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CPE

CPE

February 17, 2010

More the Merrier

androidThis blog has suggested for a long time that when prices of handsets are unbundled from the carrier subsidy that the prices would come down. Something that will accelerate that price drop is many players using an open platform to shove down R&D costs.

Well HTC comes back with a vengence right along those lines with a new line aimed at the Nexus. Two of these three phones run Android. All have the iPhone like look and feel of course. All three will be above the $100 mark, but give it time. Eventually we will see capabilities like this in that range of pricing.

Its all for the good. More here.

Filed under CPE by Dr. Dog

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December 11, 2009

An AT&T iPhone User?

bullshit_pileWell you better hang on to your wallet! AT&T is preparing to readjust its pricing and policies. Oh and it does not apply to just iPhone, but any smartphone data enabled device —

IPhone users who jam the airwaves by watching video on their devices will be put on tighter leashes, an AT&T Inc. executive said Wednesday.

The carrier has had trouble keeping up with wireless data usage, leading to dropped connections and long waits for users trying to run programs on their devices. AT&T is upgrading its network to cope, but its head of consumer services, Ralph de la Vega, told investors at a UBS conference in New York that it will also give high-bandwidth users incentives to “reduce or modify their usage.”

Well this sounds like the knee jerk reaction of a bunch of suits who did not listen to the network engineers. If you sell a device capable of doing full signal video on a 2″ screen, well damn don’t blame the customer wanting to use it. Especially if you and your partners feature such capabilities in your advertisements.

Now in a capitalist system, price adjusting is ‘the’ method for moderating demand. It will work for bandwidth too. So no faults there. But where I would draw the line is — if flows to the shareholders or the executive suite totally then shame. A significant portion of the bounty ought to go to upgrading the network to increase capacity. That is what the engineer in me says.

No data on changes, prices or when this all happens. But do keep this in mind there dear reader. When it happens you can then opt out without an ETF charge if you wish.

Linky.

Filed under 3g, 4g, AT&T, CPE, carriers by Dr. Dog

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December 10, 2009

Blue Hippo, Now Dead Hippo?

gold

BlueHippo had sought bankruptcy reorganization protection last month when its payment processor’s bank unexpectedly blocked its funds, leaving the company unable to pay creditors. BlueHippo petitioned a Delaware bankruptcy court judge to allow the funds to be released to the company, but its request was denied on Dec. 2, according to court records.

Without access to the funds held by Checkgateway LLC, BlueHippo “will not be able to satisfy administrative expenses that will continue to accrue if these cases are maintained in Chapter 11 [reorganization],” according to the filing. The company has a bankruptcy court hearing on its Chapter 7 motion on Dec. 23.

With that the Blue Hippo seems on its last legs. We have cautioned about being involved with this firm in the past. The world for most of us will be a better place without them.

Link

Filed under Courts, competition by Dr. Dog

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September 30, 2009

Kawabunga Dude

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To be sure, a certain number of dropped calls are to be expected when you’re dealing with the wonders of cellular communication, but some phones do seem to fare worse then others when paired with certain carriers in particularly congested regions. Apparently fed up with such problems in New York, Gizmodo reader Manoj decided to stop by an Apple Store to see if something might be wrong with his iPhone — this, after apparently being assured by AT&T that everything was all right on its end. After a few tests, the Apple Genius determined that Manoj’s phone was dropping 22 percent of its calls, which turns out to actually be “excellent” compared to most iPhone users in the New York area, where a dropped call rate of 30 percent is said to be average — according to the dude at the store, anyhow. The Genius further went on to confirm that the phone was indeed “fully functional,” and that the problem is “consistent with the service provided by AT&T.” So, nothing to worry about, folks — everything is “normal.”

22% drop rate with 30% average in NYC. Sounds to me like AT&T has a backhaul problem. NYC is a dense wireless area, even for 3G. Of course there is that pesky data hang time. Or it used to be. The way I see some women with the cellphone surgically attached to their ear I tend to wonder. (Sorry ladies, not sexist, just observational fact.)

I wonder if T-Mobile is having the same problems with the Google phone?

Whole thing here.

Filed under 3g, 4g, AT&T by Dr. Dog

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September 7, 2009

No Stinking Phone Numbers??

samsung_mondi_fullMike Szczys over at Hack-a-day asks the question — Do we really need phone numbers. I will give you my opinion after the jump. But I’ll let Mike have his say first —

What works better than phone numbers?

