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  • Symantec Launches Norton Online Backup Web Service


    Symantec, makers of Norton security software, has announced the availability of an online backup service.

    Norton Online Backup, which automatically stores files and digital assets, is the first Web-based consumer offering delivered by Norton.

    Intended as a simple-to-use backup system, it allows digital photographs, financial documents, music collections and archived e-mail to be stored through a website.

    Up to five household computers can be safely backed up, managed and restored through a single, central, remotely-accessible account.

    Once users have downloaded a small desktop agent, which manages a backup of the PC, a Web browser is used to restore or download previously backed up files from anywhere.

    This sets it apart from many other online storage technologies that require the user to use the same PC for backing up and accessing online files.

    Rowan Trollope, senior vice president, Consumer Products, Symantec, said more and more of people’s most valuable assets are stored on computers.

    "Norton Online Backup offers total peace of mind through a comprehensive, easy-to-manage backup solution that not only safeguards users from data loss, but makes valuable assets available from any Internet-connected PC in the world," he said.

    Norton Online Backup is available now for purchase in the US. It will be available worldwide in the coming weeks.

    The suggested retail price for Norton Online Backup is USD $49.99 per year, which includes 25 GB of online storage to backup files from up to five of family PCs.

    Additional storage space can be purchased in increments of 10, 25, 50 and 100 GB.

  • HD Movies Now For Sale on Apple's iTunes Store


    HD movies are now available for purchase from iTunes for playing on Macs and PCs.

    Until now, high def movies had only been available to Apple TV owners.

    HD Movies will be sold for USD $19.99, while HD rentals will be priced at USD $4.99. Both are in H.264 compressed 720p quality and will come with an HD file and an iPod/iPhone SD file.

    Apple said "Transporter 3" and "Punisher: War Zone" are among the titles available immediately.

    Preorders are being taken for "Twilight" (set for a March 21 release) and "Quantum of Solace" (March 24).

    Interestingly, Apple TV has now gone from having exclusive access to all non-podcast HD content from Apple,then HD TV shows were made available generally in September and now that has broadended to include movies.

    Eddy Cue, Apple’s vice president of Internet Services, was confident HD movie purchases would be popular.

    "Customers have made HD content on iTunes a hit, with over 50 per cent of TV programming being purchased in HD when available," he said.

  • 1080p Processing Added to Elgato H.264 Dongle


    Elgato has launched a successor to its Turbo.264 USB video conversion dongle with the addition of 1080p compatibility.

    Called the Elgato Turbo.264 HD, the upgraded – and much faster – device converts videos into the H.264 format from camcorders and digital cameras.

    The converted video is compatible with iPods, iPhones, Apple TV and Sony’s PSP and similar devices.

    Users simply plug the dongle into a Mac and the software allows video to be previewed and trimmed before converting – without the need to import into iMovie.

    The device also adds support for HD camcorder formats such as AVCHD as well as MPEG-2- and MPEG-4-encoded HD content.

    Elgao says that while it normally takes an hour to make a fifteen minute movie from video taken on an AVCHD camcorder, the Turbo.264 HD takes less than 20 minutes.

    The Turbo.264 HD is priced at USD $150/ €149.

  • Envivio Selected For Türk Telekom's New IPTV Service


    Envivio has announced that its Convergence Series video headend has been selected for Türk Telekom’s IPTV project in Turkey.

    The IP video convergence provider said Türk Telekom will use its 4Caster C4 SD and 4Caster HD30 HD MPEG-4 AVC encoders and the 4Manager NMS, to deliver standard and high definition channels for its new IPTV service.

    The 4Caster C4 provides video compression for all three screens of consumer video – TVs, PCs and mobile devices – on a single platform.

    Envivio’s 4Caster HD30 delivers high quality, high definition encoded content at less than half the bit rates required by MPEG-2.

    The company’s Convergence Series architecture allows MPEG-2 content downlinked from satellite to be delivered to the compression system directly over a local IP network.

    This all-IP, all-digital processing of content eliminates the need for traditional intermediate analog or digital video and audio interfaces between MPEG-2 decoders and MPEG-4 encoders.

