Archive for the ‘Motorola’ Category

Bluetooth a confirmed addition to Pandora

Friday, May 30th, 2008

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Not much else to say beyond the title of this one — MWeston has recently confirmed over at the GP32X boards that Bluetooth will indeed be included on the forthcoming Pandora mega-emulator. He noted that BT was added because of an exceptional deal they landed and to “make competing devices look that much less interesting.” Right, so what exactly is this bundle of awesomeness competing against exactly?

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Apple patents systems to warn of impending dropped calls, track down your keys

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

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As always, Apple is busy at the patent office this week, with two recently uncovered filings to make life just a little bit easier for Mr. Joe Person Man. The first of these is a system to track how far away you are from a cell tower, and to warn you via your phone when you’re about to drop your call — with similar applications for GPS and WiFi devices. The other patent is a Bluetooth-based system to track down lost objects like keys or your Bluetooth headset via the age old method of “you’re getting hotter″ and you’re getting colder.” Sure, Apple’s version might have a fancy readout on the phone display, but it’s the same basic principle — no triangulation going on here. Of course, Apple patents all sorts of crazy stuff that never makes it to market, but at least these two have a semblance of possibility.

[Thanks, Mark]

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Original post by Paul Miller

I-O Data rolls out mobile Bluetooth keyboard

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

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Think that keyboard on your subnote is cramped? Try blasting out 115 words-per-minute on this thing. I-O Data has just revealed an absurdly diminutive new keyboard with built-in Bluetooth that has a real thing for hooking up with handsets. Nah, it’s not nearly as cool as having a ‘board on your crotch, but it’s a respectable (and way more modest) alternative.

[Via Pocket-lint]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Logitech’s new Pure-Fi Mobile speakers do it Bluetooth style

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

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There’s no dearth of Bluetooth-based wireless speakers out there, but Logitech put a nice bit of polish to this new Pure-Fi Mobile set, which is always appreciated. The A2DP stereo manages 12 hours of battery off of rechargeable batteries, and can work as a speakerphone with its built-in noise canceling mic. You can charge it up via USB or a wall jack, and there’s of course an aux-in jack when you’re not feeling in the wireless mood. Expect this one to hit Europe and the States in June for $150.

[Via Electronista]

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Original post by Paul Miller

Pure-Fi Mobile Speaker System Streams Sounds From Your Pocket

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Bluetooth enabled mobile speaker system promises cable free fun.

Original post by Mike Slocombe

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Rumors

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

OCS 2007 R2I’ve heard from various sources about Office Communications Server 2007 R2 coming soon. I’m a member of the Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 MVP team, so I’m privy to information that I cannot divulge at this moment due to NDA requirements. In fact, I hadn′t planned on blogging this at all had I not come across a few posts online talking about OCS 2007 R2. Other sources outside the Microsoft MVP community were also asking me if I knew anything about R2.

There are several rumors milling about what features OCS 2007 R2 would contain, including this link on Network World. Another website, the IT-Pro Knowledge blog claims, "The R2 release is going to contain contain a lot of the features that we have been waiting for. especially about telephony handeling and routing. I saw some screenshoots of the new telephony switchboard, and another interface for group IM." He then posts a follow-up blog post claiming to know the OCS 2007, OCS 2007 R2, and even OCS 2009 roadmap. The site claims "OCS 2007 R2 is not officially announced yet, so there is no official release date of the product. My sources do say that its second half of 2008, and targeted for october-november release." and adds that OCS 2009 will come out the second half of 2009.

Alex Lewis at Network World speculates that OCS 2007 R2, "might also include the more standard SIP over UDP as an option." As I wrote in my OCS 2007 review, there is a lack of integration of OCS 2007 and Exchange 2007 UM with all the various flavors of Asterisk, a popular open source phone system. Unfortunately, Asterisk only supports SIP over UDP and Exchange 2007 UM requires SIP over TCP. I did write about some workarounds, but nevertheless, SIP over UDP would be big news for the Asterisk community if indeed OCS 2007 R2 adds this.

So does Office Communications Server 2007 R2 exist? I cannot comment. Will it launch this year. Can’t comment. Will it add 64-bit support and continue to support 32-bit? Can’t comment. Will it support SIP over UDP and easier Asterisk integration? Can’t comment. Is there a OCS 2009 coming? Can’t comment.

