Tracking Stuff in Mobile

Daily news and opinion for 250,000 industry executives and mobile fanatics.

Archive for the ‘Mobile Data’ Category

Continental Airlines Looks To LiveTV For InFlight Email and IM

continentalLogo
Continental Airlines, the 5th largest in the U.S., announced recently a partnership with LiveTV to offer inflight email and IM capabilities to passengers by January 2009. Set to be added to its fleet of Boeing 737 aircraft, the service will be free to all passengers and available on laptops as well as WiFi-enabled smartphones. They will also be offering 36 channels from DirectTV’s satellite TV lineup, free for everyone but Economy class, who pays $6 for the privilege.

According to the press release, the IM seems to be limited to Blackberry messenger and Yahoo! messenger protocols, though I’m not quite sure how or why. In any case, I’m all for internet connectivity on airlines, just not voice.

All change at Helio as CEO steps down

It’s all change at Helio, the lovechild of Earthlink and SK Telecom, with Sky Dayton has moving from the CEO position to non-executive chairman of the board, and Wonlee Sull switching from president and COO to the job of CEO. Sull has previously worked at head of the Platform R&D Center at SK Telecom.

Helio hasn’t had it easy in recent times, following Earthlink’s decision to stop funding the MVNO last year after it posted a net loss of $92 million in the third quarter and SK Telecom stepped in with its cheque book to the tune of $270 million.

With the change of leadership, Helio has revealed some stats on its performance. The operator now has “nearly” 200,000 subscribers and an ARPU of $85, $35 more than the industry average. Helio also said 95 percent of its users access the internet through their mobiles and send an average of 550 texts a month.While the words “US MVNO” can’t help but conjure a battlefield littered with the corpses like ESPN and Disney Mobile, Helio’s stats hopefully indicate that the company is actually getting hold of the data-hungry customers it always promised it would.

MYiOTA Helps You Keep Up At Mobile World Congress

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MYiOTA has announced a service that they have setup for the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain next month. Using MYiOTA’s unique technology, attendees can comment on news, get information about the parties, and otherwise stay in the loop at the Mobile World Congress.

MYiOTA’s small application presents the data in a short, SMS-style interface, reducing the amount of data transferred to offer quicker speeds and less data charges. If you’re headed out that way, you can surf on over to wap.myiota.co.uk/mwc on your phone to get the free application.

Sidenote: really? a wap. website? I’ve not seen one of those in a long, LONG time. Somewhat of a step BACK, don’t you think? Do we really want to remind people of the web atrocities that were ‘wap’ pages?

New York Times Lands Spot On AT&T’s Front Page

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According to RCR Wireless News, one of the last of the old-timer print publications to go mobile, the New York Times has hooked up with AT&T to garner a spot on the carrier’s mobile portal. The deal allows the NYT to be the exclusive newspaper for 4 months on AT&T’s MEdiaNet portal, the default homepage for AT&T’s branded handsets.

The deal apparently offers up access to the entire NYT content, including opinion, sports, and business columns, at no additional charge. Customers smartly utilizing unbranded handsets (or using another network) can easily navigate to mobile.nytimes.com to get similar access.

AT&T’s enterprise offering for iPhone: 50mb international data for $60

Link: MacNN | AT&T adds iPhone to enterprise plans

For international travel, customers have the option of two Data Global Add-On plans: $25 allows 20MB of use before overage, while $60 grants 50MB. In each case, the package only covers 29 countries, including Canada, China, Germany and the United Kingdom.

I’m assuming, I think, rightly, that this means $60 for 50mb of data per month. That is reasonable. More at AT&T’s site.

ShoZu is my first Application of the Week

SnagIt Capture

I’ve been meaning to do an Application of the Week section for quite a while. Here we are. Every week I’m aiming to look at and try out a mobile application that I reckon is either worth a look or definitely worth adding to your handset.

