Wednesday, February 13, 2008

WTF Best Buy lawsuit

Woman files $54m lawsuit against Best Buy for losing laptop

We've definitely heard some horror stories about Best Buy, but it looks like a DC woman named Raelyn Campbell has had enough: she's opening up a big can of America Sauce on the retailer in the form of a $54m lawsuit after it lost her laptop during warranty service. Campbell says she bought a laptop and $300 extended warranty from Best Buy in 2006, and took the machine in for service when the power switch broke last May. Told repairs would take two to six weeks, she set off on a business trip, only to find that her laptop had gone missing when she returned in August. Fast forward through several more weeks of run-around and delays, and the best the Buy would offer for losing a $1,100 machine with all her data on it was a $900 gift card. After being informed of the potential for identity theft, Campbell filed the multimillion-dollar suit, which prompted Best Buy to up its offer to a whopping $2,100 plus a $500 gift card. Campbell says she's not dropping the case until she finds out what happened to her machine -- and she wants ol' Blue to train its employees on privacy issues and revamp its warranty policy. Honestly? We'd say she has a better chance of getting the $54 million.

source : engadget.com

T-mobile hotspot

T-Mobile HotSpot users will get five years of Starbucks WiFi access after AT&T switchover

Yesterday's surprising-but-not-shocking announcement that Starbucks would be switching to AT&T for WiFi services left a lot of T-Mobile customers in the lurch -- although Starbucks said that T-Mo and AT&T had an "agreement" that would let HotSpot users stay connected, there weren't a ton of details given. Well, it looks like you've got a few more years of caffeinated surfing ahead of you, guys -- T-Mobile issued a press release today saying it was committed to ensuring "minimum customer impact" during the transition, and that it's signed a five year "roaming agreement" with AT&T that will kick in when the Starbucks WiFi transition begins later this year. Of course, the ideal roaming agreement would let you use either company's networks wherever you are, not just AT&T bandwidth in Starbucks -- we'll totally spring for the coffee if these two companies want to meet and sort something like that out.

source : engadget.com

Monday, February 11, 2008

OH NO T-Mobile

Starbucks brews up WiFi pact with AT&T, disconnects T-Mobile


Announced today, Starbucks is gearing up to transition its WiFi relationship from T-Mobile to AT&T in over 7,000 of its locations in the US. For T-Mobile HotSpot customers feelin' a bit like day old espresso right about now, fret not, as the coffee giant has assured us all that you folks "will be able to continue to access WiFi services at no additional cost through an agreement between AT&T and T-Mobile." Starting "sometime this Spring," Starbucks card holders will be treated to two hours of free WiFi access per day, while more than 12 million "qualifying AT&T broadband and U-verse internet customers will have unlimited free access." For whatever it's worth, the press release also notes that the carrier will "soon extend the benefits of WiFi at Starbucks to its wireless customers," but it (sadly) fails to elaborate. For those of you out there without any ties to AT&T, expect to pony up $3.99 for a two hour session or $19.99 for monthly access.

source : engadget.com

Dolby for Mobiles

Dolby and SRS Labs bring surround sound to mobiles

With all these companies honing in on bringing HD capabilities to handsets, we were beginning to wonder when someone would step up and lend a hand on the audio front. Thankfully, both Dolby and SRS Labs have come forward at Mobile World Congress to announce separate enhancements to mobile audio, so we'll touch on the former first. Dolby Mobile, hailed as an "audio processing technology platform that brings rich, vibrant surround sound to music, movies, and television programs on mobile phones and portable media players," is available as we speak on the FOMA SH905i and FOMA SH905iTV in Japan, but will hopefully float out to other handsets in due time. As for SRS Labs, it's boasting its own SRS CS Headphone technology, which reportedly "takes stereo or surround encoded 2-channel audio and processes it using an ultra-low-power Circle Surround decoder to create 5.1 highly accurate channels." Granted, we're still wondering exactly how 5.1 channels make their way though stereo earbuds, but we'd be up for a listen, regardless.

source : engadget.com

Sexi PSP

Fan-made PSP mockup is far sexier than the real thing will ever be


Good gawd y'all, we don't normally bother with fan renders and mockups, but excepting the awkward placement of the L and R triggers there's almost nothing about this PSP re-visioning that leaves us wanting. Gank that UMD, add some flash memory, and this is our be-all end-all fantasy portable gaming device -- that will likely never ever be made.

source : engadget.com

Saturday, February 9, 2008

19.1 Billion and counting! 700MHz

700MHz: 19.1B and Counting

Posted by samc on February 7th, 2008

Total potential winning bids are just under $19.1 billion at the end of today’s 700 MHz auction.

