mi liberty. industry news - 30 March 2011

by Libergraph 30. March 2011 10:40
Amazon launches cloud music service for Android devices
Amazon has launched a new service that enables users to remotely store and access their music from any Android handset or tablet, as well as PC and Macs. The new service is made up of 5GB of free online storage - branded 'Amazon Cloud Drive' - and the ability to play cloud-based music in a smartphone app or web browser via an 'Amazon Cloud Player.' However, the online retailer is not offering a standalone Android app for the player. Instead users must download the latest version of the company’s Amazon MP3 App which bundles the retailer’s music store as well as the cloud player. Any purchase from the store goes direct to the user’s cloud-based music collection. Significantly, there is no app for Apple’s iPhone, iPad or iPod touch.

Sprint speaks out against AT&T/T-Mobile deal
Sprint formally lodged its objection to the merger between rival US operators AT&T and T-Mobile yesterday, claiming the tie-up would reduce competition and harm both consumers and the US economy. “The wireless industry has sparked unprecedented levels of competition, innovation, job creation and investment for the American economy, all of which could be undone by this transaction,” said the operator in a statement. According to Wireless Intelligence data, the combination of the current US number-two operator (AT&T) and number-four (T-Mobile) will create a market leader with a connections base of just under 130 million and a 42 percent market share - leaving Sprint a distant third on just 16 percent. As such, Sprint’s objection to the deal was widely anticipated. Indeed, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse has already used the CTIA Wireless show last week to speak out against the deal.

Nokia Siemens Networks in Chinese 4G Trial
Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) has been selected to supply network infrastructure for a large-scale TD-LTE (Long Term Evolution Time Division Duplex) trial with China Mobile. With the approval of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of the People's Republic of China (MIIT), NSN will contribute its commercial 2.3GHz/2.6GHz TD-LTE equipment, professional services, and management software to conduct the major field trial in Hangzhou.

Website blocking will not solve copyright concerns
Website blocking is on the agenda again, this time in relation to copyright infringement. As reported in the Guardian last week, a government-led working group – including ministers and parties such as the BPI and Google – is to be formed to try to find a way of blocking websites that allegedly help people download songs or films without permission, avoiding potential litigation. While that might instantly conjure up Pirate Bay or Limewire in your mind, it could also include any site that hosts user-generated content, including services such as Rapidshare or Vimeo.

Rumour: BT plans a free music download service
BT is reportedly looking to develop a free music download service to attempt to stop music fans downloading music illegally via file-sharing sites such as The Pirate Bay. The new comes via a source at The Guardian, who claims to have seen a leaked Invitation to Tender document that outlines how the new free download service will be offered to BT's 5.5 million broadband customers. BT is apparently set to unveil the service "in the near future" and currently in the midst of negotiations with major labels including Universal Music and EMI.
 
Wii 2 unlikely to go down the 3D route
Nintendo has dropped a number of hints about what we should expect (or rather shouldn't) in the new Wii, explaining that the Wii 2 is unlikely to have 3D technology. Although the Nintendo 3DS came out with some nifty 3D tech, the Wii 2 looks to be going down a slightly different road. Given that the original Wii didn't even have HD, we can forgive Nintendo for not jumping on the 3D with glasses bandwagon for the new Wii.

Premium rate fraud costs UK £140m per year
On the same day that UK regulator PhonePayPlus claimed UK premium rate complaints were encouragingly down, Billingscore sounded a note of grave caution. The UK firm says fraud affects all the players in the mobile industry – from SMS wholesalers and aggregators, through to content providers, retailers, operators and of course consumers. It even argues that operators' 30 per cent rev shares are high to cover fraud and bad debt, and that this reduces the industry’s opportunity to further own the consumer’s wallet.

Dell says Apple will have to give up on iOS
A Dell spokesperson has told an Australian website Apple wil give up ion iOS in the future. Andy Lark, Dell's global head of marketing, told CIO Australia Apple will struggle to keep up with Android and Windows competitors in the tablet space. "Apple is great if you’ve got a lot of money and live on an island. It’s not so great if you have to exist in a diverse, open, connected enterprise; simple things become quite complex,” he said.

Monetise pilot brings secure mobile money to Nigeria 
Thanks to Monitise Mobile Money, Nigerians can now make deposits, withdrawals and transfers via a network of approved agents. The pilot of the first Monitise branded customer-facing service targeted at the unbanked as been launched in four cities and 11 rural locations across four states under a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) provisional licence to develop the country’s mobile payments network. Monitise expects to provide its technology to other financial institutions in Nigeria as it does in other markets around the world.

BOKU partners with O2 and mpass in Germany 
Telefónica O2 Germany, a provider of broadband and mobile services, and BOKU, a mobile payments company, have announced a direct carrier billing relationship. O2 customers can now use BOKU’s payment platform to purchase virtual and digital goods ranging from Euro .09 to euro 30.00, by entering their mobile number and charging directly to their mobile phone carrier bill. O2’s mpass System allows direct carrier billing for purchase of virtual, digital and physical goods. This new partnership integrates the BOKU mobile payments platform into O2 Germany’s operator billing interface enabling the following advanced features: Support for one-off and subscription payments in Germany; Full pricing granularity; Authorisation and Capture APIs with refund support; In-App Billing support; Web Billing support.

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3 cheers for women in tech

by Mi Liberty Directors 30. March 2011 09:36

Now I am not a staunch feminist but I do have to applaud Michelle McDowell, BDP's chair of civil and structural engineering and winner of this year’s Veuve Clicquot Business Woman of the Year award.
 
As a civil engineer she has promoted the role of women in science and technology and has helped encourage more young women to consider engineering as a career. As she points out, women rarely receive the right career advice about science and technology and I am sure I am not being biased in saying the tech world is poorer as a result :)

I didn’t intend to work in technology (and I am far from being a tech head!) but I love the challenge and diversity the world of science and engineering brings me. Every day brings something new and exciting. Science and technology is at the cutting edge of innovation – it provides us with the opportunity to see into the future and predict trends which further down the line become mainstream. Contrary to popular belief we are also a very creative bunch. As a technology PR agency we work hard to create creative campaigns for our clients – and we have fun doing it.
 
