Showing posts with label wireless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wireless. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

The World's Most Wired Airports


By Elizabeth Woyke

Beth Breidenbach calls it the "vulture hover."

It's a maneuver familiar to anyone looking to use a laptop in an airport—the circling, swooping dance to locate and secure access to wireless Internet (Wi-Fi) and power outlets.

Breidenbach, a Spokane, Wash.-based senior data architect for IBM Global Business Services, is on the road an average of 45 weeks a year. To cope, she's memorized plug locations in her favorite airports—she's found them by the main poles in the seating area in Denver International Airport; by the workstations at Chicago's O'Hare and New York's LaGuardia; still others near particular restaurants in Minneapolis, where she can grab a bite while charging her laptop and Palm handheld.

Click here for the entire story.

Monday, January 28, 2008

What Were China's 600 Million Mobile Users 'Searching' For Last Year?


The top five search topic categories for 2007 were:
1. Dining/Entertainment
2. Stock/Financial
3. Ring tones/Pictures
4. Weather/Travel information
5. Leisure/Recreational Content

Compared with 2006, Dining/Entertainment is still the most popular search topic, but Stock/Financial searches have jumped from fourth place into second, with a traffic increase almost eight times greater. This is certainly not surprising given the mass interest in the financial markets after another year of over 100% growth.

The data showed some interesting trends, like that SMS and IM users had a greater tendency to do Local and Informational searches, whereas WAP and applet users tended to do more rich content searches. SMS and IM users were also more geographically diverse having a greater spread of users across a broader set of cities compared to WAP users, which were overrepresented in the Guangdong province. Since mInfo also operates the leading English language mobile search service in China (Guanxi(R)), it has some unique views on the behavior of English-speaking foreigners in China. Foreign
mobile search users were on average twice as active as Chinese users and tended to focus more on Local Search instead of other categories of services. They also tended to be on average older and had a larger proportion of professionals and executives than the Chinese user base.

Monday, January 21, 2008

AT&T: Wireless Boosts the Bundle


AT&T chairman and CEO Randall Stephenson said that the anchor for the triple-play bundle of the future will be wireless telephony, not wireline service. The telecom giant will be more aggressive this year both within its region and possibly outside its territory with the three-product bundle that includes wireless phone service, he said last week.

"In-region, without a doubt, it will continue to get more aggressive," Stephenson said at the Citigroup Entertainment, Media & Telecommunications conference in Phoenix last Tuesday. "The triple-play option " wireless, broadband and video " that will be our strategic product set in the marketplace in-region. Out of the region, we'll see."
That could bode well for the telco, which owns the largest wireless-telephony service provider in the country, AT&T Wireless.

Click here for the complete story.

Monday, November 26, 2007

US Airways expands AT&T wireless deal


Airline giant US Airways has signed a contract with AT&T for the communications company to provide wireless services to customers, corporate email and cargo tracking.

The deal is worth $6 million and is an expansion of a long-running contract between the companies which has seen AT&T provide US Airways with internet protocol data services. US Airways will now use hand-held barcode scanners which can connect wirelessly with AT&T's network and will allow the airline to provide tracking for its customers in real time. AT&T already provides similar services to many regional airlines around the US.

Joe Beery, US Airways' senior vice president and chief information officer, said: "In a move to optimize and improve our tracking of cargo shipments, we sought a reliable and consistent solution. "AT&T brings the benefit of wireless advantages to the solution and enhances our agility and high-quality standards to our customer service philosophy."

Friday, September 28, 2007

Verizon Wireless Introduces the Ultimate Consumer Entertainment Source: The MOTORIZR Z6tv


The MOTORIZR Z6tv is Motorola's First Device to Premiere V CAST Mobile TV

Verizon Wireless, the leading wireless company with the nation's most reliable wireless voice and data network, and Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT) today announced the availability of the MOTORIZR(TM) Z6tv on October 5. This sleek phone comes with a hot slider design and is equipped with V CAST Mobile TV, V CAST Music and Video, making it the ultimate in entertainment.

