Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Mobile Video

Michael Mace writes: "I think there's a role for mobile video, but considering the limits on user interest, and the huge technical and business challenges, it's not going to be the great horizontal application that drives the mobile data market. At best, it'll be a nice add-on for entertainment-focused users who want video in addition to their MP3s and games."

Thursday, June 21, 2007
Nokia's Re-org

Nokiia writes about its re-organisation, which heralds a shift from a pure devices services to a blended devices-software-services strategy:


"The convergence of the mobile communications and internet industries is opening up new growth opportunities for us, both in the devices business as well as in consumer internet services and enterprise solutions. Growing consumer demand for rich, mobile experiences creates an opportunity for change. Nokia will bring these capabilities to the broadest range of devices and price points. This unleashes the power of Nokia's device volumes, now coupled with new services and business solutions. This distinctive approach sets Nokia apart from point solutions vendors," said Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo. "We believe this new organization can capitalize on these opportunities while allowing us to increase the effectiveness of our investments and the efficiency of our operations."

Under the new organization, Nokia's current business group and horizontal group structure in the device business will be replaced by three main units: Devices, responsible for creating the best device portfolio for the marketplace; Services & Software, reflecting Nokia's strategic emphasis on growing its offering of consumer internet services and enterprise solutions and software; and Markets, responsible for management of Nokia's supply chains, sales channels and marketing activities.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Talk at IAMAI

IndianTelevision.com writes about a talk I gave at an IAMAI symposium on "Enterprise Mobility." My talk was on Invertising.


Jain implored upon all corporates to create a friendly relationship with the customers through the mobile network. He talked about how "sounds of silence can be converted into sounds of money".

He said, "Small ads, news and movie theatre updates, shopping discounts and serial timings should be provided by the mobile operators. Mobile-centric advertising has the potential to grow annually to Rs 20 billion. The pull mails should be converted to push mails and spam into subscription."

He further explained that there can be growth in mobile advertising when customers pay for each detail they receive in their mobiles. Corporates can also double their income via network marketing and advertising.

Telecom: Back from the Dead

Business Week writes: "All those YouTube videos and MySpace pages zipping back and forth on the Net have revived the telecom industry—and charged up the economy."


Investors saw some $2 trillion of market value vanish in a little more than two years--twice the damage caused by the parallel bursting of the Internet bubble. Amid the wreckage, some predicted it could take a decade or more before the industry would climb back and fill all those empty pipes that starry-eyed executives had buried beneath the earth and oceans.

Over the past year, however, the telecom industry has roared back to life. Credit a steady rise in appetite for broadband Internet connections, which enable easy consumption of watch-my-cat video clips, iPod music files, and such Web-inspired services as free Internet phoning. Indeed, this year broadband adoption among U.S. adults is expected to cross the important threshold of 50%. Capital spending is on the rise as companies invest to build high-speed networks.

Monday, June 18, 2007
First Square Mile

[via Anish Sankhalia] Bob Frankston writes: "Telecom is about services delivered over the last mile. Our connected neighborhood gives us the opportunity to discover the unanticipated. Instead of waiting at the end of the last mile we should look within our first square mile and see the possibilities, not just the choices offered."

ESPN and Mobiles

The New York Times writes:


After some hits and misses in creating content for cellphones, ESPN thinks it knows how to keep up with its fans as they go about their days. Cellphones and other mobile devices, says ESPN, are natural platforms for its content. Consumers waiting in line, riding a bus or sitting in a cafeteria will use their phones to watch sports commentary or to check scores just as often as they glance at their wristwatches — or so the thinking goes. In ESPN’s view, it is only a matter of time, and mobile technology upgrades, until “phone watching” is as common as phone calling.

“People talk about it being the third screen,” says John Zehr, senior vice president for digital video and mobile products at ESPN. “I talk about it being the first screen because it’s the closest to you.”

Sunday, June 17, 2007
India Wireless Report

BDA has published a report with CII on "Wireless India." Excellent reading on what we can expect in the coming years.

PermaLink | Comments (1)

Thanks for info...

Posted by Thiagarajan
Friday, June 15, 2007
Mobile Phone Features Battle

WSJ writes:


Wireless phone carriers and the makers of hand-held gadgets like the BlackBerry have long had a symbiotic relationship. Carriers sell the BlackBerry to subscribers, putting it in the hands of millions. In turn, the carriers get to charge their subscribers not just for voice but for pricier data service as well.

Now, a turf war is looming between the two camps, as lucrative new services such as video, games, and maps move onto mobile devices. Each camp wants to control the new offerings, and the gusher of revenue they could produce.
...
At stake for consumers are what services will be available on their mobile phones and whether they're free or cost a monthly fee. The wireless Web is taking off more slowly in America than overseas, and one reason is that U.S. carriers tightly control what applications are available on mobile devices. That's a contrast with Europe and parts of Asia, where carriers' control is less tight and where wireless services have been more broadly available for years.

