lot!  BTW: No need to go to an appstore to get it, just open any browser on the mobile device, head over to www.operamini.com and download it right from there. Via IntoMobile
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Apple - incremental products, incremental profit Top
A very quick post... Apple is now in an extremely happy place and unusual place. It has worked out a magic formula (big fan base, good products, expectations of pricing), where it can pretty much guarantee that it can earn at least $200 of gross margin on any mid-to-high end product it sells - iPhones, Macs, iPads and so on. So as long as there is a decent-sized market, at low enough risk, it can afford to treat certain new things as "projects" even though they may not be game-changing. If they do change the game, even better. For example - the iPad. Even if it only sold 10 million, Apple would be up perhaps $2bn in gross profit. Even if the R&D upfront was $500m, that's still a pretty decent return. And so now, everyone is talking about a Verizon iPhone. A year or so ago, I would have been skeptical - a CDMA iPhone would have been a risky distraction. Now... with an extra year's traction, it seems like 10m units is pretty much a baseline. And I'll assume the cost/profit structure will look pretty similar to the HSPA ones. In other words, it's money in the bank, assuming that nothing goes horribly wrong. The only argument against it might be the opportunity cost - could those engineers be doing something *even more profitable*. But I'd imagine the company has had the time & resources to get its hiring aligned with its business opportunities. By the same token.... could Apple make & sell 10m LTE iPhones, at $200+ gross margin, at equivalent low risk next year? No. And probably not in 2012 either. There's not an installed base of existing customers to sell to, the technology isn't mature, the chipsets expensive and the user experience would likely have issues that would mean something "going horribly wrong" would be much higher probability. If it can stop its margins creeping down , I'm sure there are plenty more alternative 10-30m unit segments that Apple can target for its next few billion, while it's waiting for LTE to make the cut.
 
Sprint's mobile wallet sounds sensible Top
I'm not generally a big believer in mobile payment solutions for developed-world countries. Cash, cards and online payments already work perfectly well for me and other people, thanks. I don't need to "store value" in my phone, I don't want to scan it across an NFC reader, and I certainly don't want my operator bumping up inflation by taking a slice of everything I spend. I especially don't buy the "bill it to my phone bill" concept of mobile payments - like many people, I have a very different relationship with my bank & my telco(s) and I'm quite happy to keep it that way. You'd have to be crazy to have a financial-services arrangement with an operator which tied it to an access account provision, although if it was access-independent it might make a more sensible proposition. There's also no way I'd exclusively use my phone for payment when travelling, unless all the transaction data was very explicitly zero-rated for roaming, and I had a guarantee of 100% coverage. I'm also very happy with my existing payment mechanisms - Visa, Paypal, Mastercard, Amex and so forth. I might set up another, but I'd need a lot of persuasion. But, Sprint's announcement of its mobile wallet solution is much more appealing - you get to keep all your existing accounts, but get access to them through your phone. Makes sense. Adds to what people already have, doesn't try to substitute it. Doesn't stop you carrying a physical wallet around as well as a virtual one if you choose. Doesn't try to bill things to your phone account. Maybe over time, if it's got a good UI and proves itself, you might change your approach to physical payments, some or all of the time. That's fair enough. In other words, it doesn't force a behavioural change, but works with what people are already happy with. Which is good. Now it's not 100% clear to me what the business model is, but in terms of "will this fly", my gut feel is that it has 100x the chances of all the various NFC and other mobile payments nonsense that's been trotted out in recent years. Bottom line is that unlike most people in the industry, Sprint has actually bothered to look up the dictionary definition of a wallet: something that contains various different payment mechanisms from third parties. Edit - looks like AT&T is also entering the fray . But they are going to go for the bill-to-the-phone approach. Let's see if people are actually prepared to wear that. My money's on "no" - although I'd rather not use an MNO-powered betting application & account....
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Confronting the Wireless Charger Problem Top
 
Text4Baby Top
Here's a quick post about a very simple but potentially powerful mobile service I recently heard about at the Forum Oxford Technology conference: Text4Baby , a service in the US for pregant mothers, sends SMS messages each week during and after their pregnancy with tips and advice on what should be happening at around this time of the pregnancy and tips concerning the mother's and baby's health. A great service for something that doesn't come with a manual as someone noted during the conference. While this is an innitiative in the US, I wonder if there are similar ideas in other countries!? If you know, please leave a comment.
 
