Planning to switch to another service provider for your mobile phone ? Most cellular phone providers use a certain program code that will lock the.
Archive for April, 2010
Mobile Cell Phone History – Communication Technology | Cell Phone …
April 30th, 2010
jedwan Children today consider wireless phones as necessary and usual in daily life. They don’t know a time without them being prevalent. But that was.
Coolest Cell Phone
April 30th, 2010
jedwan Even if people are fixed with the idea that the Apple iPhone is the coolest cell phone in the world, there is quite an impressive number of smart phone models.
Super Call Saver Telecommunications Savings Portal » Blog Archive …
April 30th, 2010
jedwan An overview of voice, data and multimedia applications with the fundamental principles of wireless technologies available. Analog and digital mobile communications are covered, including analog cellular (1G), Digital Cellular (2G), …
Samsung Smooth Verizon Wireless Prepaid Mobile Cell Camera Phone …
April 30th, 2010
admin Easy-to-use clamshell phone for voice, text and instant messaging communicationsVGA camera with night mode for still photos; Bluetooth for handsfree devices;
Wireless Phone Franchise | Cell Phone Accessories Blackberry
April 30th, 2010
admin www.gomobiledirect.com – Wireless Phone Franchise – Start a wireless dealership with Go Mobile. Call us today at 888-409-8505.
Where To Buy Unlocked Cell Phones | Buy Bluetooth Wireless Headphones
April 30th, 2010
admin Most cell phones are sold by the service providers and they are locked, which means that the cell phone can only be used with that specific provider. This makes it impossible to switch between providers or use your phone while traveling …
iPhone tethering on AT&T still waiting on better network performance
April 30th, 2010
admin AT&T’s own Ralph de la Vega mentioned as early as November of 2008 that you’d be able to tether your iPhone to your computer and use it as a modem “soon,” but here we are some ten months after the initial announcement of official tethering support in the platform and there’s no sign of it. Considering that many iPhone carriers around the world deployed it as soon as Apple had it ready — and many more came online over the months to follow — it seems that AT&T’s silence on the issue has spoken volumes. We reached out to the company today to get a statement on the feature’s status, and here’s what we got back (text bolded by us, not AT&T): “We understand that there is great interest in tethering but cannot provide any details at this time. We know that iPhone users love their devices and mobile broadband, and that they’re likely to embrace tethering just as they have other features and apps – by using it a lot. iPhone tethering has the potential to exponentially increase traffic, and we need to ensure that we’re able to deliver excellent performance for the feature – over and above the increases in data traffic we’re already seeing – before we will offer the feature. ” Coincidentally, that’s almost identical to a statement the company issued last September, but regardless, AT&T can’t necessarily afford to meet its network “performance objectives” before acting — Verizon’s announcement that Palm’s Mobile Hotspot app would become a free add-on with the Pre Plus and Pixi Plus was a serious shot across the bow of any other American carrier trying to woo business customers and road warriors. Think it’ll go live before the next iPhone does? iPhone tethering on AT&T still waiting on better network performance originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 18:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Apple acquires virtual assistant search app maker Siri
April 30th, 2010
admin Apple has acquired Siri, a company that makes a virtual assistant app. Siri was inspired by DARPA’s CALO — the Cognitive Assistant that Learns and Organizes — project. Originally designed to help streamline military personnel’s activities, the consumer app focuses on helping you find things like restaurants, making use of speech recognition to boot. Essentially a smart search, there’s plenty of speculation of course as to what this means about the direction that Apple might be taking… and that direction seems to lead towards Google-y territory. Now we don’t want to speculate too much, but we’ll be watching to see how this plays out over the next few weeks. The terms of the acquisition aren’t known, meaning we have no idea how much Apple paid for the small startup, but Business Insider guesses the deal could be worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 to $200 million. Apple acquires virtual assistant search app maker Siri originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 19:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink



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