Gone are the days of science and technology being personified by men in lab coats with wispy hair pouring over a Bunsen burner! We are now the generation of iPads, Facebook and even 3D fashion shows!
 
Now who fancies a glass of Veuve to celebrate?

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The Agency of the Future

by Miliberty Directors 29. March 2011 11:53

Reading Peter Hay’s latest post on social media has reminded me how interesting I find it that the PR agency community has taken so long to recognise that social media or digital communication is just another channel and should exist alongside all the other services offered as part of an integrated marketing campaign. 

Still, it's a bit like the king's new clothes.  No-one was prepared to say that for fear of being made to look like a luddite.  I did say this to PR Week when interviewed for a special profile piece some two years ago now when asked if Mi liberty would jump on the social media bandwagon. 

Around this time, my competitors were all announcing new agencies dedicated to the digital art, which seemed a bit daft to me.  I believed then, as I do today, that the PR agency of the future (or today, however you want to see it), is one based on providing a mix of communication tools and that means integrated.  What's key is how you integrate the ingredients to provide the right outcome and when - and that hasn't changed just because we now have new channels to play with. 

Mi liberty is a marketing agency and I'm sure we've got it right.  I'd love to know how much revenue has actually been made out of social media in a campaign, even if I might be the only one saying the King has no clothes on!

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mi liberty. Industry News - March 28, 2011

by Libergraph 28. March 2011 09:52
Facebook trials real-time adverts
The social network is currently testing the new service on five million of its 500 million users. A Facebook spokesman said: “We are currently testing a feature that simply helps surface relevant advertising more quickly.” According to advertising magazine, AdAge, this is how it will work: “Any utterance will become fodder for real-time targeted ads. For example: users who update their status with 'Mmm, I could go for some pizza tonight,' could get an ad or a coupon from Domino's, Papa John's or Pizza Hut."

Trio of alliances focus on rural wireless broadband
All the headlines may focus on the 4G plans of the big four US cellcos, but about 60m US citizens live in areas underserved by broadband, and many of these get their mobile services from local rural players rather than the big names. With LTE and WiMAX expected to be used heavily to fill some of those broadband gaps, the local operators have a new opportunity, but they also need to find better economics for 4G build-out to reflect their relatively small revenues. Three new alliances are addressing the issue - LightSquared has teamed with rural access start-up OpenRange; Ericsson is working with the NetAmerica Alliance to supply LTE kit to small players; and now LocaLoop and Runcom have formed a partnership geared to rural 4G.

‘Technology census’ shows most Britons use web to find deals
The report, compiled by electronics shop Comet to coincide with National Census Day, found that 84 per cent of people use the internet at home to search for deals. The second most popular web activity was online banking, and the third was checking news. Comet polled 2,600 people across the UK to discover changing habits in the usage of the internet across different households. Searching for discounts was more popular than social networking, which came seventh in the top 10 list of web activities.

Android partners furious at Honeycomb delays
The danger of open source is that a platform becomes fragmented and the implementations can be of varying quality. This dilemma is highlighted in Google's decision to delay broad release of the tablet optimized version of Android, Honeycomb, a move that has reawakened fury over a 'two-tier approach'. Developers and OEMs claim that, in a truly open source environment, they should get equal access to new releases, but in fact, Google is restricting Honeycomb, for now, to its primary partners, such as Motorola, HTC and Samsung. Google said it was holding back on general release of Honeycomb's open source code because it still had "more work to do" before the OS was ready for "other device types including phones".

Scientists develop plastic chips
Euro scientists have used 4,000 plastic, or organic, transistors to create a plastic microprocessor. The chip measures two centimetres and is built on top of flexible plastic foil and is being touted as an alternative to silicon. According to Jan Genoe at the IMEC nanotechnology centre in Leuven, Belgium such a chip is cheap as er chips and can be flexible. Technology Review  points out that the new chip is hardly up to supercomputer power yet. It can only run one simple program of 16 instructions. These have to be hardcoded into a second foil etched with plastic circuits that can be connected to the processor to "load" the program. It runs at 6Hz and can only process information in eight-bit chunks at most. This is slightly slower than the PC of a mate of mine who, in the 1980s, said Amigas were not fast enough.

Diamonds are a geek's best friend
Flawed diamonds might be the best way to create a working quantium computer. Scientists have come up with a new process for creating qubits using flawed diamonds and lasers and double sided sellotape. A new way of manipulating nitrogen atoms inside of flawed diamonds may allow for large scale, room temperature quantum computers. According to Escapist, a top scientist at the University of California, David Awschalom, said perfection was not all it is cracked up to be and the way to create a quantum computer was to rely on defects.

London School of Economics dismisses piracy claims
Claims from the music industry that piracy is responsible for its woes have been dismissed by the economic thinkers at the London School of Economics. A paper written by Bart Cammaerts and Bingchun Meng contends that the decline in sales of physical copies of recorded music cannot be attributed solely to file sharing. According to AP, the paper said that the music industry was hit by a perfect storm of different factors including changing patterns in music consumption, decreasing disposable household incomes and increasing sales of digital content through online platforms.

Guide Aims to Remove AR Confusion
A new study into Augmented Reality (AR) shows that 62 per cent of b2b and b2c marketers are considering using the technology, but the majority are still unsure about exactly how to use it, or what its benefits are. The research, conducted by AR firm Hidden Creative, was commissioned to coincide with the launch of ‘Augmented Reality Marketing Strategies: The How-to Guide for Marketers, which looks at the commercial uses of the technology.