First off, this week, is ShoZu. Before ShoZu, well, the mobile picture industry was broken. For years I laboured arsing about with sending picture messages, or — worse — bluetoothing pictures from my handset to my computer. (There is nothing more depressing than using your shiny new 500 pound handset to take a brilliant picture and then waiting until I got home to send it via bluetooth to my computer. Ridiculous. Another critical issue was data cost. It was possible to email a photo to Flickr from your handset, but not only did it take a good amount of arsing around, unstable connections and prohibitively expensive data plans prevented that.

But then, in a crescendo of joy, T-Mobile (and later 3UK) announced flat rate unlimited data packages… and I discovered ShoZu. The principal attraction for me? The one-click upload and fault tolerant data upload features.

It works like this:

1. Take a photo
2. ShoZu, running in the background, pops up and asks if you’d like to send the photo to Flickr (or your favourite image gallery)
3. Simply click OK. You’re done. ShoZu connects in the background and uploads the photo to Flickr. If your signal is interrupted, no biggie. ShoZu will try again and upload the remaining portions. No panicking.

If you’re adventurous, you can even have ShoZu automatically upload every picture you take. It’s brilliant. Literally fire and forget. I used this for quite a while until I realised my Flickr was filling up with quite a lot of crap shots (as well as the good ones) so I switched to manual approval mode. It’s pretty cool taking a photo on the tube or somewhere without a signal and knowing that at some point, when you enter a mobile signal area, ShoZu will automatically take care of the upload.

It’s not just photos. You can upload video too - to whatever service takes your choice. If you find yourself in the middle of a David Beckham v Victoria Beckham shouting match, you can take a video on your handset and, via ShoZu, send it straight to the likes of Scoopt or the BBC and go on to reap millions in license rights.

I actually have four or five ShoZu accounts. One for each N95, E65, E61i and so on, all configured to send my media to the right places.

But what’s next for ShoZu? Well, I don’t quite know. I’ve seen their Zucasts service which delivers audio, video and more directly to your handset. I’d like to know more. I’d like to get a better idea as to their business model and future plans too. I, for example, would be absolutely delighted to pay for a hosted ShoZu service without file upload limits and with a few other smart innovations — for example the ability to stream my music, photostreams, videos and the like…

I’m off to meet Mark Bole, CEO and Jennifer Grenz, Senior Marketing Director for Shozu, sometime soon and I shall thus report.

If you haven’t tried ShoZu, do so — get yourself over to www.shozu.com and try it out. It’s compatible with a ton of handsets, not just Nokia.

Read my, er, rather extensive ShoZu posts archive here. I also added ShoZu to my list of Brilliant Mobile Things.

If you’ve got some suggestions for next week’s application, knock me over an email (ewan@smstextnews.com) and I’ll add it to the list.

SoonR Gets Another Round of Funding

logo_soonr
If I wasn’t a blogger, I would very quickly try to become a Product Evangelist for SoonR. I seriously LOVE this company. The product works nearly flawlessly (The only current flaw is the inability to download .sis files properly) and they’re adding new features regularly.

SoonR is an application that runs on your desktop computer that gives you access to your stuff from any other internet connected DEVICE. Device is the important word here. With SoonR, I can not only download files to my phone, but I can also download them to my work computer, or at a buddy’s house, or wherever. Yes, they even have an iPhone interface.

They also interface with Microsoft Outlook, Skype, and Google’s Desktop Search applications. That means, if I have Outlook open on my desktop (which I always do) I can read my email, respond to it, and even email files to people, all on my N95. I can also use SoonR to easily share large files with friends. With a few clicks, I can set my entire Video collection to be shared with a few friends, so that they can download them whenever they want, directly from my machine, and it’s secure. I can also easily revoke that permission easily.

Today they’re announcing that they’ve just received a $15.5 investment from Cisco, Intel Capital, and Clearsone Venture Partners. The company has only been around for about 2 years. SoonR’s desktop agent is compatible with Windows and Mac, so you can give it ago. Best of all, the service is free.

