Archive for the ‘Windows Live Messenger’ Category

Medis 24-7 Power Pack fuel cell tested and reviewed: not too shabby

Friday, September 12th, 2008

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We know what you’re thinking: “I’m totally not going to buy this.” After all, who really wants a kludgy recharger that isn’t reusable without buying an extra fill pack? For those still willing to give this idea a chance, you may want to point your attention to smartplanet‘s review of the Medis 24-7 Power Pack, which utilizes liquid fuel cell technology to output one-watt for charging small handheld devices. In testing, it took around an hour to bring a halfway charged iPod touch to full capacity, which is pretty much right in line with estimates. Unfortunately, we’re still not digging the “recycle or refill” approach, though we are appreciative that Medis is pushing the former. Give the linked writeup a look — maybe you′ll fall strangely in love, after all.

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Original post by Darren Murph

Comcast - We won’t block Vonage or any other VoIP provider

Thursday, July 10th, 2008


According to eFluxMedia, Comcast is “working on rehabilitating its name and implementing reasonable management techniques through a new partnership with VoIP service provider Vonage.” Vonage and Comcast said they will work on ensuring adequate management techniques to avoid network congestion to ensure high quality VoIP services.

I should point out that Comcast tarnished their own reputation when they intentionally degraded ̢P traffic, particularly Bittorrent, a heavy bandwidth application. According to a 36 page thread on the Vonage Forums that dates back to 2006, Comcast was accused of degrading Vonage’s voice over IP bat-phone.jpgquality intentionally. Comcat has denied these charges, but many Comcast users that have Vonage have had issues.

Whether conspiracy or not, now Vonage and Comcast stated they will have a “direct line of communications” between their network operations centers to resolve customer issues. Umm, so they couldn’t talk to each other easily before, so now they need a special ‘bat phone′ direct hotline?

According to the Free Press, Marvin Ammori, general counsel of Free Press and author of the complaint, issued the following statement:

“We are baffled as to why it was necessary for Vonage to strike a network management agreement with Comcast to guarantee that their services are not degraded or blocked. Such anti-competitive, anti-consumer practices are already against the law. And beyond that, Comcast has been on the record as saying that they do nothing to deter their customers′ use of VoIP.

“This announcement calls into question the company’s honesty about its treatment of competing services. Was Comcast degrading Vonage’s VoIP service before this announcement? And are they continuing to degrade other services that compete with their products? That these questions remain unanswered by today’s announcement is cause for great concern. This collaboration should do nothing to deter the FCC from investigating and stopping Comcast’s blocking other Internet services.”

The partnership with Vonage is supposedly part of Comcast’s commitment to move to a protocol-agnostic network management approach by the end of 2008. Comcast has announced collaboration with Pando Networks for a “P2P Bill of Rights and Responsibilities” (BRR) and participation in the P4P Working Group organized by the Distributed Computing Industry Association.

It all sounds well &amp good, but we’ll see if Comcast lives up to their word to play fair and not mess with IP packets. I for one am not holding my breath.

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Original post by nafiz

South Korea VoIP Number Portability Shenanigans

Monday, July 7th, 2008

south-korea-map.jpgWe all recall how South Korea banned the U.S. military from using VoIP, right? The South Korean government, with the backing of major South Korean ISPs pushed for the ban because of the unlimited flat-rate calling plans offered by American competitors.

Now, according to the Korean Times in a recent article, it states VoIP service providers were put on hold as South Korea delayed its decision on whether to allow number portability to VoIP users. Mind you, these must be South Korean VoIP service providers and not American VoIP service providers. Let me remind you that according to a Vonage Form thread I read, South Korea is blocking U.S. military personnel from making inexpensive VoIP calls back to the U.S. using American VoIP service providers such as Vonage.

The kicker is that it’s the incumbent telcos and Korean-based VoIP service providers that have lobbied to block foreign-based VoIP service providers. According to the Vonage thread, “Shawn Dorcy, general manager for the Army and Air Force Exchange Service at Yongsan, said some servicemembers have had their Vonage service wrongly turned off by (ISP) LG Dacom, but the company had fixed the problem for eight servicemembers. South Korea’s major Internet companies warned nearly two years ago they would block Internet calls made through providers not registered under the Korean Telecommunications Business Act. U.S. Forces Korea arranged a deal that allowed servicemembers who signed up for Vonage before July 1, 2007, to keep the service.”

You got all that?

Let me summarize. American VoIP service providers are banned in South Korea, including for U.S. stationed military personnel. However, some large ISPs, such as LG Dacom will make exceptions for people who signed up for Vonage before July 1, 2007. Packet8, Teleblend, and other VoIP service providers need not apply. And apparently, only 8 servicemembers used Vonage that needed their service unblocked. I find that low number highly unlikely — most probably decided not to fight the blocking and found another inexpensive phone calling solution to call back home to the U.S.