According to RCR News, the big news of the afternoon was that the E-Block licenses surpassed their reserve price of $903.7 million during round 44. The E Block is now no longer subject to a possible re-auction that would have been required had it not met its reserve price.

This block is different then the rest in that it is unpaired spectrum, using a single 6 megahertz channel (on UHF Channel 56). It seems likely to be dedicated to mobile television, like Channel 55 next to it, which is owned by Qualcomm for their MediaFLO system.

E-Block licenses that received new bids in round 45 include; Atlanta ($27.5 million); Miami ($24.8 million); Dallas ($35.6 million); Philadelphia ($37.7 million); Boston ($25.1 million); San Francisco ($44.9 million); and Los Angeles ($92.9 million).

On Monday, new c-block bids were placed on the eight regional c-block licenses – not the 50-state package. Bidders can place a bid on the package of eight licenses as a whole or bid on the regional licenses separately. Under FCC rules, if bids on the regional licenses are higher than bids on the package, the spectrum will be sold separately. Bids on the regional licenses now stand at $4.74 billion, trumping the $4.71 billion high bid on the 50-state package.

Under FCC rules, if bids on the “C Block” regional licenses are higher than bids on the nation-wide package, the spectrum will be sold separately.

“It would make perfect sense for Verizon or AT&T to focus on the regional c-block licenses - and acquire the entire c-block if the price exceeded the reserve - and Google stopped bidding,” said Michael Calabrese, director of the Wireless Future Program at the New America Foundation.

Only the national commercial-public safety D-Block license is not likely to reach its reserve price. The FCC may release the names of the A-, B-, C- and E-Block licenses shortly after Auction 73 concludes. Stifel Nicolaus expects the auction to end by the end of the month, or possibly sooner.

The FCC said today that it was increasing the number of bidding rounds from five to six beginning tomorrow. Under Phase 2 of the auction, new bids only have to be 2% higher than the current bid, rather than the 5% increase required in earlier rounds of bidding.

source : dailywireless.org

AWS licenses

AWS Lights Up Texas

Posted by samc on February 8th, 2008

Stelera Wireless, an Oklahoma City-based rural broadband service provider has launched Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) in Floresville and Poth, Texas, notes Om Malik.

Stelera is a wireless startup that is focused on delivering broadband services in rural communities. It owns 42 AWS licenses across the United States covering almost 6 million people. It is the first mobile operator to utilize the AWS band (2.1 GHz and 1.7 GHz) in the United States.

The company will offer residential and business packages that cost anywhere from $60 to $100 a month. The speeds on an HSPA network are up to 7.2 Mbps downlink and 2 Mbps uplink. The I-HSPA technology from Nokia Siemens Networks can offer download speeds of up to 42 megabits per second. Stelera owns 42 AWS licenses across the U.S., mostly in rural communities.

Leap Wireless is another AWS operator poised to make a large push into East Coast and Gulf Coast markets using its AWS spectrum notes RCR News. Leap owns AWS spectrum along the Gulf Coast, from Corpus Christi, Texas, to Baton Rouge and New Orleans, La. The East Coast cities where Leap expects to build new markets include Wilmington, Del.; Philadelphia, Pa.; Washington, D.C.; Baltimore, Md.; and Richmond and Norfolk, Va.

More recently, Leap and MetroPCS announced a merger, that brought two large AWS spectrum owners into more direct competition with the largest AWS spectrum owner in the United States — T-Mobile.

