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Archive for October, 2008

Verizon Wireless KPC680 ExpressCard

Verizon Wireless KPC680 ExpressCard

Verizon Wireless KPC680 ExpressCard Its compact form factor and decent connection speeds make the Kyocera KPC680 a solid choice for road warriors in need of mobile broadband. 49.99

Kyocera KR2 Mobile Router

Kyocera KR2 Mobile Router Kyocera’s latest EV DO router adds support for 802.11n and for more types of connection cards and makes setting up a wireless network on the road fast and easy. 249

No More Firefly Phone?

No More Firefly Phone?
Although I did think that the flyPhone and the glowPhone look like awesome phones (I’m actually thinking of replacing my son’s Tictalk for the flyPhone when he turns twelve next year), I didn’t know that the original Firefly was being phased out.. I received an email today from Andrew Lowenstein of Firefly Mobile stating the […]

Free Firefly - Regularly $119.00
If you’ve been checking out the FireFly phone for kids and teens and see it as a good option for your family. Check out this link, which will show you how to get the phone for free!! You can thank me later - LOL Go Here to Purchase   Go Here for More Info […]

Bell And Solo Mobile Line-up Leaked

Bell And Solo Mobile Line-up Leaked

Bell And Solo Mobile Line-up Leaked

Information leaks are getting more and more commonplace these days, and today we have the entire Bell and Solo Mobile line-up for Q4 which will definitely cause a great deal of headache for folks who want to reward themselves with a new handset this Christmas. Some of the handsets with their launch dates that will be available from Bell include :-

  • BlackBerry Storm (November 21st)
  • HTC Diamond (early November. Includes 200 songs on 4GB internal memory)
  • HTC Touch Pro (early December)
  • LG Reveal (early November. Includes “Shimmer Kit” consisting of a case and crystal covered Bluetooth headset by Swarovski)
  • LG Voyager (mid-November. Includes is 350 songs on a pre-loaded 2GB microSD card)
  • Samsung Cleo (early November)
  • Sanyo Pro 200 (late November)
  • Sanyo Pro 700 (late November)

As for Solo devices, you will be able to choose from the white BlackBerry Pearl 8130 and Samsung Cleo.

Add a comment | From: Bell And Solo Mobile Line-up Leaked | Visit Ubergizmo | Good deals

G&D cuts SIM card delivery time for T-Mobile UK customers

G&D cuts SIM card delivery time for T-Mobile UK customers
(Telecompaper) Provider of smart cards and system applications Giesecke & Devrient (G&D) has introduced a system called 'SIM production on demand', to reduce the……(read more)

G&D cuts SIM card delivery time for T-Mobile UK customers

G&D cuts SIM card delivery time for T-Mobile UK customers
(Telecompaper) Provider of smart cards and system applications Giesecke & Devrient (G&D) has introduced a system called 'SIM production on demand', to reduce the……(read more)

Aliph Jawbone Bluetooth Headset vs. Plantronics 665

Aliph Jawbone Bluetooth Headset vs. Plantronics 665

Aliph Jawbone Bluetooth Headset vs. Plantronics 665 Ready to take hands free talking to the next level? We put two noise busting Bluetooth headsets through some real world tests. Love them

AT&T Samsung SGH-A237
The AT&T Samsung SGH-A237 is coming soon. The new handset would definitely fall under the “budget” category, although you’ll still get all the basics. The main selling points will be a camera & Bluetooth capabilities. It’ll be available in two colors: blue & red. The sleek styling of the handset is pretty attractive as well. We […]

Casio Exilim W63CA 8 Megapixel Mobile Phone

Casio Exilim W63CA 8 Megapixel Mobile Phone
Casio has just announced a new model mobile phone cum digital camera, the Exilim W63CA. It comes with impressive 8MP camera that features with 9 auto focus point and wide angle lens. Casio is taking the same tactic Sony Ericsson does with their Cyber-shot cellphones by placing a camera brand on a high-end camera phone. It […]

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Convert Documents Online With Universal Document Convertor

Convert Documents Online With Universal Document Convertor
Have you ever found yourself with an image or a document that you can’t open because it’s in a weird format, or you need to convert it to another format so that you can send it to a friend or colleague?  Or maybe you want to post a document on your website in a format […] Related posts:

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Ray Ozzie steers Microsoft into the cloud

Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie has officially filled the shoes previously worn by founder and Chairman Bill Gates, stepping in as leader of the company's vast developer network, which is its lifeblood and crucial to the enormous success of Windows. Ozzie delivered Monday's keynote speech at the company's Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles, introducing Windows Azure, a cloud-computing development and hosting environment that integrates Ozzie's vision for the future of the Web, which he began building at his company Groove Networks before he joined Microsoft.

Ozzie also took some time Monday for an interview with IDG News Service, discussing Azure, cloud computing and the future of the Windows OS. An edited transcript of the interview follows.

[ Special report: All the latest from Microsoft's PDC ]

IDGNS: Windows Azure will help corporate developers bring application development to the Web, but at the same time it looks like it's going to help Microsoft bring its own applications to the Web. Can you talk about the two purposes that it serves?

