News (513)

  • WiMax Forum gives out first 2.5Ghz certifications

    The WiMax Forum has issued its first certifications for mobile-centric products that operate around the 2.5GHz frequency and said it will start certifying 3.5GHz products later this year.

  • SA police keep tabs on gangs with $5.2m IT system

    South Australian police are spending AU$5.2 million over five years on an IT system to track criminal motorcycle gangs.

  • Femtocells gather new followers

    Femtocells mobile base stations which piggyback off DSL to boost mobile reception indoors could have inched a little closer to consumers' living rooms.

  • Motorola tech chief latest to leave

    Rich Nottenburg, chief strategy and technology officer, has become the latest executive to leave Motorola.

  • Adobe opens up Flash, ditches licensing fees

    Adobe is aiming for greater use of its Flash Player multimedia Web software within mobile and other non-PC devices by launching its Open Screen Project an industry alliance it hopes will garner the support of large vendors in the embedded multimedia space.

  • LiMo releases its mobile Linux platform

    The LiMo Foundation released the first full version of its mobile phone platform on Monday.

  • Motorola splits into two companies

    Under pressure from investors, Motorola has decided to split into two publicly traded companies, one handling handsets and accessories and the other taking on wireless broadband networks and enterprise-level communications services.

  • Google gives Wi-Fi 'white space' Gbps speed boost

    Google has proposed a standard to allow US consumers to access Wi-Fi at Gbps speeds using the vacant "white space" left open by unused TV channels.

  • Motorola denies Malaysian bribery accusations

    Motorola has rejected allegations that it broke any local laws pertaining to its reinvestment plans and involvement in a government contract in the Malaysian state of Penang.

  • Motorola loses its devices head

    Motorola announced the "immediate" departure of the head of its troubled mobile devices division late last week, a day after confirming that its marketing chief was no longer with the company.

  • Apple's iPhone wooing the enterprise market

    Mobile operators offering the iPhone may be concentrating their efforts on consumers, but research suggests they shouldn't neglect business users, who apparently love the touchscreen interface.

  • Aussie Nortel jobs safe despite global cuts

    Nortel staff in Australia and New Zealand are likely to escape the thousands of redundancies announced at the company's fourth quarter results briefing.

  • LiMo launches mobile Linux handsets

    The LiMo Foundation launched its first mobile handsets, which run on the Linux-based Mobile LiMo Platform, at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona yesterday.

  • Location-based services expected to rocket in 2008

    Worldwide subscribers for location-based mobile phone services will increase by 168 percent this year, according to analyst house Gartner.

  • Dell says no to phones, yes to tiny laptops?

    In a sign that the convergence trend is even reaching technology's stalwarts, Dell has hinted its customers could force it to release a laptop with an eight-inch screen.

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