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  • HD Streaming and Blu-ray "Can Co-exist" – For Now


    There are already more digital delivery devices connected to HDTVs in US homes than Blu-ray players, thanks largely to the Xbox 360 and the likes of TiVo, Roku, AppleTV and Vudu.

    Yet despite the numerical supremacy of players capable of streaming HD content, digital downloads are not expected to be a serious competitor to the Blu-ray format anytime soon.

    Why not? Well most consumers don’t have fast enough broadband connections to stream HD video. And the amount of content available is limited.

    Even without these factors, most companies say HD streams can’t yet match the quality of Blu-ray.

    Despite this, Vudu, Apple iTunes and Amazon Video on Demand have all added high-def titles in the last six months.

    They will be joined shortly by Microsoft, via the Xbox 360, and Roxio CinemaNow in a major high-def push.

    But because of broadband limitations, most companies in the space are positioning HD downloads as a complement to Blu-ray.

    Their rationale for this is covered in detail by Jennifer Netherby at Video Business, who quotes a PriceWaterhouseCoopers report predicting that digital sales won’t come near that of Blu-ray in the next five years.

    She goes on to explain that many digital services are planning to deliver them through Blu-ray players in an attempt to expand their reach into the home.

    Sonic and Netflix already have deals with LG Electronics to offer their services on BD players coming this fall.

    Vudu’s director of content acquisitions Rob Holmes acknowledges that HD streaming and Blu-ray can co-exist.

    "We certainly don’t see ourselves as competing with Blu-ray," he told Video Business.

    Some comfort for Blu-ray then, but it is surely just a breathing space?

  • SinglePipe Restructures Management Team


    Jeff Carr has been appointed CEO of VoIP provider SinglePipe as part of a strategic restructuring to support a market and product expansion.

    Matt Phillips, who had been CEO, shifts to vice chairman of corporate development for the Kentucky-based managed services provider, while Cynthia Carpenter has been named as president and COO.

    Carr, who joined SinglePipe in 2008 as COO, was a partner in Accenture’s Global Technology Consulting practice.

    Priot to that he was COO of ZoomTown, a Cincinnati Bell unit that provides Internet and data services to consumers and businesses.

    George Tronsrue, SinglePipe’s executive chairman, said he was confident Carr would accelerate the company’s growth.

    As COO, Carpenter has responsibility for sales, marketing, product management and customer operations. Before this, she was founder and president of Wheelhouse Strategies, a strategic marketing consultancy targeting venture-backed startup technology companies.

    Before that she had marketing and operations positions at Level 3 Communications, Cablevision Systems, High Speed Access Corp., Time Warner Cable and Starz Encore Group.

    In April, SinglePipe raised USD $5.1 million in equity funding, led by existing investor Chrysalis Ventures and also involving Meritus Ventures and the Kentucky Science and Technology Corp.

  • Zer01 Launches Unlimited Voice and Data Service


    Zer01 Mobile has announced the launch of its unlimited, prepaid, voice and data service that the company is selling to distributors in the US.

    The Mobile Virtual Network Enabler (or MVNE) said its low-cost offering can support unlimited service via mobile VoIP technology running over AT&T Mobility’s network.

    Ben Piilani, CEO of Zer01, said many years of research and testing have culminated in the public launch this week of the new, "truly unlimited" voice, data and Web mobile wireless service.

    "Thanks to the ingenuity of the Zer01 Mobile engineering team, our new Veritable Mobile Convergence technology allows each smartphone user to make voice calls or transmit data through a VoIP system," he said.

    The company’s offering is not intended for end users. Instead, Zer01 is selling the service as an MVNE – so doesn’t actively sell the service to phone shoppers.

    That roles is taken by the company’s distributors, which include Buzzirk Mobile and others.

    The company expects to add additional distributors in the near future.

    Its system runs on Windows Mobile phones and it will offer devices from HTC and Pharos.

    The service also includes low-cost international calling.

    Zer01 unveiled its plans earlier this year and at the time said it would launch in April with a service for USD $69.95 per month.

    However, the company has since backed off offering that specific price, apparently to provide more flexible pricing options to distributors.

  • VoIP Biggest Victim of IT Managers' Hesitance to Deploy Next-Generation Apps


    VoIP is the most likely application type to have deployments delayed due to third-party network concerns, according to a survey of IT managers.

    The report by Apparent Networks found that 73 per cent of respondents also said VoIP was the most common application to stress their networks.

    Of the IT managers surveyed who said they delayed an application deployment (36 per cent), 61 per cent said they had delayed a VoIP application.

    Unified communications and video delivery applications were the next two most commonly cited for delays in deployment.

    Jim Melvin, Apparent Network’s president and Chief Marketing Officer, said the report, The State of the Path, provides an interesting insight into the issues causing network managers to delay their deployment of next-generation applications.