Absolutely ridiculous reporting from the FT on o2, data and the iPhone

Yesterday I went to the gym.  To the sauna, though.  Not to do any excruciating exercise (that starts again tomorrow).   While I’m here in San Francisco, I’ve made an arrangement of the gym at the Fairmont Hotel.  Very nice, good service, all is good.  I picked up a complimentary copy of the FT as I walked through reception and proceeded down to Club One via the shower and into the sauna.

I am well disposed to the sauna experience — I like the dry heat — plus I do enjoy reading something, anything, whilst I’m in there.

There were two problems with my experience yesterday though.   The first was some absolutely donkey reporting from the Financial Times relating to o2 and the iPhone — the kind of reporting that makes my mouth drop open in shock.  The second problem was the guy who joined me in the sauna.  I don’t have an issue with naked men per se.  However this chap came into the sauna, laid his towel down on the top bench, laid face down upon the towel and … slowly… ever so slowly, proceeded to hump the bench.  Thoroughly off-putting.  An exception, though.  I want to be clear that this isn’t something I witness there regularly.

THANKFULLY I was able to use the FT to avoid the action scenery.

And that’s when I read this piece of joyous nonsense:

Link:  FT.com / Mergermarket - iPhone users raise network hopes

Matthew Key, who becomes chief executive of O2 Europe next month, told the Financial Times that 60 per cent of the company’s iPhone customers in the UK were sending or receiving more than 25 megabytes of data a month, the equivalent of 7,500 e-mails without attachments or 25 YouTube videos.By comparison, less than 2 per cent of O2’s other UK customers on monthly payment contracts use more than 25MB a month.

My problem with the above text?  Well, I nearly yelled ‘OBVIOUSLY’.  (I didn’t want to put off the humper opposite or call unnecessary attention to myself, hence ‘nearly‘).

OBVIOUSLY less than 2% of o2’s other UK customers use more than 25mb a month of data. OBVIOUSLY!  Because they’re WHACKED for FOUR QUID a MEG.

OBVIOUSLY.

So either it’s the reporter who didn’t quite get this.  Or it’s Mr Matthew Key, newly crowned Chief Exec of o2 Europe, who thinks our heads button up the back.  And clearly they do if you’re an FT staffer.

Come on!  The only reason o2 iPhone customers are ABLE to enjoy using the web is because it’s unlimited.  Their other customers — the CHUMPS who’re sat there paying stupid amounts per meg for their data — are trained not to use the internet via their handset because of bill shock.

In fact I don’t quite know if unlimited data is available to non-iPhone customers on o2 as yet.  I think it might be, if you really, really complain to customer services.

The £27,000 ‘unlimited’ mobile phone bill

Did you catch this story recently?  This poor chap in Darlington, North of England, got himself a Vodafone Anytime 800 contract and also purchased the 7.50 ‘unlimited internet’ option.  All was good until he received a bill for £27,000 from Vodafone.

Why?  He failed to read the small print.  He thought, like any normal person, that ‘unlimited internet’ meant unlimited data.  It doesn’t.  It means unlimited web browsing from the handset, not plugging in your mobile to your laptop and downloading TV shows from it.  Oh no.  Deary me.

Link:  The Opinionated Normob: Worker runs up £27k mobile bill

It’s good to talk… unless you fail to read the smallprint on your new mobile phone contract and end up with a bill for £27,322.Ian Simpson, 29, was sent the bill for four weeks’ service after wiring his mobile up to a laptop to download TV shows - and only then found out his £41.50-a-month deal didn’t include unlimited web use.

Last night the factory worker, from Darlington, Yorks, said he feared he could be made bankrupt.

He said: “I just laughed out loud. How on earth could I afford to pay that?”
Ian signed up for a Vodafone Anytime 800 contract and added a £7.50 inclusive internet deal to let him use his phone for surfing the net.

Don’t worry Ian.  I’m pretty confident Vodafone will come to an arrangement with you.  Too may of these sorts of headlines in the mainstream media will seriously damage the UK’s adoption of data plans.