I can say that a new version of OCS is coming, but so is a new version of Office, Vista, Windows 2008, etc. etc. Yeah, yeah, I know, I’m such a tease.


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Original post by nafiz

Telcos Join Forces to Battle Skype?

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

SkypeAccording to analysts at ThinkAnton (ThinkPanmure), AT&T and other international incumbents plan on launching a global Skype competitor.

"We believe that AT&T, in conjunction with perhaps 10-15 other incumbent operators such as British Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, and NTT, is preparing to launch, in 2009, a competitor of sorts to Skype. We believe that the motivation to do this would be to keep subscribers from completely disappearing, reducing win-back marketing costs."

Their key points the analysts stress is how "incumbent telephone operators have been losing wired access lines for a few years, to a variety of destinations: cellular, cable TV operators, competitive wireline carriers and, in a sense, also to IP telephony operators such as Skype."

They claim that the incumbent operators have been able to make up for these losses by entering new businesses such as cellular, DSL/fiber, and television.

Here’s the rest of the analyst report "teaser":

However, the loss of the long-time telephone number often means that the incumbent phone operator loses the relationship with the customer entirely. Why? Because the consumer can buy access for his VoIP service such as Skype from another source, such as cable modem, 3G cellular, WiMax, or a competitive DSL/fiber carrier. If this happens, the cost to win back this subscriber can be disproportionately high, if it does ever occur.

As a result, we believe that these incumbent operators will join together in the launch of their own de-facto Skype competitor, so that they may keep as many customer relationships as possible. The service would be free when calling any other subscriber of the consortium, consisting of perhaps 10-15 incumbent carriers around the world.

We believe the likely "hook" for the consumer would be that you have to buy your access service-such as DSL, fiber or, for that matter, 3G-from the incumbent. That way, the incumbent, while losing some telephone revenue, can use the power of the DSL line to upgrade the customer to IPTV or to add one or more cellular subscriptions down the road.

Speaking of cellular, we believe this concept will also eventually be extended to cellular. In this manner, the consumer would purchase 3G such as HSPA and in the future LTE, from the incumbent cellular operator, on top of which the consumer would use this Skype-like service. We believe this is going to happen some time after this service has been implemented on DSL/fiber. We wrote about this concept in 2003, but it appears we were a few years ahead of our time.

Each member of this consortium such as AT&T, Deutsche Telekom, British Telecom, or NTT would have the right and ability to brand this service any way it wants. We believe some would choose to do it under an easily-identifiable existing name, while others may want to use a brand that is more differentiated, so as to separate the consumer perception from the regular POTS (plain old telephone system). In order to accomplish uniformity of this service, we believe these operators would have to agree on a common software system, so bug-fixes can be globally implemented, universally, with the pressing of an update button from one central point.

As I told some fellow TMCers, this is utter hogwash and pure speculation. Skype hasn’t been undercutting the incumbents landlines or their business revenue. People have been going to cellphones if anything, which has reduced revenue from traditional landlines. Why make a long-distance call from your landline when you have a free bucket of minutes on your cell phone?

Further, the incumbents own both the last mile and termination networks, so they can do cheap international dialing, which is Skype’s "break & butter" if they truly wanted to. And they could do cheap international dialing without the need for their customer based to install some PC VoIP software that competes with Skype. Simply pick up your cordless landline phone and dial. No need to boot up your PC, run the VoIP app, and put on a headset or use some USB-based phone device.

That said, there could be some synergies if the incumbents did launch a VoIP softphone application. For example, they could blast the call to your regular landline, the VoIP softphone, and your mobile phone simultaneously. Then you could get take the call using any of these 3 communication methods. Further, if you’re sitting at your PC or laptop away from the phone or on the road even, you can see CallerID info and decide to accept or reject the call.

There might be some other interesting features as well, but if the incumbents think that simply "cheaper" minutes are what people want, they’ll be sorely mistaken, especially with "free" solutions available from companies like Jajah. Users want convenience and they want features. And if the incumbents offer 100% free calling via this VoIP application to anyone "in network" then I suppose this would compete with Skype’s free PC-to-PC calling. But again, the carriers could simply "peer" with one another, agree to carry the call free of charge, and then send the call over the regular PSTN and not the public Internet. The quality is more guaranteed and unlike a VoIP application it doesn’t require special hardware or software at the customer’s end.