And now after all these shenanigans, South Korea wants to make it harder for customers to port their existing phone number to a VoIP service provider. The excuse? According to The Korean Times article, “the five executive members of the Korea Communications Commission (KCC), in a meeting chaired by chairman Choi See-joong, failed to agree on whether to allow the conversion, citing that telephone systems using the Internet are unable to provide directions on emergency calls.” In other words, they’re blaming 911 emergency services lack of support in the VoIP world. Actually, in Korea it’s 119, or the backwards dialing of the U.S.’s 911 emergency dialing pattern and certainly their view on VoIP emergency services is half-ass backwards!

South Korea in some ways is more technologically advanced than the U.S. especially when it comes to Internet and wireless connectivity. Don’t tell me South Korea doesn’t have the technical know-how to integrate VoIP with emergency systems. That’s bull! 9 out of 10 South Koreans own a mobile phone and if they dial 119 from their mobile, there’s no guarantee emergency personnel can locate them either. Most phones still don’t have GPS so would require cell tower triangulation of the cell phone signal. That takes precious time. So if South Korea was so concerned about locating its citizenry during an emergency very quickly, they would make GPS tracking on mobile phones mandatory. Of course, many emergencies occur in buildings where GPS doesn’t work. There are always tradeoffs in safety vs. customer freedoms.

The answer as to why South Korea is stalling number portability for VoIP service providers can be seen in one statistic –  telecom giant KT handles around 90 percent of the country’s fixed-line telephone customers. No doubt, they want to keep their customer base, and one way to do that is people’s emotional attachment to their phone number (not to mention all their contacts have the number). Many people are loathe to change their phone number even if they can get a better deal elsewhere.

Heck, two years ago, the U.S. Congress, which is very partisan these days, overwhelmingly voted to take control of the E911 issue from the FCC (See: “We’ll handle E-911″), and two years later & just one month ago, Congress passed a VoIP e911 bill. This bill requires the operators of 911 networks to allow VoIP providers to connect. It’s the law of the land. Problem solved. Is it perfect? No, since you can take your ATA (analog telephony adaptor) to a hotel and the E911 address information stored in the database will be incorrect. Again, there are always tradeoffs, but don’t blame lack of 119 support as the reason for not allowing number portability. Anyone can see right through this lame excuse!

Related:
Number Portability Problems

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Original post by nafiz

AT&T Dropping CallVantage?

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Just got this email stating that as of July 7th, AT&T will no longer offer CallVantage through their affiliate channel. To me, this is “codeword″ for “we’re no longer promoting CallVantage and expect AT&T to end CallVantage entirely in the near future.” I’ve read about many affiliate programs that when they′re ended, it’s the end of the road for that product. Further, the emails explains, “We ask that you remove all of your promotion of the CallVantage product on/before July 7th and we recommend that you swap out your creative to another of our product offerings such as High Speed DSL or our latest flagship product, UVerse.”

Now tell me that doesn’t hint towards the end of the road for CallVantage. So current CallVantage affiliates are supposed to promote High Speed DSL which has little to do with VoIP phone service? As for UVerse, that has it’s own share of problems. Not to mention UVerse isn’t offered everywhere yet. CallVantage, like Vonage, at least works everywhere there is a broadband connection. This is a sad day for the single-play VoIP broadband providers. If AT&ampT is jumping ship, what does this bode for Vonage, Packet8, and the other single-play providers?

Now this ‘could’ simply mean AT&T doesn’t want to pay the referral fees from affiiates. But even that doesn’t make sense since affiliates are the CHEAPEST way for broadband VoIP service providers to acquire new customers. Something’s up. I wouldn’t be surprised if AT&T drops CallVantage in 6 months or 12 months from now. My guess is 1 year from now (July 7th, 2009) due to their cancellation terms:

$29.99 disconnect fee applies if service or order for service is canceled or disconnected less than 1 year from the date you placed your order for service and Telephone Adapter (if obtained directly from AT&T without charge) is not returned to and received by AT&T within 16 business days of cancellation or disconnection.

They′ll wait till like June 2009, announce they′re dropping CallVantage, and anyone that jumps ship before the full year is out will have to shell out the $29.99 cancellation fee. Check out the email for yourself…

We want to make you aware that as of July 7th, we will no longer be offering our CallVantage product in our suite of products offered through the affiliate channel.

You will receive commissions on all residual sales that come through during the 60 day referral period that is offered through the program.

We ask that you remove all of your promotion of the CallVantage product on/before July 7th and we recommend that you swap out your creative to another of our product offerings such as High Speed DSL or our latest flagship product, UVerse.