The MOTORIZR Z6tv provides entertainment lovers 24-hour access to broadcast-quality full-length TV shows through V CAST Mobile TV from Verizon Wireless. V CAST Mobile TV offers programming for TV viewers of all ages and interests including the "Late Show with David Letterman," "24" and "Dora the Explorer." The service offers live shows and mobile television content from CBS Mobile, Comedy Central, ESPN Mobile TV, Fox Mobile, MTV, NBC 2GO, NBC News2GO, and Nickelodeon. V CAST Mobile TV customers can enjoy fast channel surfing, view upcoming programs on the easy-to-use program guide and access parental control features.

Beyond V CAST Mobile TV, the MOTORIZR Z6tv can access Get It Now(R) applications, such as VZ Navigator(SM) which helps customers access location information to more than 14 million points of interest. For customers who are musically inclined, V CAST Music is sure to keep customers connected to their favorite music while on-the-go, allowing them to enjoy over-the-air full-track downloads from a library of more than 2.1 million songs. The MOTORIZR Z6tv is also equipped with Bluetooth(R) stereo
headset support for music, creating a truly wireless mobile music experience. Other features of the MOTORIZR Z6tv include:
-- Integrated digital audio player and support of .mp3 and .wma music
files
-- 2.0 megapixel camera
-- Video capture and playback
-- Landscape and portrait modes available for TV, video or camera capture
-- Location-based services-capable
-- Text, picture and video messaging capabilities
-- Display: 2.0" 240 x 320 TFT (65k colors)
-- Memory: Over 50 MB internal and optional external microSD(TM) expansion
slot
-- 2.5mm headset jack
-- Weight: 3.7 ounces
-- Battery: 940 mAh

V CAST Mobile TV from Verizon Wireless is powered on the FLO TV(TM) service from MediaFLO USA Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of QUALCOMM Incorporated. Because MediaFLO USA operates a dedicated multicast network that delivers programming in a linear format, Verizon Wireless can offer customers the latest in mobile entertainment without impacting its award- winning voice and data services.

Pricing and Availability


The MOTORIZR Z6tv will be available on Friday, October 5 for $179.99 after a $50 mail-rebate and new two-year customer agreement. Customers may http://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif purchase the new MOTORIZR Z6tv at more than 2,300 Verizon Wireless Communications Stores, including those in Circuit City, and online at http://www.verizonwireless.com.

Monthly access packages for V CAST Mobile TV range from $13 to $25 per month. For the latest information on V CAST Mobile TV from Verizon Wireless, including programs, handsets, pricing and availability, visit the V CAST Mobile TV Web site at http://www.verizonwireless.com/mobiletv.

For more information on Verizon Wireless products and services, visit a Verizon Wireless Communications Store, call 1-800-2 JOIN IN or visit
http://www.verizonwireless.com.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Alaska Airlines to launch in-flight internet


Wireless Internet access through a satellite link is to be tested by American Airlines, it has been reported.

The carrier is to provide wireless hotspots inside a plane's cabin through a satellite receiver on top of the plane, so passengers can connect to the internet. Alaska Airlines has been working with the California-based company Row 44 for the last two years to develop the technology. Steve Jarvis, Alaska Airlines' vice president of sales, marketing and customer experience, said: "Bringing broadband internet access to the skies is one of the most important things we can do to enhance the experience of both business and leisure customers.

"We're moving ahead with testing and ultimately plan to bring wireless broadband to our whole fleet." Alaska Airlines was the first North American carrier to offer tickets over the internet in 1995. The airline is based in Seattle and has a fleet of 114 aircraft.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Printer Is Final Piece of Wireless Puzzle


Work-at-home professionals say they need a wireless printer to complete a truly wireless work environment in their homes, according to the latest survey commissioned by Lexmark International, Inc. on productivity and technology trends at work and at home(1).

The online survey included 1,000 respondents in three categories:
* People who bring work home from the office on weeknights or weekends
(48 percent of respondents).
* People who operate a home-based business (29 percent of respondents).
* People who telecommute from home at least periodically (23 percent of
respondents).

When asked about wireless technology in their homes, 40 percent of respondents strongly agreed with the statement "I have a complete wireless setup at home."

However, only 18 percent of those who strongly agreed that they had a complete wireless setup said they had wireless printers and 63 percent subsequently agreed that they need a wireless printer to complete their home setup.