Headquartered in San Diego, Leap Wireless began as a spin-off of QUALCOMM and now owns licenses for 35 of the top 50 markets, including Chicago, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Washington D.C, and Seattle. Leap ended 2007 with approximately 2.86 million customers.

MetroPCS, headquartered in Dallas, has more than 3 million subscribers and holds 23 licenses through its subsidiaries in the South and Central Florida, Atlanta, San Francisco, Dallas, Detroit and Sacramento metropolitan areas.

Both MetroPCS and LeapWireless (under the Cricket name) acquired nationwide spectrum in the AWS auction last year.

Top 10 Highest AWS Bidders
Bidders Net total of high bids
1. T-Mobile $4.2 billion
2. Verizon Wireless $2.8 billion
3. SpectrumCo $2.4 billion
4. MetroPCS $1.4 billion
5. Cingular $1.3 billion
6. Cricket $710 million
7. Denali Spectrum $365 million
8. Barat Wireless $127 million
9. AWS Wireless $116 million
10. Atlantic Wireless $81 million
Click here to find out who is backing these bidders.

The FCC’s Advanced Wireless Services auction concluded in September 2006 and grossed $13.9 billion for the U.S. Treasury.

The big winner of AWS spectrum was T-Mobile, which spent some $4 billion covering virtually the entire country.

As an aside, some observers believe going beyond the $4.7 reserve price for nationwide 700MHz coverage would be imprudent. But considering you only need one third the towers at 700MHz for similar coverage, it could be a comparative bargain. Because 700 MHz is “open”, unlike the AWS band, it might be tougher for an operator like Verizon or AT&T to rationalize.

But without a legacy cellular network to protect — and a mobile advertising platform to generate revenue — 700 MHz could be a license to print money for someone like Google. Research firm Gartner predicts worldwide mobile advertising revenue will grow from less than $1 billion last year to $11 billion in 2011.

In related news, Nokia Siemens Networks was also selected by satellite phone company TerreStar Networks, to deploy Internet-HSPA solution for the TerreStar all-IP integrated satellite and terrestrial wireless communications system.

Nokia Siemens says it will be the first commercial I-HSPA network deployment, a technology that Nokia Siemens helped pioneer.

Their Flexi WCDMA Base Station uses an Internet-High Speed Packet Access (I-HSPA) architecture, which eliminates legacy circuit-switched technology. Optimized for native IP applications, including voice and data, I-HSPA is the only commercially available all-IP solution, and is optimum for edge deployment within TerreStar’s MSS service, says the company.

“I-HSPA still isn’t a replacement for WiMAX, not providing the bit-per-hertz efficiency of the OFDMA technology, but it’s not intended to be”, said Mark Slater Nokia’s VP of sales, in Telephony Magazine. Nokia, in fact, is straddling both sides of the fence, building a WiMAX portfolio in parallel with its UMTS (3G) cellular portfolio.

Devices normally connect through a base station and then are routed through specialized cellular gear before finally hitting the Internet. I-HSPA eliminates much of that cellular gear, allowing the device to connect directly to the Internet through a base station. Smooth handoffs between ajoining cell sites is said to be the downside.

TerreStar Networks, a satellite phone company, will leverage Nokia Siemens Networks’ I-HSPA technology as the foundation for development of their LTE (Long Term Evolution) services.

When TerreStar’s network is deployed, perhaps later this year, the company will provide universal access and tailored applications to millions of users throughout North America via mass market commercial wireless devices and spot beams.

TerreStar, which just announced $300 million in investor commitments through the launch of its hybrid mobile satellite, said Arianespace, the launch provider for TerreStar-1, has confirmed it can launch the satellite during the December 2008 through February 2009 launch window.

Competitor ICO also shares those MSS frequencies and boardchairman Craig McCaw would like to use ICO’s frequencies to carry mobile television as an adjunct to Clearwire’s Mobile WiMAX.

ICO plans to integrate its Mobile Interactive Media (MIM) suite of services with Clearwire’s broadband network. “Our next generation wireless personal broadband networks are built to deliver data, voice and video over a single network,” said Scott Richardson, chief strategy officer for Clearwire.