3UK launches fantastic prepaid mobile data service

Link:  3 launches pay-as-you-go mobile broadband - News - Tech.co.uk

Mobile provider 3 has launched a Pay As You Go (PAYG) version of its popular mobile broadband service. To join customers must first purchase a USB modem ‘dongle’ at a cost of £99. From here customers can ‘top-up’ their mobile broadband credit in increments of 1GB, 3GB or 7GB at a cost of £10, £15 and £25 respectively. Credit can be purchased online at the 3 website, over the phone, or from any shop displaying the 3 Top-Up logo.

SMS Text News Reader Chris Drake spotted this and whacked it over. It’s brilliant news.  99 quid for the USB modem and then a tenner for 1GB of data for the month.

The United Kingdom is fast becoming one of the world’s most data friendly mobile countries.  Next time you fly in, get yourself a USB dongle from 3UK.  No contracts, no arsing around.  This is absolutely excellent.

Mind you I’m still quite happy with my tenner-a-month 12 month contract that I got a few months ago from them.

o2’s ‘Memova’ service offers email-to-phone by MMS; synchronisation

Well I like the sound of this. I might be a bit of a real-time email snob with my reliance on the likes of Good Mobile Messaging but I’m a fan of any service that helps make mobile email simple for your average normob (”normal mobile user”)…

Link: PC Pro: News: O2 pushes email to mobiles

O2 broadband subscribers can now pick up email on their O2 mobile phones, as the operator looks at ways of converging services.
According to O2, the “Memova” technology works with any MMS-capable phone and allows subscribers to “mobilise” their O2 Broadband email accounts without having to install or configure email software on their mobile phones.

Memova also allows users to synchronise contacts, diary and task information between devices. Automatic updates are also routinely synchronised across all mobile and fixed-line services.

So if you’re an o2 fixed-line broadband customer, you can get your email on your mobile without any configuration. Smart. Obviously all they need is your mobile number to get you connected as emails are sent by MMS. And since you’re using o2 infrastructure — broadband and mobile — the cost, one imagines, for transmitting emails to picture messages on your o2 handset is next to nothing as there are no interconnect fees.

I particularly like the sound of the contacts, calendar and task synchronisation. That sounds fantastic.

Good job o2.

The Sprint Express data card

sprint data card

I’ve been so impressed with Sprint that I called up their PR here in San Francisco and asked if it was possible to borrow one of their PCI express ‘mobile broadband’ data cards to check out their data service via my Apple. I got it today and I’m going to have a play with it then wander around the city using it. More shortly.

iPhone Causing Huge Data Overages?

iphone-cost-money
Over at the Financial Times, they’ve got some dirt that Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson has been added to the Disgustingly High Roaming Bills rank, thanks to his trusty iPhone. Seems that on a recent foreign trip, Anderson had his iPhone powered on in his pocket, and forgot to disable the email app, which was connecting and checking his email every ten minutes.

$2,100 later, Anderson stands a good chance of winning the ‘Roaming Mad’ contest we wrote about earlier this week. When I was in Amsterdam recently, I made sure to not stick my AT&T SIM card back into my phone till I was safely on the ground in the States.

This also brings into question different features of handsets and how they use data. Obviously there’s an offline mode, but how many users would connect offline with data, or even know that data runs even without them using the voice aspect?

Pownce Mobile Attacks Your Handset

Pownce
Pownce, the micro-social-blogging site launched by Digg.com founder Kevin Rose, has launched its mobile site, mobile.pownce.com. The site is optimized for mobile browsers (apparently it even looks killer on the iPhone, perhaps someone can confirm this for us) and allows you to do most everything on your phone that you can with a PC browser.

Twitter, Jaiku, and now Pownce all have mobile-oriented sites, as do Facebook and MySpace. Is anyone out there still unconvinced that the mobile web is going to see a bigger explosion of users than you can imagine?

Martin Sauter has a great article on why the Mobile Web had such a terrible start, and why he thinks it’s going to see a boom soon, as well. I know that I’ve been known to break down in tears and assume the fetal position when AT&T’s data network has an outage.