    Julien Signès, president and CEO of Envivio. said: "Forward-thinking operators around the world recognize that quality of service is a dominant factor in their success and the C4 and HD30 both deliver the very highest picture quality."

    The IPTV headend for Türk Telekom, which serves more than 30 million customers, is being installed by Birtel the partner of Envivio in Ankara, Turkey.

  • Vyke Names New CEO, Confident of Continued Growth


    Vyke has appointed Kim Berknov as chief executive, effective from April 1.

    The announcement came as the VoIP service provider forecast it will meet market expectations for 2009.

    However, Vyke, which had expected to have a positive earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) figure by the end of 2008, said it now expected a loss of GBP 3.5 million for 2008, before exceptional costs of GBP 1.75 million.

    It expects a 46 per cent rise in gross billings to GBP 39 million for 2008.

    Despite this, Tommy Jensen, executive chairman of Vyke, said prospects for 2009 were encouraging with the company benefitting from acquisitions and a new product.

    Tommy Jensen, executive chairman Vyke

    "Trading in the current year has started strongly with the full effect of the cost synergies related to the acquisition of Callserve and Iios being realised during the first half of 2009," he said.

    The company expects to release its multi-channel Vyke Air platform, a new mobile service, next month.

    Earlier this month Vyke announced it had formed a partnership with mobile social networking company Nimbuzz.
    The move is intended to build upon the strengths of both Vyke and Nimbuzz by combining the former’s paid mVoIP service with the latter’s mobile peer to peer mobile social messaging and VoIP services.

    Vyke, which provides VoIP mobile services, expects gross billings for 2009 to be no less than GBP 70 million pounds (USD $97.49 million), with an EBITDA of at least GBP 3 million pounds.

    The company said this will include an expected continued growth rate of around 3,000 paid users per day.

    Berknov is currently managing director of Structured Investment Products plc and Evergreen Capital Partners Limited and holds a number of non-executive board positions in private companies.

    He has previously held positions as executive vice president of Aldata Solution Oyj and managing director of Digital Mountain AG, TransConnect Corporate Finance GmbH and GE Capital IT Solutions.

    Before joining those companies, Berknov was a management consultant with McKinsey & Company and previously held international sales and marketing positions at both AT&T and NCR Corporation.

  • Mobile Tag Steps Up Global Drive: Appoints William Hoffman as US CEO


    European 2D barcode leader MTag has set up a US sister company as part of its expansion plans.

    It has appointed William "Chip" Hoffman as CEO of the new venture, Mobile Tag, Inc.

    Headquartered in Atlanta, GA, Hoffman will head a global mobile marketing campaign for the company’s mobile barcode technologies and services.

    Already well established in Europe, MTag specialises in mobile handset software solutions.

    It has two main products: mobiletag and MEEPASS.

    Launched in 2006, mobiletag is an embedded software application that allows mobile phones to read 2D barcodes, otherwise known as tags, simply by using the phone’s camera.

    MTag developed the software to create quick access to external content.

    Example of Mobiletag web tag

    The French company received a venture capital investment of 4 million euros in October 2008, funded by new lead investor Alven Capital and by existing shareholders (XangeCapital and IDF Capital).

    MTag launched MEEPASS, a new mobile identification product, at this year’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

    Hoffman was responsible for the large-scale operations of mBlox, Inc., Dobson Communications, Advanced TelCom Group, Sprint and Logix Communications Enterprises.

    He has worked closely with companies like Publicis, Interpublic Group, BBDO-Omnicom, and others on interactive advertising using mobile telecommunications technology.

    More recently he was CEO of NeoMedia Technologies, Inc, where he helped develop a global technical and financial system for mobile barcodes.

    Earlier in his career, Hoffman served 8 years with Sprint managing business clients from the Global 10 to small and medium-sized business customers.

  • FutureDial's Mobile Content Solution Can Have "Huge Impact" On Operators' Revenue Potential

    INTERVIEW: Sanjiv Parikh, vice president of marketing for FutureDial, talks to smartphone-biz.news about its mobile content management service and its potential to generate revenue for operators and retailers.