New F1 Season Accelerates Racing Game Download Numbers
Demand for mobile racing games has surged in the last month, according to statistics from mobile ad network BuzzCity. Data from its mobile gaming site Djuzz (m.djuzz.com) reveals a sharp increase in racing game downloads. GTS World Racing had 4,700 downloads per day in March, compared to less than 100 daily downloads in January. BuzzCity's CEO KF Lai comments "Since Djuzz launched last year, motorsports games have appealed to our audience and downloads have been on the increase. With the start of the F1 season this week, this upward curve looks set to continue, as fans reignite their interest in the sport via these games."

RIM forecasts weakened earnings due to PlayBook costs
Shares in BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion (RIM) slipped by as much as 13 percent yesterday after the firm revealed that costs relating to its new PlayBook tablet would eat into profits in its current quarter. RIM said that its earnings per share for its fiscal first quarter (ending 28 May) are expected to be in the range of US$1.47 to US$1.55 per share – well below the US$1.65 forecast by analysts in a Reuters poll. “This guidance range reflects a mix shift in handset towards lower ASP products in the first quarter and an increased level of investment in R&D and Sales and Marketing related to our tablet and platform initiatives,” said RIM in a statement. Revenue in the quarter was tipped to be in the range of US$5.2 billion to US$5.6 billion, also slightly below most expectations.

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Industry News - March 25 2011

by Libergraph 25. March 2011 11:01
Take A Deep Breath Google, Facebook Isn’t Doing Search Just Yet
I can imagine this post, titled “Facebook Testing Web Search Box At Top Of Site” was flying around Google’s cubicles today. Probably with a few expletives attached as commentary. This certainly wouldn’t be unprecedented. They targeted Microsoft years ago with their online Office competitor, and Microsoft fired back with Bing and seems to be quite willing to invest billions of dollars for as long as it takes to grab search share from Google. Now Google is targeting Facebook with their social efforts. There’s no reason at all why Facebook wouldn’t go into search. For us users, it’s all good. Competition brings better products to the market at lower prices. And Google needs more competition in search. But…phew! The screenshot that All Facebook got is a fake, or the result of third party software messing with a user’s browser (my guess is photoshop is the culprit). So take it down to DEFCON 2, Google, Facebook isn’t launching search just yet.
 
Google keeping Honeycomb source code on ice, says it's not ready for other devices
Itching to put some sweet, crunchy AOSP Honeycomb on your hardware of choice? You might have quite a wait, as BusinessWeek reports that Google will not release the Android 3.0 source code in the near future, and we just received confirmation of the same. Google forwarded us the following statement, which pretty much says it all: Android 3.0, Honeycomb, was designed from the ground up for devices with larger screen sizes and improves on Android favorites such as widgets, multi-tasking, browsing, notifications and customization. While we're excited to offer these new features to Android tablets, we have more work to do before we can deliver them to other device types including phones. Until then, we've decided not to release Honeycomb to open source. We're committed to providing Android as an open platform across many device types and will publish the source as soon as it's ready.

Color Looks To Reinvent Social Interaction With Its Mobile Photo App (And $41 Million In Funding)
41 million. From Sequoia Capital, Bain Capital, and Silicon Valley Bank. Pre-launch. That’s how much a brand new startup called Color has to work with. Your eyebrows should already be raised, and here’s something to keep them fixed there: this is the most money Sequoia has ever invested in a pre-launch startup. Or, as the Color team put it, “That’s more than they gave Google.” But the founding team goes a long way toward explaining it. Headed by Bill Nguyen — who sold Lala to Apple in late 2009 — the company has attracted a wealth of talent. It has seven founders including Nguyen and company president Peter Pham, who previously founded BillShrink. And its chief of product is DJ Patil, who was previously LinkedIn’s chief scientist.

U.S. Internet Piracy Is on the Decline
Internet piracy is on the decline in the U.S., according to new research from NPD Group. The percentage of the U.S. Internet population using a P2P file-sharing service to download music has decreased from 16% (28 million users) at the end of 2007, to 9% (16 million users) in the fourth quarter of 2010 — the very quarter that LimeWire was forced to shut down its file-sharing service. In the quarter previous, a federal judge ruled against LimeWire in a copyright infringement case versus the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Between Q4 2007 and Q4 2010, the average number of music files downloaded from P2P networks also dropped from 35 tracks per person to 18 tracks, NPD found.
 
A Tale of Two Future Net TVs, From Apple and Microsoft
Recent moves by two of the biggest names in tech may be shedding light on their plans for digitally connected televisions. Can Apple and Microsoft succeed where Google and Yahoo have already been? Microsoft's Tom Gibbons, a member of the Windows Phone team since 2009, and previously head of Microsoft Hardware business (makers of some very successful keyboards and mice) has recently been repurposed. His job title inside MS is now "corporate vice president of TV and Service Business within Microsoft's Interactive Entertainment Business." His responsibilities include "driving subscriptions usage and global partnerships" for this business unit, using the fact that he's "experienced in hardware, software and consumer product development."

Google Books Deal Not Dead, Only Resting, Authors’ Lawyer Says
U.S. Circuit Court Judge Denny Chin’s rejection of Google’s legal settlement with authors and publishers was not only a setback for the search giant’s plans to digitize and make available 10 million books, but also for the dream of a universal online library. So where do we go from here? Is this deal dead? “There’s nothing dead about the case or the settlement,” Michael J. Boni, lead attorney for the Authors Guild, told Wired.com in an interview. “We’re just considering what our next steps are. It’s gratifying that the publishers have said they’re still interested in working something out. That’s encouraging.”

MySpace loses 10 million users in a month
The steep decline follows a further round of major redundancies at the start of 2011 and the continued growth of Facebook, which now has 30 million registered users in the UK. According to the latest comScore figures, MySpace lost 10 million unique users between January and February of this year, going form 73 million to 63 million in a matter of four weeks.This time last year, when site began the first in a series of major relaunches, MySpace attracted 95 million unique users. Parent company News Corporation is reportedly still trying to sell off the ailing social network – which had hopes to reinvent itself through its streaming service, MySpace Music and its renewed focus on entertainment content. At the start of the year Mike Jones, MySpace’s chief executive announced that the company was making 500 staff members redundant and slashing its international operation to a skeleton staff.