PermaLink | Comments (1)

The MeOnGo service is designed with the intention of allowing you to access your existing mailboxes on your mobile phones. With the help of this service you can access your emails on your mobile. Hence, you no longer have to look for the nearest cyber café or computer to view or reply to your emails. The MeOnGo service will enable you to read emails from your Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail and other mailboxes on your mobile. You can also access emails from any POP3 or IMAP4 based mailboxes too. The solution lets you configure the mailboxes you want to access through your mobile phone. Once you have configured the mailboxes you are not required to give user name and password each time you want to access your emails. Moreover, you can configure more than one mailbox and access your emails from multiple mailboxes using a single MeOnGo account.
http://www.meongo.com/MeOnGo/Main.jsp

Posted by Sujay
Thursday, June 14, 2007
iPhone and Mobile Business

Om Malik writes about the changes the phone from Apple will usher in:


Break the Wireless Walled Gardens: iPhone is fully functional iPod, with full tracks of music. Do you need to download ring tones for $2.99 a pop, when you get a full song for a third of that price? Ditto for Wallpapers, and themes, and everything else that is being sold on the carrier deck.

Shift of control to the customers: If the embedded (Safari) browser if it performs the way as hyped by Jobs & Co., will give us the choice-control we have on the web. Search engines to web sites – nothing will be determined by the wireless carriers who have thus far done nothing but create barriers between what we want, and giving us what they want to sell.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Mobile vs Fixed Internet

Victor Keegan writes in The Guardian:


Tomi Ahonen, a strategy consultant, points out that whereas porn and gambling drove revenues on the internet, five content groups are more successful than adult material on mobile phones: music, infotainment, images, videogames and web browsing. He reminds us that in 2005 one annoying ringtone, Crazy Frog, outsold all of iTunes. A key reason is that most content on the web is free whereas mobile phones arrived with a payment system pre-installed for calls, followed by a premium service for texting. If the web had had its own payment system it would have taken a different course.

Monday, June 4, 2007
Changing Industries

Tomi Ahonen writes:


In our book we talk about the 4C's: Commerce, Culture, Community & Conectivity as a means to reliably map whether a commercial initiative will succeed or fail in todays world. We believe you need all 4.

I was asked, what comes next? The 2.0 question. And It was a good question.

My view is that, we are just about witnessing the dramatic reordering of the media industry, and in fact many other industries driven by the falling cost of technology, the fact we are a We species, and the fact that today we are all capable of creating and distributing, knowledge, information and culture.

So what next? The next is the reordering of Medicine – Education – and Politics. No aspect of what makes our civil society tick will be left untouched. Darwinism is upon us. Forcing us to adapt or die.

Friday, June 1, 2007
India's Mobile Internet Market

ContentSutra interviews Rajiv Hiranandani of Mobile2Win, who offers some interesting stats: "around 15-16 million are CDMA with access to premium content. 7-9 million GSM handsets are GPRS enabled, and 40 percent (3-3.5 million) of these use operator WAP sites. So thats around 18-20 million potential targets for WAP based advertising. The situation with WAP is similar to that of Internet advertising in 1999-2000. The 14-25 year old age group is on WAP, and even the 10-11 year olds are now coming on to the mobile platform."

Mobile Devices and Data

Tony Fish writes: "Our mobile device is not only with us, it is increasingly part of us; it has become for many users the most personal thing. Published research suggests that we notice the loss of the mobile device faster than our wallet. The mobile device, if capable, can capture your ‘Digital Footprint’ [My first impression of this was described as ‘the slug trail’ in Being Digital by Nicholas Negroponte 1996. Digital Footprint is also known as a ‘Lifestream.’ ‘Lifestreams’ will soon be structured using APML as a common data interchange format for attention or iPALS - identity, Presence, Attention, Location and Services.] which is our daily actions and activities; when we start moving in the morning, what information was searched, requested or delivered, where we have been, where we stayed and for how long. Relationship analysis using our contact base would detail who we were with and who was nearby. Other Screens of Life [‘Screens of Life’ is a phrase explored in Mobile Web 2.0 as a mechanism to describe how we interact with media; both as a consumer of content and as a creator. The screens of life being Cinema, TV, PC, HeadRest (Airplane or Car), Mobile Device, Informational (iPod)] will be unable to repeat this data collection feat, at best a fixed access Web model may get 10% of the available data of your daily pattern, TV maybe 1%, but the mobile device opens the possibility of 90%."

Thursday, May 31, 2007
WiFi and Mobiles

BBC News writes:


As the numbers turning to 3G are climbing, those mobile networks could be forgiven for thinking that it was only a matter of time before they started recouping the considerable capital cost of buying and building that network.

Unfortunately the relentless pace of innovation may be about to dent the dreams of recovering those costs.
...
As hotspots get linked up into mesh networks that offer blanket coverage they create a rival to the 3G networks currently in existence.

Coming iPhone Era

Tomi Ahonen writes: "June 2007 marks a watershed moment in time. Much like the Western calendar marks time from before and after Jesus Christ, and how the computer world changed totally by the Macintosh - remembering that Windows is Microsoft's copy of the Mac operating system - I am certain that the mobile telecoms world will count its time in two Eras. The Era BI: time Before the iPhone, and the ERA AI: time After the iPhone. What will change? Pretty much everything. And funnily enough, most of it is not actually caused by the iPhone, they only happen to occur so closely to the iPhone, that the iPhone will be given much of the credit."

Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Helio's Ocean Design

Technology Review writes about the design of the new mobile phone from Helio: "The Ocean is hefty by today's sleek standards, pill-shaped in a market of rectangular things. The company's future will hinge on how much the intended audience appreciates those departures from conventional design. It will hinge on the layout of the device's QWERTY keyboard. It will hinge on the simplicity of the messaging and search interface (for instance, the way it allows users to start typing from idle mode). And it will hinge on--the hinges. The Ocean (which will sell for $295, plus a monthly fee of $65 to $135 for rich-media subscriptions and varying allotments of voice minutes) sports a pair of them; operated by a novel three-way spring, they enable a keyboard to slide out from one side of the device and a numerical keypad to slide out from another."

Monday, May 28, 2007
GooglePhone Fact and Fiction

DailyWireless analyses all the statements and theories.

7 C's of Cellphones

Tomi Ahonen discusses Communication, Consumption, Creation, Commerce, Community, Commercials and Control.

Friday, May 25, 2007
3G Killer Apps

Reuters writes:


Mobile operators around the globe are busy rolling out 3G services and upgrades, dreaming of a day when users casually make video calls and download movies, allowing companies to reap several times more revenue per phone.

But that rosy future remains elusive. Despite the billions of dollars spent on new networks and marketing, operators are still struggling to find the new features customers cannot live without that will finally make 3G pay.
...
Analysts say many operators have neglected the development of content and services that their customers want in their headlong pursuit of new technology. Meanwhile users are still mostly just using their phones to make voice calls and send text messages.

Wireless Broadband

Knowledge@Wharton has a progress report:


The pieces appear to be falling in place for wireless broadband: Sprint Nextel says its next-generation high-speed network will be launched in a few markets by the end of 2007. Intel plans on embedding so-called "WiMAX" enabled semiconductors in laptops by the end of 2008, and the Federal Communications Commission on May 1 approved a laptop device that will receive WiMAX signals from a company called Clearwire. Other companies, such as T-Mobile, are supporting hybrid wireless networks so devices can hop between technologies.

Although these developments could be the Next Big Thing in broadband wireless access, it's too early to say where this will all end up. For years, the industry has had a crystal clear vision of how users will connect to the Internet in the future: High-speed wireless devices will allow consumers to watch videos, share pictures, socialize and do many activities that haven't even been thought up yet. The big unknown is when technology -- or a combination of technologies -- will make that vision a reality.

PermaLink | Comments (1)

Hi
We are looking for Industry professionals who write on IT, ITeS or related Industry. We would be interested in talking to you. Can you please send us your email at Invitation.thinkingstreet@gmail.com

Thanks Anuja.

