FCC demands to know every detail about Google Voice

FCC Logo

Yesterday, the Federal Communications Commission launched yet another inquiry into the Google Voice service, this time at the behest of a bi-partisan group of congresspersons who questioned Google's ability to block calls to rural telephone exchanges.

"We understand Google has asserted Google Voice is not a 'traditional' telephone service -- despite its use of 10-digit telephone numbers and its ability to connect calls between telephones through a local exchange carrier," members of the House of Representatives wrote to the FCC on Wednesday. "Instead, Google maintains it ought to be allowed to block calls to rural telephone exchanges -- a position we find ill conceived and unfair to our rural constituents."

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Why a Verizon iPhone wouldn't work (for Verizon)

Verizon

One of the most common remarks you'll see in iPhone-related discussion is the "If iPhone were on Verizon Wireless" comment. Though phrased differently, they're usually the same sentiment...discussing how much better the iPhone experience would be on Verizon, and about how many more people would become satisfied iPhone users.

Most people seem to agree that Verizon Wireless' data network is better.

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The roots of all evil: Apple, Google, Intel, and Microsoft

George C. Scott as Gen. George S. Patton

Americans love a winner, and will not tolerate a loser.

- General George S. Patton (as portrayed by George C. Scott)

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Facing down irrelevance: What Palm can learn from RAZR

RAZR in Pink

The half-life of any piece of modern electronics, which was once measured in years, is now barely a few months. It's no one's fault, of course, but it's a reality that vendors need to integrate into their own life cycle planning lest they get caught with the product line equivalent of grandma's wardrobe.

Simply put, the half-life of today's uber-hot phones is shrinking. Fast.

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FTC official dispels $11,000 anti-blogger fine as misinterpretation

US Capitol in Washington

When the US Federal Trade Commission last Monday published its amended Guidelines for commercial publishers' behavior, set to go into effect December 1, many sources ended up passing judgment on the document before having read it in its entirety. One misinterpretation that was passed around the blog-O-square like a hot potato was the notion that the FTC would impose an $11,000 fine for each offense where a blog failed to disclose its connections to the manufacturer of a product for which it posted a review.

One blogger, whose tagline is "an Internet entrepreneur who generates six figures online per year," chocked up the supposed fine as another example of the government's "infinite wisdom." Meanwhile, quite ironically, discussion of the fine on one of the world's more popular blogs managed to become newspaper material by way of the Washington Post.

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In-flight Wi-Fi: Everybody's doing it

airplane, spruce goose,

Aircell has made a commanding name for itself in in-flight Wi-Fi systems. In its first year offering GoGo InFlight Internet service, the company has secured Wi-Fi contracts with Virgin America, American Airlines, US Airways, Delta, AirTran, United, and others.

At the beginning of 2009, United announced that it would begin to offer Aircell's GoGo Wi-Fi on its transcontinental service between New York and California "in the second half of this year," and it has finally been able to deliver.

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FCC Chairman: Spectrum deficit could set wireless data back 50 years

FCC Chairman (designate) Julius Genachowski

"We are fast entering a world where mass-market mobile devices consume thousands of megabytes each month," FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski warned at CTIA Wireless yesterday. "So we must ask: what happens when every mobile user has an iPhone, a Palm Pre, a BlackBerry Tour, or whatever the next device is? What happens when we quadruple the number of subscribers with mobile broadband on their laptops or netbooks?

"The short answer: We will need a lot more spectrum."

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Microsoft to replace Works with ad-supported 'Office Starter 2010'

Microsoft Office 2010 'product key card'

In a bold new experiment for distributing Office that, quite surprisingly, does not involve Office Web Apps, Microsoft announced this afternoon its plans to let OEMs pre-install the full Office 2010 on new PCs, but enable it to run in a limited format until users purchase their licenses. That format, for the first time, will be ad-supported.

When Office 2010 premieres (the official date is still unknown at this point), a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed to Betanews, new Windows 7 PCs will be made available through participating OEMs (no list has been revealed yet) that contain, pre-installed, a product that will be known as Office Starter 2010. It will contain partly functional versions of Word and Excel -- or perhaps more accurately, it will appear to contain partly functional versions, because the complete Office 2010 software will be installed on these systems.