Facebook Friending Tech to Test NFC at a Belgian Music Festival
We believe NFC is the next big thing in digital comms, but some of the applications it'll be used for are hard to imagine. This makes the upcoming PIAS Nites music festival in Brussels all the more interesting, as attendees will be able to use it to make Facebook friends, play games, and a ton of other stuff.
Around 10,000 people at the event in Belgium will be guinea pigs in a very large-scale and focused trial of NFC technology that may not have been attempted before. The CEO of PIAS has remarked that "it's a revolutionary concept that opens up a wide range of possibilities in the world of music events." And though the technology may do much to promote the event itself, the bands performing there and even lead to increased attendance next year, the real interest in the festival's use of NFC is how it indicates that pretty much everything about how we use our mobile devices may be about to change.

Nobody Needs a Tablet. So Why Are We Gobbling Them Up?
Apple’s iPad is just one year old, and more than 15 million customers have voted with their wallets. The tablet is officially mainstream. But just what is a tablet good for? It’s not a complete replacement of a PC and it’s not a necessity for anyone who carries around a notebook or a smartphone. At best, it’s a “tweener” device. For a product category that didn’t exist (except in niche form) a year ago, it’s surprising how well the tablet is doing. It’s as if a mainstream product appeared out of nowhere. Indeed, most tech experts underestimated how many iPads would sell in year one. If it’s not a necessity, doesn’t do many things as well as a notebook and lacks the portability of a smartphone, what’s the key to its success? Perhaps the best gadget to compare with the iPad is the microwave oven, says tech writer Matthew Guay. Succeeding the conventional oven, the microwave oven could heat food faster and use less energy. Even though it wasn’t as good at cooking as an oven, and it wasn’t obvious why anyone would want a microwave, the microwave became a staple in practically every home, because people kept finding new ways to use this technological wonder.
 
In Amazon’s Android Appstore, Fat-Fingering Will Cost You — Literally
A couple days ago, in writing up some thoughts on Amazon’s new Android Appstore, I noted that the app buying process may be a little too easy. You see, just scrolling through the feed of apps, I accidentally clicked a buy button. That immediately triggered a transaction. And guess what I found out today? There are no refunds. You might not think this is a big deal because while the Android Market gives you 15 minutes to get a refund (down from 24 hours) Apple’s App Store also technically doesn’t have an app refund process (though you can get one if you jump through some hoops). But there’s a big-little difference between the App Store and the Appstore (besides the tiny name difference, that is): an entire click.

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The customer is STILL king

by liberty 24. March 2011 15:07

Recently we made a further commitment to Mi liberty's ethos around client satisfaction and appointed a dedicated client services director to our management team. This role is an extension of everything the agency has been built on from day one. Mi liberty celebrated its 13th birthday this week and my experiences over the past years has just served to strengthen my view that happy clients are intrinsically linked to a solid business ethic and a fundamental for growth and reputation.


Still, it never ceases to amaze when new clients come to Mi liberty having already been "burned" by poor service or bad PR from the agency world. It's like the PR industry never learns that to be perceived as a valued partner, it has to deliver on its promises. Of course, it's the same in every walk of life, so why would PR agencies feel that they can get away with shoddy support and poor advice?


I'm proud that we can boast some very long term clients and that has to be a testament to our way of working. Prior to founding the agency, I worked on the client side at some major global brands in the technology world. My in-house communication roles enabled me to experience, first hand, some of the worst, and thankfully, some of the best of agency support. Unfortunately, throughout a 15 year career I never found the agency with the right mix. The upshot was that I was determined to build an agency that was better in every way. Let's face it, any agency is only going to be as good as its fundamental founding principles and the calibre of professionals who deliver that ethos.


At the end of the day, Mi liberty is a reflecton of my standards as a person. So why wouldn't I want it to be the best at client satisfaction? One part of me hopes that agencies that don't stack up read this and buck their ideas up, but the other half thinks that whilst they continue to take their clients for granted and under-perform, there will always be an agency that does it right.


What do you think about PR agency support in the technology industry? You can email me, or follow me on twitter where I intend to become quite vocal on the matter.

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General

Industry News - March 23 2011

by Libergraph 23. March 2011 12:33
Verizon to hit over 145 LTE markets by end 2011
US operator Verizon Wireless today unveiled an additional 59 markets that will have LTE services by the end of this year. This will see the carrier serve at least 147 US cities with LTE technology by the close of 2011. The operator began switching on LTE in 39 markets in December 2010 and announced plans for a further 49 markets at the CES show in January.

Solacia to provide mobile money smartcards for 4G services
The three major US mobile phone carriers - AT&T Wireless, Verizon Wireless, and T-Mobile - jointly created ISIS, a national mobile commerce network that will enable users with USIM cards to access popular transit ticketing applications, mobile credit card applications, membership loyalty programs, and mobile banking services that enable subscribers to make contactless withdrawals from ATMs and to trade stock and coupons.

No 3D-only games for 3DS, says Nintendo
The Nintendo 3DS may have made headlines for its 3D capabilities, but Nintendo is steering the console away from games in which the 3D element is essential. When quizzed over the disappearance of prototype games in which the 3D display had to be active in order to see crucial elements of the game, Nintendo 3DS platform producer Hideki Konno said: "We want to get software out to as many people as possible, and there are some people who just can't see 3D. We're moving away from any stance that says if you don't use the 3D functionality you can't play this game."

