Archive for the ‘telecom’ Category

Calling All Bloggers! Free Blogging on TMCnet.com

Friday, November 14th, 2008

This is a call out to all bloggers out there - Rich Tehrani, my boss has extended an open invitation to bloggers interested in blogging for TMCnet.com, a leading communications/telecom site according to Alexa, Quantcast, and others.

Today, TMC launches its Blog Aid program to help people out of work stay in the public eye - in order to improve their hiring prospects in a tough economy. In the last few months, many good marketers, PR people, engineers and others who have been laid off. These potential Blog Aid bloggers have a good deal of quality commentary and information to share which could be very useful to the TMC community of online readers.

TMC is offering these new bloggers - especially those working in the communications and technology industries, a venue to voice their thoughts on the spaces where they have expertise so as to allow them access to the 2-3 million global visitors who come to TMCnet on a monthly basis.

So if you enjoy writing about communications, telecom, VoIP, wireless, unified communications, mobile, etc. and want a wide audience, go check out Rich’s blog for more details.

p.s. The blogging platform is Movable Type 4.21.

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Original post by nafiz

HP’s Netbook/Mobile Package Plot

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

hp r.jpeg Hewlett-Packard wants to employ a new tactic to market netbook computers in the U.S., offering them at a steep discount to customers who sign-up for wireless service contracts.

This bundling of cellular service with PCs isn’t done in the U.S., but in Asia and Europe wireless carriers routinely knock hundreds of dollars off the price of a computer if a customer also buys a long-term service contract.

Maybe AT&T and Verizon Wireless are interested?

For example, Taiwanese carrier Far EasTone Communications sells the EEE PC from Asustek Computer for $29 with a two-year contract, rather than the usual price of $429.

Hewlett-Packard says the surging interest in netbooks — stripped-down computers that offer basic applications and Web browsing — is driving the move. With the economy fading and lots of high-speed cellphone networks available, the world’s largest computer seller by revenue sees bundling as a way to move more of its computers into customers’ homes.

Yesterday, H-P introduced three new netbooks, including a $399 HP Mini 1000 and a $699 HP Mini 1000 Vivienne Tam Edition, with flourishes like a “red with peony flower”-colored case.

More at the Wall Street Journal.

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Original post by nafiz

10-inch Mini 1000 appears on HP website

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

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HP’s obviously getting ready to expand its netbook line beyond the well-received Mini-Note 2133 — the company recently started teasing the Vivienne Tam Digital Clutch, and now images and pricing for a “Mini 1000″ have appeared on the HP shopping site. As expected, the new rig is basically a non-glam version of the Digital Clutch, and specs appear to be right in line with what we’ve seen: 10-inch screen, sub-1-inch thickness, and 2.25-pound starting weight — and we’re guessing the Mini 1000 also gets the upgrade to an Intel Atom over the 2133′s VIA ʥ-M. Not bad at all for a starting price tag of $399 — hopefully we’ll find out a lot more soon.

[Via jkOnTheRun]

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Original post by Nilay Patel

HP announces Pavilion Verde and Pavilion Phoenix eco-PCs, 25-inch display

Monday, October 20th, 2008

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HP’s bringing a little fiesta to the green game this morning, announcing the new Energy Star-qualified Pavilion Verde a6645f (pictured) and the Pavilion Phoenix Special Edition a6655f desktops along with the new �c 25.5-inch display. Both the $579 Circuit City-exclusive Verde and $659 Best Buy-exclusive Phoenix claim a 45-percent energy savings over traditional PCs and sport 5GB of RAM, a LightScribe dual-layer burner, and Vista Home Premium, but the Phoenix is the hotrod of the pair, packing an AMD Phenom X4 9150e quad-core processor over the Verdes′ Athlon X2 4850e dual-core unit. The � display seems nice and flexible, with HDMI inputs, a 15-in-1 card reader, 2.0 megapixel webcam and multiple USB ports, but we’ll wait for specs a little more detailed than “fast” response time and “high” brightness before we plunk down our $599. Both machines should hit their respective big-box stores on November 9th, and the display should be out now — check it out after the break.

Continue reading HP announces Pavilion Verde and Pavilion Phoenix eco-PCs, 25-inch display

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Rohm brings super-bright OLED out of the shadows, literally

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

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Kyoto-based company Rohm impressed us at last year’s CEATEC with a mega-tiny OLED display but it didn’t rest on its laurels. A larger prototype exhibited this year emitted ambient light at 3,000 to 4,000cd/m² and a brief flash at 100,000cd/m² — that’s respectively 10 and 250 times the brightness of a typical LCD display. But the impressive bit is this: nothing illuminated cast a shadow. Obviously a light like that is a poor match for haunted houses or a romantic restaurant, but surgeons use shadowless lamps at the operating table, so there are applications. The short shelf life of OLED materials is still a nagging disadvantage, but as Dr. Eldon Tyrell would say: “the light that burns twice as bright burns half as long, and you have burned so very, very brightly.” Then again, he was talking about cybernetic killing machines, so, maybe not such a great endorsement.