    Apple has shown how its App Store can be a lucrative earner – and has inspired similar ventures from the likes of Google’s Android, Blackberry, Nokia and even the as-yet-unlaunched Palm Pre.

    But how can wireless operators and even retailers ensure they maximise their earnings from the lucrative mobile content market?

    Software company FutureDial believes it has the answer.

    Sanjiv Parikh, vice president of marketing for FutureDial, said its Retail Management Solution (RMS) 4.0 allows mobile content to be directly loaded to handsets at store counters – an industry first.

    He said the "Buy Content" feature enables retailers to sell user-selected content from an integrated online content site at a store counter.

    "Online content is still very difficult to access using phone browsers. It’s still not very user friendly," he said.

    "So when someone is buying a new phone, the store would ask if they want the content transferred from their old phone, but also if they are interested in games, applications, music files and so on for their new phone.

    "It’s an additional up-selling opportunity."

    Parikh said initial feedback suggested this new feature was having a "huge impact" on clients’ business.

    He said the idea was to provide operators or retailers with complete flexibility when it came to providing their own content.

    With this in mind, FutureDial also offers a solution to clients that have their own music or content portal.

    Main Markets

    RMS is supported on over 1000 handsets and this number is continually being added to – at a rate of 50 new handsets a month, if necessary.

    FutureDial’s main markets are the US and Europe, with a major UK carrier deal expected to be announced "shortly".

    Parikh said the latest version of RMS – launched at MWC in Barcelona last month – helps stores to close the sale on new phone purchases, maximize customer acquisition and retention, and increase ARPU.

    As well as allowing content downloads, RMS also offers users phone-to-phone content transfer, backup and restoration services across thousands of handset models at the store counter.

    The mobile content transfer service handles personal address books, pictures, calendars, messages, and audio/video files.

    A major addition in RMS 4.0 is an operation from a tablet-sized touch-screen online terminal called Talisman for "mobile personalization" services, either for use by store staff or as a customer self-service kiosk.

    Solution Aids Content Management

    Parikh said the content transfer, back-up and restore features of  RMS essentially address the issue of how consumers manage old phone content when switching handsets.

    He said it helps consumers move personal content – and to protect it by offering a backup and restore function.

    These aspects of the solution work in two ways.

    Firstly, with operators and equipment retail stores so that when a consumer switches phone, content can be transferred and backed-up at the store counter.

    He said that the more tech-savvy user was happy to do this themself at home – and FutureDial provides a product that connects mobiles to PCs to back-up and download content.

    Backing-up: "Complex & Tedious"

    But he said for many people it was a complex and tedious process.

    "What we found based on our home back-up offering is that many customers didn’t like to do this themselves," he said.

    "They would rather have someone do it for them and they are willing to pay for the service.

    "This has turned into a major opportunity for service providers."

    Around 70 per cent of stores using RMS charge for the service.

    Parikh said a fear of losing content and data – which often involves a huge investment of time and effort – also put many people off changing their handsets.

    But he said that even if they overcame that fear, simply by changing to a new phone could result in lost revenue for operators.

    "When users start with a new phone it can take up to 18 weeks before they come back to the original usage levels of the old phone," he said. "That’s a lot of user revenue lost."

    That wasn’t the case with RMS because content is instantly transferred onto a new handset – enabling usage to continue as before.

    Loyalty Has Rewards

    Parikh said RMS’s second function is to create loyalty in users by ensuring they return to stores for future back-ups – and so creating the potential for sales of sleeves, cover and other accessories.

    He said one US operator using RMS in hundreds of its stores had seen a marked upturn in user loyalty.

    "This loyalty element really helps operators avoid churn and sell more," he said. "It’s a revenue opportunity but it also give consumers the feeling that the service provider is taking care of them.

    "That’s a major element in such a fiercely competitive market."

    Please let us have your comments on RMS – will in-store content delivery and back-up appeal to the mass market?

  • Jajah Attracts $ 2.8M To Expand VoIP services


    Jajah has secured USD $2.75 million from an anticipated USD $5 million fourth round of funding.