"Many people are focused first on the basics of wireless networks in their homes -- essentially just connecting computers to the Internet via routers linked to their broadband modems. That accounts for the exceptionally strong growth in sales of wireless-enabled laptops and routers. But to get the full advantage of working more productively at home, a wireless printer is essential," said Paul A. Rooke, Lexmark
executive vice president and president of its Consumer Printer Division.

Lexmark offers a new line of affordable wireless all-in-one (AIO)
printers.

The printers' wireless capabilities enable users to work anywhere in the home that is accessible on their wireless networks, enabling complete mobility(1). In addition, all of the wireless-enabled computers in the house can print wirelessly to the same printer, eliminating the need for multiple printers and potentially different supplies items.

Where they work

Respondents to the latest Lexmark survey cited inadequate office space as a key dislike about working from home. While 42 percent said they have a separate home office or study, the remainder of respondents said they work from a wide range of locations within the home, including spare bedrooms, kitchen or dining room tables,
space in their basement, a "nook" under stairs or in a hallway, a coffee table in the living room, their bed, and a corner of the baby's room, for example.

With wireless printers, users are not limited in their placement by proximity to a computer or computers, providing more flexibility to take advantage of the most convenient space possible.

What they print

Text documents are the most commonly printed material by work-at-home professionals, followed by Internet content. Here's a list of content and the frequency with which they were selected by respondents (who were asked to select all that applied):
* Text documents, 84 percent
* Internet content / Web pages, 66 percent
* Spreadsheets, 49 percent
* Photos or images, 47 percent
* Emails / calendars, 47 percent
* Presentations, 32 percent

Lexmark's wireless AIO printers enable users not only to print, but also to copy and scan as well as to send and receive hardcopy faxes on four-in-one models. The printers also provide advanced photo editing and printing capabilities.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Apple mulls wireless move


The software and technology giant Apple is reportedly considering building a wireless network of its own.

BusinessWeek has reported that the company is considering taking part in the government's upcoming auction of a segment of the wireless spectrum. If Apple did indeed build its own wireless network, it would no longer have to rely carriers such as AT&T to provide service for its wireless devices like the iPhone.

Giants such as Google and others are also likely to put in bids for the 700 MHz spectrum, which the Federal Communications Commission has dubbed "beachfront property". The minimum bid for the band will be 4.6 billion but the bidding is widely expected to go as high as $9 billion. However, a source at Apple told BusinessWeek that though the company is still considering the move, it is more likely that they will choose not to. Meanwhile, over the weekend Apple sold its millionth iPhone. Click here for information on other digital products and services.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

FCC Leaves Public In The Dark


By JOHN DUNBAR

WASHINGTON (AP) — It's odd for an agency that has the word "communications" as its middle name, but the Federal Communications Commission routinely leaves the public in the dark about how it makes critical policy decisions.

That secrecy was on display during the recent debate over how the government should auction off the rights to billions of dollars worth of publicly owned airwaves.

For three weeks, potential bidders such as AT&T Inc. and Google Inc. and a coalition of public interest groups waged a war through the media over proposed rules, prepared under FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, that would guide the auction.

The debate advanced largely on rumor and speculation, because Martin's draft, as required by agency rules, was never made public. In fact, even when commissioners approved the auction rules at an open meeting on July 31, they still hadn't been made public.

That didn't happen until 10 days later, after the FCC staff had a chance to proofread and fine-tune the language.

The auction rules experience is not unique. It is how the agency has conducted the public's business for at least a decade, some observers say. The FCC is auctioning a large swath of spectrum being made available thanks to a transition by TV station owners to digital broadcasting. Old-style analog broadcasting must cease by Feb. 18, 2009. Anyone who does not have a digital-ready television or converter by then won't be able to receive a picture.

The transition will be long, expensive and painful, but ultimately worth it. More efficient use of the spectrum will lead to billions of dollars deposited in the U.S. Treasury from auction proceeds and more advanced services for wireless customers. The government estimates the auction, scheduled to begin Jan. 16, 2008, will raise between $10 billion and $15 billion.

Before the auction can be conducted, the FCC must work out hundreds of technical details regarding the licenses that will be granted for use of the spectrum. These include what the spectrum can be used for and the size of the geographic areas the licenses will cover.