Ozzie: We looked at our own internal properties, we looked at the trends. We always try to monitor what are the technology trends that are going on and where might things happen. Our systems people were getting more and more interested in how the high-scale Internet services really work. And so we did this big assessment, and we really came to the conclusion that there's a role for this new kind of computer, this computer in the sky, computer in the cloud.

IDGNS: When was this?

Ozzie: The first document that I know of that I wrote about was in December '05, and I know we were talking about it throughout '06. It wasn't so much what Amazon was doing, because essentially Amazon's model — even though I have a lot of respect for what they've done — they've basically taken more or less a hosting model of taking existing operating systems and putting them up into the cloud.

The conclusion we came to was there was this new role for this new third tier of computer in the cloud. You've got your personal computing tier, you've got Windows servers for the enterprise tier serving the enterprise, and now this computer in the cloud serving this whole worldwide Web.

Once we took that on, we basically had to start thinking, how does it change for developers, how would it benefit enterprises over the long term, and so forth. So that project has been going for several years now, and part of the way through that project, that was when we began evaluating how can we take our business applications online on that platform, how will it help our consumer apps — Hotmail and things like that.

But once we decided to really make it like a Windows in the cloud, that's a decision where you say, well if we're going to build those APIs for our groups internally, let's make sure we also give them to people externally because they'll find just as much benefit as we did. They don't have those people who run hundreds of millions of user services as we have. So I can't say there was ever a time that it was only for internal use or only for external use — they really kind of grew up together. There should be no question it will help us run our internal things more efficiently, but we're really measuring our success more from the external feedback because it's more balanced than the feedback we get internally.

IDGNS: So you said Azure is different than just taking things and putting them on the cloud. Can you tell me how?

Ozzie: Let me try to describe it — this is not an analogy I've tried. Let's say that Richard [Eckel, Ozzie's colleague] over there tossed me a tennis ball, and then he tossed me a second one, and he tossed me a third one. I could possibly juggle those three. Each ball that I'm taking, I'm doing what we in the industry call scaling up. I'm the computer and I'm doing these things as much as I can. Now, let's say he throws 100 balls at me. There are limits to the scale-up model and if I fail, all the balls will fall to the ground. But if we, together as a group, decide we're going to take turns, as he starts throwing them — hey you grab that one, I'll grab that one, he'll grab that one — there's a chance that by just adding more people, we can take any number of balls that he'll throw at us. And if one falls down, then maybe the guy next to him will pick it up, but he'll keep going. That's called scale out. It's basically saying the more tasks you're juggling, the more you can just keep adding things, and it just works in that way. The systems we've built for enterprises are really the scale-up model. We build a system, and we try to add hardware to make it get bigger and bigger and support bigger and bigger enterprises but eventually that kind of falls apart. Something like Notes or Exchange has a history in building up and up and up. Hotmail started at exactly the opposite way, knowing it had to scale to hundreds of millions. There's a process you use to take an enterprise app and change it and rethink it to be that broad, horizontal thing. We've done that with Exchange, and we're doing that with more and more.

IDGNS: So that's the model Azure is going to take. It seems like it's more like worrying about how you're going to architect the hardware to meet the application, but the application sort of meets the challenges [of different tasks].

Ozzie: That's exactly right. It would be writing a program to be able to catch one ball and keep bouncing that one ball and cranking up a lot of them to handle all of them coming at you instead of designing the app to try to juggle.

IDGNS: I've talked to some users about Azure, and they've said one of the benefits of a hosting applications platform like that is the applications would no longer be dependent on the desktop OS, and you wouldn't have to worry about compatibility and things like that. But then, Windows client is still a massive part of Microsoft's business. Obviously you're on to something, but how is Microsoft going to evolve Windows — starting with Windows 7 – to take advantage of what you're presenting with Azure?

Ozzie: Let me separate a couple of things. The thing that you saw today is this computer in the sky. The Windows Azure part doesn't have a direct correlation between with things that go on with computers and devices.

I believe that people buy devices because they work for them. You buy a computer because you like the form, you like the function, you like the apps that operate on it. In the future, there will be some service interconnection that you like the way it relates to the cloud. But really people buy PCs because they like the cost and the function of what it does. Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 9, whatever the future Windows are, they will be successful businesses based on how well they do the job with the hardware innovations that are coming down the line in that realm. It really isn't a decision that will be connected to that service. Same with phones — you pick a phone because it matches your outfit or your purse or the way that you want other people to see you. Sure, there's a relationship to the cloud and to other things, but that's why we believe very strongly in Windows and in this services thing.

IDGNS: How do you keep your feet in both worlds as you're facing competition on both sides? You have to worry about Google on the Web services side and you still have to worry about open source, and now Google is trying to get in on the desktop applications. It's a delicate, tricky thing.

Ozzie: Oh, there's more [competitors] — there's many more. On the business apps side you've got SAP and Salesforce.com. As someone who has had a long-term relationship with Microsoft and came in three-and-a-half years ago, one of the things that I've respected about Microsoft is it's a very resilient culture. Every time Microsoft has had a very big competitive battle, the culture learns from that battle, and then when some new battle comes along, it doesn't paralyze the company. People go, "Oh, here we go again. I guess we have to turn the ship and address that challenge."