    Launched three years ago, the VoIP communication service has grown steadily and now provide a service to millions of users.

    Although the identities of the latest investors haven’t been released, Jajah has been backed by Globespan Capital Partners, Intel Capital, Deutsche Telekom and Sequoia Capital in the past, according to VentureBeat.

    The Menlo Park, California-based company previously raised USD $23 million.

    Last April it signed a deal with Yahoo to provide phone-to-PC calling capabilities to the 90 million people who use the search giant’s messenger product.

    In February, it rolled out software for Windows Mobile, Blackberry and Symbian that allows them to make VoIP calls over WiFi or the cellular network.

    It also released a system that allows any carrier to deliver calling and text messaging services to the iPod Touch, no SIM card required.

    At the start of this month, Jajah began a partnership with Bravestorm, developer of the click-to-call BoldCall product.

    Under the deal, companies using BoldCall will allow visitors to their sites to call live customer service representatives in real time for free via the Jajah IP network.

  • Nimbuzz Bridges iPhone 3G VoIP Gap


    Nimbuzz has today released what it describes as the most comprehensive VoIP application for the iPhone after "quite a few" rejections from Apple.

    Building on its iPhone app launched in November, Nimbuzz users can now make international calls to mobiles and landlines at domestic rates by dialing a local access number available in over 50 countries.

    The Dial-Up VoIP 3G call is then connected to anywhere in the world via Nimbuzz VoIP servers.

    Other new additions include the introduction of a full dial-pad and the ability to make VoIP calls to landlines and mobiles via Skype-Out, and Nimbuzz’s major SIP provider partners including Gizmo5, Vyke, and sipgate over Wifi – effectively turning the iPod touch into an iPhone.

    Nimbuzz can also show users’ available credit on the dial-pad when using Skype Out for phone calls to landlines and mobile phones.

    Another new feature allows Twitter updates via the Personal Message option.

    Free Wi-Fi calls to instant messaging buddies were already available.

    Evert Jaap Lugt, CEO of Nimbuzz, said Nimbuzz’s rapidly growing user base is partly due to its already successful iPhone application.

    "We are a mass-market lifestyle application and are keen to ensure we keep up to date with the needs of the hyper-connected, so this update reflects initial feedback from our users."

  • GoHello Expands Mobile Virtual Phone System to US and Asia

    INTERVIEW: Francois Mazoudier, CEO of GoHello, tells VoIP.biz-news about its expansion plans and explains his vision for the future of business phone systems – which doesn’t include hardware PBXs.

    Francois Mazoudier likes to keep things simple and the CEO of GoHello seems to be winning plenty of people over to his way of thinking.

    GoHello offers – and has patented – an ALLmobile, virtual phone system that works on every mobile network in the country where it’s deployed, doesn’t require equipment and is not dependent on mobile operators.

    Over the next few months the London-based company will be announcing its expansion into new markets.

    Mazoudier said these include "two large Asian countries" where fixed line quality is often poor and business calls are already largely made on mobiles – making the GoHello application particularly well suited.

    Francois Mazoudier, CEO GoHello

    Already Europe’s leading ALLmobile, operator-independent phone system for business, GoHello is also in the process of building a network centre in the US – a market seen as having huge potential.

    "We are opening in a number of countries, including some big developments in Asia," he said.

    "Instead of just being a mad Scandanavian company with a mad idea, we will enter the mainstream."

    The rationale behind GoHello’s virtual phone system is pretty straightforward: Why buy expensive telecom equipment when you can have a feature-packed virtual system that is quick and easy to install and uses employees’ mobiles phones?

    So no fixed lines, no desktop phones – all that’s required is a broadband connection and the mobile network.

    It’s understandable that companies might be wary of getting rid of all their fixed lines.

    Mazoudier said the pattern was for GoHello to be trialled for a month in one department – usually sales – before being rolled out to the rest of the business.

    He said once companies saw how the system worked, that tended to be the route they took.

    "There is no reason why you would want to have the cost and long-term contract of a fixed line if you can have all the services on your mobile," he said.