On April 25, the agency issued a "notice of proposed rulemaking" that laid out the general framework for what would be included in the rules and it requested comment from interested parties.

Flash forward to July 10: In a front-page newspaper story, Martin previewed his proposal for the auction rules. He said his proposal would promote a "truly open broadband network — one that would open the door to a lot of innovative services for consumers."

Martin said the rules would require winning bidders on the spectrum to let wireless customers use whatever phone and whatever kind of software they want on the network — something that would be new to the largely closed wireless industry.

Similar stories followed, some quoting Martin. But the writers were forced to rely on the chairman's characterization of what was in his proposal rather than being able to read the proposal itself.

FCC rules say the "content of agenda items" — such as draft proposals — are "nonpublic information" and "shall not be disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any person outside the Commission."

Employees who break the rule can be terminated.

Martin made his media push before his proposal was circulated among the other four commissioners, a move criticized by former FCC General Counsel Henry Geller.

"In my day you couldn't treat the other commissioners that way," Geller said. "It's kind of a fait accompli."

Industry reaction to the media reports was swift and fierce.

Verizon Wireless described the proposal as a "Google Block" on the auction, favoring the giant search engine company over other potential bidders. AT&T said the proposed restrictions would "devalue this spectrum, thereby robbing the U.S. Treasury and taxpayers of its full worth."

Their wrath was short-lived.

On July 16, James W. Cicconi, AT&T's chief of government affairs and general counsel, visited Martin and his chief of staff, Daniel Gonzalez. Two days after the visit, AT&T dropped its opposition to the plan, with Cicconi describing Martin's open-access model in a publicly released statement as "an experiment."

Verizon also tempered its criticism, following a visit with Martin by Verizon Wireless CEO Lowell McAdam and former Rep. Tom Tauke, R-Iowa, Verizon's public policy chief.

It became clear that the companies, which run the nation's two largest wireless networks, were initially under the impression that Martin's proposal went further than it actually did.

In fact, despite the pro-consumer spin that Martin put on his idea, some industry analysts concluded the auction rules would do little to encourage the emergence of a new wireless competitor to challenge the incumbents.

While draft proposals are not made public, Martin could have made public the text of the rules he was pushing in an earlier proceeding. That's how many other federal regulatory agencies operate, and how the FCC has operated in years past, Geller said.

"You have to set out what it is you're proposing to do," he said. "If you really are proposing open access, you should have it out there. If you don't, it's flawed rulemaking."

Geller served in several positions with the FCC from 1949 through 1973. He also was President Carter's top telecommunications adviser.

Longtime FCC observers told AP that rule proposals became less specific after telecommunication laws were rewritten in 1996, when the commission had to approve thousands of pages of extremely dense regulations in a very short time period.

So why not put the proposed rule out for comment?

In response to that question, FCC spokeswoman Tamara Lipper provided this statement:

"The FCC's procedures balance the need for deliberation and the open and candid exchange of ideas and information with conducting its business in an open and transparent fashion. Through the comment cycle and the ex parte process, members of the public are able to participate in and have access to information regarding pending items."

The agency's ex parte rules require that communications with agency personnel regarding issues before the commission be made public.

On July 24, Martin made his first public presentation regarding his plan to the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet and took some heat from Republican lawmakers who objected to his plan.

By then the issue was largely decided, with three of the five commissioners publicly supporting it.

On July 31, in a carefully scripted open meeting, the commission approved — something — 4-to-1. (Commissioners also unanimously approved a plan designed to lead to the creation of a national public safety broadband network.)

A press release was distributed, as were written statements of the commissioners. The rules, however, were not. The 352-page package wouldn't be released until Aug. 10.

Actually, 10 days is a relatively quick turnaround for the agency.

"This proceeding is in line with existing culture," said Phillip J. Weiser, a professor at the University of Colorado School of Law, who co-authored a book on telecommunications issues. "Many people would say '10 days? That's nothing, that's great.'"

Friday, July 20, 2007

Swedish granny sets fastest Internet record


A 75-year-old Swedish woman has become the owner of the fastest residential broadband connection in the world.