MAXroam Wants To Reward Your High Roaming Bill

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MAXroam (SMStextnews sponsor) has announced their ‘Roaming Mad’ story competition, which rewards consumers for sharing their horror stories of high roaming rates. The MAXroam SIM, recently launched by Cubic Telecom, is a borderless SIM card offering significantly lower roaming rates. The MAXroam SIM also eliminates the hassle of getting a local SIM and trying to figure out the rates for it.

The Roaming Mad story competition encourages consumers to submit their stories of crazy roaming bills and attempts to get a local SIM when travelling. All entries will automatically be rewarded with a EUR5 voucher off a MAXroam SIM. Ten EUR50 vouchers will be handed out to the travellers with the highest monthly roaming bills, and the best story submitted will receive an Apple iPod Touch.

I had my own issues recently when traveling to Amsterdam for a week, and in the future will likely look into a MAXroam SIM. You can submit your story online at www.maxroam.com. It only takes a minute, and you automatically make EUR5, so you’ve got nothing to lose.

Bluetooth Car Stereo Offers More Than You Think

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I stumbled on this post by Stuart Henshall and couldn’t resist sharing. Stuart recently had his car broken into and the thieves stole his stereo. To replace it, he chose the Sony MEX-BT2500, which retails for under $200 USD. What’s so cool about this stereo?

It’s got Bluetooth.

For less than his phone cost, Stuart is now using his Nokia N81 8GB with his car in ways that I dreamt about several years ago, when I got my first bluetooth headset and started listening to music on my Nokia 6620 with it. Sure, he can connect his phone to his car’s sound system for handsfree calling and that sort of thing, that’s nothing fancy. Cars have been doing that for a few years now.

What’s cool about this setup is that his N81 8GB has, well, 8GB worth of music on there. And it can stream music via 3G (where supported). This brings a whole new bevy of options. When connected and a call comes in, the music pauses, and gracefully fades back in automatically. When he gets back in the car from a stop, all he has to do is press play on the phone, it’s already reconnected itself. Seamless in its true sense.

Personally, I’ve installed a 3.5mm lead in my truck, so that I can plug whatever device I have handy in and use my truck’s speakers and superior sound system. It’s awesome with my N95-3, as I can use HSDPA to stream internet radio, or download a podcast and listen to it on the go. Stuart and I agree that this makes connected MP3 players that much more attractive, and could be a devastating blow to iPods and Zunes that don’t support Bluetooth or the ability to connect to a cellular network to stream music on-the-go.

What do you think? Would you rather have an HSDPA-capable phone as your in-car MP3 player, with an 8GB microSD card installed, or a 160GB iPod?

Canadian Gets $85,000 Data Bill

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Recently, a Canadian fellow, 22 years old, stopped into a Bell Mobility store to get himself a new phone and took advantage of their new unlimited mobile browsing plan. He assumed that this meant any data coming through his mobile was unlimited and set it up to tether his home computer to his phone’s data connection.

At $65,000, he figured his first bill was a mistake, and continued using his phone to download movies and other large files. When he called in to inquire about it, he was informed that his total had jumped to $85,000. Apparently the new Bell Mobility plan does NOT include tethering to your computer. He’s fighting the charges, and rightfully so.

The carriers have such a rough time convincing people to use data on their handsets and wonder why. It’s situations like this that scare people away from their mobile browsers. Why wasn’t this chap cut off, or at least given a phone call when they realized what he was doing? Did Bell Mobility really think this guy would (or anyone for that matter) deliberately run up $85,000 in data charges?

The 3UK Slingbox road-test!

FW: Slingbox Review!!!

Back in August I reviewed 3’s X-Series tariffs , the ‘unlimited data’ add-on for contract customers bundled with a range of applications , and rather liked them.

