Blog

  • IFA 2009: The Clarity of Sound by Harman

    Biz-News.com interviewed Jurjen Amsterdam, Category Manager for Home Electronics for Harman International. He introduced to us Harman International and the brands under the umbrella of the company, a company that aims improve the listening experience of homes around the world.

    Jurjen gave us a live demonstration on Harman-Kardon’s newest product; the AVR 760 High Quality AV Receiver. The system supports various Dolby formats such as the innovative Dolby Volume technology which automatically adjusts volume levels when you switch between sources and channels.

    He also gave us insights into their new website – to be launched soon – where users can investigate in detail the company’s products.

    IFA 2009 has turned out to be a great event for the company whose stand this year was located at the Berlin Radio Tower – one of Berlins’ protected monuments.

  • IFA 2009: The Clarity of Sound by Harman

    VIDEO INTERVIEW. Biz-News.com interviewed Jurjen Amsterdam, Category Manager for Home Electronics for Harman International. He introduced to us Harman International and the brands under the umbrella of the company, a company that aims improve the listening experience of homes around the world.

    Jurjen gave us a live demonstration on Harman-Kardon’s newest product; the AVR 760 High Quality AV Receiver. The system supports various Dolby formats such as the innovative Dolby Volume technology which automatically adjusts volume levels when you switch between sources and channels.

    He also gave us insights into their new website – to be launched soon – where users can investigate in detail the company’s products.

    IFA 2009 has turned out to be a great event for the company whose stand this year was located at the Berlin Radio Tower – one of Berlins’ protected monuments.

  • Interview with Rod Ullens, CEO and co-founder of Voxbone

    In a nutshell Voxbone provides services for telephone numbers also called DID numbers. The provision of these numbers to communication service providers exists so any type of company can be a VoIP company, it could be a call conferencing company, or it can be a call center.

    There are a lot of businesses, a lot of services that in fact use telephone numbers because when you have a service which is Internet based, and you offer telephone service using IP telephony for example, of course customers want access to those numbers. So you have the choice of either being a licensed operator to provide these numbers or you outsource to get the numbers form someone else.

    “We realized a couple of years ago that as more and more companies were launching services internationally, a lot of companies are global because the Internet is global and in such a situation a lot of companies needed phone numbers not just from the US but also from a lot of different countries so they could operate from day one in as many countries as possible” said Rod Ullens, CEO and co-founder of Voxbone, specifically when questioned on their recent move into Hong Kong.

    The decision was then made for Voxbone to launch a company that would focus on obtaining telephone numbers from as many countries as possible and to provide these in wholesale to anyone who needs it for their own services.

    In June of this year Voxbone started offering services without the need for 3G or wifi. This shift was innovative to say the least and became a focal point for the company. There are lots of mobile VoIP solutions out there and some of them are a software that you install on your mobile device. Let’s say you have a smartphone, you could download an application, it can be something like Nimbuzz or Truephone or some application that allows you to place calls international calls over wi-fi. When you make an international call this application detects that there is a wi-fi available and forwards the call over the wi-fi connection over the internet instead of routing the call over the traditional telephone network.

    Rod notes that this plan works today, but the problem with such a solution is that you don’t have wi-fi everywhere. This ties you down to specifically be in a wi-fi hot spot which makes the solution not as feasible or not as practical if you want to use it anywhere you are. The solution stands to the benefit of providers who offer mobile VoIP like Voxbone, where you don’t actually see that when you use the service you’re not using wifi or some 3G network, but rather a local number instead of an international number. This local call is made using a local DID number and then the call arrives to Voxbone and then Voxbone then forwards the call over the Internet to the customer.

    Rod Ullens gives the following example. “Suppose you are using a mobile phone application in the US and you want to make a phone call to someone in London, in the UK, your application will detect that it is an international call, it will detect that there is no wi-fi where you are, and instead of dialing a +44 number which is an international number, it will dial a local New York number, for example, if you are in New York. And then of course you will not have to pay the international call, but you will only pay a local call. The call will then be forwarded over the internet to the UK for a rate that is much lower than what you would have paid if you had made this international call from the beginning. So thats the idea, to benefit from mobile voice but without the 3G or wi-fi coverage.”