Posted by Anuja
Older Entries
UK: SMS replacing Voice   [Monday, May 21, 2007]
Mobiles in Kenya   [Friday, May 18, 2007]
Mobile Data Industry   [Tuesday, May 15, 2007]
Mobile Phones and Economic Growth   [Monday, May 14, 2007]
Micro MVNOs   [Monday, May 14, 2007]
Open Wireless   [Friday, May 11, 2007]
Mobile Handset Makers   [Friday, May 11, 2007]
US Mobile Data Services   [Wednesday, May 9, 2007]
Mobile Operators and Third Parties   [Wednesday, May 9, 2007]
Global Wireless Data Market Update 2006   [Tuesday, May 8, 2007]
Mobile Youth Report   [Monday, May 7, 2007]
Mobile Ads in China   [Sunday, April 29, 2007]
MVAS in India   [Saturday, April 28, 2007]
Economist Telecom Survey   [Saturday, April 28, 2007]
SMSing   [Friday, April 27, 2007]
Mobile Advertising   [Thursday, April 26, 2007]
China Mobile Numbers   [Wednesday, April 25, 2007]
Nokia N95   [Tuesday, April 17, 2007]
New Broadband Network   [Monday, April 16, 2007]
Meraki   [Friday, April 13, 2007]
Mobile Ecosystem   [Friday, April 13, 2007]
The New AT&T   [Monday, April 2, 2007]
Wireless Innovations   [Saturday, March 31, 2007]
Vanu's Software Base Station   [Friday, March 30, 2007]
SMS vs MMS   [Friday, March 30, 2007]
Mobile Content   [Wednesday, March 28, 2007]
Wireless Disruption   [Saturday, March 24, 2007]
Verizon's Network   [Friday, March 23, 2007]
Rethinking Mobiles   [Friday, March 23, 2007]
Japan's Mobile Internet Lead   [Thursday, March 22, 2007]
Nokia's View of India   [Tuesday, March 20, 2007]
Moving Petabytes   [Tuesday, March 20, 2007]
Voice and Portals   [Monday, March 19, 2007]
One Number to Ring All Phones   [Monday, March 19, 2007]
Mobile OSes   [Tuesday, March 13, 2007]
Mobile Web 2.0 Ecosystem   [Monday, March 12, 2007]
Verizon's Network Bet   [Friday, March 9, 2007]
Mobile Gaming   [Wednesday, March 7, 2007]
Mobile Advertising   [Friday, March 2, 2007]
India's Mobile Revolution   [Wednesday, February 28, 2007]
WiMax   [Saturday, February 24, 2007]
3GSM Learnings   [Thursday, February 22, 2007]
Mobile Data   [Wednesday, February 21, 2007]
3GSM Winners   [Tuesday, February 20, 2007]
Ads and Mobiles   [Tuesday, February 20, 2007]
Telecom Industry Future   [Monday, February 19, 2007]
Two Mobile Industries   [Saturday, February 17, 2007]
Mobile Web Phone   [Friday, February 16, 2007]
Mobiles and Healthcare   [Thursday, February 15, 2007]
Carnival of the Mobilists - Khosla Post of the Year   [Thursday, February 15, 2007]
Mobile Data Lessons   [Wednesday, February 14, 2007]
Finland for Mobiles Future   [Tuesday, February 13, 2007]
mChek in MobileMonday Peer Awards Finalists List   [Tuesday, February 13, 2007]
Mobile Content Market   [Thursday, February 8, 2007]
Meraki's Wireless Connectivity Solution   [Wednesday, February 7, 2007]
Obstacles to Mobile Innovation   [Tuesday, February 6, 2007]
Mobile Marketing   [Monday, February 5, 2007]
Mobile Advertising   [Monday, February 5, 2007]
Broadband Use   [Saturday, February 3, 2007]
Beyond Walled Gardens   [Saturday, February 3, 2007]
Mobile Advertising Guidelines   [Saturday, February 3, 2007]
A SmartPhone Future   [Friday, February 2, 2007]
Nokia N800   [Thursday, February 1, 2007]
iPod and Musicphones   [Wednesday, January 31, 2007]
2.7 Billion Mobiles   [Saturday, January 27, 2007]
Mobile Marketing   [Friday, January 26, 2007]
iPhone as Teleputer   [Friday, January 26, 2007]
Mobile Marketing   [Wednesday, January 24, 2007]
Telecom Trends   [Monday, January 22, 2007]
Mobile Marketing   [Monday, January 22, 2007]
Nokia Nseries Phones   [Saturday, January 20, 2007]
Mobile Predictions for 2007   [Friday, January 19, 2007]
Chinese Mobile Aggregators   [Thursday, January 18, 2007]
Mobile Marketing   [Wednesday, January 17, 2007]
India's Mobile Market   [Saturday, January 13, 2007]
Apple iPhone Impact   [Friday, January 12, 2007]
Mobile's Next Killer App   [Friday, January 12, 2007]
The Fourth Screen   [Tuesday, January 9, 2007]
Mobile Predictions   [Saturday, January 6, 2007]
2007 Mobile Trends   [Friday, January 5, 2007]
Mobility in 2007   [Thursday, January 4, 2007]
2007 Mobile and Wireless Trends   [Friday, December 29, 2006]
Mobile Data   [Friday, December 29, 2006]
Phones and Privacy   [Friday, December 29, 2006]
Mobile Marketing Challenges   [Thursday, December 28, 2006]
Blackberry Pearl   [Thursday, December 28, 2006]
2007 Broadband Trends   [Tuesday, December 26, 2006]
Mobile Advertising   [Monday, December 25, 2006]
Telecom's Future   [Saturday, December 23, 2006]