[Thanks, Erik]

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Original post by Samuel Axon

Fujitsu-Siemens quietly intros Stylistic ST6012 tablet PC

Monday, September 29th, 2008

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Now that we think about it, it’s been a hot minute since we’ve seen a new Stylistic tablet flow from the doors of Fujitsu-Siemens, but it has finally hit back with a new unit to keep the family alive. The Centrino 2-based ST6012 has been revealed on the firm’s website without much fanfare, though the specs are decent enough. We’re talking a Core 2 Duo SU9400 ULV processor, 12.1-inch WXGA (1,280 x 800) non-glare display, up to 4GB of RAM, optional WiFi / WWAN / Bluetooth modules, your choice of a 64GB SSD / 120GB to 320GB HDD, a built-in multicard reader, biometric scanner and a rather industrial motif. Mum’s the word on a price and release, and quite honestly, we can′t imagine those details ever being blasted from the rooftops.

[Via TabletPCReview]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Sprint and Intel signing up Baltimore-area XOHM testers

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

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Back in June, we heard that Sprint would be going live with its XOHM WiMAX service in Baltimore, um, this month. As of today, it’s pretty clear that the service won’t be rolled out fully before October dawns, but at least some progress is being made. Based on a survey sent out to select (read: lucky) Baltimore-area residents, it seems that Intel and Sprint are willing to give away free laptops in order to trial the XOHM service in the city. Unfortunately, the lappies won’t even be given out until late October, and the trial itself is set to last 30 days, so frankly, we’ll be lucky to see XOHM hit the general populace before Santa takes to the friendly skies. Though, why are we not surprised?

[Thanks, Anonymous]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Wilmington, NC kills analog dead as broadcasters go all-digital

Monday, September 8th, 2008

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Wilmington, NC had the pleasure of being the nation’s first DTV transition test market, and now it has officially become the first market in the nation to flip the kill switch on analog. As of noon ET today, the Wilmington area entered the digital frontier, and initial reports suggest that things are going fairly swimmingly. Granted, “a few” viewers were still “struggling” to see the signal (read: not at all prepared for the change), but at least the world didn’t completely implode or anything. Not like we can really avoid that scenario come Wednesday, but hey, an extra 24 or so hours to live it up ain’t half bad.

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Original post by Darren Murph

Controlling Asterisk based on Microsoft OCS 2007 user’s presence

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Paul Adams contacted me recently since he’s been reading my posts about Asterisk and ‘Microsoft OCS 2007′ integration.

Paul wrote an interesting application that enables call queuing that ‘respects’ OCS presence. That is, if the agent’s OCS status is “Busy”, “Away” or “Do not Disturb”, don’t send them a call from the call queue. Leveraging Asterisk.NET &amp the Microsoft OCS development tools - in C# (Visual Studio 2005) - he was successfully able to control calls in Asterisk 1.4 based on any user’s presence in OCS.

He wrote a simple test app that register’s with OCS 2007 for a single or multiple users presence. Whenever a users presence changes - OCS 2007 informs his app directly.

Using an agi entry in the Asterisk dial plan, Asterisk asks his app what to do next. Then - based on the user’s presence - the app tells Asterisk to queue the call or pass it to the user.

Eventually, he intends that the user can ‘register’ themselves for call queues (via a web page perhaps) - and this information will be used by the app to determine what calls should go to what users &amp if they are available right now or now. He explained that he intends to turn this app into a service and run it on his OCS or OCS Mediation server - and control incoming calls for his call center.

He told me, “I’m impressed with Asterisk.NET - and with the tools from Microsoft - they have made it really easy to monitor presence. It’s more difficult to CHANGE presence - but I’m not so worried about that right now.”

With information Paul sent me I was able to write a tutorial on controlling Asterisk based on an OCS user’s presence. Credit goes to Paul for this tutorial.

Controlling Asterisk based on an OCS 2007 User’s Presence Tutorial

This tutorial, although very basic, demonstrates is that it’s easy to add ‘OCS presence’ awareness to desktop apps written in Visual Studio. Then you can control Asterisk using Asterisk.NET.

This is not intended to be a professional, server-based solution (because it uses the desktop Office Communicator client) - there is other MS development API’s for OCS server interaction. Still, this provides some powerful presence integration with the popular Asterisk and OCS 2007 platforms.