We truly value your partnership and will continue to work with each and every one of you to ensure that we are giving our publishers what they need in order to be successful. Feel free to reach out to the team with any questions, concerns or comments you may have regarding the AT&T Consumer program and enjoy the summer!

Here are some links to get you started:

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Original post by nafiz

8×8, Inc. Awarded New VoIP Patent

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

8×8, Inc. the provider of the Packet8 broadband Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), videophone and mobile VoIP communication services, today announced that it has been granted U.S. Patent No. 7,394,803 entitled “Distributed Local Telephony Gateway.” The patent was issued from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office yesteday on July 1, 2008.

Interestingly, the patent relates to Internet Protocol (IP) communication systems and, more particularly, to broadband telephony services having “distributed local gateways”. Don’t all broadband telephony services use “distributed local gateways”? After all, you need distributed local gateways to help get cheaper rates. So Does this mean Packet8 can go after Vonage, AT&T, Time Warner, and all the other providers of broadband telephony for patent infringement? Patent troll license fees are looking good!

I′ll have to contact my sourcs at 8Ҹ and find out exactly what this patent entails. Stay tuned…

Relatedly, since its establishment in 1987, 8×8 has been awarded seventy-three (73) United States patents covering a variety of voice and video communications, processing and storage technologies.

Also, Packet8 is up 1.5% and Vonage is down 5.99%. Coincidence?

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Original post by nafiz

T-Mobile USA T-Mobile@Home VoIP Service

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

T-Mobile USA is going to launch next week a $10-a-month broadband VoIP service that will be available to T-Mobile wireless subscribers. The VoIP service is called T-Mobile@Home, granting users unlimited local and long-distance calls over a broadband connection. They’ve partnered with Cisco’s Linksys for the $50 ATA device to connect analog phones.

Features include the usual suspects: call waiting, caller ID, three-way conferencing, voicemail and call forwarding. You will be able port your existing home phone number, and you can also add a second voice line.

The move poses a challenge to traditional carriers, cable TV operators that offer bundled services, and and single-play VoIP providers like Vonage and PackeҐ.

This is T-Mobile USA’s first foray into the fixed line market after being exclusively wireless.

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Original post by nafiz

Asterisk 1.6.0 beta5

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

AsteriskThe Asterisk.org development team just released Asterisk 1.6.0-beta5. According to the announcement with beta5 of 1.6.0 the feature-set is frozen. One thing still missing is "caller name screening" where you can screen the call and accept/reject the call. I’d also like to see&nbsp"voicemail call screening", which would allow me to screen a caller leaving a message and pull them out. Here’s the announcement according to Asterisk.org:

In addition to a number of bug fixes, the following new features have been added since beta4:

  • The SMDI interface in Asterisk has been reworked to fix a number of issues as well as add some new features. SMDI message information is now accessed in the dialplan using some new dialplan functions. New options have been added to map Asterisk voicemail boxes to SMDI station IDs. Also, MWI will now properly be sent for systems that have some external interface modifying voicemail boxes, such as a web interface, or with an email client in the case of IMAP storage.
  • The Postgres CDR module now supports some of the features of cdr_adaptive_odbc. Specifically, you may add additional columns into the table and they will be set, if you set the corresponding CDR variable name. Also, if you omit columns in your database table, those fields will be silently skipped when inserting the record.
  • The ResetCDR application now has an ‘e’ option that re-enables the CDR if it has been disabled using the NoCDR option.
  • A new CLI command, "devstate change", has been added which allows you to change the state of a Custom device. Custom device states were previously only settable by using the DEVICE_STATE() dialplan function.
  • The Originate manager action now has its own permission level called originate. Also, if you want this action to be able to execute applications that call out to a subshell, it requires the system privilege, as well. These changes were made to enhance the security of the manager interface.

For a full list of features that have been introduced from Asterisk 1.4 to Asterisk 1.6.0, see the following file:

For a full list of changes to Asterisk 1.6.0 from beta4 to beta5, see the ChangeLog:

And if you′re really curious, you can view the full feature-set changes after the jump…

Continue reading Asterisk 1.6.0 beta5…


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Original post by nafiz

Everex’s Cloudbook coming to Wal-Mart by month’s end

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

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Well folks — it’s official. The Everex / Packard Bell / FIC Nanobook / Cloudbook / CE260 (phew) that we recently got some face time with is actually coming Stateside… to Wal-Mart. That’s right, the Eee crown-threatener will be available on January 25th of this year, featuring a 1.2GHz VIA C7-M CPU, 512MB of RAM, a 30GB hard drive, and a 800 x 480 display for the extra-affordable price of $399. The system will be sporting Everex’s gOS Rocket, the Google-ified version of Ubuntu which powers the company’s cheapo desktop. Watch your back, front, and sides, ASUS.

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky


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