India's 10-Point Telecom Plan   [Friday, December 22, 2006]
India Mobiles Growth   [Thursday, December 14, 2006]
2007 Mobile Industry Predictions   [Monday, December 11, 2006]
Business Week Wireless Report   [Monday, December 4, 2006]
Mobile Operator Pipes   [Saturday, December 2, 2006]
Broadband as the new Utility   [Wednesday, November 29, 2006]
Telecom Bundles   [Tuesday, November 28, 2006]
3 and Mobile Data   [Wednesday, November 22, 2006]
South Korea's High Mobile Speeds   [Friday, November 17, 2006]
TI's eCosto Chips   [Saturday, November 11, 2006]
HBO's Broadband Plans   [Friday, November 3, 2006]
The Philippines and SMS   [Monday, October 30, 2006]
Mobile TV   [Saturday, October 28, 2006]
Mobile Value Shifting   [Friday, October 27, 2006]
Video Conferencing   [Tuesday, October 24, 2006]
Telecoms Convergence   [Thursday, October 19, 2006]
IPTV Issues   [Monday, October 16, 2006]
Telecoms Convergence   [Friday, October 13, 2006]
Ten Hot Wireless Trends   [Saturday, October 7, 2006]
Nokia's Wibree   [Thursday, October 5, 2006]
Mobile Buzz   [Saturday, September 30, 2006]
WISPs   [Thursday, September 28, 2006]
Mobile Youth Services   [Wednesday, September 27, 2006]
US and European Mobile Use   [Monday, September 18, 2006]
Worldwide Wireless Data Trends   [Saturday, September 16, 2006]
Mobile Entertainment   [Friday, September 15, 2006]
NTT Docomo's Future   [Tuesday, September 12, 2006]
Sky Dayton's Ventures   [Friday, September 8, 2006]
Nokia's E62   [Friday, August 25, 2006]
Qualcomm vs Intel   [Thursday, August 24, 2006]
India Cellphone Market   [Wednesday, August 23, 2006]
Wiring Rwanda   [Tuesday, August 22, 2006]
Sprint's WiMax Bet   [Thursday, August 17, 2006]
Mobiles and PCs   [Thursday, August 17, 2006]
Pay-Per-View Internet?   [Wednesday, August 16, 2006]
SMS and MMS Opportunities   [Monday, August 14, 2006]
VoIP over WiFi   [Saturday, August 12, 2006]
3G in Europe   [Friday, August 11, 2006]
Texting in US   [Wednesday, August 9, 2006]
MMS   [Sunday, August 6, 2006]
WiFi on Mobiles   [Monday, July 31, 2006]
IPTV Dream   [Saturday, July 22, 2006]
Clearwire and WiMax   [Monday, July 17, 2006]
Cringely on WiMax   [Monday, July 10, 2006]
Mobile Internet in Japan   [Thursday, July 6, 2006]
The Last Mile   [Saturday, July 1, 2006]
MetroNanoNet   [Saturday, July 1, 2006]
Fon's WiFi Plans   [Friday, June 30, 2006]
Announcing Mobile Monday Mumbai   [Wednesday, June 28, 2006]
Taipei's WiFly   [Wednesday, June 28, 2006]
Mobile Network as Computer   [Tuesday, June 27, 2006]
Mobile Uses in Asia   [Monday, June 26, 2006]
Utilicom   [Saturday, June 24, 2006]
Mobile Media Startups Struggling   [Friday, June 23, 2006]
Jeff Pulver and Internet Video   [Tuesday, June 20, 2006]
British Telecom's 21CN   [Friday, June 16, 2006]
Mobile TV in Italy   [Friday, June 16, 2006]
Simpler Mobiles   [Tuesday, June 13, 2006]
Online Video Ads   [Monday, June 12, 2006]
Future Mobiles   [Saturday, June 10, 2006]
Mobile TV   [Friday, June 9, 2006]
Motorola's Q   [Thursday, June 8, 2006]
WiFi Mobiles   [Wednesday, June 7, 2006]
MTV and Mobile Content   [Monday, June 5, 2006]
Nokia's Plans   [Thursday, June 1, 2006]
Mobile TV   [Wednesday, May 31, 2006]
Video on Demand   [Tuesday, May 30, 2006]
Wireless Future   [Monday, May 29, 2006]
Mobile Internet   [Saturday, May 27, 2006]
Dot-Mobi   [Friday, May 26, 2006]
Wavion   [Thursday, May 25, 2006]
Mobile Media   [Thursday, May 25, 2006]
Mobile Internet Usage   [Wednesday, May 24, 2006]
Mobile Content   [Tuesday, May 23, 2006]
Future Phones   [Monday, May 22, 2006]
Mobile Internet   [Tuesday, May 16, 2006]
Municipal Wireless Networks   [Monday, May 15, 2006]
Power Lines for Networking   [Friday, May 12, 2006]
QualSoft   [Thursday, May 11, 2006]
The Need for Gigabits   [Thursday, May 11, 2006]
Texting vs Calling   [Tuesday, May 9, 2006]
Wi-Fi Challenges   [Tuesday, May 9, 2006]
Skype's Town-Hall Idea   [Friday, May 5, 2006]
MuniFi Woes   [Friday, May 5, 2006]
3G   [Thursday, May 4, 2006]
Japanese Phones   [Tuesday, May 2, 2006]
Mobile Content Subscriptions   [Tuesday, May 2, 2006]
City Wi-Fi Network Costs   [Saturday, April 29, 2006]
Japan Mobile Market   [Saturday, April 29, 2006]
Texting and the Thumb   [Friday, April 28, 2006]
Skype as the Future of the Connectivity   [Thursday, April 27, 2006]
Mobile Internet   [Wednesday, April 26, 2006]
Low-cost Cellphones   [Tuesday, April 18, 2006]
Mobile Trends 2006   [Monday, April 17, 2006]
Broadband in France   [Tuesday, April 11, 2006]