HTC outs updated HD7S Windows Phone 7 handset
HTC has served up a modest update to its primary Windows Phone 7 device with the new HD7S handset. The HD7S, as the name suggests, is a slight upgrade to the HD7 device, which launched with Microsoft's new operating system last autumn. The tagged-on 'S' stands for the new Super LCD screen, while there's a new version of WP7 that will feature copy and paste out of the box. Aside from that, everything else remains the same. It still boasts the 1GHz processor, a 4.3-inch screen, 16GB of internal storage and a 5-megapixel camera.

Facebook policy chief admits site needs to improve deletion tools for a minority of users
Richard Allan, talking at a Westminster Media Forum debate entitled, ‘Social media, online privacy and the ‘right to be forgotten’', said that the majority of Facebook’s 500 million users around the world were more concerned that their data, such as photos and videos, remained on the service rather than being deleted. Allan, who was en route to Brussels to take part in continued discussions on the European Union’s plans to force social networks to completely erase personal data, said that it would be a mistake to amend data protection laws on the basis of a few exceptional cases.

Apple iPad 2 will cost less than iPad 1 in the UK
The iPad 2 will go on sale in Britain at 5pm on Friday with prices starting at £399 for the 16GB wifi model - £30 less than the launch price for the same model of the original iPad last year. The most expensive iPad 2, the 64GB wifi and 3G model, will cost £659 - £40 less than the same model of the original iPad. Despite claims that the iPad 2 launch might be delayed because of shortages, Apple said the tablet computer will go on sale in 25 countries on Friday, including Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy and Spain.

LinkedIn has 100 million members
The social network for business people and, more likely, recruitment consultants said it add around one million new members every week, with Brazil and Mexico among its fastest growing countries. Now, LinkedIn wants to raise up to $175m in an IPO to cash in on the hype around Facebook, Twitter and Groupon. The company launched in May 2003, and took six years to reach 50 million users. It hit 85 million members in October 2010.

Shazam adds Facebook sharing with new Shazam Friends feature
Mobile discovery service Shazam has launched a new music-related feature, using the Facebook API to let users see what their friends are tagging. The new feature is called Shazam Friends, and adds a new Friends tab to the Shazam iPhone and Android apps. Users can browse friends' tags in a real-time feed, while also checking out what individuals have been tagging.

Motorola Acquires IPTV Software Company Dreampark
Motorola Mobility has acquired Dreampark, a Swedish IPTV software provider. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Motorola says it expects the acquisition to close in the second quarter. Dreampark is the company behind Dreamgallery, a software suite for operators aiming at providing services over TV networks. Its middleware platform takes advantage of open standards like HTML and scalable vector graphics, and combines that technology with SDKs to allow operators to obtain control of their TV portals for complete customization and regionalization.

Nanotech nerds assemble überfast-charge battery
Three researchers have come up with a technique they claim will allow laptop and smartphone batteries to be recharged in two minutes. Huigang Zhang, Xindi Yu and Paul Braun of the University of Illinois created a new battery cathode - the negatively charged one - formed "from a self-assembled three-dimensional bicontinuous nanoarchitecture consisting of an electrolytically active material sandwiched between rapid ion and electron transport pathways".

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Industry News - 22 March 2011

by Libergraph 22. March 2011 11:54

China rejects Gmail interference allegations
China has rejected allegations by Google of deliberate interference with the Gmail service.
Jiang Yu, a spokesperson for China's foreign ministry, told a press conference that Google's suggestion was "an unacceptable accusation", according to the BBC.Users of the Gmail service in China encountered difficulties after there was an Internet campaign for popular protests similar to those in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. At first it appeared to be a technical difficulty, but Google vowed that it was having no difficulties and that the attack was masked to look like a problem with Gmail itself.
The Inquirer

Play.com customer details 'leaked'
The online retailer Play.com is warning its customers their names and email addresses may have been stolen from a company that handles its marketing. However the company suggests in its message, sent out to everyone who has done business with the site, that credit card details held at its main site have not been affected. In an email to customers, the company said the issue "occurred outside of Play.com and no other personal customer information has been involved".
The Guardian

RIM BlackBerry PlayBook tablet release slips
RIM's PlayBook tablet will be out slightly later than planned. The BlackBerry maker today announced a whole heap of network operators and retailers who will be selling the PlayBook in North America. Curiously, it didn't say when these retail partners will offer the 7in, QNX-running tablet, which RIM promised earlier this year would go on sale in Q1. The first quarter of 2011 is rapidly approaching its end. Will RIM get its tablet out in time? Well, no, not according to one of its aforementioned retail partners.
Reg Hardware 

Microsoft sues Barnes & Noble over Android tablet
Microsoft filed suit on Monday against Barnes & Noble, as well as the makers of its Android-based e-reader and tablet devices, for patent infringement, part of its broader campaign against Google's mobile operating system. The software giant alleges its patents cover a range of functions "essential to the user experience". The company specifically cites the way users tab through various screens on the Nook e-reader and the Nook Color tablet, both of which run Android, to find the information they're after, as well as the way they interact with documents and e-books.
ZDNet

Half of old mobile phones still contain personal details of previous owner
More than half (54 per cent ) of second-hand mobiles contained information on the previous owner including photographs, banking details, Pin numbers and even private texts and e-mails, a study reveals. Researchers bought used phones and SIM cards on eBay, the internet auction site and used electronics shops to see what personal data they held. A total of 247 pieces of data were left on 19 of the 35 mobiles and 27 of the 50 SIM cards, revealed the study for life assistance company CPP.
Metro

Ofcom reveals 4G auction plan
Ofcom has published a consultation surrounding its upcoming auction of 4G mobile spectrum in the UK. The new spectrum is intended to provide capacity for 4G data which, Ofcom says, should bring mobile web speeds close to those of current home broadband internet. Don't get too excited though  we're not going to see the auction happen until early 2012. There are two spectrum bands up for grabs; 800 MHz, which will have greater capacity thanks to the digital TV switchover and can widen existing 2G and 3G coverage, and the 2.6GHz band which allows for the higher-speed 4G mobile data speeds.
Tech Radar