Microsoft’s Office Communication Server 2007 does not include call queuing, (it is believed call queuing shall be included in R2 of OCS 2007 - but how it will function or what it will offer is not yet clear).

Asterisk can provide call queuing - but Asterisk is not aware of the presence of a user in OCS. So how do we control Asterisk to pass calls to OCS users based on their presence?

Tools needed:
- Microsoft’s C# - there is a free version of C# called the Express Version which maybe suitable for this - Visual Studio Professional 2005 or later works just as well.
- Asterisk.NET (1.4.0.1) - http://sourceforge.net/projects/asterisk-dotnet
- Microsoft Office Communicator 2007 SDK 
- Office Communicator Presence Controls

You can ‘tweak′ the example app provided with Asterisk.NET & demonstrate this can be done.

“Preparing your Persona”
Install the “Office Communicator Presence Controls”.
Now open “Program Files Microsoft Office Communicator 2007 Presence Controls”.

Here you will find a readme.doc. Pages 7 & 8 tells you how to compile the managed control - which will produce “PresenceControls.dll″.

Remember where this dll is - we′ll need it later. Close this project.

“Check Asterisk.NET works with your Asterisk server″

On your Asterisk server, edit your extensions.conf file and add these 2 lines in any context you wish to use:
exten => 200,1,agi(agi://<ip address of dev PC in here>/customivr)
exten =&gt 200,2,Hangup()

Open Asterisk.NET in Visual Studio - once loaded - you should see two projects inside it:

Asterisk.NET & Asterisk.NET.Test

Under the Asterisk.NET.Test project - view the code in “Program.cs”. Update the IP address &amp; login credentials to match your Asterisk server.

From the Solution Explorer panel, right-click on the Asterisk.2005 solution - and choose Rebuild. When it finishes - navigate in Windows to the “binRelease” subfolder under the Asterisk.NET folder. Run the Asterisk.NET.Test.exe

You should see a command window running the test app. You should now be able to use a softphone to connect to Asterisk - and dial 200. If you are watching the Asterisk console - you should be able to see Asterisk receiving instructions from the test app running on your desktop.

“Amend the Asterisk.NET test app to react to OCS presence”

Return to the Asterisk.NET solution in Visual Studio. Right click on Asterisk.NET.Test - choose Add…- and from the sub-menu, choose Windows Form… I shall leave the name of the form as default - Form1.cs

Look at Form1.cs in the Designer View (not code view). Right-click anywhere in the toolbox panel &amp select “Choose Items…” You should see this window…

visual-studio-toolbox-items.jpg

Press “Browse…”. Now find the “PresenceControls.dll” from earlier. This will add the following two controls to the toolbox.

personalist.jpg

The “Persona” control is to monitor one user, and the “PersonaList″ monitors multiple users.

Drag a “Persona″ control onto your form. Now change the “Modifiers” property of the “Personϋ″ control to Public.

Now change to the code view for Form1.cs. Immediately after the InitalizeComponent line, I added a line to assign a user to the persona control - as below:

InitializeComponent();
persona1.SipUri = “<username&gt;@<domainname.com&gt;”;

Once assigned a SipUri - the Persona control will register with the OCS server for that user - and continue to receive updates from the OCS server whenever the presence changes for that user.

You do have to have Office Communicator installed for the persona control to work - but the assigned user can be any user that you can detect presence for. Basically - if you have the permissions to add a user to your contacts in the Office Communicator (OC) client - you can monitor the presence of that user here.

Move to the code view of Program.cs - and change line 29 to exclude the checkManagerAPI(); command - like this below:

// checkManagerAPI();
checkFastAGI();

Move to the code view of CustomIVR.cs - here is the code controlling Asterisk when you dial the extension numbered 200.

Approx line 40 - after the answer command, add a new line to create an instance of the form1 we created.

Form1 testform = new Form1();

The form contains the persona control for our user.

We then use the persona control within the IVR code to control the call flow based on the presence of that user. “TextStatus” from the Persona control will give us a text response of the status of that user.

Use this line to display to the console the status of the user:

Console.WriteLine(testform.persona1.TextStatus);

Then use this code anywhere within the IVR code to control call flow based on the presence of the user in OCS.

if (testform.persona1.TextStatus == “Busy” || testform.persona1.TextStatus == “On the Phone”)
{
&ltruns some code in here if the user is busy or one the phone&gt
}

Note that within OCS the “On the Phone” status is used when a user is on the phone (doh!) - but from an OC client it appears their status is set to “Busy”.

If a user is not logged in to OCS - the presence is set to “Unknown″. It also shows the text from the four OC client custom presence states if you have used them.

