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Displaying items by tag: Mobile TV

Nokia’s N96 smartphone is well positioned to be its flagship N-Series phone of 2008, ready to capture as much of the frenetic Christmas/end-of-year/holiday shopping season as possible in the face of the iPhone assault, while also having brought its own iPhone-clone to some markets pre-2009 – but not Australia, the US or Europe.

Published in Market
Multimedia technology company, Dilithium Networks, has developed technology to support the delivery of live video or streamed video-on-demand to an iPhone, viewable in the standard Safari browser.

Tagged under
Nokia’s long-awaited successor to the N95 series has arrived: the N96. Coming after the iPhone 3G, Google Android phone and the HTC Touch, the N96 aims to deliver the most complete mobile experience and compete fiercely for market and mind-share. Not just built to consume digital content and enable communication, the N96 is also being positioned as the ultimate handheld content creator for digital media and the web. On first inspection, does it deliver?

Published in Mobility
BlackBerry Bold customers on Telstra's network can now upgrade to the anticipated final version of the handheld software, in time for its public release. This software was produced by Research in Motion, despite any statements to the contrary by policy advisors.
Published in Mobility
At long last, Australia’s original 3G provider and arguably one of its most competitive, 3 Mobile, is expanding its previously mostly capital-city only 56% coverage to a much better 96% population coverage by mid 2009 – but will roaming costs come down, too?

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Previewed to the press over a month ago as Telstra exclusive, the HTC Touch Diamond has finally landed on store shelves to challenge the iPhone 3G for smartphone supremacy.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Wednesday, 25 June 2008 17:30

The HTC Touch Diamond: a true iPhone 3G killer?

Nope, there’s no iPhone on Telstra’s Next G network yet, but from mid-August the HTC Touch Diamond will exclusively sparkle its way into Telstra stores and sprinkle a bit of magic over the lacklustre Windows Mobile OS. Surely it’ll be joined, if not preceded, by the iPhone 3G?

Published in Mobility
iYawn... yeah, Apple has finally, after a million, zillion years, launched TV shows in the Australian iTunes store. I’m sure it’ll grow, or at least, I certainly hope so, but for now... iYawn. Aaaah.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Ever remember hearing that one day phones and computers would have a built-in projector that would project large images onto the wall, making the watching of video or even just using your phone like a computer? No? Yes? Well, it’s come true anyway.

Published in Mobility
Tuesday, 03 June 2008 08:24

Ericsson wants to be telcos' 'Televisionary'

The 'holy grail' of service providers as broadcasting and fixed and mobile communications converge is the 'three screens' model: the ability to deliver, and receive, integrated video content via PCs, TVs and mobile devices, and Ericsson is making a big push to be the preferred supplier to deliver on this vision.

Published in Strategy
Based on the high popular Spb “Mobile Shell”, Spb Software House has showcased a new “Online Shell” at Australia’s CeBIT tech conference. It brings a range of online multimedia entertainment and information services using the Mobile Shell interface, which itself brought a very iPhone-esque experience to drab Windows Mobile devices.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
I know my mobile phone usage is far from typical. If the supermarket is out of our usual brand of butter, I don't ring home and discuss it, I just pick from what's there. But it is reassuring to learn that I am in at least one respect part of the majority according to a new survey.

Published in Mobility
Saturday, 03 May 2008 10:27

ITWire by request: PS3 PlayTV preview

iTWire reader Electron Beam posed this challenge recently – to bring a 'dummies' explanation to the Sony PlayTV box for the PlayStation 3.

Published in Radioactive IT
Monday, 28 April 2008 18:23

CDMA network gets cu... beep beep beep

Cut. Chopped. Closed. Finito. Over and out. Lights off. KO’d. Goodbye and good luck, oh CDMA network, may you forever rest in peace, as your equipment is taken away in pieces.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
How quickly will Australia’s dominant telco, Telstra, act to fix remaining CDMA blackspots now that CDMA network has been given the green light to shut down on Monday April 28? A Liberal Party Senator says the Federal Labor Government has lost its powerful leverage – but is this true?

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Monday the 28th of April is D-Day for the CDMA network, and while there’s no stopping the closure now, last minute frustrations are being shared with media outlets across Australia. Whether CDMA users like it or not, they’ve got no choice but to switch to Next G – or give up on mobile telephony.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Saturday, 19 April 2008 15:10

Can music turn Nokia into Rokia?

Nokia’s entry into the music business is one that further pushes Nokia into direct competition with the very telecommunications companies it does business with worldwide. But seeing how poorly telco music services have fared against iTunes, traditional CD sales and piracy in general, can Nokia take music and make it rock around the clock?

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Saturday, 19 April 2008 12:11

Telstra issues CDMA shutdown Q&A

With only a few days to go before Telstra shuts down the CDMA network permanently, it has issued a brief Q&A outlining what it believes are important final questions, while urging any remaining CDMA holdouts to move to Next G quickly.

Published in Strategy
Friday, 18 April 2008 06:50

The rise and rise of mobile data usage

A new study by m.Net corporation and the University of Adelaide shows that mobile data services (MDS) on mobile phones – purchasing, communications, information and entertainment – are finally reaching “critical mass”.

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Telstra has done a multi-million dollar deal with the Seven Media Group to stream live coverage of the Olympic Games to Telstra customers on the Next G network – but the cost to consumers hasn’t been announced yet.

Published in Mobility
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