There is one caveat though. Even if the carriers agree to "peer" and not charge monies for carrying a call from another carrier, the telco industry is still heavily regulated and there will potentially still be some costs incurred for any call. It certainly could be more cost effective for the carriers to bypass these "regulations" by carrying the calls over VoIP, which as of right now the government has been relatively hands-off. The carriers could potentially create a massive global VoIP peering network. Many carriers already do transport calls over IP to other carriers, so I still think the key is the last mile. After all, do you see grandma running to her PC to pick up a &quotcheaper&quot call from England or Sri Lanka using her VoIP softphone? I don’t think do. Nor do I see her using a PC to make &quotcheaper&quot outbound calls.

Maybe I’m off my rocker. Tell me your thoughts…


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Original post by nafiz

The Biggest Loser Week 8

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Continuing my updates for my local gym’s The Biggest Loser competition, here’s Week #8.

Week 1 (Jan 14th) - weighed in at 198lbs (original weight)
Week 2 (Jan 21st) - weighed in at 189lbs (-9 lbs)
Week 3 (Jan 28th) - weighted in at 189lbs (0 change)
Week 4 (Feb 4th) - weighed in at 186lbs (-3 lbs)
Week 5 (Feb 11th) - weighed in at 186lbs (0 change)
Week 6 (Feb 18th) - weighed in at 184lbs (-2 lbs).
Week 7 (Feb 25th) - weighed in at 183lbs (-1 lbs).
Week 8 (March 3rd) - weighed in at 180lbs (-3 lbs).

Surprisingly, after I predicted my weight loss would slow down, I pulled a 3 pounder this week. This even though I was away this weekend in Maine and didn′t go to the gym for 4 days. Total percentage loss is 9.09%.


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Original post by nafiz

The Biggest Loser Week 7

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Continuing my updates for my local gym’s The Biggest Loser competition, here’s Week #7.

Week 1 (Jan 14th) - weighed in at 198lbs (original weight)
Week 2 (Jan 21st) - weighed in at 189lbs (-9 lbs)
Week 3 (Jan 28th) - weighted in at 189lbs (0 change)
Week 4 (Feb 4th) - weighed in at 186lbs (-3 lbs)
Week 5 (Feb 11th) - weighed in at 186lbs (0 change)
Week 6 (Feb 18th) - weighed in at 184lbs (-2 lbs).
Week 7 (Feb 25th) - weighed in at 183lbs (-1 lbs).

My weight loss has slowed down with just 6 more weeks to go. The good news is that I′ve lost 15lbs with a fantastic 7.57% weight loss. The even better news is that I’m currently in 1st place for the Biggest Loser competition with 15 total competitors. My wife is actually in 2nd place. Guess the Keating family is kicking some serious butt!

Now for the bad news. I injured my right shoulder about 8 days ago and haven’t been able to do much upper body weight training. I think I would be down another 3lbs if not for my shoulder. I′m sure my wife would tell me to stop complaining since I′m in 1st place. I love competition and the thrill of victory but more importantly, when I set me mind to something I just want to do the very best I can regardless if I am competing against others. Part of it is pride, part of it is stubbornness, and part of it is ego.

On top of it all, I caught a nasty cold this week. I woke up this morning and my ears were clogged from the congestion. I took a shot of NyQuil and headed off to my 7:30am morning training session with just a granola bar in my stomach. I usually work out at night but I wanted to work with this particular trainer and she could only do early mornings.

The trainer warned me that people that aren’t used to working out in the mornings can feel light-headed. I thought to myself "Me? Light-headed? Bah! I’ve never felt light-headed in my life from a gym workout. Only girlie men get light-headed". Well, word to the wise - when you take a shot of NyQuil on an empty stomach, you have a cold, then run 6.5mph for 5 minutes and then have a trainer push you to your limit, you are going to feel light-headed.