Rebuild the Asterisk.2005 solution - and run the Asterisk.NET.Test.exe again. Now when you call 200 from a Asterisk connected softphone - you should see the presence of the OCS user you are monitoring appear on the console of the test app each time the IVR menu ‘loops’.

To help with troubleshooting - this is the contents of the “Release” directory when finshed.

asterisk-net-release-directory.jpg

Note: Make sure you have you need RTMPLTFM.dll &amp Uccp.dll in the working directory.

Happy OCS 2007 presence integration with Asterisk! If you try it, let me know how it goes.

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Original post by nafiz

Cowon’s A3 PMP gets bumped to 80GB

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

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If you’ve been holding off on getting an A3 for some strange reason, perhaps a bump in capacity will push you over the edge. That’s right, Cowon′s little performer just got more junk in the trunk — 80GB of junk, to be exact. Sure, you’ll have to drop €448 (or about $691) on this thing, but think of all the pics, music, and “movies″ you’ll be able to load up on it.

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

E-Fuel’s Micro Fueler creates Ethanol from sugar in your backyard

Friday, May 9th, 2008

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Far from being the first at-home biofuel kit we’ve seen, E-Fuel is hoping to target consumers with a hankering for fueling up their vehicle with homegrown goodness. The Micro Fueler claims to be the first backyard Ethanol brewer made specifically for use at one’s abode, and according to the outfit’s CEO, the premise behind it is quite simple. By mixing water, sugar and yeast, individuals can receive E100 Ethanol in a matter of hours. More specifically, it’s noted that a gallon of fuel can be derived from ten gallons of sugar, and while that may not sound like the most efficient conversion rate in the world, the company is quick to point out that costs can be lowered via federal, state and local credits along with carbon trading coupons. Those eager to start fueling up before they even leave the house can order one now for $9,995, though we’re told not to expect shipments until Q4.

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Original post by Darren Murph

Volkswagen to produce 1-Liter car in 2010, should get over 200MPG

Friday, May 9th, 2008

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Although you can definitely pre-order an Aptera if you’re okay with space-aged design, Volkswagen is hoping to provide another option for those looking for ridiculous MPG and a little bit of normalcy in construction. Okay, so maybe the 1-Liter isn’t exactly standard fare — with its plastic / magnesium shell and all-glass roof — but at least it packs four whole wheels and an iconic VW badge, right? According to Motor Authority, the automaker will be producing said vehicle and pushing it to market as early as 2010, and while the minuscule engine will only take you to 75MPH, it will still seat two people — one in front of the other, though — and get around 235MPG. No word on a price or any of that good stuff, but we’re hearing that they’ll only be produced in “limited numbers” whenever they’re launched.

[Via EcoGeek, thanks Yossi]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Audi aims to produce electric car within ten years

Monday, May 5th, 2008

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Although Audi isn’t aiming to beat Chevrolet to the punch with an electric whip, it does plan on joining the party a bit further down the road — according to company bigwig Rupert Stadler, that is. Based on an interview with Germany’s Welt am Sonntag, Mr. Stadler noted that he expected diesel and battery technology to dominate within five to ten years, and he made mention that “by then, [Audi] would offer cars without exhaust emissions.” Curiously enough, he also stated that “electric cars offer opportunities, which [the company has] already seized on,” but alas, he didn’t elaborate beyond that. Just to confirm, we’ve got you, me and a whisper-quiet ride in five- to ten-years? It’s a date.

[Via News]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Dell to cut even more jobs as it reduces costs

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

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Looks like Dell’s plan to trim $3B in costs from its budget is going to involve even more job cuts than the 8,800 already announced — speaking to analysts today, Michael Dell said that his company’s management had “identified a very significant opportunity” to cut costs, and that it was “aggressively going after it.” That means even more jobs will be slashed, apparently — a further 1,000 this quarter at least, but Dell wouldn′t say what the total would be in the end, just that it would be more then 8,800. Dell went on to say that no part of the company would be considered sacred as cuts are considered, and that Dell’s brass thinks that it’s “begun the journey to transform the company.” Cutting jobs is one way to do it, sure — but might we suggest focusing on delivering great products would also help?

 

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Motorola to cut another 2,600 jobs

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

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The tough times just don’t seem to end at Motorola — the company announced today that it’s laying off another 2,600 workers, for a total of 10,000 positions eliminated since the start of 2007. That’s on top of the various high-level executive departures that have been taken place lately, not to mention the company’s plan to split off its mobile phone business, which will undoubtedly lead to more cuts down the line. The goal is to reduce costs by some $500M by the end of the year, and some of the jobs being lost come as Moto closes a factory in Singapore and a WiMAX development lab in Florida. There’s no word on when the cuts are going to come, but here’s hoping all these aggressive steps lead to a little vacation for Sad Moto here.

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Original post by Nilay Patel


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