If Craig McCaw’s ICO can deliver live television to mobile DVB-SH receivers, who needs MediaFLO? Probably not Clearwire — or possibly Sprint’s Xohm. ICO’s first GEO satellite is scheduled to be launched in early 2008 with MSV’s hybrid service starting in 2009.

ICO’s G1 satellite is due to launch on an Atlas V launch next month by United Launch Alliance. ULA, by the way, is the product of a merged Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle program (EELV) that stuck taxpayers with a $14.4 Billion bill for cost overuns due to Lockheed and Boeing’s duplicative rocket programs that ballooned from $17 billion to $32 billion in a few years.

Clearwire, a partner with Intel and Motorola, is committed to Mobile WiMAX, but I-HSPA handsets could be one option for AWS spectrum holders T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T — featuring dual-mode AWS/satphone connections.


source : dailywireless.org

iWave Cube

iWave Cube, the personal portable microwave


There comes the time in every young person's life where they decide to graduate from the microwave to the stove. And fail miserably. Now instead of retreating dejectedly back to the kitchen microwave, where the rest of the appliances can point and make fun, you can hide your shame with the iWave Cube. The little microwave measures one cubic foot (about the size of a Kleenex box), and weighs just 12 pounds. Unfortunately, you'll still need to plug it in, so there's a limit to how far you can run. The iWave Cube comes in black, red or silver, and retails for $130.

source : engadget.com

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

WiMAX : 100 million by 2014

WiMAX: 100 million by 2014

Posted by samc on February 4th, 2008

Telecommunications market research firm Maravedis today announced the publication of the fifth edition of its yearly report “WiMAX, LTE and Broadband Wireless Worldwide Market Trends 2008-2014.”

Maravedis forecasts WiMAX subscribers to exceed 100 million by 2014. “WiMAX chipsets will start to be embedded in laptops in the second half of 2008, into handheld devices in 2009, and into consumer electronics by early 2010,” said Adlane Fellah, President and CEO of Maravedis and co-author of the report.

On the technology side, the report confirms that both WiMAX and LTE are converging upon 4G service capabilities. LTE’s primary market, 3G operators, will be unlikely to adopt LTE until 2012-2014. “While LTE appears to have the decisive volume advantage, the lag between 3G evolution and the next generation mobile network will greatly benefit WiMAX,” said Robert Syputa, co-author of the report.

Highlights of the report include the following:

  • The accumulated market size for combined demand and supply of WiMAX equipment will reach $42 billion by 2014.
  • There were over 1,650,000 BWA subscribers, including 635,000 WiMAX subscribers, at the end of 2007.
  • Motorola was the leader in BWA and WiMAX combined equipment markets, with a 23% market share, followed by Alvarion at 18%.
  • The combined BWA and WiMAX equipment market totaled US$1.2 billion in 2007.
  • The mobile version of WiMAX (802.16m) in 2011 will challenge cellular phone volume dominance.
  • Opportunities exist in the 700 MHz spectrum for both WiMAX and LTE protocols.

“As predicted by Maravedis, more than 100 Mobile WiMAX devices have been announced or made available commercially,” said Jeff Orr, co-author of the report.

A January Maravedis research report, written by senior analyst Tim Sanders, notes that the rollout of mobile WiMax faces many hurdles before it can be widely adopted. He noted that interest and commitments to LTE (Long Term Evolution) is gaining, and Sprint and other suppliers must send clear signals to the wireless broadband world about development plans for WiMax.

“LTE is still two years behind WiMax,” Sanders said. “But the technologies are so close that they may end up converging in three or four years.”

source : dailywireless.org

RF-ID tracking

Integrated RF-ID Tracking

Posted by samc on February 4th, 2008

Today, AeroScout announced a series of partnerships and new software that let organizations use multiple real-time location system (RTLS) technologies in a single system. It integrates Wi-Fi Active RFID, with Ultra Wideband and Passive RFID.

AeroScout has been a leader in Wi-Fi-based Active RFID tracking. Their new products feature integration between Wi-Fi Active RFID, Passive RFID and Ultra-Wideband (UWB) and puts that information on easy to use application software.