Sigbritt Lothberg's 40 gigabits-per-second connection was set up for her by her son, Peter, a networking expert who works for Cisco Systems. Mr. Lothberg said: "We wanted to show that that there are no limitations to internet speed. "She's a brand new internet user. She didn't even have a computer before."

A new modulation technique was used in setting up the connection, involving the sending of information between two routers spaced 1,240 miles apart, with no transponders in between. Using her high-speed internet connection, Ms Lothberg could download an entire movie in less than two seconds. This is thousands of times faster than a regular residential connection.

Ms Lothberg lives in Karlstad in central Sweden and mainly uses her connection to read online newspapers. The average residential internet connection speed is eight Mbps.

For more information on high-speed Internet connections visit www.dsldance.com

Monday, June 11, 2007

U.S. Broadband To Boom By 2012


Improving affordability of broadband will mean that almost three-quarters of U.S. households will have high-speed Internet access by 2012, according to new research.

Competition between broadband providers will encourage 36 million new subscribers in the next five years, according to Jupiter Research. The company predicts the decline of dial-up, saying that the new generation of Internet users is more likely to go straight to broadband. Jupiter Research analyst Doug Williams said: "As broadband becomes more attractive to consumers from an economic perspective, current dial-up users will be more likely to migrate to broadband service, and consumers who are new to the online population will never take dial-up service in the first place."

He went on to say that the main providers of broadband, namely cable operators and local exchange carriers, would continue to dominate the market and alternative methods of receiving broadband would trail behind. Jupiter Research provides independent research, analysis and advice about the impact of the Internet and emerging consumer technologies on businesses.

"We’re seeing continued and strong growth in the number of new broadband users, states Mark Weibel EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc., who operates the industries leading comparative shopping website for digital products. "We have also discovered that as consumers purchase or upgrade to broadband they also upgrade to digital and HDTV as well. We also believe that the next explosive area for growth will be in VoIP and digital voice"

For more information on VoIP and other digital products and services visit www.dsldance.com

Friday, June 08, 2007

Search Results Can Be Risky

The results of Internet searches are exposing users to malware, according to a recent report from the software security company McAfee.

At least four percent of all search results could lead users to websites that could download malware, the study found. However, the study also found that the number of such results with malware fell one percent on last year's results.

Most likely to contain websites with malware are the sponsored search results purchased by their owners which appear at the top of a page. The author of the study, Ben Edelman, told vnunet.com: "The search engines could do more. "These advertisers rely completely on search engines, so the search engines are uniquely positioned to kill these businesses."

In the study, Mr. Edelman analyzed the initial 50 results from 2,300 of the most popular keywords on Yahoo! Google, AOL, MSN and Ask.com. Meanwhile, levels of malware have climbed over the last year at a greater rate than in the years before, a recent report has found. In their most recent report, IBM's Internet security systems researchers detected over 7,200 weaknesses, most of which could be exploited by attackers.

Spyware programs are sometimes installed as Trojan horses of one sort or another. They differ in that their creators present themselves openly as businesses, for instance by selling advertising space on the pop-ups created by the malware, states Mark Weibel EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc. who operates the industries leading comparative shopping website for digital products and services. “Most such programs present the user with an end-user license agreement which purportedly protects the creator from prosecution under computer contaminant laws. However, spyware EULAs have not yet been upheld in court.”

For more information on digital products and services visit www.dsldance.com

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Sprint To Launch Wi-Max


Sprint has announced plans to expand availability of its new Wi-Max service to 100 million people across the U.S. by the end of 2008.

Trials in Baltimore, Chicago, and Washington DC have proved successful for the mobile broadband service provider and will form a solid base for the service's launch. The company claims that mobile Wi-Max is "one of the year's hottest topics" and "is set to alter the competitive landscape for high-speed multimedia applications". Sprint aims to provide customers with a nationwide mobile data network http://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gifthat is faster, cheaper and more convenient a "more enhanced multimedia quality" than anything other service.

It will work with partners Samsung, Motorola and Nokia and plans to invest up to $800 million this year and between $1.5 billion and $2 billion next year. The "advanced, data-centric mobile broadband network" will enable an "Internet everywhere experience", the company stated. Sprint started out as Kansas-based Brown Telephone Company in 1899 and was eventually reborn as a long-distance service in 1986.