There have been some immense things. Open source I think was probably the thing that shocked the system the most because what if people don't value software anymore? Of course, that didn't turn out to be the case. Open source turned out to probably have created more opportunity because enterprises had to integrate our systems with their systems, that creates more demand for our systems. It's just a good situation.

Is Google perceived as a threat? I'm sure there are people within the company who view it that way. But as long as they stay focused on the customer, what they're delivering for that customer, as long as every time there is a chance to do new product planning that we factor in what we can learn from what the competitor is doing and just keep iterating, I have confidence we'll stay in a good place.

IDGNS: In Windows 7, you're going to take out some applications that formerly were part of the operating system and send people to Windows Live instead. How are you going to see the operating system evolve as you move to more hosted services, because it looks like at some point it may become more of a control environment for aggregating and managing all of these different services? Would you say that's true or false? How would you see it evolving?

Ozzie: It's an interesting perspective. I would say that you said several things and I'll try to bring them together. The reason those apps were pulled out is that in many cases apps now want to have a services component and a software component to them, and just delivering it as a service and having the service update the software as the service evolves just seems to be better in terms of the way those particular apps have been packaged — Movie Maker, Photo Gallery. So you'll see more and more of that.

The core OS — there is such device innovation going on right now in terms of the broad variety of PCs. I don't know what kind of PC you have at home, but I kind of go nuts, because I can, and I have a 30-inch monitor with two 21-inch wing monitors. I have all of this screen real estate. It's not even a very expensive PC but the stuff that I can do with it — I can edit a document here and review the thing here and have the Web open. It's context that surrounds me. At the same time I have a laptop I travel with. It's got a bigger screen because my eyes aren't that great, but it's portable enough. I have a really, really thin one for when I go on vacation — I can carry that with me. There is such a broad variety.

All I'm getting at is the core purpose of the OS on the device, whether it's a phone device or anything, it's really to make the hardware and the user kind of just come together like that. The purposes of the apps is to have the seamlessness between the PC, the service and the phone. The purpose of the OS on the device is to have the best value on that device. So, I think there's just going to continue to be tremendous opportunity for innovation on these devices.

IDGNS: I'm still trying to understand the balance between the OS as something that takes advantage of the hardware it's running on and the OS as something that also takes advantage of the Web.

Ozzie: The way that we're going to do that — to try to be as clear as possible — the OS that you get out of the box will clearly have some base connections to the Web. Like the browser. Like Windows Update. I'm just saying these are base-level connections to the Web. We have to kind of limit the amount that we go above there because we still sell Windows to a large number of people who don't have great Internet connections. It might be the government that has their own separate network, it might be in a part of the world that doesn't have great [Internet connectivity]. But it's still great Windows. Then the pieces that connect Windows more richly to the Internet will just use the Internet to deliver those pieces themselves. We'll make sure that Windows has enough open APIs so you can bring that thing down and have it hook right into the shell, and have it feel like a natural extension.


Parting Shots: Nokia 5310
Our detailed review of the Nokia 5310 XpressMusic phone is now complete. What did we think of the tiny phone that promises to be your music BFF? Well, we loved the external music controls and the music player software is pretty good and allows you to make playlists and organize your music right on the phone. If you’re the type who listens to music from dusk ’til dawn, you’ll enjoy the decent music playback battery life of the 5310. But the budding photographers among you will not be so happy with the 5310 with its poor camera resolution and the eons it takes for a photo or video to be saved to memory, and we were disappointed that it can’t play many video file formats at all. It has basic organizer functions help you keep your life in order, but you’ll have to hunt down a way to sync it with your computer. The good news is that it costs only $49.99 when purchased online and comes with all the accessories you need to make the 5310 fit the bill as your digital music player, and is a pretty good value as a result. Read the full review here.

T-Mobile launches eCard service

T-Mobile launches eCard service
UK operator to embed Sharpcards' EMMA app onto selected devices. Mobile Entertainment is the leading community site for all professionals working within the international mobile content industry. We bring you the latest news, views and analysis from this fast moving entertainment sector, complementing our flagship monthly printed magazine and specialist events….(read more)

Samsung Omnia

Samsung Omnia Samsung’s ultra–high end touchscreen phone brings a welcome makeover to Windows Mobile along with a sharp 5 MP camera. 720 Samsung Omnia

HTC Touch Diamond

HTC Touch Diamond This luxury touchscreen phone sports an intuitive and fun touch interface, a desktop like Web browser, and the sharpest display on the block. 779

Motorola EQ7 Wireless Hi-Fi Stereo Speaker

Motorola EQ7 Wireless Hi-Fi Stereo Speaker

Motorola EQ7 Wireless Hi Fi Stereo Speaker This compact Bluetooth speaker packs a surprising punch. 179 Motorola EQ7 Wireless Hi Fi Stereo Speaker This compact Bluetooth

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