Clearwire's Sievert talks about selling spectrum and testing LTE Top
 
Moto Looks to Diversify, Build on Android Success Top
 
Alca-Lu: Tiered mobile data pricing doesn't translate into operator profitability Top
 
Qwest aims to ease wireless backhaul migration pain Top
 
Facebook dominating mobile broadband traffic on 3's UK network Top
 
Broadcom looks for swift entry into femtocell market with Percello buy Top
 
Sprint's mobile wallet sounds sensible Top
I'm not generally a big believer in mobile payment solutions for developed-world countries. Cash, cards and online payments already work perfectly well for me and other people, thanks. I don't need to "store value" in my phone, I don't want to scan it across an NFC reader, and I certainly don't want my operator bumping up inflation by taking a slice of everything I spend. I especially don't buy the "bill it to my phone bill" concept of mobile payments - like many people, I have a very different relationship with my bank & my telco(s) and I'm quite happy to keep it that way. You'd have to be crazy to have a financial-services arrangement with an operator which tied it to an access account provision, although if it was access-independent it might make a more sensible proposition. There's also no way I'd exclusively use my phone for payment when travelling, unless all the transaction data was very explicitly zero-rated for roaming, and I had a guarantee of 100% coverage. I'm also very happy with my existing payment mechanisms - Visa, Paypal, Mastercard, Amex and so forth. I might set up another, but I'd need a lot of persuasion. But, Sprint's announcement of its mobile wallet solution is much more appealing - you get to keep all your existing accounts, but get access to them through your phone. Makes sense. Adds to what people already have, doesn't try to substitute it. Doesn't stop you carrying a physical wallet around as well as a virtual one if you choose. Doesn't try to bill things to your phone account. Maybe over time, if it's got a good UI and proves itself, you might change your approach to physical payments, some or all of the time. That's fair enough. In other words, it doesn't force a behavioural change, but works with what people are already happy with. Which is good. Now it's not 100% clear to me what the business model is, but in terms of "will this fly", my gut feel is that it has 100x the chances of all the various NFC and other mobile payments nonsense that's been trotted out in recent years. Bottom line is that unlike most people in the industry, Sprint has actually bothered to look up the dictionary definition of a wallet: something that contains various different payment mechanisms from third parties.
 
Paolini: Data revenues to surpass voice revenues at DoCoMo Top
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Ray Ozzie, the so-called "post PC" era, and the naivete of the software industry Top
A post on ForumOxford pointed me towards Ray Ozzie's monologue about Microsoft and the future direction of the IT industry, " Dawn of a New Day ". Beautifully-written, yes. And containing much wisdom and knowledge. But displaying, once again, the arrogance of the software mindset which believes it has conquered physics. Contrast this with Jobs' comment last week: " We create our own A4 chip, our own software, our own battery chemistry, our own enclosure, our own everything " The idea that software engineering has the capability of beating hard limits and challenges in RF, power management, silicon and so on is myopic. Apple understands this and works to juggle all of them appropriately. (As does RIM, incidentally). But then Apple value hardware at least as much as software, from milled aluminium shells to customised bits of radio front-ends. Ozzie assumes that wireless networks will be fast and pervasive. But what the software crowd (whether it's in Redmond, Silicon Valley or London) fails to comprehend is that there are no 3G networks to connect tablets or clouds to, in most parts of the world. Nor the money to justify the build-out in the depth needed to realise Ozzie's vision. Nor the willingness to support subscription-based business models. Even in the developed world, ubiquitous, high-performance indoor networks would need fibre everywhere for WiFi or femtos. And lets not even touch on the legal and regulatory hurdles. But good luck trying to persuade the GSMA to ditch roaming charges for data, specially for cloud devices. Maybe give the WTO a call and see if they can sort it out over the next decade or two? Until then, I'll keep my local storage and processing, thank you very much. It's interesting that none of the best-known software billionaires talk about the "post-PC era". Maybe that's perhaps because, through their non-IT philanthropic work, they get exposure to true "ecosystems", ones based on far more complexity than Ozzie's filtered view of computing. We're not yet living in a post-malaria world, despite Gates' heroic efforts through his Foundation. At a recent conference, I crossed swords with a well-known and outspoken financial analyst, who complained that PCs hadn't evolved in 20 years. I pointed out that sharks & crocodiles haven't evolved in over 100 million. They are still occupying and controlling their own (literal) ecosystems rather better than humanity does with its. Ozzies's comment about devices that "They're instantly usable, interchangeable, and trivially replaceable without loss " also displays the overwhelming naivete of the software mindset. It ignores that fact that end-users (you know, customers) like expensive, unique and tangible hardware. It performs many social and behavioural functions, not just acting as a cloud-services end-point. Software isn't loved and cherished, and neither will cloud services be. Software isn't polished, used as a status symbol, or oohed-and-aahed over. Nobody walks across a cafe to excitedly ask a stranger if they've *really* got the new OS7.3. Yes, there will be some "trivially replaceable" devices (3G dongles, for example, already are), but anything truly personal will stay expensive. Again, Apple understands this - as does Nokia, squeezing out an extra few bucks at the low-end, differentiating hardware against no-brand competitors in the developing world. Telecom dinosaurs refer to "dumb pipes". I predict that software/cloud dinosaurs will refer to "dumb devices". Both are wrong. (Yes, I know - Larry Ellison already got this one wrong in the 1990s) Yes, cloud services will be more important and we'll see more devices accessing them, or optimised for them. But the notion that this means that the world is somehow destined for a "post PC" era remains as risible now as it did a year or two ago, when the term was first coined.
 