However, I wasn’t able to test the Slingplayer Mobile application and was dubious about its value a part of the more expensive Gold tariff. This option, costing double the basic price at £10 per month in the UK, allowed unlimited streaming of media to an X-Series handset from a PC (via the Orb software package) or from a Slingbox ‘place-shifting’ device. Well, the nice folks from Parys Communications sorted us out with one to borrow and now I’m eating some humble pie…

For those not in the know, a Slingbox is a small electronic box of tricks shaped similar to a bar of gold (or so I believe from watching the ‘Italian Job’). It contains both an analogue and a Freeview (DVB-T) tuner, but can also be connected to a set-top box (for cable or satellite TV). It then connects to your broadband service and allows streaming of whatever is being watched or any channel from its internal tuners to PCs, PDAs and now Symbian phones so you can watch them away from home (hence ‘place-shifting’).

Usefully the Slingbox also provides an infrared transmitter that knows how to control most popular set-top boxes, DVD players and the like so channels can be changed, menus can be operated and recordings started and stopped remotely too. 3 were the first network in the world to introduce the Symbian client coupled with unlimited streaming over 3G and it wasn’t until almost a year later in October this year that Sling made the client generally available.

Setting up the Slingbox is easy, even with the spaghetti of cables under my TV the instructions had me hooking it up to my Sky box in 5 minutes with all the various cables needed included. An annoyance I hadn’t anticipated was that the Slingbox requires a wired connection to your broadband router so I had to move that closer to my TV (Homeplug-type devices can work around this - Sling even sell their own), but otherwise it worked straight away.

Once connected to my home network and switched on, I loaded the PC client and configured its network settings. Again this worked first time and I was able to start watching and controlling TV on my PC. Exciting as this was though (read reviews here, here, here for more on its basic features) I wanted TV on my mobile and moved straight on to my N73 handset to download the Slingplayer Mobile application from 3’s portal.

On running the application for the first time I entered the details of the Slingbox I wanted to view (the application can remember several if you have more than one) including a long number and letter sequence that I had written down during the initial PC-based config. Then I hit ‘start’ and held my breath… Around 10 seconds later the client indicated it was connected and starting to stream. Another 20 seconds or so passed and then voila! TV… on my phone. I threw on a hands-free kit to get the best out of the sound and settled in for a play…

FW: Slingbox Review!!!

I’m not sure what I expected, but the quality was simple amazing. I would have believed it over a WiFi connection, but over 3G streaming from my ropey home broadband? Wow. Although I had the option to switch it off I also left the sound set to highest quality stereo and it was as good as listening to FM radio on the device. I was astounded. Control of my Sky box was slick too… the client received the configuration of the set-top box I had entered on my PC earlier and through a ‘remote control’ menu I was able to access all of the features of my Sky box including the menus – the options appeared to have been customised for my device. Intuitively the mini-joystick on the phone controlled channels and menus as if using my remote control and I selected a couple of buttons I used regularly to add to a shortcut bar.

FW: Slingbox Review!!!

Showing colleagues at work many wouldn’t believe the video wasn’t being played from a memory card.

However, sat at home or in the office I already had access to TV when I wanted it so I set about testing it properly… on the move. I figured the train was as good a place as any. As a rule, anywhere with a reasonable 3G signal was absolutely fine, but there was nothing doing on 2G. On a 20 minute journey into Waterloo the picture would stutter on 2 or 3 occasions, but even if lost completely it recovered well without intervention after 10 seconds or so. One problem tunnel where only a 2G signal is available routinely caused the connection to fail, but otherwise I was surprised by its reliability. Off public transport and sat in coffee shops or waiting for an appointment the experience was much the same as at home – seamless. The picture was sharp, the sound was stereo and always synchronised with the picture and even text was crisp and clear (if not a bit small).

FW: Slingbox Review!!!

Although greatly impressed there were a few areas for improvement… The free Slingbox client that 3 gives away presents the image across the width of the phone’s display. This felt like a real waste of screen space as my N73 turned sideways has an almost wide-screen aspect. I eventually solved this by downloading the newer, generally-available client from the Sling website. Although not free (£20) it adds this crucial feature and allows the image to be scaled to fill the screen or displayed fully with letterboxing. However, it is a shame that 3 have not updated their client. Another cause for complaint was the start-up speed of the connection. This varied depending on signal and was a little slower on the move – at it’s slowest (over a minute from clicking ‘start’ to viewing an image) it was frustrating and particularly so if re-connecting after one of the rare disconnections. However, my biggest complaint doesn’t really relate to the Sling product at all… it’s TV.