The new line of unified, dual-mode products tracks assets using both standard Wi-Fi and UWB standards. And integration with Reva Systems brings enables joint Passive RFID / Active RFID installations. AeroScout says it’s the industry’s only dual-mode tag that can be tracked over standard Wi-Fi networks, while adding high precision of UWB where desired.

Attempts to standardize UWB through the IEEE 802.15.3a floundered two years ago with two opposing sides – the UWB Forum and WiMedia Alliance – going their separate ways. But the WiMedia Alliance was able to get its technology standardized through the European standardization organization Ecma International as well as the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).

Nurses may put active band-aids on hospital patients to wirelessly monitor as many as three vital signs sometime next year. Startup Toumaz Technology described its custom chip to power such a disposable device at the International Solid State Circuits Conference Monday in San Francisco.

The chip is one of an emerging group of smart wearable devices that ultimately aim to help patients get medical monitoring from the comfort of home.

A large U.S. health care company is said to be working with Toumaz, aiming to field the silicon-backed band-aids in a hospital setting before the end of 2009. Other giants include GE and Philips are said to have similar projects in the lab.

In just more than three months, millions of law-abiding Americans might face new hassles when traveling on commercial flights if they hold driver’s licenses or identification cards issued by Maine, South Carolina, Montana, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, and up to 15 other states plus the District of Columbia that have rejected the Real ID regulations on privacy and cost grounds or have not agreed to comply. (See C/Net map).

Starting May 11, unless your home state agrees to comply with the federal Real ID Act or unless it asks for an extension, you should expect problems going through security at airports.

This represents a potentially embarrassing political setback to the Bush administration, which has championed Real ID as a way to identify terrorists and criminals. But instead of what supporters hoped would be a seamless shift to a nationalized ID card, the requirements have created a confusing patchwork of state responses.

With the prospect of a billion-dollar tab, a giant database prone to hacker attacks and the fact that every American driver’s license holder will have to renew or obtain a new license in person — meaning lines of epic proportions at the DMV — many states and their representatives are starting to question whether they want to be a part of this whole Real ID thing after all.

source : dailywireless.org

700MHz Auction

700MHz: Ain’t Over Yet

Posted by samc on February 4th, 2008

Hold the phone! The FCC’s 700 MHz spectrum auction ain’t over yet.

RCR News reports the auction took another unexpected turn today with high bidding on individual C-Block licenses. Analysts are guessing that Verizon Wireless is behind the individual C-Block bids and has brushed past Google, which is thought to have been the high bidder for the 50-state package.

A $4.71 billion offer last Thursday for nationwide “C” block package of wireless spectrum was surpassed by a combination of eight separate bids for regional pieces of the C-block airwaves that totaled $4.74 billion, today.

It was unclear whether the piecemeal regional bids on Monday had been put together by a single bidder aiming to acquire the entire block of spectrum or were offers from several different suitors, analysts at Stifel Nicolaus said in a research note.


The action began in round 27 when the C Blocks for the Mississippi Valley and Central regional economic area grouping licenses received new high potential winning bids of $1.6 billion and $723 million, respectively. That was followed by a new bid of $502.8 million for the Northeast REAG in round 29 and new bids during round 30 on the Great Lakes ($1.1 billion), Southeast ($424.2 million), West ($319.8 million), Hawaii ($36.1 million) and Alaska ($1.7 million) REAGs.

After all was said and done, the eight individual licenses totaled $4.734 billion, just nipping the $4.713 billion potential winning bid for the licenses as a package.

Despite the C-Block action, general bidding across the rest of the FCC’s 700 MHz licenses slowed to a crawl. There were only 405 new bids placed during round 27, falling to 232 new bids in round 28, 203 new bids in round 29 and 158 new bids in round 30.

Today’s potential winning bids added a paltry $270.9 million to the auction’s total purse, which stood at $18.8 billion at the end of round 30.

The FCC was forced to cut today’s bidding action short by one round as a technical glitch foiled the scheduled start of round 31. The auction is set to resume tomorrow morning at 9:30 am EST.