"Many companies are closely examining WiMAX for "last mile" connectivity at high data rates,” states Mark Weibel, EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc. who operates the Internets leading comparative shopping website for digital products and services. “This could result in lower pricing for both home and business customers as competition lowers prices.”

For more information on digital products and services visit www.dsldance.com

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Verizon Customers Get 24/7 Support

Now Verizon Wireless customers are able to call technical support at any hour of the day or night when things go wrong.

The company has announced the debut of its new Premium Technical service, which offers customers in need expert assistance with problems like spyware, viruses, Internet security, hardware malfunctions and so forth. To cost $9.99 per month, the service goes far beyond that offered by most Internet carriers, Verizon claims.

Frank Nelson, director of Verizon Broadband Solutions Group, said: "Our customers need help with more than just their online service and now they can get it from us right away. "Verizon support is available over the phone to solhttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gifve a variety of computer problems and customers can avoid expensive, in-home or business service calls."

The advisors on the other end of the line are prepared for almost any problems that may be encountered by a broadband user, Mr. Nelson added. Verizon has invested $35 billion in the last seven years on maintaining and upgrading its operating systems.

"Last year more than 40 million Internet users in the United States had problems with Internet security," states Mark Weibel, EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc. who operates the Internets leading comparative shopping website for digital products and services. "More than 21 million had hardware or software issues; and more than 11 million struggled with home networking."

For more information on digital products and services visit www.broadbandnational.com

Southern California's Latino Population Catered To

Communications giant Verizon has claimed it is making a concerted effort to target southern California's Latino population with its services and products.

Among the measures Verizon has committed to are hiring copious numbers of Latino and bilingual employees and providing services in Spanish. A full 34 percent of the calls made to Verizon's Irvine call centre are from Latinos and employees of the company that are bilingual earn $1,500 more per year than normal.

John Palmer, regional president of Verizon Wireless, said: "We make sure our sales and customer service employees are trained not just to succeed in their job, but also to build a career with the company. "For the sixth consecutive year we've been named to Training magazine's 2007 list of 'Top 125 Training Organizations in America.'" More than 40 percent of Verizon's stores in the Southern California area have bilingual personnel. Meanwhile, Verizon Wireless customers are now able to call technical support at any hour of the day or night when things go wrong using the company's new Premium Technical service.

Many companies are starting to recognize the needs and spending power of the Hispanic population, the largest minority group in the United States. states Mark Weibel, EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc. who operates the Internets leading comparative shopping website for digital products and services.

For more information on digital products and services visit www.broadbandnational.com

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Broadband users spend half of free time surfing the net

People who have broadband end up spending almost half their free time surfing the internet, according to recent research.

During the week, users with high-speed internet spend approximately 48 percent of their free time on the net, a survey from Media-Screen shows. And 48 percent of young users of the broadband go on the internet to find out information about the entertainment sector, compared to 25 percent who rely on TV, the survey discovered.

Josh Crandall, managing director of Media-Screen, said: "Many broadband consumers go online for entertainment and to talk about entertainment with other fans. "Marketers need to leverage that interest and focus on catalysing a conversation now, instead of just talking to their fans via traditional advertising channels."

Of the time spent on the internet 27 percent is spent communicating with others, while 12 percent is spent shopping and nine percent searching for news or information. Meanwhile, a fake version of the next book in the popular Harry Potter series has hit the internet and fooled thousands of readers.

With a length of 250,000 words, the fake version of the book is similar enough to the real books that it took in legions of fans of the teenage wizard.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

One Third Of Americans Do Not Want Internet

Less than one-third of American households have access to the Internet and do not want it, according to recent survey.

Most of these people do not see the Internet as being able to help their lives in any concrete way, the research from technology research firm Park Associates found. Some forty-four percent of households without the Internet said that they were not interested in anything it had to offer, while 22 per cent said they could not afford a computer or the service.

And 17 percent said that they did not have the Internet because they did not know how to use it and three percent said that the Internet did not reach their house. John Barrett, director of research at Parks Associates, said: "The industry continues to chip away at the core of non-subscribers, but has a ways to go. "Entertainment applications will be the key. If anything will pull in the holdouts, it's going to be applications that make the Internet more akin to pay TV."