China mobile subscriber total rises to 863 mln in Feb
China Mobile , China's largest mobile carrier, said its total mobile subscribers in February rose to 594.9 million, including 24.5 million 3G subscribers. China Unicom , the country's No. 2 mobile carrier, said its total mobile subscribers increased to 171.6 million for the month, including about 16.7 million 3G subscribers. China Telecom said its total mobile subscribers rose to about 96.5 million in February, including 14.8 million for 3G subscribers.
Reuters

Intel sees head of mobile business leave
Intel has said that the general manager of its mobile business is leaving the company.
Anand Chandrasekher, a senior v-p and 24 year veteran with Intel, has said that he will leave the processor company to pursue other interests.  Intel was quick to re-state its commitment to the mobile chip business, which has been a target for the company for a number of years. Yet despite investment which has included the acquisition of Infineon’s cellular modem chip business, it is still to see its first major mobile phone design-win.
Electronics Weekly

Russian mobile retailer Euroset to float in London
Russia's largest mobile phone retailer Euroset Holding NV plans to float on the London Stock Exchange, Euroset said Tuesday, defying the poor market conditions that have seen other offerings pulled in recent weeks.The sale is planned for April, a person close to the deal said, with the company expected to raise $140 million through the issue of new shares. Most of the shares offered to the market will be those of Euroset's 50%-shareholder Alexander Mamut, who may consider selling his entire stake depending on Euroset's valuation and market conditions, the person said.
Total Telecom

Olympics to create thousands of IT jobs
New figures suggest that some 5,000 IT and telecoms jobs are to be created through the 2012 Olympics in London. According to an IT recruitment specialist, IT professionals will be needed for a diverse set of roles arising from the Olympics, including the installation of cyber security measures and providing the IT and telecoms networks for the international media coverage of the Games.
Online Recruiting

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liberty Industry News

Life in PR

by Mi Liberty Directors 21. March 2011 16:34

To celebrate Mi liberty’s 13th birthday as a PR agency, we’re featuring two examples from either end of the PR spectrum. One, a fresh-faced PR graduate with one year’s experience in the workforce. The other, an aging former journalist who came to PR after over 16 years’ experience in other industries.

The PR graduate

Until I decided to study public relations at university I didn’t know what it was. I was keen to study a subject at university that I could use in an industry. Although looking back there will always be a part of me that regrets not following my heart and studying dance. Nevertheless, even when I was young and supposed to be carefree I was not, so I chose a degree that not only had relevance to the working world it also had a sandwich year. This meant that I would work for a year to get experience. To try and combat the age old dilemma of graduates not having enough experience to get a job but no one willing to give them a chance to gain experience.

I went Bournemouth University to study public relations. I spent three years in total at Bournemouth and spent one year in the middle of that working full time in two separate agencies. I have to admit, my year out in the world of work was not an enjoyable one. Although I gained some invaluable experience it left me wondering if PR was the job for me. My two agencies were consumer focused and it ended up feeling more like I was a salesman or cold caller rather than a PR professional. This left me slightly disheartened and I spent my final year at Bournemouth considering that I maybe had made the wrong choice. Nevertheless, pragmatic as ever, I got my BA Hons in Public Relations realising that if PR didn’t work out, I could take my very transferable skills into a new sector.

While having a PR degree offers graduates with a wide range of transferable skills, it also has the advantage of being extremely vocation, which makes the first tentative steps into the workplace a little more obvious. Like the majority of my fellow graduates, I began my search for a career at an agency upon graduation.

Misfortune struck somewhat to me and my peers, graduating as we did in the middle of a deep recession. The media regularly reported how challenging it now was for fresh graduates to find gainful employment. Additional competition in the PR workforce came in the form of thousands of graduates from non-vocational traditional arts or humanities backgrounds such as English, history or politics. Nevertheless, I felt pleased that my decision to choose a sandwich course would prove fruitful. And so it proved to be, my experience working at agencies helped put me in front of potential employers.

Mi liberty was one of the agencies that requested an interview. My first interview was conducted by four of the senior managers, so felt quite daunting. The interview went well though and I was asked back to meet the wider team. Thankfully, Mi liberty then offered me my first fulltime contract at a PR agency, an offer that I gladly accepted.The irony of me working at a telecoms and technology PR agency was not lost on me. At university I was the butt of many jokes as I managed to go through five phones in my final year of university. This meant that I was never able to trust myself with any phone that was too flash. So when I let my friends know I was going to work in the telecoms industry this added fuel to the fire and no one saw me lasting beyond my probation period!

Nevertheless, not only did I last, I thrived. I have now been at Mi liberty for just over a year and I am thoroughly enjoying the experience. My old fears about PR not being the role for me career-wise have long since vanished. I have learnt so much from the Mi liberty team and its wide range of clients during my first year. I expect this trend to continue as my career progresses. In addition to learning on the job Mi liberty, I have also attended a variety of training sessions.

Mi liberty supports people as they grow. Across all my teams I have been given opportunities to push myself and try to prove myself. There is a great team spirit throughout the company and you really get the feeling that everyone wants to see you succeed.

I think I was worried when I first started telecoms PR especially with it being an industry that I had no idea about. However, Mi liberty has supported me throughout and I am glad that when it came to university choice I followed my head not my heart.

The former journalist

So, Mi liberty is 13. Thirteen is a tricky age; no longer a child, not yet an adult. As Mi liberty enters its 14th year I expect that its future will be no less colourful than my own has been. As a slightly bemused 13 year old making his GCSE choices, I was told to fill out a form by the school careers officer. The form posed a number of questions regarding my perceived abilities and preferences. The data was put into a computer and the computer suggested that I should become a fireman.

The careers officer asked me whether I had considered becoming a fireman, “not really,” I said thinking to myself that footballer or rock star sounded more fun, and less dangerous. “Well,” said the CO, “maybe you should go and work in your dad’s garage?”