How many different phone numbers does your family have? Many households have a home phone, a cell phone for each family member, and a work phone for each adult. What if all of these numbers were addressed similarly to how the Domain Name System works for internet addresses? Something like this:

phone://famiy.johndoe2155.voice/john_at_home

phone://family.johndoe2155.voice/jane_at_home

phone://www.your_company’s_domain.com/customer_service

This can be accomplished in the near future. All cell phones and many land line phones already have the ability to store numbers so that you only have to enter them once. Cell phones can already input web-style addresses and a firmware upgrade would allow for a new system of addressing and storing voice connection information. Service providers like Comcast and Charter are already providing phone service that utilizes VOIP, paving the way for dialing from your computer. For legacy hardware an inexpensive interface box similar to the digital cable converter boxes could be implemented. The new box would have a keyboard and character LCD and be rolled out in the same way that caller ID boxes were.

The idea of an address space of phone://some_voip_address merits a great deal of consideration. Played the right way it would be a boon to the whole VoIP packet based voice system. But that does not mean it will get rid of numbers. Nor does it have anything to do with legacy systems –

a) The Bell Folks did human factors research before they recommended the NPA/NXXX call plan. One thing was clear, digits only had the least amount of error. Even more important, the average American could remember a 7 digit number with 95% accuracy 30 min after being exposed to it. That saved operator time, during that period dominated by switch boards. The retention numbers still hold true today.

b) Numbers make the interface design for the cell phone dirt simple. Otherwise one must provide a QWERTY keyboard with every unit.

The solution? A DNS like service that would take a xxx.yyy.zzzz number and translate it to a user given phone:// address. Completely doable that could also be queried by the legacy SS7 network for POTS to POTS calls.

Digits only however is here to stay for a very long time.

Linky.

Filed under CPE, backbone by Dr. Dog

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August 22, 2009

Who’s on First, or When Oligarchies Collide

Apple and AT&T have an agreement in principle that neither party would partake of supporting anything that injuries the other party in any material fashion. AT&T is concerned about users foregoing the voice components on iPhone and using the data component via VoIP. Google then shows up with an application for the iStore to do exactly what AT&T does not want. Is it rejected? Welllll, not exactly, but then you can’t download it either –

AT&T and Apple told the FCC that they did have an agreement that Apple would not help iPhone owners use VOIP calling services like Skype on the iPhone. VOIP calls use the data, rather than the voice plan, and would cut into the companies profits. Thus, Apple and AT&T agreed to cripple the Skype iPhone app so that it would only work when the iPhone used a WiFi connection.

The companies say they also agree not to let apps that stream live television, which AT&T says would strain its network.

As for Google and its app store?

Its FCC filing emphasizes that Android phone users can get apps from outside the store — unlike iPhone users. (Users can “jailbreak” their iPhones to do so, but this invalidates the warranty.)

It says only one percent of apps in its online marketplace have been rejected, mostly due to copyright or obscenity reasons.

Google did not, however, mention that it too crippled mobile apps at the request of a telecom.

T-Mobile asked Google to remove apps that let customers use their phone as a modem for a laptop, a practice known as tethering, and Google complied. T-Mobile, like all of the U.S.’s largest carriers, charges customers extra for that service. Google later re-allowed the app, but not for T-Mobile customers.

Is Google the unvarnished victim in this? The maiden for her prince to open the gates? Well not exactly either. Google is doing the same thing for T-Mobile on Android platforms. Google you can pucker up, but wash your shoes first, they reek of BS.

All this jockeying and “where’s the pea” is going for naught too. Wimax is continuing to rollout. The following cities are targeted this year — Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Fort Worth, Honolulu, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Portland, Seattle. Wimax is already in Atlanta, NYC, Los Angeles and the outskirt of WashDC. So many of the mass market areas are in coverage. The upshot is the Wimax providers are not freaking out that VoIP will traverse their network. Fact some providers are offering bundles that include VoIP. So the cat’s already out of the bag. Fact some are considering using a “netbook-as-phone”.

By the way Who if on first and What is on second and Google is in the outfield. Google still has not understood how damaging their lack of 700mhz ownership means to them over the long haul.

Linky.

Filed under 3g, 4g, 700 mHz, Litigation, Wifi, Wimax, new technology by Dr. Dog

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August 15, 2009

Dell Smartphone?

dellphoneThe blog Boy Genius Report has some input on what appears to be a Dell branded phone headed for the Chinese market initially. Still all rumor at this point. –

  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE class 12
  • Size: 68.6cc
  • 103g grams weight
  • Dimensions: 58 x 122 x 11.7mm
  • Display: 3.5″ nHD 640×360 LCD, 18-bit, 262K colors
  • OTA capable
  • Microsoft Exchange support
  • Google, AIM, Yahoo and MSN IM support
  • 3 megapixel auto-focus, flash, 8x digital zoom camera with 30fps video shooting mode, built in photo editor
  • USB 2.0, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR
  • A-GPS
  • On-screen QWERTY keyboard, hardwriting recognition, multi touch UI
  • MicroSD slot

Yes its Android based. This was tech that was very hot two years ago but is now reaching table stakes to be in the market. Seems to be another candy bar style iPhone knock off. I’ll grant that the form factor and features are favorable, but there will be a dozen entrants with the same handheld for Christmas season.