Redundancy And A Universal Charger Top
As a frequent traveler there are some things that are always in my suitcase and that are never taken out when I am at home so I won't forget them on the next trip. One of those things is a spare charger for my mobile phones. When I recently arrived in Oxford I noticed that I forgot to put the usual charger in my backpack. Already thinking that I'd have to go out and by a charger for the week I suddenly remembered that I have a spare one in the suitcase. So much for redundancy! Sure, you wouldn't have this problem with recent phones, most of them now chargable over USB. And with universal chargers now coming to the market, things are getting even simpler and, as a side note, also a bit more environment friendly.
 
Sprint Tackles Browser-Based Apps Top
 
4GWorld 2010 Conference Report - Femtocells, Small Cells and LTE feature prominently Top
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Sprint's mobile wallet sounds sensible
I'm not generally a big believer in mobile payment solutions for developed-world countries. Cash, cards and online payments already work perfectly well for me and other people, thanks. I don't need to "store value" in my phone, I don't want to scan it across an NFC reader, and I certainly don't want my operator bumping up inflation by taking a slice of everything I spend. I especially don't buy the "bill it to my phone bill" concept of mobile payments - like many people, I have a very different relationship with my bank & my telco(s) and I'm quite happy to keep it that way. You'd have to be crazy to have a financial-services arrangement with an operator which tied it to an access account provision, although if it was access-independent it might make a more sensible proposition. There's also no way I'd exclusively use my phone for payment when travelling, unless all the transaction data was very explicitly zero-rated for roaming, and I had a guarantee of 100% coverage. I'm also very happy with my existing payment mechanisms - Visa, Paypal, Mastercard, Amex and so forth. I might set up another, but I'd need a lot of persuasion. But, Sprint's announcement of its mobile wallet solution is much more appealing - you get to keep all your existing accounts, but get access to them through your phone. Makes sense. Adds to what people already have, doesn't try to substitute it. Doesn't stop you carrying a physical wallet around as well as a virtual one if you choose. Doesn't try to bill things to your phone account. Maybe over time, if it's got a good UI and proves itself, you might change your approach to physical payments, some or all of the time. That's fair enough. In other words, it doesn't force a behavioural change, but works with what people are already happy with. Which is good. Now it's not 100% clear to me what the business model is, but in terms of "will this fly", my gut feel is that it has 100x the chances of all the various NFC and other mobile payments nonsense that's been trotted out in recent years. Bottom line is that unlike most people in the industry, Sprint has actually bothered to look up the dictionary definition of a wallet: something that contains various different payment mechanisms from third parties.
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

Yahoo! Alerts
My Alerts

The latest from Telecom-Funda


Sprint Gives 'Leapfrog' Details Top
 
Option Drops Complaints Against Huawei Top
 
Buy Tickets Online - Abroad And Without A Printer Top
Every now and then I'd like to buy a ticket online when I am traveling, for a theater play, for a bus ride, for the next train trip, a museum ticket, etc. The difficult thing that is a showstopper sometimes is that you never know how to convert the virtual ticket to a real ticket afterwards. The good old way is to print out something and to present it somewhere, something that is not really feasible when you travel and don't have a printer you can use nearby. Some offer to send you a text (SMS) but they don't tell you in advance if that works with a foreign SIM card, too. Some offer a code to present, some work with your name and presenting the credit card, some send you a 2D bar code that you have to present on paper, others are progressive and allow it to be shown on the mobile phone, etc. etc. Quite a chaos, really. Some more thought around how foreigners can buy a product visiting the country and clear information before the sales process of how the real product can be collected afterwords would be really good.
 
