Thursday, July 06, 2006

Good Extends Its Mobile E-Mail Offering to Notes Domino

Good Mobile Messaging for IBM Lotus Domino and Good Technology's partnership with IBM will enable both vendors to target a new segment of the corporate market for wireless e-mail solutions.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Google to build wireless network in San Francisco (FT)

ReutersGoogle, the internet search group, and Earthlink, the internet service provider, on Wednesday drew closer to covering the city of San Francisco with a wireless broadband network, after a city panel selected the companies as the preferred providers for the project.

Schmidt's Google To Give San Francisco Free Wi-Fi (Forbes)









London - Peace, love and Wi-Fi: It must have baffled members of San Francisco's legendary Beat Generation when after decades of gentrification, their city not only became a bastion of billionaires but featured pockets of wealth like Atherton, top of the Forbes list of the most expensive zip codes in the U.S. Surely now that its home to the tech revolution and affluent, hard-nosed eggheads, Frisco doesn't need a warm blanket of free wireless Internet. Or does it? Perhaps we shouldn't underestimate the power of that free-wheeling sentiment, and the will of a city mayor.

Google aims to track users with wi-fi (FT)

Google aims to be able to track its users to within 100-200 feet of their location through new wireless networks in order to serve them with relevant advertising from local businesses.

The leading internet search company, which depends on advertising for 99 per cent of its revenues, was selected on Wednesday by San Francisco as its preferred bidder to provide a basic free wi-fi internet service covering the entire city.

It had partnered in its bid with the internet service provider Earthlink, which intends to charge a fee for a faster internet connection.

Google and Earthlink will now enter final contract negotiations with the city. There were five other bidders including a non-profit group backed by Cisco Systems and IBM.

The company hopes to defray the costs of offering a free service through contextual advertising. Analysts have speculated that the San Francisco bid could be a prelude to Google seeking to extend its reach into localities nationwide.

It is already planning a free wi-fi network by the summer covering the city of Mountain View, where its headquarters is based, and the San Francisco service may be up and running by the end of the year.

Google says users linking up with wi-fi transmitters placed around cities can be located to within a couple of blocks. This would open up a new level of advertising opportunities for the company, allowing it to serve tightly focused ads on its web pages from small businesses in the immediate area.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Cool Vendors in Mobile and Wireless, 2006 (Gartner)

Cool vendors

Dblur Technology

GeoVector

Mobile 365

Mobile ESPN

Motricity

Skyhook Wireless

Sling Media

TeleCommunication Systems mobeo

xG Technology

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Mobile VoIP could radically change cellphone use (InfoWorld)

At last week's 3GSM World Congress in Barcelona, several big names in the communications sector, including Microsoft (Profile, Products, Articles), Nokia (Profile, Products, Articles), and Skype Technologies (Profile, Products, Articles), announced mobile phone-based VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) products and services that could radically change how cellular customers use their handsets in the future.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Internet telephony set to go mobile (FT)

Internet telephony over mobile phones took centre stage at the 3GSM World Congress mobile phone conference in Barcelona last week, with two announcements signalling that the mobile phone industry is waking up to the potentially disruptive technology coming its way.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Mobile Matters: Extend SAP Applications to Your Handheld Mobile Device in 10 Minutes or Less (SAP Insider)

For many business people, being reachable by phone — no matter when or where — has become a basic business necessity. Now with the emergence of mobile devices like Pocket PCs and BlackBerrys, it’s about more than being able to take a call. It’s even gone beyond having access to emails and calendars. Full mobile enablement means having permanent, wireless access to business data and online services; it’s about integrating mobile devices into business processes. Only when business data, functions, and processes are available in real time through the browser of a mobile device can a company achieve complete, integrated use of mobile technology.

3GSM: Skype, Hutchison 3G partner on VOIP (InfoWorld)

If you're hooked on making Internet calls from your PC, you could really like this: Skype Technologies (Profile, Products, Articles) SA and the Hutchison 3 Group (Hutchison 3G) announced Tuesday a partnership to provide what could become the world's first commercial VOIP (voice over Internet Protocol) service for mobile phones.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Mobile television may be the answer (FT)

If every promise made at a 3GSM World Congress in the past decade had been fulfilled, then delegates at the show’s new venue in Barcelona would be able to wander down the Ramblas and locate several tapas bars using a mixture of GPS and location-based services.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Lenovo plans to offer 3G wireless laptops by Q2 (InfoWorld)

Lenovo Group has joined the race to release laptops with built-in wireless broadband technology. The computer maker, which completed its acquisition of IBM's (Profile, Products, Articles) PC business last year, on Tuesday announced plans to integrate technology to access Vodafone (Profile, Products, Articles) Group's wireless broadband network into upcoming models of ThinkPad notebooks, including the T60 and the X60, according to a press statement.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Draft 802.11n Could Cause Confusion Among Wi-Fi Users (Gartner)

Several Wi-Fi chip vendors are basing their marketing on the Enhanced Wireless Consortium's (EWC's) proposed 802.11n standard. But the standard is far from final, and most enterprises should avoid adopting early releases.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Cisco to enter consumer electronics market (FT)

Cisco, the biggest maker of internet networking equipment, plans to enter the mainstream consumer electronics market, challenging companies such as Sony and Samsung in the production of radios, stereos, phones and home theatre equipment.

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Informatieprofessional gespecialiseerd in het organiseren van content, kennis en samenwerking(collaboration) in de onderneming.