    Writing on the Apparent Networks blog he said the survey, which targeted hundreds of network managers, found that network concerns outside of managers’ control are slowing application deployments, especially for VoIP and Unified Communications.

    "Apparent understands that network managers are completely on board with these next-generation technologies, but they are not confident enough in the third-party network performance necessary to make these technologies meet their performance requirements," he said.

  • GENBAND and BroadSoft Offer Legacy Switch Migration Solution


    VoIP applications provider Broadsoft and IP infrastructure solutions developer GENBAND have announced a new set of solutions that enable carriers to upgrade their networks while supporting legacy features.

    The two companies have integrated GENBAND’s gateways with BroadSoft’s suite of hosted telephony and multimedia applications.

    Carrier demand to migrate aging TDM switches and expand broadband voice services is behind the move, according to the two companies.

    They have coupled BroadSoft’s BroadWorks VoIP application platform with GENBAND G9 and G6 gateways and C3 Signaling Controller, as well as the S3 Session Border Controller (SBC).

    David Bukovsky, vice president of products for BroadSoft, said the combined solution offers affordable switch migration that extends beyond legacy functionality, delivering new sources of revenue.

    "Previously, switch replacement meant new expenditures without new services," he said.

    "Unlike other offerings, the GENBAND/BroadSoft solution allows carriers to deliver carrier grade legacy Class 4, Class 5 and voice over broadband services via a single system.

    "Our combined solution enables carriers to reduce operational costs, but more importantly, gain a host of new services for the subscriber base."

    Bukovsky said these new services — such as fixed-mobile integration, hosted unified communications and Web 2.0 integration — improve customer retention and provide new sources of revenue that were previously unavailable.

    When the GENBAND/BroadSoft solution is deployed for TDM switch replacement, carriers can implement a complete next generation voice over broadband network via one integrated platform, including:

    • Residential Broadband — delivering primary-line services to residential consumers and home offices over any broadband or legacy connection, including GR-303, V5.2 and TR-08
    • Business Connectivity — connecting legacy Customer Premises Equipment (CPE), such as IP PBX, PBX or Key Telephone Systems, to the PSTN over any form of IP connectivity
    • Hosted PBX— delivering a complete suite of enhanced PBX functionality over any IP connection
    • IP Peering and Transport — lowering total cost of operation and increasing network efficiency and operational simplicity
  • Standard Smartphone Charger Gets Green Light in Europe


    European smartphone users are to get a standardised charger following an agreement between handset manufacturers that control 90 per cent of the region’s mobile market.

    From next year, new phones will be sold with the charger but will eventually come without one – significantly lowering manufacturing and shipping costs.

    The phone makers – Motorola, Nokia, Apple, Sony Ericsson, LG, NEC, Qualcomm, Research in Motion, Samsung and Texas Instruments – announced their plans on Monday through the European Commission.

    The accord finally ends the long-running debate over doing away with the waste and cost of having to change charger whenever buying a new phone that have been rumbling on for years – in Europe at least.

    Following the announcement, EU Industry Commissioner Guenter Verheugen said: "People will not have to throw away their charger whenever they buy a new phone."

    The chargers will be usable only on data-enabled phones that access the Internet, going beyond voice calls and SMS.

    Nearly half of the 185 million estimated mobile phones projected to be sold in Europe 2010 are expected to be data-enabled – and compatible with the charger.

    Verheugen said the it was assumed the new European initiative would have a knock-on effect globally.

    Consumers will gain from being able to borrow someone else’s charger – regardless if they have an iPhone, Blackberry or Nokia.

  • Innocell Developing Double Capacity Palm Pre Battery


    Battery life is a key issue for smartphones – and it’s an area where the Palm Pre with its removable battery has some definite advantages over Apple’s iPhone.

    Not least that Innocell is developing a new battery for the Pre that has twice the capacity of the handset’s original.

    It currently offers the Innocell 1350mAh Extended Life Battery, which promises longer standby and talk time than the original fits in the existing space (so no replacement door is needed) and costs USD $44.95.

    With its non-replaceable battery this is an option not open to the iPhone.

    Innocell is also developing an extended battery that the company claims will provide up to nearly twice the capacity of the standard battery.

    This will include a rubberized battery door to accommodate the slightly bigger size.

    Price and availability has yet to be announced for this battery.

  • 02 Secures Exclusive UK Rights to Palm Pre


    O2 has beaten rival operator Orange to secure the exclusive rights to the Palm Pre when it is released in the UK.

    Palm and O2 are expected to make the announcement next week almost a month after the launch of the handset in the US.

    The deal strengthens O2’s position in the smartphone market since it is already the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in the UK.

    There are no details yet on Pre costings and tariffs for the UK.