Block Frequencies (MHz) Bandwidth Pairing Geographic Area Type

No. of Licenses

A 698-704, 728-734 12 MHz 2 x 6 MHz EA 176
B 704-710, 734-740 12 MHz 2 x 6 MHz CMA 734
E 722-728 6 MHz unpaired EA 176
C 746-757, 776-787 22 MHz 2 x 11 MHz REAG 12
D 758-763, 788-793 10 MHz 2 x 5 MHz Nationwide 1*
*Subject to conditions respecting a public/private partnership.

There have been no new offers for the nationwide C Block license package or the D Block commercial/public safety spectrum, but as long as bidding continues for regional licenses, the auction will continue, notes Information Week.

source : dailywireless.org

16GB iPhone

Official: 16GB iPhone available and 32GB iPod touch -- both $499


Out of the rumor mill comes the 16GB iPhone, now official. Ever since the 16GB iPod touch was announced in September, we all knew it was just a matter of time until Apple could bung the same NAND capacity into their chubbier iPhone. The surprise is a new 32GB iPod touch for the same $499. No other changes and certainly not 3G. Both are available immediately.

Update: We just spoke with Apple, who told us that by available immediately, that means both US and international customers. They should start making their way to stores over the next couple of days, too, so call ahead to check stock if you're buying offline. Also, Cupertino had no comment on whether there were any other under-the-hood hardware changes in these new models.

source : engadget.com

Finland toilets accessible by SMS

Finland's roadside toilets: now accessible only by SMS


While those in London can use SMS to actually find a lavatory, folks passing through Western Finland will be required to bust out their handset in order to relieve themselves in select public restrooms. In an attempt to curb vandalism, the Finnish Road Administration has implemented a system along Highway 1 which requires restroom visitors to text "Open" (in Finnish, of course) in order to let themselves in. The idea is that folks will be less likely to lose their mind and graffiti up the place knowing that their mobile number is (at least temporarily) on file, but it remains to be seen if uprooters will simply take their defacing ways elsewhere or actually excrete in peace.

source : engadget.com

Linus Torvalds calls Apple file system CRAP

Linus Torvalds calls Apple's file system "utter crap"

Linus Torvalds may have dabbled in Apple territory in the past, but he's definitely not mincing any words about competing operating systems now. In a recent interview, Linus says that OS X is a "much better system" than Windows Vista overall, but that "in some ways is actually worse than Windows to program for." Apparently these problems are rooted firmly in OS X's file system (HFS and HFS+), which he describes as "complete and utter crap," and even "scary." Of course, Torvalds also took the opportunity to tout the many virtues of Linux, which he says is an "obvious choice for anything from full-blown PCs to phones or video players." Damn straight it is.

source : engadget.com

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Microsoft bid $44.6 Billion for Yahoo

Microsoft: $44.6B for Yahoo!

Posted by samc on February 1st, 2008

Microsoft has made an offer to buy Yahoo with an unsolicited takeover offer of $44.6 billion. The surprise offer of $31 per share, was made late Thursday and announced Friday. In a statement Friday, Yahoo said it will “carefully and promptly” study Microsoft’s bid.

“Today, the market is increasingly dominated by one player, who is consolidating its dominance through acquisition,” Microsoft said. “Together, Microsoft and Yahoo can offer a credible alternative.”

“Together, we can offer an increasingly exciting set of solutions for consumers, publishers, and advertisers while becoming better positioned to compete in the online-services market,” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said in a statement.

The move would be by far the largest acquisition ever for Microsoft. Its largest prior deal, also in the online-advertising space, was last year’s $6 billion deal to acquire Aquantive.

The online advertising market is $40 billion globally now and is expected to grow at least 20 percent each year for the next few years, said Kevin Johnson, Microsoft’s platform and services unit head. Yahoo has a worldwide audience of about 500 million users. The U.S. market for online ads — $21.4 billion in 2007 — eclipsed the $20.5 billion radio advertising spending for the first time, says research group eMarketer. It expects domestic online ad spending to double to $42 billion by 2011.