I was in the middle of doing a drop set exercise when I couldn’t lift the weights and was struggling way more than I should have. Trainer looks at me and says "Are you feeling ok? You look very pale". I told her I was fine, but could understand why I couldn’t life the weights since they were very light. My stubbornness and never give up mentality was pushing me way beyond mere mortals. Ok, off the ego trip. So anyway, I started to feel light-headed, told her I just needed a second and she then asked if I wanted a Gatorade, which I accepted. By the time she got back, she said "You are very pale. I think you need to lay down." So I swallowed my Irish pride and laid down with my feet up for 5 minutes. The trainer says this happens all the time with people that aren′t used to working out in the morning. Still, my ego was a little bruised. I told her about the shot of NyQuil and she said "No wonder why you’re light-headed. Working out will increase the speed of the absorption and you have a head cold." After my 5 min break from my continuous circuit training, I got back on the machine. She asked me if I wanted to skip the last set and I told her no. I always finish what I start. I’m hearing Ronald Reagan saying in my ear, "There you go again - with that ego of yours."

Anyway, even with the injury I’m hoping to lose at least 1lb per week. I may have a few 0 weight changes, but I’m hoping to never have a weight gain. Wish me luck! And now back to your regularly scheduled program of VoIP & gadget news!


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Original post by nafiz

Biggest Loser Week 6

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Continuing my updates for my local gym’s The Biggest Loser competition, here’s Week #6.

Week 1 (Jan 14th) - weighed in at 198lbs (original weight)
Week 2 (Jan 21st) - weighed in at 189lbs (-9 lbs)
Week 3 (Jan 28th) - weighted in at 189lbs (0 change)
Week 4 (Feb 4th) - weighed in at 186lbs (-3 lbs)
Week 5 (Feb 11th) - weighed in at 186lbs (0 change)
Week 6 (Feb 18th) - weighed in at 184lbs (-2 lbs). I’m surprised I lost anything this week since I was away on vacation. Went to AAA 4 Diamond rated Rabbit Hill Inn in Vermont (gorgeous bed &amp breakfast by the way) and of course ate some calorie-rich food, including grilled beef sirloin &amp venision osso buco, rainbow trout, as well as some world-class desserts such as chocolate stout cake,&nbsp Northeast Kingdom Gateau (very rich &amp chocolatey), and some tasty chocolate truffles and pastries during their afternoon tea. I did however bust my butt on the treadmill last week in anticipation of eating badly on vacation. I guess it paid off.

Rabbit Hill Inn nailed a perfect score in the Select Registry and Zagat said of Rabbit Hill Inn: "This just might be the most romantic place on the planet."

I should mention that Rabbit Hill Inn has several unique Stave puzzles, which are like art pieces, which sucked both my wife and I into the lounge area for hours on end trying to solve. These puzzles are handcut and go for hundreds - even thousands of dollars. We spent a good deal of time in the two chairs by the window (pic below) putting together a Stave puzzle depicting an elephant. Hmm, sit on my butt for hours on end and still lose two pounds. Not that’s the way one should lose weight!
Rabbit Hill Inn


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Original post by Eric

AT&T hands out free hotspot access to broadband customers, ups its bandwidth

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

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AT&T, continuing to be the open, giving, and free-wheeling loony that it is, has decided to bestow cost-free access to its 10,000+ WiFi hotspots (for its broadband subscribers, that is). Effective immediately, if you’re tossing money the company’s way for any high-speed access, you can hop onto wireless networks in retail shops, restaurants, and airports free of charge… provided they’re AT&T networks. We know its a lot to handle, but get this — the telco has also upped the speeds of its U-verse service to a whopping 10 Mbps downstream / 1.5 Mbps upstream configuration, undoubtedly warming the hearts of AT&T subscribers hankering for a little more bandwidth to sustain their ever-increasing ‘net needs. It’s like the holidays all over again.

Read - AT&T To Deliver Free Access To Nation’s Largest Wi-Fi Network
Read - AT&T Boosts Bandwidth Choices and Speed with 10 Mbps Offer for U-verse Customers

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Hands-on / video with the LG.Philips massive 52-inch multi-touch display

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

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We just got back from the super sneaky secret LG.Philips room at CES where the totally Surface-esque 52-inch multitouch display was being shown off. The 1920 x 1080 screen rocks an interesting infrared image sensor to get data about hand placement and movement, and is capable of doing all kinds of gesture and area recognition from two separate touch points. Check the gallery to get a better view, and watch the video if you’re excited about the prospect of a flipping, zooming Google Earth on a screen with multitouch.

Gallery: Hands-on / video with the LG.Philips massive 52-inch multi-touch display

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky


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