    News of O2’s deal with Palm was reported in The Guardian, which described the competition between O2 and Orange as "fierce".

    Apple recently announced that the iPhone 3GS sold over one million units in its first weekend of its availability.

    Sprint, the only wireless carrier to offer the Pre in the US, has not revealed sales numbers – although it appears to be doing reasonably well.

    Estimates of its sales range from 150,000 to 300,000 units.

  • iPhone Fuelling Handset Navigation Uptake


    The rapidly growing smartphone market is providing a much-needed boost for handset-based turn-by-turn navigation.

    While PNDs and in-dash navigation device sales continue to suffer from the economic recession, the number of paying handset-based turn-by-turn navigation users will increase to 26 million by the end of 2010, according to ABI Research.

    The Asia-Pacific region is forecast to experience the strongest growth.

    ABI Research practice director Dominique Bonte said that in the wake of a continuous stream of eye-catching touchscreen smartphone launches, navigation software developers are rushing to port their solutions to as many new platforms as possible.

    These includes Android (ALK, Telenav) and the new Palm webOS (Telenav).

    But it is Apple’s iPhone that is causing the biggest waves.

    "The most significant driver for the uptake of handset navigation is expected to come from the iPhone, following Apple’s decision to finally enable turn-by-turn navigation on its latest 3.0 platform version," according to Bonte.

    Software from TomTom, Sygic, AT&T (Telenav), and Networks In Motion is already available from the iPhone App Store, with Navigon’s solution expected soon.

    ABI Research’s report said that while application stores are expected to become an important channel for the distribution of navigation software, many carriers and handset manufacturers prefer to pre-install or bundle navigation software with their phones and offer plans based on strategic partnerships with navigation developers.

    Examples include Verizon/NIM, AT&T/Telenav, Vodafone/Telmap LG/Appello, HTC/ALK Technologies, and Samsung/Route 66.

    Market leaders Nokia and Vodafone have respectively opted to acquire navigation providers Gate5 and Wayfinder, allowing tighter integration of navigation and LBS services into their portfolios. Both approaches often coexist.

    However, Bonte believes that several barriers still remain in place: "High monthly subscription fees and data roaming costs will need to be addressed for off-board navigation on handsets to reach high penetration levels."

    Free ad-funded navigation is one possible way forward with Locationet’s Amaze solution powering Technocom’s SpotOn GPS platform, Huawei’s new GPS phones, and Bouygues’ free navigation offer in France.

  • MetaPlaces09: Location-Based Services Have To Earn Consumer Trust

    INTERVIEW: Tony Jebara, chief scientist for New York start-up Sense Networks and a professor at Columbia University, tells smartphone.biz-news how location-based data is being used to predict consumer behavior and preferences.

    Jebara, who is delivering a keynote presentation at this year’s MetaPlaces09 conference, said the results can be used to highlight hot spots where different urban "tribes" gather – but can also give advertisers a better idea of where and when to advertise to certain groups of people.

    Someone who goes to Starbucks at 4PM a few times a week probably has some similarities with others who also visit the coffee chain at around the same time – regardless if they are in San Francisco or New York.

    Equally, knowing where someone in San Francisco has dinner on a Friday night could help a visitor to the city make a better restaurant choice, according to Tony Jebara, chief scientist for New York start-up Sense Networks.

    His company has developed a phone application that highlights hot spots where people are gathering around a city.

    App Like "Sixth Sense"

    Called Citysense, the app uses frequently updated cell-phone and taxi GPS data to produce a heat map of where users are in the city.

    Jebara said people who have used the software love it because it is like a "sixth sense about what’s going on in the city".

    The application is currently up and running in San Francisco and is expected to be launched in New York in August before being rolled-out to other cities.

    Tony Jebara, chief scientist Sense Networks

    But providing basic activity information is only the start.

    Sense Networks’ platform, Macrosense, is able to receive streaming location data in real-time, analyze and process the data in the context of billions of historical data points.

    This can then be stored in a way that, the company says, can be easily queried "to better understand aggregate human activity".

    Users Categorized in Urban Tribes

    So in a new version of CitySense, expected shortly, this data will be used to reveal the movement of people with certain behavior patterns – urban "tribes" such as students, tourists, or business people, for example.

    What this means in practice is that users could arrive in a new city and with the help of CitySense find bars, restaurants or other activities that chime with their tastes and socio-economic profile.

    Jebara, who is also a professor at Columbia University, said that while people loved the fact they can see a street map of city-wide activity, they wanted something that is customised for them to show "people like me" or "tribal clustering".

    Location Data Potential

    He said the Sense Networks’ software was initially developed to allow stores to use location data in order to monitor consumer activity.

    But they quickly realised that the information had much more powerful applications.