Meanwhile, new research from the Pew Hispanic Center in the U.S. has found that Hispanics are falling behind other cultural groups in the use of the Internet because their English skills are lacking. A full 56 percent of Hispanics in the US use the Internet, but this figure is well below that of other groups, the rhttp://www2.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gifeport from the Pew Hispanic Center and the Pew Internet Project found.

We've identified two groups of people that are resistant to the Internet," states Mark Weibel, EVP of Marketing for Broadband National Inc. who operates the industries leading comparative website. "Hispanic's that don't speak or read English and the elderly that feel computers are too difficult and complicated to use. The industry needs to take greater steps to embrace theses market segments because the growth potential is enormous."

For more information on broadband and other digital related products and services visit www.broadbandnatinal.com

Friday, April 06, 2007

FCC To Examine Broadband

The FCC is to launch a study into whether different broadband providers can offer different rates for services of varying capabilities and speed.

However, many have expressed doubts about the "notice of enquiry", as it is an academic study of the situation, not a decisive action. In addition, the regulatory body will also look at how providers manage Internet traffic and if the FCC should differentiate between providers that charge for content and those who do not.

Democrat Michael Copps, who sits on the FCC, said a notice of enquiry is "not the way to sail boldly forward." "I want an FCC that unconditionally states its preference for non-discrimination on the Internet." Of late, net neutrality has become a controversial issue among regulators.

FCC chairman Kevin J Martin said that the FCC "remains vigilant" in protecting consumer's access to Internet content. Meanwhile, the FCC has classified wireless broadband as an information service, which puts it in the same bracket as cable modem service, wireline broadband internet access service, and broadband over power line.

To compare broadband prices of over 50 providers visit www.broadbandnational.com

Verizon Business Named Top Service Provider

Verizon Business Named Top Service Provider

Verizon Business has been named the best service provider to big companies and the government by a consulting firm.

Frost & Sullivan awarded Verizon Business its Product Line Strategy Award for enterprise wide area networking (WAN) services. The company was recognized for its ability to introduce new WAN products in a strategic way to compliment the products already in place. Nancy Gofus, senior vice president and chief marketing officer at Verizon Business, said: "Our product set underpins the next-generation services our customers require to do
business better around the world. http://www2.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif

"As a global networking and IT leader, we will continue to invest in and lay the right foundation for large businesses and government agencies to communicate and operate reliably and seamlessly around the globe." In rewarding Verizon Business, Frost & Sullivan particularly highlighted the company's 2006 expansion of its Ethernet Virtual Private Line service from the US to six countries in Asia as a crucial improvement of its Enterprise WAN portfolio.

Meanwhile, a jury has ruled that the Internet phone giant Vonage must pay Verizon Wireless $58 million for infringing three patents. The patents were among the technologies that made it possible for Vonage to offer its much-touted low-cost telephone service over the Internet, Verizon contended.

For more information on Verizon Business Products and other broadband services visit www.broadbandnational.com

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Slacker.com Makes Internet Radio Mobile


San Diego-based Slacker.com has debuted its own satellite-based radio service, which combines Internet radio, portable music and satellite distribution.

Currently the service is only in the testing stage, but when it is fully functioning could provide over 10,000 stations to users.

And by using the Slacker DJ function, the service also makes it possible for listeners to devise their own stations based on the kind of music they like.

Slacker co-founder and chief executive Dennis Mudd, said: "The only problem is that until now, personalized radio has been stuck on the PC.

"Slacker solves that problem."

Though Slacker is ad-based and therefore free of charge, the company is set to launch a premium service costing $7.50 per month, which will be ad-free and provide more flexibility to users.

In addition, the company is also to release the Slacker Personal Radio Player, which will be Wi-Fi enabled and able to play the user's personal playlists.

“Slacker has a taken a unique approach to the radio business,” states Mark Weibel EVP of Marketing for Broadband National whose website broadbandnational.com is considered the industry leader for users shopping for broadband and related digital products and services. “It’s much like an MP3 player but instead of play lists of songs Slacker.com offers customized radio stations.”

For information on broadband and other digital products and services visit www.broadbandnational.com