    Critics might claim that quality is lost in the process, but Rod insists that quality is not sacrificed for convenience. The reason? Your call goes out from your phone just as if you made a direct international call which will be “bounced” off Voxbone and sent to its destination intact and without loss. Basically the idea is to use the Internet as the shortest way possible and to forward the call internationally over a private backbone.

    Recently Voxbone was a part of the ClueCon conference, where they had an amazing presentation on scalability, which, in today’s technology climate, is a very hot topic. The Voxbone R&D Manager spoke about what Voxbone did to build a completely redundant and scalable network. The presentation stems from the fact that there is an impression that the carriers out there are sometimes afraid to use open source components in their Internet work.

    We believe with the right experience and the right people in the company, its [open source] actually a very efficient and very scalable solution that you can deploy for your network. So we wanted to show with a real case, which is our own network that having open source components in your network is actually something that can be very flexible and very affordable” Rod commented in response to the business world’s fears..

    Voxbone transports a lot of voice minutes, very reliably, and they could not do what they have done today without open source. When they launched their service it was decided from the very beginning that Voxbone wanted something very automated where the customers can select to reach continents. The call is forwarded, the customer can do lots of configurations themselves; it was not possible to do that with standard equipment when we launched our service.

    When asked what types of companies should consider services like those offered by Voxbone, Rod had this to say, “Ours is very specific to voice but in a general way I think reliability is something indeed that every company should consider but there are ways to make it very easy. As a service provider what we’ve tried to do is have a network that is very redundant because thats our job, but as a user of our services if you are for example, a call center, you might not have the expertise to build all thats required to share numbers between continents, and that’s where we step in to help

    Reliability and assurance is what Voxbone offers those that use their services. By ensuring up time, and redundancy, any company from the big to the small can benefit from using Voxbone, especially if a lot of work is done in various countries, which as stated before, is becoming more and more common.

    If you look at what Amazon is doing with its cloud-based solutions and so on, they are managing all the redundancy and all the complexity around it because its their job, but then the users using their service don’t have to worry about that anymore. Thats the same kind of strategy Voxbone has tried to put into place. We don’t sell our service to consumers so we don’t have to worry about all the marketing and all the customer care and so on but we do worry about the reliability and scalability at the corporate level.

    In terms of the industry keeping ahead of the game and providing services as new trends emerge, Rod stated that companies too often try to innovate before they even know what the client wants. This works against companies, and Voxbone, while innovative, keeps in close communication with their clients in order to ensure that growth is with the client, not leaps and bounds ahead of them. So their only worry is to have as many innovation tools that they can provide to the customers. Essentially, all going back to the ease of use and ease of creation within the open source platform.

    Voxbone has a busy 2009 schedule, with presentations at both the Las Vegas PrePaid Solutions Expo, and a September IT Expo.

  • IFA 2009: iSuppli Analyst About HDTV Market

    VIDEO INTREVIEW. This time at IFA 2009 our reporters interviewed Riddhi Patel, the iSuppli analyst. Riddhi is responsible for the television and plasma display panel (PDP) analysis.

    She shared with us her latest discoveries on HDTV market as well as her opinion of the nearest future of LCD technology that has dominated our living rooms.

    She was visiting this year’s Berlin expo looking for some big innovations. Watch the video to check out if she has found anything that took her breath away.

    iSuppli is a market research and consulting firm specialized in the electronics value chain. They provide market intelligence services for the EMS, OEM and supplier communities in addition to servicing consumer electronics and media concerns. /

    iSuppli provides research in multiple areas, including: Automotive, Broadband, Digital Home, Consumer Electronics, Mobile Handset, Displays, Semiconductors, Storage, Wireless Systems and more.

  • Motorola Introduces MOTOBLUR – the New Vision of Android Phones

    We have saved the date for long-expected Motorola’s big event, but instead of rumored two phones – Sholes and Morrison – the company introduced just one handset – CLIQ and the new custom Android UI – the MOTOBLUR.

    “Your entire social life now in a single streem!” – announced Motorola at GigaOM’s Mobilize ‘09 conference, unveiling the company’s first Android phone, “the first phone with social skills”. But all that buzz was not much about the new device, it was more about the new innovative interface solution.

    Developed by Motorola, MOTOBLUR is a solution that manages and integrates communications: it syncs contacts, posts, messages, photos, etc. – from sources such as Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, Gmail, e-mail – and automatically delivers it to live widgets on the home screen. There is no need to open and close different applications or menus.