Howard Rheingold Interview   [Saturday, April 8, 2006]
PCCW's NOW   [Wednesday, April 5, 2006]
3G Changes Social Habits   [Tuesday, April 4, 2006]
Helio and MVNOs   [Friday, March 31, 2006]
Will Internet replace TV?   [Thursday, March 30, 2006]
Mobile Data Survey   [Wednesday, March 29, 2006]
Mobile Data Pricing   [Monday, March 27, 2006]
City Wi-Fi Networks   [Friday, March 24, 2006]
Tomorrow's Networks   [Thursday, March 23, 2006]
IPTV Introduction   [Monday, March 20, 2006]
WiMax Report   [Monday, March 20, 2006]
The Maximum Net   [Sunday, March 19, 2006]
Online Stores Adopt Click-to-Call   [Friday, March 17, 2006]
Mobile TV   [Thursday, March 16, 2006]
Municipal Wi-Fi   [Tuesday, March 14, 2006]
Google Mobile   [Saturday, March 11, 2006]
Open Mobile Internet   [Thursday, March 9, 2006]
SMS bigger than Movies, Video and Software   [Thursday, March 9, 2006]
Wireless as New China   [Monday, March 6, 2006]
MVNOs and MVNEs   [Saturday, March 4, 2006]
Fixed-Mobile Convergence?   [Friday, March 3, 2006]
Generation M   [Thursday, March 2, 2006]
China 3G   [Tuesday, February 28, 2006]
WiFiber   [Monday, February 27, 2006]
Broadband as Utility   [Monday, February 20, 2006]
GSMA Awards   [Friday, February 17, 2006]
Wireless Networking in the Developing World   [Monday, February 6, 2006]
US Mobile Rates   [Monday, February 6, 2006]
Entertainment as Broadband's Killer App   [Saturday, February 4, 2006]
VoIP: Market Expansion   [Thursday, February 2, 2006]
Future Wireless Devices   [Tuesday, January 31, 2006]
Mobile Killer App?   [Monday, January 30, 2006]
WiFi in Taipei   [Monday, January 23, 2006]
The All in One Phone Concept   [Saturday, January 21, 2006]
Internet TV   [Wednesday, January 18, 2006]
Triple Play in Europe   [Monday, January 16, 2006]
Mobile Data Killer App   [Monday, January 16, 2006]
Broadband as Electricity of 21st Century   [Friday, January 13, 2006]
TV and Mobiles   [Tuesday, January 10, 2006]
Broadband Year   [Wednesday, January 4, 2006]
Mobile Predictions   [Monday, January 2, 2006]
Mobile Operator Walled Gardens   [Friday, December 30, 2005]
Mobile TV   [Thursday, December 29, 2005]
Carnival of the Mobilists   [Tuesday, December 27, 2005]
Mobile Marketing   [Sunday, December 25, 2005]
Broadband over Power Lines   [Friday, December 23, 2005]
Cisco Bets on Web Video   [Wednesday, December 21, 2005]
Mobility and Cable Operators   [Wednesday, December 21, 2005]
Two-tier Internet?   [Monday, December 19, 2005]
Cisco and True Convergence   [Monday, December 19, 2005]
Subscriptions on Mobile   [Saturday, December 17, 2005]
Nokia's N70   [Thursday, December 15, 2005]
Dark Fibre and Opportunities   [Wednesday, December 14, 2005]
Broadband via Satellite   [Monday, December 12, 2005]
Mobility Links   [Monday, December 12, 2005]
IMS   [Friday, December 9, 2005]
Telcos Morphing   [Thursday, December 8, 2005]
The Broadband Game   [Wednesday, December 7, 2005]
Skype 2.0   [Friday, December 2, 2005]
Build-it-yourself Cellphones   [Thursday, December 1, 2005]
Cellphones Future   [Wednesday, November 30, 2005]
Qualcomm's Paul Jacobs   [Tuesday, November 29, 2005]
Single Chip for Cellphone   [Monday, November 28, 2005]
Network or Content?   [Friday, November 25, 2005]
Cisco's Triple Play Buy   [Monday, November 21, 2005]
Mobile Revolution   [Wednesday, November 16, 2005]
DMB Phones   [Monday, November 14, 2005]
Walled Gardens   [Monday, November 7, 2005]
TV on Small Screens   [Saturday, November 5, 2005]
Internet Pricing Models   [Friday, November 4, 2005]
ISPs Choose Wi-Fi   [Wednesday, November 2, 2005]
Mobiles for All   [Wednesday, November 2, 2005]
Mobile as Remote Control for Life   [Tuesday, November 1, 2005]
Battle for the Soul of the MP3 Phone   [Saturday, October 29, 2005]
Broadband Impact   [Friday, October 28, 2005]
Next-Generation Broadband Primer   [Thursday, October 27, 2005]
Free Voice   [Monday, October 24, 2005]
Mobisodes   [Wednesday, October 19, 2005]
Mobile Media Era   [Tuesday, October 18, 2005]
Faster Networks   [Tuesday, October 11, 2005]
Mobiles as Consumer Electronics   [Tuesday, October 11, 2005]
Mobile Third Screen   [Saturday, October 8, 2005]
Voice SMS   [Thursday, October 6, 2005]
Telecom Upheaval   [Tuesday, October 4, 2005]
Tomorrow's Phone Company   [Monday, October 3, 2005]
Triple Play Phone Companies   [Thursday, September 22, 2005]
eBay-Skype Deal   [Tuesday, September 20, 2005]
Japan Mobile Media   [Sunday, September 18, 2005]
Telecom and the Internet   [Friday, September 16, 2005]