I’m sure that my career officer had my best interests at heart, just like she had the best interests at heart of the 400 other kids she had seen over the space of that week. Her advice was rubbish, of course. Still, that’s what you get when you appoint a middle-aged career long English teacher as the school careers officer. It wasn’t her fault, she was massively under-qualified for the role and this was the tail end of the 1980s when the media were telling everyone on a daily basis that there were no jobs anymore and that the country was going to the dogs.

Rather than take up the position of assistant to my dad fixing up cars, I decided that the harsh realities of the workplace could wait a few more years. I got some GCSEs and some A-levels and went to university instead. Then I found myself facing the harsh realities of the workplace in my early 20s still with absolutely no idea what I wanted to do with my life.

Ultimately, formal education saw me graduate with a degree in environmental engineering from Nottingham University. I started applying for jobs, well, any jobs with the word ‘environmental’ in their job description. My first job after college was writing distance learning courses in environmental management subjects at De Montfort University.

I had never considered writing as a viable career option before. I had done engineering principally because it was a ‘proper’ degree, one with maths and science, one that would certainly get me a much better job than the one my pal doing media studies would get anyway.

Only my pal who had done media studies ended up working as a journalist down in London and I had ended up as a technical author in Leicester. Somewhere along the lines something had gone seriously wrong. After about three years of technical authoring, I decided that I actually what I really wanted to do with my life was become a journalist since it sounded much more fun and glamorous than technical author.

Becoming a journalist is a lot easier said than done. My first job in writing had revealed that writing might be something I could do that would keep me from working in my dad’s garage. But it hadn’t really taught me how to be a journalist. Back in those days, the web and email were in their infancy, and no one I knew had a mobile phone. Job searching involved buying Monday’s Guardian and scouring the adverts. I went through a period that lasted about a year applying for about ten jobs per. All of my CVs were accompanied by bespoke letter and posted down in the finest envelopes that WH Smith supplied.

I was singularly unsuccessful in my search for a job in London in journalism. I ended up getting a job in Newmarket for an energy analyst – it was kind of near London and it was kind of like journalism. I got to write monthly reports for a set audience of newsletter subscribers, but mostly the job involved cutting up the Financial Times and sticking the stories in a scrapbook. I did this for a couple of years while I built up more experience writing newsletter reports, then I started buying the Guardian on Mondays again. At this second time of asking I was a bit more successful. Mostly I was ignored and occasionally I was rejected, eventually though I was invited to an interview, albeit for a job for which I hadn’t actually applied.

The editor of a b2b magazine called Banking Technology had been passed my CV by one of the hundreds of people I had applied to for a job and she wanted to see me. I knew nothing about banking and even less about technology. I got the gig. This was my first job in journalism.

As a child, I had The Game of Life, in which the most financially rewarding career was journalist. If you landed that job in The Game of Life you generally ended up winning. It didn’t take me very long as a journalist to realise that, in this instance, life did not reflect the challenges and promises of a boardgame. Journalists are not well-paid.

In the six years following graduation, my annual salary had crept up from a £12k per annum to an uninspiring £14k, while my cost of living had gone in the opposite direction. When I lived in Leicester, my monthly rent at one point was £75, while rent at my first flat share in Hackney was £350. I was significantly worse off financially, but hey, at least I got to live on a street just off Clapton’s Murder Mile.

The financial blisters that I had acquired by walking this rocky road of financial discovery were soothed only by the fact that journalism comes with a number of fringe benefits. First up, it is interesting. You get to find out about all sorts of new stuff, you get to meet all sorts of interesting people and if you’re lucky you get to travel all over the world. Second, it rewards the soul. Not only do you get to find out about new stuff and meet interesting people, you also get to write about it and have an audience. Third, in addition to learning and writing about all the exciting new stuff you cover for the publication, you get PR people being nice to you and telling you that you are important.

The fringe benefits are so good that they encouraged me to stay in journalism for 10 years. My salary did go up but it was still significantly lower than that of my friends working outside the media. I was, however, noticeably happier than almost all of my friends. I loved being a journalist. Being wined and dined, going to parties, I really did fly all over the world and stay in some extremely plush hotels, and every so often I wrote some articles.

Unfortunately, the world wide web had grown up in the time it had taken me to move from Leicester to London. Its arrival represented a genuine paradigm shift. The consumption of news and views changed rapidly, and the number of places where marketing executives could spend their advertising budgets multiplied almost exponentially. Many of the traditional publishing houses were not equipped to change their business models. Job security in journalism became almost as bad as the remuneration.

It is a common complaint among journalists that they do not have the time to cover everything of interest to the level that they would like. The instantaneous nature of news consumption now means spending time on quality stories is no longer always an option. In many instances, journalism has become churnalism. When you spend your time covering the same set of subjects with no real level of depth, a good deal of fringe benefits numbers one and two disappear. It is perhaps no coincidence that the most recent version of The Game of Life does not even include journalism as a possible profession.

Fringe benefit three remains in journalism though. In fact, it is stronger now than ever. Principally, because the number of outlets for marketing messages is shrinking and so it is more challenging than ever to get coverage. Public relations is growing as journalism shrinks. When I moved into PR one old hack I knew joked that pretty soon there would be no one left for PRs to call and pitch.

PR, for me, represents growth. It represents a challenging and fascinating change of direction. It represents a chance to stay in the media industry and have genuine influence.  And, perhaps most importantly, it represents financial stability. Moving into PR as a former journalist, losing fringe benefit number three was a bitter pill to swallow, people don’t call me up very often and offer to take me out to lunch or fly me to the other side of the world, but benefits one and two are very much in place and have been joined by a very obvious direct benefit. The path from journalism to PR is well-trodden, it is not without its rocks and the resultant blisters, but the financial rewards are there for those who persist.