Last year there were 838 media mergers with a combined value of nearly $110.0 billion, up 32% and 79%, respectively, from 2006. The online media and marketing services sectors led the charge in 2007 with a combined 555 transactions valued at $43.0 billion.

With its profits steadily sliding, Yahoo’s stock slipped to a four-year low earlier this week and a new management team has been trying to steer a turnaround but sees more turbulence through 2008. The announcement sent Yahoo’s share price up 60 percent in premarket trading, while Google fell 8 percent, weighted down by a fourth-quarter earnings report that missed Wall Street expectations.

source : dailywireless.org

Super Bowl

Super Bowl: To All the Ships at Sea

Posted by samc on February 1st, 2008

U.S. sailors and Marines aboard ships in the Pacific can watch Super Bowl XLII this Sunday while at sea using Raytheon’s Global Broadcasting Service.

Global Broadcast Service (GBS) is a high-speed, wideband military satellite communications system that broadcasts near real-time data, such as imagery, video, weather, and other intelligence to joint military forces around the world. GBS service, capable of delivering 24 megabits/sec to antennas as small as 22 inches in diameter.

GBS uses primarily COTS technologies. The system operates over Ka-band transponders on Navy UHF Follow-On satellites and Ku-band transponders on leased commercial satellites. It boasts throughput measured in terabytes and transmission rates of up to 96 megabits per second per satellite, allowing it to provide imagery and video feeds to the field.

Three fixed uplink facilities providing near-global coverage are located in Wahiawa, HI, Norfolk, VA, and Sigonella, Italy. Several other mobile units are located around the world.

Advertisers paying a record $2.7 million for a 30-second spot in Sunday’s Super Bowl broadcast are counting on Internet tie-ins to deliver more bang for their big bucks.

    Super Bowl TV ads by the numbers

    $2.7 million: Average cost of a 30-second
    ad to be shown during Sunday's Super Bowl

    63: Number of 30-second spots scheduled. All are sold.

    $275 million: Estimate of Fox's total ad revenue from the game and pre-and post-game shows.

  • Pepsi will launch a new Web promotion with a stunt-filled ad featuring pop star Justin Timberlake being tossed into a pond, dragged through a soccer game and slammed into a mailbox. Pepsi consumers will be able to redeem points for music downloads from Amazon.com through a special Web site.
  • ESPN.com has launched a Twitter channel where you can get the headlines and interact with the topics via mobile or internet.
  • Sprint’s Super Bowl XLII Mobile Website, includes information on Super Bowl events and attractions, a “Top 10″ list of things to do in Arizona, and in-depth game analysis and opinion. The site will also provide access to concert information, ringers and screen savers, and a variety of video segments throughout Super Bowl week.
  • NFL Mobile, available only to Sprint customers, will also be updated with Super Bowl XLII-specific news and information, Super Bowl archive video highlights, a daily blog from NFL Network’s Adam Schefter.
  • Verizon’s V CAST Mobile TV features ESPN Mobile TV, FOX Mobile, MTV, NBC 2GO, NBC News2GO, and Nickelodeon. Monthly access packages range from $13 to $25 per month. Four V CAST Mobile TV-enabled phones are currently available: the Voyager by LG ($299.99), Samsung SCH-u620 ($99.99), the LG VX9400 ($149.99), and the MOTORIZR Z6tv ($179.99).
source : dailywireless.org

Sigma Lens

Sigma APO 200-500 F2.8 telephoto lens hands-on


We spent some quality time around Sigma's monstrous APO 200-500 F2.8 lens this afternoon, and what can we say? It's gigantic. If you've ever wanted to the look of a portable rocket launcher without all the hassle at the airport, this is definitely the way to go. A feast for your eyes awaits in the gallery below.