    According to the company, MOTOBLUR is also easy to set up and secure – all contacts, log-in information, home screen customizations, e-mail and social network messages are backed up on the MOTOBLUR secure server. Lost or stolen phones can be found with integrated A-GPS from the online owner’s portal, and data can even be wiped clean.

    “With MOTOBLUR we are differentiating the Android experience for consumers by delivering a unique mobile device experience designed around the way people interact today,” said Sanjay Jha, co-CEO of Motorola.

    “MOTOBLUR helps us to create phones that are instinctive, social and smart,” he added.

    This new solution will be available first on Motorola’s new device, called Motorola CLIQ in the U.S. and Motorola DEXT elsewhere around the globe.

    In the U.S., CLIQ will be available exclusively to T-Mobile customers later this fall in two colors — Titanium and Winter White.

    DEXT will be available with Orange in the United Kingdom and France, Telefonica in Spain and America Movil in Latin America.

    The first Motorolas’s 3G Android-powered device features include a 3.1-inch HVGA touch-screen display, a 5 megapixel auto focus camera with video capture and playback at 24 frames per second, a 3.5mm headset jack, a music player with pre-loaded Amazon MP3 store application, Shazam, iMeem Mobile, and a pre-installed 2GB microSD memory card.

    This QWERTY slider comes with thousands of applications and widgets from MOTOBLUR, Android Market or pre-loaded Google mobile services, Google Search by voice, Google Maps with Street View, YouTube and Picasa.

  • IFA 2009: The Magic Touch of Hero

    Eric Matthes, Channel Manager for HTC, was interviewed by Biz-News.com reporters at IFA 2009 in Berlin. He explains the innovativeness of the two company’s handsets – Magic and Touch Diamond2 – that have been nominated for Plus X Award.

    Our reporters were also one of the first to see the HTC’s Tattoo, short of the release.

    Eric also talks about his expectations for the smartphone market before the end of 2008 and unveils how the financial crisis has affected the HTC.

  • IFA 2009: IDAPT Presents Universal Desktop Charger for All Devices

    VIDEO INTERVIEW. At IFA 2009 in Berlin, Biz-News.com reporters interviewed Jacques Giribet, CEO & Founder of IDAPT.

    He showed us the company’s star product – a universal desktop charger that allows to charge several portable devices (such as mobile phones, MP3 players, digital cameras, PDA notebooks, GPS, Bluetooth devices, game consoles, etc.) at the same time, through a system of interchangeable tips. According to the company, it’s compatible with over 3000 devices.

    The IDAPT has been nominated for Plus X Award as one of the most innovative products at IFA 2009.

    IDAPT is the concept of INOITULOS, the high tech start-up company located in Barcelona.

    Introduced to the market in 2006, the Universal Charger is now available in 25 countries on 6 continents in electronics and department stores such as MediaMarkt, Wal-Mart, Carrefour or Orange shops.

    In 2008 IDAPT won “HEC Start-up of the Year” award from HEC Paris. It was also designated an “Innovative Enterprise” by Barcelona Activa during the Mobile World Congress 2009.

  • T-Mobile and Orange Merge to Create the UK's Largest Mobile Carrier

    Deutsche Telekom and France Telecom are planning to merge T-Mobile UK and Orange UK. The companies have entered into exclusive negotiations to combine T-Mobile and Orange in a new 50:50 joint venture company.

    If the negotiations are successfully accomplished (the deal is expected to be completed by the end of October), the new joint venture will create the UK’s leading mobile operator. It will have a combined mobile customer base of around 28 million, representing approximately 37 percent of UK mobile subscribers.

    The companies assure that this combination will result in expanded network coverage and better customer proximity through a larger network of own shops.

    Obviously, the other aim of the new enlarged business is to compete more effectively with the other two large UK operators – O2 and Vodafone.

    “By combining our operations in the UK, we anticipate the long-awaited consolidation in one of Europe’s most competitive markets. This will reinforce fair competition and will provide strong benefits for our customers through improved coverage, quality of service and an enhanced capacity to develop new services and technologies,” said Gervais Pellissier, CFO of France Telecom.

    “Our shareholders will benefit from higher profitability and an immediate cash flow per share accretion without impacting the overall indebtedness of the parent companies.”

    The business will have pro forma 2008 revenues of approximately £7.7 billion. The merger and integration of the operators should generate estimated synergies with a net present value in excess of £3.5 billion, as the companies claim.