Apologies for upsetting English sensibilities and ending this post discussing the taboo topic of cash, but when you have a mortgage and baby to support, the fringe benefits don’t cut it; while money most certainly talks. If I had continued to follow my heart, I would not have been able to support my family. Frankly, if I’d followed my school computer’s advice and become a fireman I would have been better paid than I was as a journalist. I put out a fair amount of fires now of course, but as one of my amazing friends at the agency points out regularly, we work in PR not ER and what’s more, it is better paid. Like Hayley above, I am glad I followed my head.

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Industry News - March 21, 2011

by Libergraph 21. March 2011 11:53
ZTE's western revenues surge despite US hurdles
ZTE's bid to reduce its reliance on Chinese business seems to be succeeding, as a strong rise in overseas sales drove it to a 32 per cent leap in full year profit, up to $494m for 2010. The fourth quarter was particularly strong, with net profit up 49 per cent year-on-year. Full year revenue was $10.67bn, up 17 per cent on 2009's figure, and CFO Wei Zaishen said recently that he expected the company's growth this year to be at least as great as in 2010.

RIM in war with operators over m-payments data
As Wall Street looks for double-digit growth when RIM reports its fourth quarter results on Thursday, the company has reportedly picked one of the first big fights in the boom area of mobile payments. According to the Wall Street Journal, RIM is "locking horns" with operators over control of data as smartphones take on electronic wallet functions. The carriers and RIM have different viewpoints on where the user's payment credentials - the data held in the magnetic strip of a credit card - should be stored on a handset. The carriers believe this data should be encrypted and stored in the SIM card, which they control, while RIM says it should be in a secure area of the phone. The dispute highlights the fight among different players in the m-commerce chain to take pole position, and own the main customer relationship.

O2 Switches On "Superfast" London Network
O2 UK has revealed that it switched on a new “superfast” 3G network across London last week, having gained permission to reuse the 900MHz spectrum for 3G services from Ofcom, the UK Communications Regulator, back in January. O2 is the first UK operator to take advantage of the change to its 900MHz network licence and says the new 3G900 network layer in London is expected to deliver a 50 per cent increase in capacity to its existing 3G network. The 900MHz frequency band was previously only licensed for 2G services in the UK, but it offers the capability to significantly improve the potential of 3G services. Since being granted its new network licence in January, O2 has deployed 3G900 services in key cities across the UK, including Leeds, Birmingham and Manchester, with other cities set to follow in the coming months.

Whitepaper Examines Prospects for NFC
SJB Research has published a report and free whitepaper, NFC Business Models, looking at the prospects for the technology. The whitepaper sets out the latest thinking from around the world on what successful NFC services will look like; the building blocks that will need to be put in place in order to drive adoption of NFC services; the roles and responsibilities of each of the numerous players in the value chain; and the business strategies that are most likely to succeed.

Orange takes its Book Club store to Android smartphones
Orange has launched its Book Club e-books store as an Android app, following its debut last year for BlackBerry, Symbian and Java phones. The app went live yesterday alongside the announcement of this year's longlist in the Orange Prize for Fiction. The app has a catalogue of 23,000 e-books and audiobooks, with one-click purchases using carrier billing. Like Amazon's Kindle apps, Orange Book Club allows its users to read their purchased e-books on multiple devices, including handsets, tablets and PCs. Mobcast is responsible for the service.

Orange Kenya partners with ZTE for 3G rollout
Orange will partner with ZTE to roll out its 3G network in Kenya. The investment, valued at €33m, will see Orange launching services in the first half of this year as part of the telco’s drive to double its subscriber base to more than 4.5 million in 2011. Orange is currently the third-largest operator in Kenya, well behind market leader Safaricom, which claims a massive 77 per cent share of the market through its almost 17 million subscribers and is currently the only commercial 3G service provider in that country.

Mobile phones are not for calls
British people are not using their mobile phones to make calls any more. According to  mobile comparison site Dialtosave.co.uk, the number of minutes UK consumers want from a mobile phone contract has more than halved in less than a year. Your average mobile phone user would be happy barking into their handset for just 10 minutes per day, or 300 minutes per month. More than three times as many consumers want 300 minutes per month as require 600 minutes a month. Hardly anyone wants a contract for 900 minutes. Over a year ago it was average for a person to be looking for 600 minutes. What they replace it with is SMS. Richard Cappin, DialToSave's founder said that punters want to surf, use their social networks, and send texts, much more than they want to talk.

How to slay a cellphone with a single text
Attacks that crash most older cellphones are frequently compounded by carrier networks that send booby-trapped text messages to the target handset over and over. In other cases, they're aided by a “watchdog” feature embedded in the phone, which takes it offline after receiving just three of the malformed messages. The so-called SMS of death attacks were unveiled late last year at a hacker conference in Berlin. They use special binary characters and overflowed headers to temporarily crash most older models made by manufacturers including Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, LG, Motorola, and Micromax. Carrier networks often aggravate the attacks by bombarding the target with the same malicious message, making them an inexpensive way to take a phone completely offline. 

BBC World Service to sign funding deal with US state department
The BBC World Service is to receive a "significant" sum of money from the US government to help combat the blocking of TV and internet services in countries including Iran and China. In what the BBC said is the first deal of its kind, an agreement is expected to be signed later this month that will see US state department money – understood to be a low six-figure sum – given to the World Service to invest in developing anti-jamming technology and software. The funding is also expected to be used to educate people in countries with state censorship in how to circumnavigate the blocking of internet and TV services.

Twitter offers encryption to beat hackers
The measure is particulary designed to defend those who access Twitter via unsecured public Wi-Fi networks, which can make it easy for hackers to steal their passwords. If activated, the new option in users' account settings means that whenever a they log on, their browser will connect to Twitter's servers via HTTPS, an encrypted version of the basic web protocol. Virtually anyone trying to spy on the traffic will see only packets of completely unintelligible data. "This will improve the security of your account and better protect your information if you’re using Twitter over an unsecured Internet connection, like a public WiFi network, where someone may be able to eavesdrop on your site activity," said Twitter spokeswoman Carolyn Penner.

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