Tesla electric car 2009

Tesla defies its roots, plans gas-electric car for 2009

We're not exactly sure what to make of this one -- the auto maker created to show up gas guzzlers and prove that electric whips could indeed prove viable in a society helplessly addicted to gasoline is apparently gearing up to turn a blind eye to its original mantra. According to a report over at CNET, the firm is planning to unveil not one, but two editions of its forthcoming Whitestar sedan. Although one will indeed cruise sans fuel, the other will be a gas-electric REV (range extended vehicle), purportedly designed to entice buyers who would typically be concerned about the range (or the lack thereof) of a purely electric vehicle. So, let's get this straight -- rather than holding true to its original rallying cry, Tesla's deciding to just a build a car that it knows will actually sell. Right-o.

source : engadget.com

Friday, February 1, 2008

Pot Vending Machines in Los Angeles

Friday, February 1, 2008
Pot vending machines take root in Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES - The city that popularized the fast food drive-thru has a new innovation: 24-hour medical marijuana vending machines.

Patients suffering from chronic pain, loss of appetite and other ailments that marijuana is said to alleviate can get their pot with a dose of convenience at the Herbal Nutrition Center, where a large machine will dole out the drug around the clock.

"Convenient access, lower prices, safety, anonymity," inventor and owner Vincent Mehdizadeh said, extolling the benefits of the machine.
But federal drug agents say the invention may need unplugging.

"Somebody owns (it), it's on a property and somebody fills it," said DEA Special Agent Jose Martinez. "Once we find out where it's at, we'll look into it and see if they're violating laws."

At least three dispensaries in the city, including two belonging to Mehdizadeh, have installed vending machines to distribute the drug to people who carry cards authorizing marijuana use.

Mehdizadeh said he spent seven months to develop and patent the black, armored box, which he calls the "PVM," or prescription vending machine.

Convenience and privacy
A sliding fence protects the tinted windows of his dispensary, barely distinguishing it from a busy thoroughfare of strip malls, automobile dealers and furniture shops. A box resembling a large refrigerator stands inside the nearly empty shop, near a few shelves stocked with vitamins and herbs.

A guard in a black T-shirt emblazoned with the word "Security" on the front stands at the door. A poster of Bob Marley decorates a back room.

The computerized machine requires fingerprint identification and a prepaid card with a magnetic stripe. Once the card and fingerprint are verified, a bright green envelope with the pot drops down a slot.

Mehdizadeh says any user approved for medical marijuana and registered in a computer database at his dispensaries can pre-purchase the drug and then use the machine to pick up.

The process provides convenience and privacy for users who may otherwise feel uncomfortable about buying marijuana, Mehdizadeh said.

At the Timothy Leary Medical Dispensary in the San Fernando Valley, the vending machine is accessible only during business hours. An employee there said the machine was introduced about five months ago, and provides speedy service.

"It helps a lot of patients who are in a lot of pain and don't want to wait around to get help," Robert Schwartz said. "It's been working out great."

Mehdizadeh said he sought the advice of doctors, and decided to limit the amount of marijuana per user to an ounce per week. Each purchase from the machine yields 1/8th or 2/8th of an ounce. By eliminating a vendor behind the counter, he said, the machine offers users lower drug prices. The 1/8th ounce packet would cost about $40 — $20 lower than the average price at other dispensaries.

'It's to medicate'
A spokesman for a marijuana advocacy group said the machine also benefits dispensary owners.

"It limits the number of workers in the store in the event of a raid, and it'll make it harder for theft," said Nathan Sands, of The Compassionate Coalition.

Marijuana use is illegal under federal law, which does not recognize the medical marijuana laws in California and 11 other states.

The Drug Enforcement Agency and other federal agencies have been actively shutting down major medical marijuana dispensaries throughout the state over the last two years and charging their operators with felony distribution charges.

Mehdizadeh said the Herbal Nutrition Center was the target of a federal raid in December. He said no arrests were made and no charges have been filed against him.

Kris Hermes, a spokesman for advocacy group Americans for Safe Access, said the machine might benefit those who already know how much and what strain of marijuana they're looking for. But he said others will want to see and smell the drug before they buy it.

A man who said he has been authorized to use medical marijuana as part of his anger management therapy said the vending machine's security measures would at least protect against illicit use of the drug.

"You have kids that want to get high and that's not what marijuana is for," Robert Miko said. "It's to medicate."

source : ekbtv.blogspot.com

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