    Estimated opex-based synergies should reach an annual run rate of over £445 million from 2014 onwards.

    The operators predict that the key areas for the opex synergies of the joint venture will be network & IT – large-scale site rationalisation leading to savings notably in site rental expenses, network operations and maintenance expenses – and distribution and marketing – higher proportion of sales through own shops, resulting in lower distribution costs and savings in marketing costs primarily post roll-out of a new branding strategy.

    “We will become market leader,” stated Timotheus Höttges, CFO of Deutsche Telekom.

    “Our customers will benefit in many ways, for example from the best mobile broadband offer in Britain. In the second-biggest market in Europe, which is undoubtedly one of the toughest and most competitive, we are giving T-Mobile UK a clear and strong future.”

    The joint venture expects to invest £600 to £800 million in integration costs over the period from 2010 to 2014. Those costs would primarily relate to the decommissioning of mobile sites, the rationalisation of the network of retail stores and the streamlining of operations.

    The Board of the new joint venture company will have balanced representation from both firms. The management team would be led by Tom Alexander, currently CEO of Orange UK, as CEO and Richard Moat, currently CEO of TMobile UK, as COO.

    The T-Mobile UK and Orange UK brands will be maintained separately for 18 months after completion of the transaction.

  • Skype for Asterisk Now Available


    Digium, the Asterisk Company, and Skype announced the general availability of Skype for Asterisk.

    Skype for Asterisk is an add-on channel driver for Asterisk-based PBX systems. The software is compatible with the free and open source Asterisk versions 1.4, 1.6 and AsteriskNOW, as well as the commercially licensed Asterisk Business Edition.

    It enables multiple concurrent Skype calls from a single Skype account, and supports both G.711 and G.729a calling.

    According to Digium, with the new software, customers can:

    • Manage business Skype accounts with the Business Control Panel
    • Get low Skype global rates on outbound calls (as low as 2.1US¢ per minute)
    • Receive inbound calls to online numbers
    • Route calls according to Skype profile fields, online status and privacy settings
    • Streamline customer contact by allowing Web site visitors to place free Skype calls directly to their business with global click-to-call buttons

    The companies promote the software as a solution for connecting Asterisk-based business phone systems to Skype.

    “We created Skype accounts such as Digium Sales and Digium Support—a convention I suspect many companies will quickly adopt. Now, our customers all over the world can call us for free using Skype and our Asterisk PBX processes the inbound call just like it would a normal call,” said Danny Windham, CEO of Digium.

    “Skype for Asterisk allows businesses to access the 400 million community of people communicating over the Internet, natively encrypts all voice calls and lets companies manage their Skype user accounts via Skype’s Web-based Business Control Panel,” the company says.

    Businesses already using an Asterisk-based phone system can add Skype as another complementary form of communications by downloading Skype for Asterisk, without additional costly hardware.

    Skype for Asterisk is available to download for $66 per concurrent call. It comes with 90 days of installation support from the time of purchase.

  • IFA 2009: Philips Launches Wireless HDTV Link


    Today at IFA 2009, Philips presented Wireless HDTV Link that allows to connect TV to set top box and AV components without any cable.

    Wireless HDTV Link transmits 1080p/30 HD signal up to 20 meters, making it possible e.g. to stream devices like a Blu-ray player to a TV from the other side of the room.

    The device has two digital HDMI connections and two component connections, allowing switching between devices (TVs, DVDs, games consoles) without having to change cables and plugs in between uses.

    Philips admitted that there are products already available that can wirelessly replace cables but, as they claim, their Wireless HDTV Link is the only that doesn’t deteriorate the picture quality “allowing you to enjoy the same high standard of picture quality without wires.”

    HDTV Link allows connecting all major brand (CEC) HDTVs with audio and video. Compliance to the HDMI CEC standard will allow devices to seamlessly work together.

    The receiver has also been specially designed to fit behind standard TV wall mounts so that it is out of sight and won’t ruin the aesthetics of the room.

    It looks as if there was some more room for a device like that on the market, after Belkin has said in July this year it will not be releasing its FlyWire wireless HDMI accessory because of the current state of the economy.

    We can understand the move of Philips even in the time of a crisis, as its Wireless HDTV will cost €599.99, while the Belkin’s device had an expecteds retail price of USD $1,499.