    "What the platform does is it looks at different places and figures out what happens there," he said.

    "At different times, what kind of common activity is taking place? It looks at individuals and how they are exposed to different types of commercial activity and how they spend their leisure time."

    This can be whether someone choses to go, say, to a high-end restaurant or a nature park at weekends.

    The data on an individual’s movements then allows them to be categorised and their probability of doing different activities calculated.

    Sense Networks has defined 24 "types" or "tribes": student, business, young and edgy, stay-at-home parent etc.

    These tribes are determined using three types of data:

    • a person’s "flow" or movements around a city
    • publicly available data concerning the company addresses in a city
    • demographic data collected by the US Census Bureau

    Jebara said someone can be a mix of tribes, such as student and stay-at-home parent.

    "What’s interesting is that these tribes carry across different tribes and cities," he said.

    "If two women like to shop at high-end stores, they will have a similar profile even though one is in New York and the other in Dallas.

    "They are more similar than two women in Dallas, if one does not shop in high-end stores."

    A Next-Generation Facebook

    Jebara said this is a good way of modelling for marketing, indicating if someone is likely to be interested in a particular advert, or would download certain mobile applications or upgrade a phone.

    "There are a variety of business decisions that we can derive by using location data to look at what people are doing," he said.

    "It’s a way of building the next-generation Facebook. Instead of having someone’s profile typed in, we figure out where they hang out and the activities they do.

    "That determines their profile and they can be linked to similar people."

    Jebara’s keynote presentation at MetaPlaces09 is titled A Snapshot of the Location Industry.

    The two-day conference in San Jose, California is attended by the leading location platform and service providers, as well as wireless carriers and device manufacturers.

    Privacy Issue

    To increase the accuracy and effectiveness of its software, Sense Networks stores historical location data.

    So the number of times a person goes to a particular store or restaurant is saved to build up a profile.

    This idea of being tracked and logged understandably makes people uncomfortable, but Jebara stressed this is not exact data.

    The raw data is used to analyse commercial activity and demographics and then disposed off.

    "We do not have latitude-longitude information about any individual, so if the FBI asked us for information they would never be able to figure out where someone was in the past," he said.

    "The data just tells us someone likes high-end restaurants with a family crowd, for example.

    "It tells us the probability of different commercial, demographic and tribal exposure.

    "There is a lot of anonymity in that prediction."

    Sense Networks, headquartered in New York City’s SoHo neighborhood, was founded in 2003 and incorporated in early 2006. The founding team is composed of top computer scientists from MIT and Columbia University.

    Among them is Alex Pentland of MIT, who pioneered reality mining, a research trend that is trying to tap into the potential of location-based data.

    Accuracy Improved

    Jebara said one of the key things holding location-based applications back is concerns over their accuracy due to poor signals or infrequent pinging.

    However, he said Sense Networks’ software looks at the long-term history of activity and summarises that to say what people are doing or could be doing.

    "We do not just look at the current latitude and longitude or time, but we augment that with the history of what someone was doing for the last three weeks," he said.

    Again, Jebara said this is not the exact data – just that someone went to a certain type of restaurant or certain type of nightclub, and so on.

    "Combining this history with more recent things overcomes the problem of just using single location pings," he said.

    Jebara said Sense Networks’ intention isn’t to keep the technology in-house but to make the analytics engine available to other people to use on their apps.

    This would even apply to a company building a rival app to Citysense.

    He said the beauty of location data is that it has the same format everywhere (latitude, longitude, time and an error measurement).

    This Lingua Franca doesn’t need to be translated and it can be used anywhere in the world.

    Sense Networks plans to provide its location data on city activity to advertisers.

    Tailored Advertising

    This would comprise details on where certain types of people congregate and when.

    So, for example, Sense Networks’ data-analysis algorithms may show that a particular demographic heads to bars downtown between 6 and 9 PM on weekdays.

    Advertisers could then tailor ads on a billboard screen to that specific crowd.

    While operators and advertisers stand to gain from the use of this location data, Jebara believes the consumer will actually benefit more.

    "People don’t want to fill in forms and answer questions. Consumers want customised recommendations rather than generic advertising," he said.

    "If this data is properly leveraged we will trust it a lot more. It will empower the user."

    Once consumer trust in Macrosense is there, Jebara said it can be combined with Citysense to offer something of value to users.

    He compared it to the early days of Google when the search engine had to first earn users’ respect by proving its worth in finding things accurately.

    Once that was achieved it was possible to include some relevant adverts as well.

    "It becomes much more palatable to the user if it is combined with something useful," he said.

    "So first we have to win over the hearts and minds of customers. Then the business opportunities will be great."

    For more information on the MetaPlaces09 conference (22-23 September 2009) in San Jose, California, please click HERE