Linky.

Filed under 3g, 4g, CPE by Dr. Dog

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June 29, 2009

Boycott Brewing Over Nokia-Siemens Iran Deal

telephonepole.jpg

Consumers are calling for a boycott of telecom equipment makers Nokia and Siemens after the Wall Street Journal reported that the companies’ joint networking firm sold sophisticated internet surveillance equipment to Iran — a story that the company says is false.

Despite the denial, boycotters have written Nokia saying they’ve destroyed their Nokia phones, and are telling friends and family to avoid Nokia products until the company “can make the right ethical choices.”

According to the Journal, a system installed in Iran by Nokia Siemens Networks — a Finland-based joint venture between Nokia and Seimens — provides Iranian authorities with the ability to conduct deep-packet inspection of online communications to monitor the contents and track the source of e-mail, VoIP calls, and posts to social networking sites such as Twitter, MySpace and Facebook. The newspaper also said authorities had the ability to alter content as it intercepted the traffic from a state-owned internet choke point.

Will have to delve into this more. But it brings up a interesting phenomenon. Individuals as using the power of the purse, by not buying or not using products from a company based on their relationships with other entities. It may very well be the Achilles heel of the multinational corporation. With the world becoming more and more interconnected, the ability of persons to act locally for global impact. There are not many Corporations that can afford 1-2 quarters of lost revenue.

Linky.

Filed under Nokia, Wireless, ecommerce by Dr. Dog

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June 25, 2009

Self Twitting Home?

luddite

A computer engineer has connected his home to social networking service Twitter, enabling it to Tweet him with updates about his residence’s electricity and water consumption.

Andy Stanford-Clark, 43, has fitted wireless sensors onto household items scattered around his 16th Century thatched cottage on the Isle of Wight, according to various online reports.

The sensors feed information to a central hub that, with the help of some specially written software, translates into words a sensor notification that, say, the bathroom heater has been turned on.

[source]

This is the best use I have seen for the Twitter service yet. Most readers know I think Twetters to humans turns all into Twits. Nor do I mean that in a flattering manner. But as a machine based protocol for sending/receiving queries it rocks.

I already have several client’s servers that send me critical messages as to they had to switch over battery power, cooling etc. So the question would be how hard is it to develop an API that handles the Twitter-X10 interface? If that was in place one could possibly build a remote control interface to the home right from a Twit enabled handheld. Possibly a two message format. First message with the intended action. Second with the security code to add that activates it to the hub’s queue.

Twitter really needs to up the message limit to say 2048 characters.

Filed under Overseas, Third Pipe World, new technology by Dr. Dog

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Yo Pixin’ with A Cell?

htc_g3_01Well if you are taking snapshots with a cellphone camera you might want to take a look at this little article from The Register

My findings can be summarized as follows:

  • Upgrading an iPhone 3G from iPhone Software 2.2.1 to 3.0 provides a welcome improvement in image quality. Essentially, image quality takes a step up from “sucks” to “sucks less.”
  • The iPhone 3GS’s three-megapixel camera is a noticeable improvement over the two megapixel camera in the iPhone 3G - and the differences are much more than mere megapixelage.
  • The Palm Pre’s three-megapixel camera takes crisp, well-focused images, but it’s a finicky little fellow with maddeningly inconsistent white balance.
  • And here’s my “Well duh!” finding: even a five-year-old six-megapixel DSLR could easily out-image any of its phone-based competition, not only in detail but also in overall exposure and color balance.

Doubtful that the camera function in a cell phone will ever improve too much. There is an upper limit that the carriers would want to see a burst of pixel traffic on their network. Especially if someone was downloading a lot of pictures. They just don’t want the hold times even if they would like the cash the traffic represents. The little screen makes framing an issue. Finally the fixed focal length lens makes cropping impossible.

That being said if I was in an auto accident I would whip out the cell and start taking snaps in an instant. The true camera buff has gone to packing a slim Nikon Coolpix with them where ever they go.

Read the whole article here.

Filed under 3g, 4g, CPE by Dr. Dog

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