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Judge orders Google, publishers to start over on Books settlement

Google Books

In the wake of a Dept. of Justice Statement of Interest last month questioning whether Google had the right to negotiate a settlement deal on behalf of publishers that aren't direct parties to the deal -- and that may not even exist anymore -- the federal judge overseeing the case, Judge Denny Chin, ordered Google and publishers' groups to draft a completely revised settlement proposal by November 9.

At issue now is that several of the groups on whose behalf Google was claiming to be acting, actually do exist; and a number of them filed objections to the settlement, most recently on September 22, asking why they weren't made direct participants. Last September 2, Judge Chin ruled that groups representing photographers whose scanned works would be made public through Google Books, were too late in making their objections heard.

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Now that 7Digital supports US, Songbird can almost replace iTunes

Songbird logo

UK music store 7Digital is now open for business in the US, challenging iTunes with $7.77, DRM-free albums.

Online music store 7Digital officially gained support from all major labels in March of 2008, and has since enjoyed substantial growth by offering its platform as an API for developers to integrate into other services such as RIM's BlackBerry music download service and EMI's music discovery portal.

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Clever Adobe compilation trick sneaks Flash apps onto iPhone

Adobe Flash development tools logo

Up to now, Apple's prohibition against anyone's runtime modules from appearing on its iPhone without authorization has been one of two central reasons that Adobe's Flash video and Flash platform have not made their appearance there -- the other reason being simply that Steve Jobs doesn't like it.

But at its annual MAX developers' conference in Los Angeles this week, Adobe's engineers unveiled a surprise: It's planning a public beta release of Flash Professional CS5 that will go through a new and unique set of hoops to enable developers to write or export apps built for the Flash runtime, to run on the iPhone as native apps. The new Flash Pro will use a mechanism for Flash application developers to deploy their apps on the iPhone anyway, even without the Flash mobile runtime.

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AT&T's first Android phone: A Dell?

The smartphone that Dell is saying is not really its Mini 3i, at least not yet.

Dell has smartphones on the way, but it's not talking about them yet.

In fact, the first Android-powered smartphone on AT&T's network could be coming from Dell, according to reports Wednesday afternoon.

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Firefox 3.6 public beta slated for 10/14, promises faster startups, loads

Firefox 3.6 'graffiti' top story badge

Mozilla's stated goal for its next version of Firefox, first and foremost, is a perceivable improvement in the time it takes to do things, not just render pages. We saw a big performance jump in JavaScript execution and page rendering in Firefox 3.5; but for 3.6, the developers want to apply the same level of improvement to responsiveness and process activation.

Although all Mozilla daily builds -- even the "private" alphas -- are publicly downloadable, the public may be formally invited to render its opinions on version 3.6 on Wednesday, October 14. That's the decision made during a Mozilla planning meeting Monday.

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Qualcomm's FLO TV debuts its own mobile television

FLO TV Personal Television

Qualcomm subsidiary FLO TV, the company responsible for the MediaFLO mobile content delivery system used in Verizon V Cast Mobile TV and AT&T Mobile TV, has launched its first piece of branded hardware, the FLO TV Personal Television.

The device looks almost exactly like a smartphone or a touchscreen media player, and has the specs to match. The main difference, of course, is that the FLO TV Personal Television is built with the single purpose of watching subscription FLO TV streams. The $249.99 TV is made by HTC, has a 3.5" capacitive touchscreen, and built-in stereo speakers.

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Fake entries in new e-mail/password lists point to unsophisticated phishing

Phishing

If last weekend's unsolicited posting of about 10,000 supposed Hotmail addresses and passwords to a legitimate developers' Web site did not contain some addresses that were fake, the theory that a hacker may have obtained those addresses through an attack on Microsoft's servers might continue to hold water. That theory lost ground today, after more addresses from major services other than Hotmail -- including Gmail, Yahoo, AOL, Earthlink, and Comcast -- appeared without warrant on Pastebin.com, a site for developers to share debugging information.

In what could be the first publicly shared forensic report on the original Hotmail list, security researcher Bogdan Calin with server security software maker Acunetix reported that of the 10,028 entries that appeared in that list (which was apparently partial, including usernames that only began with A and B), 185 of the entries actually had blank passwords. That in and of itself could not have come from a server's own list of valid passwords, thus lending much credence to the theory that the responses came from a phishing scam.

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