Broadband's Three Aspects   [Friday, September 16, 2005]
Mesh Networking   [Thursday, September 15, 2005]
Telecom Rising?   [Thursday, September 15, 2005]
VoIP Impact   [Wednesday, September 14, 2005]
i-mode to FeliCa   [Tuesday, September 13, 2005]
Mobile TV   [Monday, September 12, 2005]
Seven Challenges to our Shared Mobile Future   [Thursday, September 8, 2005]
Mobile TV Start-ups   [Thursday, September 8, 2005]
IMS   [Tuesday, September 6, 2005]
Mobiles for Converged Services   [Monday, September 5, 2005]
3G in Europe   [Friday, September 2, 2005]
14 Essential Mobile Blogs   [Thursday, September 1, 2005]
Mobility Future   [Wednesday, August 31, 2005]
Basic Mobile Phones   [Saturday, August 27, 2005]
Rural Africa and Mobiles   [Friday, August 26, 2005]
Internet Phoning   [Friday, August 26, 2005]
Murdoch, WiMAX and The Two Way Web   [Wednesday, August 24, 2005]
Skype as NextGen PBX   [Monday, August 22, 2005]
Wireless Broadband   [Sunday, August 21, 2005]
Sub-$20 Mobile Phones   [Friday, August 19, 2005]
Docomo's Banking Plans   [Thursday, August 18, 2005]
Cellphone Future   [Wednesday, August 17, 2005]
Mobile Web   [Monday, August 15, 2005]
Nokia's Vision   [Monday, August 8, 2005]
Of Mobiles and PCs   [Friday, August 5, 2005]
mPayments   [Friday, August 5, 2005]
Mobiles as Social Computers   [Wednesday, August 3, 2005]
Telcos, TV and Internet   [Tuesday, August 2, 2005]
Huawei in US   [Saturday, July 30, 2005]
Next-Gen Broadband in US   [Friday, July 29, 2005]
Google and BPL   [Friday, July 22, 2005]
Apple's iPod and Cellphones   [Wednesday, July 20, 2005]
Broadband in US   [Tuesday, July 19, 2005]
Asia Leads IPTV Revolution   [Saturday, July 16, 2005]
Content Centric MVNOs   [Friday, July 15, 2005]
Verisign and Wireless Net   [Friday, July 15, 2005]
Multi-Purpose Mobile Phones   [Thursday, July 14, 2005]
Future of Mobiles   [Wednesday, July 13, 2005]
SMS-to-TV   [Tuesday, July 12, 2005]
Mobile Video Learnings   [Monday, July 11, 2005]
Presence and Push-to-X   [Friday, July 8, 2005]
Qualcomm Interview   [Thursday, July 7, 2005]
Nokia CTO Interview   [Wednesday, July 6, 2005]
France Telecom's Nice Problem   [Tuesday, June 28, 2005]
Mobile Content Development   [Tuesday, June 28, 2005]
SNRC 2005 on IPTV   [Monday, June 27, 2005]
Mobile vs PC Web   [Friday, June 24, 2005]
Beyond Wi-Fi   [Thursday, June 23, 2005]
SMS Revenues   [Thursday, June 23, 2005]
Why Carriers Love the New Game Consoles   [Wednesday, June 22, 2005]
Broadband Options   [Tuesday, June 21, 2005]
The Open Cellphone   [Tuesday, June 21, 2005]
China's Big 3 into IPTV   [Friday, June 17, 2005]
Mobile Carriers and Presence Management   [Wednesday, June 15, 2005]
Future of Cellphones   [Sunday, June 12, 2005]
The Ecology of Mobility   [Wednesday, June 8, 2005]
Cellevision   [Monday, June 6, 2005]
Mobile Media   [Monday, June 6, 2005]
Opening up Mobile Phone Platform   [Friday, June 3, 2005]
Cellular or WiMax   [Wednesday, June 1, 2005]
Mobiles Design   [Tuesday, May 31, 2005]
Cellphone as the Next Computer   [Monday, May 30, 2005]
IPTV in Oklahoma   [Monday, May 30, 2005]
Microsoft and Mobiles   [Saturday, May 28, 2005]
The Only Exciting Thing In Tech?   [Saturday, May 28, 2005]
Qualcomm's One Cellphone Chip   [Friday, May 27, 2005]
Cellphones Featuritis   [Thursday, May 26, 2005]
Networked Communications Predictions   [Wednesday, May 25, 2005]
3G Phones Features Wish List   [Wednesday, May 25, 2005]
WiMax and BitTorrent   [Friday, May 20, 2005]
The Telecom Earthquake   [Wednesday, May 18, 2005]
Wireless in South Korea and US   [Friday, May 13, 2005]
The Future of Telephony Looks Like Email   [Wednesday, May 11, 2005]
Boston as Wi-Fi City   [Tuesday, May 10, 2005]
Asia's Mobile Ads   [Monday, May 9, 2005]
Qualcomm's 802.11nlightenment   [Friday, May 6, 2005]
Ethernet Everywhere   [Thursday, May 5, 2005]
Mobile Advertising   [Tuesday, May 3, 2005]
Mobile Marketing   [Tuesday, April 26, 2005]
Telecom Patricide   [Friday, April 22, 2005]
Broadband for Development   [Wednesday, April 20, 2005]
WiMax Update   [Monday, April 18, 2005]
SMS Future   [Friday, April 8, 2005]
Mobile Phones Buttons and Form Factors   [Monday, April 4, 2005]
100 Megabits at the Edge   [Wednesday, March 30, 2005]
Mobile Phones Future   [Friday, March 25, 2005]
Handsets in US, Japan and Korea   [Monday, March 21, 2005]
Nokia's Local Marketing Solution   [Thursday, March 17, 2005]
3G Killer App   [Monday, March 14, 2005]
