Results 31 to 40 of 49
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June 22nd, 2005 10:30 AM #31Originally Posted by pissword
Originally Posted by notEworthy27
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June 22nd, 2005 12:12 PM #32
hehe ewan ko sir ungas baka marketing gimik lang yun.. some people may PDA na may LAPTOP pa na dala dala
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June 22nd, 2005 01:08 PM #34Originally Posted by Ungas
The difference between PLDT WeRoam Mobile and Wi-Fi Hotspots is there access speed. What they are trying to say to you is if you want faster access speed.... add ka lang P500.00 and you will have it over Wi-Fi.
Br,
silver_corollaLast edited by silver_corolla; June 22nd, 2005 at 01:32 PM.
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June 22nd, 2005 01:29 PM #38Originally Posted by Ungas
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June 22nd, 2005 06:36 PM #39Originally Posted by silver_corolla
Matanong ko na rin kung san alam nyong wifi hotspots declared ang kanilang download speed? Puro high speed lang kasi nakikita kong nakasulat.
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June 24th, 2005 11:31 PM #40
Avaya, Nokia eye enterprise market for Wi-fi/GSM phones
(INQ7.net) TELECOM equipment manufacturer Avaya and top phone maker Nokia have announced a partnership that will develop “dual-mode phones” that can work on both mobile phone and wireless local area networks -- more popularly known as wireless fidelity (wi-fi).
Avaya, Nokia eye enterprise market for Wi-fi/GSM phones
June 24, 2005
Updated 02:31am (Mla time)
Erwin Lemuel Oliva eoliva*inq7.net
INQ7.net
TELECOM equipment manufacturer Avaya and top phone maker Nokia have announced a partnership that will develop “dual-mode phones” that can work on both mobile phone and wireless local area networks -- more popularly known as wireless fidelity (wi-fi).
Expecting an emerging enterprise market for converged services that would ride on wi-fi and mobile phone networks, Avaya and Nokia have begun trials on a dual-mode phone in St. George Bank, Australia this year), James Haensly, Avaya Asia Pacific chief technology officer and vice president for solutions sales, official told reporters in Makati City on Thursday. They expect to launch it commercially by end of 2005, he said.
“While this is initially viewed as a disruptive innovation by mobile phone operators, it actually extends their reach into enterprises,” he said, adding that dual-mode phones would boost operators’ business.
Both companies are now working on the dual-mode phone using the Nokia 60 series models, but will extend their collaboration on other Nokia phone models soon, according to Haensly.
The ability to switch from using a mobile phone network to a wireless fidelity network is an innovation that has been talked about in the recent years.
Motorola, for instance, introduced its own wi-fi/GSM phone last year in the US, according to this blog found at http://rodrigo.typepad.com/english/2...ar.html.Vonage also recently introduced a handset that can work on a wi-fi network.
Haensly however stressed dual-mode phones are generally not pushed on consumers by operators despite their strong interest. The biggest attraction of the wi-fi/GSM phone is the voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) feature that comes with this innovation.
Since this phone can now work on a wi-fi network, a client like Skype could transform this phone into an IP device. VoIP calls can then be made through this phone and since they’re cheaper than regular mobile phone calls, this innovation poses a threat to the bread and butter of mobile phone operators.
Haensly pointed out however that the overlooked and expected killer application in dual-mode phones turns these little handsets into extensions of a desktop. In a business environment, this feature leads to more business applications.
“This will allow employees to become more productive,” he said, noting that most enterprise customers do much of their work outside their offices.
Number portability is another possible attraction to dual-mode phones. It allows a person to use a single phone number (usually an IP number) no matter where he or she is. This will allow mobile workers to receive calls on their dual-mode handsets while roaming.
Nokia and Avaya’s dual-mode phones will support the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), an emerging protocol being adopted to allow mobile phone handsets to do VoIP and other emerging Internet applications like instant messaging.
There are now inter-operability and hardware issues affecting the wider adoption of dual-mode phones. Haensly believes though that SIP will be the "transformational" ingredient in the next-generation mobile phone services.
"SIP will open new opportunities for everyone, at the same driving down the cost of handsets and services. I don't see any alternative in the horizon that will challenge SIP," he added.
The popular Skype is using a modified version of SIP.
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