    "We have nothing to install on a GSM phone – no software, no setting up. You can even take an old GSM phone and it works."

    Mobile Becomes Sole Phone

    Having said that, Mazoudier recommends companies buy employees a cheap Nokia phone, especially since the market is currently full of bargain deals.

    "Employees are told: ‘That’s your deskphone, but you can use it as a mobile’," he said.

    Although now headquartered in the UK, GoHello was founded in Denmark in 2001 and originally worked with mobile operators.

    It received widespread recognition for its efforts to build the first mobile PBX.

    Commercially, however, Mazoudier, who joined GoHello later, said it was a disaster and they realised the company needed to do something else.

    At the time, he was looking for an opportunity to build a software telecom company as an alternative to the conventional route of having to buy phone system hardware and enter into contractual agreements.

    "I went to mobile operators around the world and asked them if they had any plans for a PBX system in the sky," he said.

    "They looked at me as if I was mad – and I knew I had a great deal on my hands."

    Mazoudier said the system’s first trials were carried out in 2006 in Denmark and succesfully proved the software worked as well for small companies as it did for large employers with hundreds of handsets and multiple sites.

    Then in 2007, additional funding of €7 million allowed GoHello to go international.

    A factor which has undoubtedly aided GoHello has been the fact that mobiles – and particularly smartphones – are increasingly being used in enterprises – rather than fixed phones.

    Rapidly Changing US Market

    The US had not been included in GoHello’s original plans, according to Mazoudier, largely because the mobile culture was not as strong as in other parts of the world.
    But since the launch and success of the iPhone that has all changed.

    "The US is the land of IP telephony," he said. "And since the receiving party pays there, dialling a mobile is not as expensive as in the rest of the world.

    "Then the iPhone came in. In the past 18 months, people have begun to realise the value of working on their mobile phones – way beyond my wildest dreams."

    Mazoudier said he was now getting phone calls from large US companies – some with 10,000+ employes – asking when GoHello was being introduced in the US.

    Among those calls was one from Apple, which he said was particularly interested since employees have all been given iPhones.

    "They have a huge IP telephony installation that has just stopped being used," he said.

    "The US is out-pacing any other country in the world. Households are dropping fixed and cable in favor of mobiles, to the extent that within the next five years it’s estimated that 50 per cent of people will not have a fixed line."

    As a result, the US now presents a major opportunity for GoHello and Mazoudier said they realise they should have been there sooner: "We are now trying to catch up. We are now putting up a huge network operation centre."

    Crisis Accentuates Value

    Mazoudier said the current economic crisis had highlighted GoHappy’s value to companies.

    One advantage was that the system didn’t require the large capital investment that was usually the case when companies had to buy conventional telephone hardware.

    He said the fact that many companies were now centralising offices or re-locating to smaller premises also showed the advantages of not having to uninstall and re-install telecom hardware.

    "Every time you change office it’s a trigger point for us," he said. "With GoHello, you just have to take your mobiles with you.

    "That has created a lot of leads for us. It shows that if we can sell in a recession, then it must be an interesting service to have."

    Mazoudier said other new services were also being prepared to make life easier for mobile users.

    He said these included call transfering and call recording.

    These services are free to try and users will be able to activate and deactivate as they please.

    The company recently launched MyGoHello, a PC-based widget that handles all incoming calls, group calls, call forwarding calls, and so on.

    While users will still only have one phone – their mobile – they can use their PC to:

    • Handle incoming calls (accept / reject / forward to others / send to voicemail etc)
    • Handle incoming Group calls (if you’re a member of that group – pick up call, reject, forward to others etc)
    • Click To Dial. Select any number on the PC screen (any application / window, not just the browser), click and dial that number.
    • Click to Text. Select any number on the PC screen, click – send a text to that number. Select a group of users and broadcast a text message to everyone in a single click. Text are sent using the GoHello SMS centre

    Mazoudier knows there will be those who disagree with him.

    But he has no doubt that PBX hardware will become obsolete as enterprises move to virtual phone systems.

    "There is no reason to have a PBX in the office – it should be on the network," he said.

    We’d like to hear your views on mobile virtual phone systems.