India's "amazing" use of information technology outsourcing to jump-start its entire economy is a model that can also work elsewhere in the world, according to technologists from India, who spoke this week at a conference at the UN.
UNITED NATIONS (BetaNews) - "Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, and colleagues," said one of the speakers from India, Prahbat Sharma, addressing investors and other attendees at a conference called "United Nations Meets Web 2.0 and ICT Entrepreneurs."
Japanese carrier NTT DoCoMo, long known for pushing the mobile data envelope, reports that it attained 250Mbps speed in outdoor tests in February..
NTT DoCoMo already leads the world with mobile data rates available at 3.6Mbps to subscribers, expected to double next month through new enhancements.
Alltel Wireless launched a new social video service, Alltel Social Video, designed to give Alltel customers with video-capable phones access to videos collected from various sources, in an environment conducive to sharing.
The new service costs $2.99 per month and lets users share and rate videos from sites such as Break.com, AtomFilms and GrindTV.com. Subscribers have the ability to share favorite videos through the "Send-to-Friend" feature. Users also have the ability to create video playlists and customize a distribution list for each video.
AT&T today announced two new music services for its consumers to directly access their library of music directly through their phones.
The Make-UR-Tones service is designed to allow users to create and customize any ringtone, while Remix lets users access music from their home PC through a mobile phone. Napster Mobile will be available on more AT&T phones starting this summer, the company said.
If consumers aren't that thrilled yet with the quality and quantity of high-definition TV programming, maybe an emerging technology called switched digital video (SDV) will come to the rescue, suggests In-Stat.
How might SDV help? Essentially, the technology will distribute video more efficiently over cable TV coax lines, according to a new report from industry analyst firm In-Stat.
Nokia Siemens Networks has announced that it can double the data speeds possible on GSM/EDGE networks with only a software update.
By the third quarter of this year, the company claims it will be able to take existing EDGE-capable GSM networks to speeds up to 592 Kbps with its Downlink Dual-Carrier EDGE software solution.
Continuing its efforts to broaden the reach of its music service, Real on Thursday announced a deal with Cox, the third largest cable provider in the US.
Rhapsody already has a similar deal through Comcast, where it offers its radio service for free to their customers. Like that deal, users will also have the option to purchase plans to allow for unlimited streaming and downloads of music.
In an emerging effort called UNIWIKI, UNICEF is now using technologies ranging from open source software to SMS text messaging for helping young people from throughout the world to communicate via international social networking sites.
UNITED NATIONS (BetaNews) - To broaden out access to more geographic areas, communications are taking place not just via PCs but also through mobile phones and radios, according to UNICEF's Terra Weikel, speaking at the UN in New York Wednesday afternoon.
Though it was expected before year-end 2007, Adobe has opened the public beta of Photoshop Express, a Web-based version of its photo editing tool.
Users of Photoshop Express can upload photos directly or import their libraries from Facebook, Photobucket, and Picasa. Yahoo's Flickr is notably absent, as the popular photo sharing site is partnered with Picnik for its editing features.
As the race for perfect compliance with the Web Standards Project's latest test battery heats up, the two dark horses in the race claim a neck-and-neck finish ahead of Firefox and Internet Explorer.
Screenshots of perfect 100/100 scores on the Acid3 standards compliance test for apparently the most recent daily development builds, were posted on the team blogs for both the Safari browser for Mac and Windows and the Opera browser for Windows, at the very same hour early yesterday evening. It may have been perhaps the closest photo-finish since Intel and IBM claimed they discovered the hafnium formula for high-k dielectrics on the same morning.
In its rush to bring Safari to the Windows platform, it looks like Apple's legal department didn't quite do its job.
Apple enthusiast site 9to5mac discovered that within both the licensing agreement presented at install and the PDF which accompanies the products, Safari's license agreement still prohibits installs on computers that aren't "Apple-labeled." While this is most definitely an oversight on Cupertino's part, for the time being, any Windows install is technically illegal.
It builds CPUs, chipsets, and now with ATI, it builds graphics processors. So beginning today, AMD is radically reforming its marketing strategy, arguing now that it takes all three components together in harmony for customers to realize value.
Between now and April 7, AMD will be releasing its first triple-core processors, announced last September, along with performance upgrades to all three of its quad-core Phenom desktop processors. The success of their release may be completely dependent upon how well the company's new value proposition is received by consumers: What their CPUs may lack in performance against Intel's top-of-the-line, may be compensated when you add an AMD chipset-based motherboard and an ATI graphics card.
In a surprise announcement, the BitTorrent and Comcast will partner to address issues of network management and architecture, as well as content distribution.
BitTorrent could be described as the bane of the cable industry's existence when it comes to high-speed Internet services.
The suit that began in early summer against Verizon Wireless for charging customers a premium for entry into TV promotional contests has entered the courts.
The class action suit states that Verizon Wireless' 99 cent charge to enter contests related to TV shows such as "Deal or No Deal," and "Sole Survivor" via text message are tantamount to illegal gambling. While the games were free to enter online, since nothing was given in exchange for the 99 cent text message entrance fee, the contest violated what is known as the Standard Lottery Rule.
The Wall Street Journal reports that both Comcast and Time Warner Cable may be in talks with Sprint and Clearwire over forming a new company to run a network based on the technology.
The cable providers will provide funding for the venture, which will be operated by Sprint and Clearwire. It isn't known what the companies are looking for, but WiMAX could possibly give the carriers a mobile footprint.