Cellphones Unlimited   [Saturday, March 12, 2005]
Cell Phone Ads that Consumers Love   [Friday, March 11, 2005]
The Sub-$50 phone   [Thursday, March 10, 2005]
Global Handset Sales   [Tuesday, March 8, 2005]
Phones as Multmedia Clients   [Wednesday, March 2, 2005]
Mobile TV Standards   [Monday, February 28, 2005]
Indian Broadband   [Saturday, February 26, 2005]
Cellphones for $40   [Wednesday, February 23, 2005]
HSDPA and WiMax   [Tuesday, February 22, 2005]
SBC's Planned TV Service   [Saturday, February 19, 2005]
Mobile Games in India   [Thursday, February 17, 2005]
Switzerland's Broadband Battle   [Wednesday, February 16, 2005]
Open-Source PBXes   [Wednesday, February 16, 2005]
Wireless Data Services   [Friday, February 11, 2005]
Rise of the SoftCom   [Thursday, February 10, 2005]
Mobile and Open   [Wednesday, February 9, 2005]
What A Single Chip Phone Means   [Tuesday, February 8, 2005]
WiMax   [Saturday, February 5, 2005]
DIY Open-Source-based Telco   [Friday, February 4, 2005]
Mobile Phone as Digital Music Player   [Wednesday, February 2, 2005]
Mobile Wars   [Monday, January 31, 2005]
AT&T's Shifting Business   [Wednesday, January 26, 2005]
New Cellphone Chip from TI   [Wednesday, January 26, 2005]
VoIP Trends   [Wednesday, January 26, 2005]
Mobiles and Context   [Tuesday, January 25, 2005]
Voice Messaging   [Wednesday, January 19, 2005]
TV on Phones   [Wednesday, January 19, 2005]
MIMO   [Tuesday, January 18, 2005]
3G Future   [Monday, January 17, 2005]
VeriSign's Plans   [Monday, January 17, 2005]
Cellphones as Credit Cards   [Wednesday, January 12, 2005]
Mobile Phones for Homebrew Sensors   [Tuesday, January 11, 2005]
Mobile Push   [Monday, January 10, 2005]
Nokia, Preminet and Brew   [Tuesday, January 4, 2005]
Mobile and Internet   [Monday, January 3, 2005]
Qualcomm, China and WiMax   [Friday, December 31, 2004]
VoIP Value   [Tuesday, December 28, 2004]
WiFi Will Impact Cellcos   [Thursday, December 23, 2004]
TV on Cellphones   [Thursday, December 23, 2004]
Verizon's EV-DO   [Wednesday, December 22, 2004]
Broadband to the Home   [Friday, December 17, 2004]
Mobile Gaming   [Friday, December 17, 2004]
The Phone Platform   [Thursday, December 16, 2004]
Reliance Infocomm's R Connect Card   [Thursday, December 16, 2004]
Verizon's Broadband Plans   [Wednesday, December 15, 2004]
Services on Mobiles   [Monday, December 13, 2004]
Smart Phone Definition   [Saturday, December 11, 2004]
Mobile Internet Challenges   [Saturday, December 11, 2004]
WiMax Hype, 802.11 Reality   [Friday, December 10, 2004]
Paying by Cellphone   [Friday, December 10, 2004]
Internet Telephony   [Wednesday, December 8, 2004]
Open Source + VoIP   [Monday, December 6, 2004]
Taipei's WiFi Grid   [Friday, December 3, 2004]
Mobile Gaming   [Thursday, December 2, 2004]
Broadband Internet   [Wednesday, December 1, 2004]
WiFi and WiMax   [Wednesday, December 1, 2004]
Smarter Phones   [Tuesday, November 30, 2004]
Mobiles for All   [Sunday, November 28, 2004]
Clearwire's Tests   [Saturday, November 27, 2004]
Popular Telephony   [Friday, November 26, 2004]
SBC CEO Interview   [Friday, November 26, 2004]
The Mobile Web   [Thursday, November 25, 2004]
Cellphone TV   [Thursday, November 25, 2004]
Rethinking Phones   [Wednesday, November 24, 2004]
4G and OFDM   [Tuesday, November 23, 2004]
Vodaphone's Strategy   [Friday, November 19, 2004]
Cisco's IBM-like Plans   [Friday, November 19, 2004]
Skype Statistics   [Thursday, November 18, 2004]
Korea's WiBro   [Wednesday, November 17, 2004]
Taking on Cisco and Lucent   [Tuesday, November 16, 2004]
Communicontent   [Friday, November 12, 2004]
Mobile Application Design Success   [Thursday, November 11, 2004]
Vonage's Success   [Wednesday, November 10, 2004]
Nokia's Future Plans   [Monday, November 8, 2004]
Broadband Technologies   [Saturday, November 6, 2004]
One's Own Phone Company   [Friday, November 5, 2004]
Phone and TV   [Thursday, November 4, 2004]
The Future is Mobile   [Tuesday, November 2, 2004]
Why WiMax   [Monday, November 1, 2004]
Dreaming of a Single-Chip Mobile Phone   [Friday, October 29, 2004]
What Broadband Really Means   [Thursday, October 28, 2004]
Telecom's Future   [Wednesday, October 27, 2004]
3G Lessons   [Tuesday, October 26, 2004]
Wireless Hotspots Reality   [Monday, October 25, 2004]
Syncing and Mobility   [Friday, October 22, 2004]
China as Early Wireless VoIP Market   [Monday, October 18, 2004]
Soft Edge and Hard Core   [Sunday, October 17, 2004]
VoIP Applications   [Friday, October 15, 2004]