There’s nothing on. Well, nothing worth watching….

The problem is that I normally only sit down to watch TV when something I want to watch is on. Having mobile TV was great but at 8am on the train into work all I could watch was painful breakfast TV… It was at this point that it dawned on me why so much attention to detail had been put into the remote control features. A Slingbox really is at its best paired with a DVR such as a Sky+ box. I went home, re-wired and configured the Slingbox to work with my hard-disk recorder (no Sky+ in my flat!) and bingo… telly nirvana. With the ability to watch shows I wanted from disk, to pause them when I was interrupted and rewind TV if the signal dropped the Slingbox was complete. Rather than being something to idly fill the time, I looked forward to commuting to catch up with the previous night’s Sopranos. On other occasions I’d watch live TV on the train home, pause it at the station and finish the program on the TV once I arrived. ‘Showing off’ my girlfriend called it, but she always says that when she’s impressed…
So would I recommend a Slingbox and Slingplayer Mobile? Absolutely I would – particularly if you’re a regular traveller. But there’s another factor to consider too… the price. Although not making much effort to publicise it, 3 offer a free Slingbox to Gold tariff subscribers. These normally cost about £95 from internet retailers, but if you intend to subscribe to Silver tariff anyway upgrading to Gold for an 18 month contract will only cost an additional £90. That’s pretty good value for a Slingbox and unlimited media streaming in my book.

Update: Since I started this review Sling have released 2 new products in the UK – primarily adding High Definition features. The original model is now referred to as the ‘classic’ but continues to be available for sale and free from 3. Although I haven’t tested them, reports indicate the new models are compatible with the Symbian client, but that there is no noticeable improvement in quality of mobile experience – that requires a PC or Mac client.

Confused customer gets $85,000 data bill from Bell

And all of a sudden the world’s media spotlights on Bell Mobility’s data charges…

Link: BBC NEWS | World | Americas | Shock at $85k mobile phone bill

A Canadian man has been shocked to receive a mobile phone bill for nearly $85,000 (£41,000).
Piotr Staniaszek thought he could use his new phone as a modem for his computer under his $10 unlimited mobile browser plan from Bell Mobility.

He downloaded high-definition movies and other large files unaware that this incurred massive extra charges.

Bell Mobility has since lowered the bill to $3,243, but Mr Staniaszek says he intends to fight the charges anyway.

Mobile broadband in Australia - an overview

I was checking out The Australian IT this morning and came across this review of the country’s mobile broadband services. I was quite surprised to see Virgin Mobile mentioned. For me, Virgin Mobile is unequivocally voice and text. Data rates here in the UK on Virgin Mobile are nothing short of atrocious. You must always beware of greeks bearing gifts, so goes the saying; or mobile operators displaying their data rates charges by the kilobyte. (Virgin UK: 0.5p per Kb — STUPID).

So it’s with some surprise that I discover that Virgin Mobile Broadband in Australia are knocking out an AUS$80/month unlimited deal (which includes $520 worth of mobile calls and 1gb data). Nice.

Here are the key points from the article:

Virgin Mobile Australia

For $80 a month, users get a mobile phone, $520 worth of calls, a mobile broadband unit and 1GB of broadband usage. This makes it attractive to people looking for a new mobile phone plan and ready to take the plunge into mobile broadband.

Everybody’s favourite innovating mobile operator, 3, make an appearance too:

3 Mobile:

Last week, 3 Mobile halved the price of its mobile broadband plans, which means its 1GB plan is probably the cheapest offering on the market, at $14.50 per month. To qualify for this, however, you need to also sign up for a mobile service with 3, or be an existing 3 post-paid customer.