It May be Ready for AARP Membership, but DSL's Productive Life Continues Top
 
Juniper Preaches Smartphone Security Services Top
 
Broadcom to Buy Femto Chip Startup for $86M Top
 
Ray Ozzie, the so-called "post PC" era, and the naivete of the software industry Top
A post on ForumOxford pointed me towards Ray Ozzie's monologue about Microsoft and the future direction of the IT industry, " Dawn of a New Day ". Beautifully-written, yes. And containing much wisdom and knowledge. But displaying, once again, the arrogance of the software mindset which believes it has conquered physics. Contrast this with Jobs' comment last week: " We create our own A4 chip, our own software, our own battery chemistry, our own enclosure, our own everything " The idea that software engineering has the capability of beating hard limits and challenges in RF, power management, silicon and so on is myopic. Apple understands this and works to juggle all of them appropriately. (As does RIM, incidentally). But then Apple value hardware at least as much as software, from milled aluminium shells to customised bits of radio front-ends. Ozzie assumes that wireless networks will be fast and pervasive. But what the software crowd (whether it's in Redmond, Silicon Valley or London) fails to comprehend is that there are no 3G networks to connect tablets or clouds to, in most parts of the world. Nor the money to justify the build-out in the depth needed to realise Ozzie's vision. Nor the willingness to support subscription-based business models. Even in the developed world, ubiquitous, high-performance indoor networks would need fibre everywhere for WiFi or femtos. And lets not even touch on the legal and regulatory hurdles. But good luck trying to persuade the GSMA to ditch roaming charges for data, specially for cloud devices. Maybe give the WTO a call and see if they can sort it out over the next decade or two? Until then, I'll keep my local storage and processing, thank you very much. It's interesting that none of the best-known software billionaires talk about the "post-PC era". Maybe that's perhaps because, through their non-IT philanthropic work, they get exposure to true "ecosystems", ones based on far more complexity than Ozzie's filtered view of computing. We're not yet living in a post-malaria world, despite Gates' heroic efforts through his Foundation. At a recent conference, I crossed swords with a well-known and outspoken financial analyst, who complained that PCs hadn't evolved in 20 years. I pointed out that sharks & crocodiles haven't evolved in over 100 million. They are still occupying and controlling their own (literal) ecosystems rather better than humanity does with its. Ozzies's comment about devices that "They're instantly usable, interchangeable, and trivially replaceable without loss " also displays the overwhelming naivete of the software mindset. It ignores that fact that end-users (you know, customers) like expensive, unique and tangible hardware. It performs many social and behavioural functions, not just acting as a cloud-services end-point. Software isn't loved and cherished, and neither will cloud services be. Software isn't polished, used as a status symbol, or oohed-and-aahed over. Nobody walks across a cafe to excitedly ask a stranger if they've *really* got the new OS7.3. Yes, there will be some "trivially replaceable" devices (3G dongles, for example, already are), but anything truly personal will stay expensive. Again, Apple understands this - as does Nokia, squeezing out an extra few bucks at the low-end, differentiating hardware against no-brand competitors in the developing world. Telecom dinosaurs refer to "dumb pipes". I predict that software/cloud dinosaurs will refer to "dumb devices". Both are wrong. (Yes, I know - Larry Ellison already got this one wrong in the 1990s) Yes, cloud services will be more important and we'll see more devices accessing them, or optimised for them. But the notion that this means that the world is somehow destined for a "post PC" era remains as risible now as it did a year or two ago, when the term was first coined.
 
Redundancy And A Universal Charger Top
As a frequent traveler there are some things that are always in my suitcase and that are never taken out when I am at home so I won't forget them on the next trip. One of those things is a spare charger for my mobile phones. When I recently arrived in Oxford I noticed that I forgot to put the usual charger in my backpack. Already thinking that I'd have to go out and by a charger for the week I suddenly remembered that I have a spare one in the suitcase. So much for redundancy! Sure, you wouldn't have this problem with recent phones, most of them now chargable over USB. And with universal chargers now coming to the market, things are getting even simpler and, as a side note, also a bit more environment friendly.
 
Sprint Tackles Browser-Based Apps Top
 
4GWorld 2010 Conference Report - Femtocells, Small Cells and LTE feature prominently Top
 

CREATE MORE ALERTS:

Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted

Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope

Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more

News - Only the news you want, delivered!

Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more

Weather - Get today's weather conditions




You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089.