Big Red aren’t far behind:

Vodafone Mobile Broadband: Vodafone has by far the best value plan on the market, offering 5GB of download for $39.95, and is the only other provider to offer the same-size plan, but this usually costs almost double.

And finally Optus Mobile:

Optus has also looked to get in the game recently by quietly launching a 400MB and 2GB plan, which are cheaper if bundled with a mobile phone plan for the 24-month contract. Yes Starter, the 400MB option, costs $34.99 a month on its own, and yes Classic, which includes 2GB of downloads, costs $49.99. It is $10 less per month on each plan when bundled with a mobile plan.

We’ve got quite a few Aussie readers — so for them, I pose this question: Are you using any of the above services and are they any good in practice?

Buzzwire knocks back $8m funding for mobile streaming

GOOOD morning Buzzwire!

The mobile streaming company has just raised a bank-account-warming 8 million dollars. Sit back, relax for a few minutes, then get spending!

Link: mocoNews.net - Unhealthily Obsessed with Mobile Content - Mobile Streaming Service Buzzwire Gets $8 Million Second Round Funding

Buzzwire, the mobile audio and video streaming provider based in Bedford, MA and Denver, has received $8 million in second round of funding. The round was led by new investor Sequel Venture Partners, and also included existing investors Matrix Partners and Spark Capital.

7.50 per meg..gahhh

I wondered why my bill was so high this month with T-Mobile (the main account). 70 pounds worth of international calls on T-Mobile and 60 pounds of data. I used about 8 meg across the week. Sheesh. 7.50 a meg. It sounds reasonably innocent when you’re looking down the price plan in the store…

(”I’ll never use more than a meg when I’m abroad, so, you know, 7.50… well… fine for emergencies.”)

Think again, MacLeod.. think again…

I always get my dongle out at Christmas

I saw a Carphone Warehouse advertisement earlier whilst I was on the train. It read: “Get your dongle out at Christmas” and showed a picture of the 3UK USB modem next to a “From £10 per month” sticker. Heh…

Alas I can’t use my USB Modem

I’m in one of those pockets of zero-to-patcy 3UK coverage so I’ve been sat in this office working away via Bluetooth to my 3.5g-conneced Nokia N95. Obviously you’d get about, what, an hour, maximum, from the N95’s battery working as a modem — so I thoughtfully brought my charger. Both laptop and handset have been plugged in and activated for about 6 hours and the service via T-Mobile has been impeccable — fast. Very, very fast.

All is not lost with T-Mobile…

More dotMobi domains up for grabs

Following the success of their first auction in September 2007, mobile domain name registrar dotMobi are having another auction, kicking off tomorrow (31st October 2007).

Amongst the 100 “premium names” in the auction are such gems as car.mobi, gps.mobi, gay.mobi, kiss.mobi, love.mobi and map.mobi. If the first auction is anything to go by, the stakes will be high - back in September hosting.mobi sold for $101,000 plus bank.mobi and download.mobi both sold for more than $50,000 apiece.

“The success of our first online auction generated more than $850,000, proving that the market is seeing a strong demand for mobile content. Already, more than 7.5 million pages of .mobi content have been created, many of them using tools that dotMobi makes available for free like http://ready.mobi/ and http://site.mobi/,” said Trey Harvin, CEO of dotMobi. “The auction proceeds allow dotMobi to make tools like these available to encourage the growth of the mobile web.”

Tim Schumacher, CEO of Sedo, said, “dotMobi’s premium names are specifically designed for brands wanting to reach a mobile audience The success of dotMobi’s first auction showed that there is a strong market demand for the mobile web in general and for .mobi names specifically. Additionally, the auction approach of making these premium .mobi domains available for ownership gives countless people and brands an equal opportunity to secure these most desirable domains.”

The auction - handled by domain specialists Sedo - is open to any company or individual, subject to Sedo’s standard auction terms and conditions with additional dotMobi requirements for buyers. Full information, including the list of auction names, is located on the dotMobi web site at http://premiumauction.mobi/.

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