Keynote Nokia CEO, november 2006
Esmée Denters from the Netherlands is 18 years old and famous because of her awesome songs on YouTube.com. After the summer of 2006 Esmée decided to open a YouTube profile and uploaded some of her videos. She surprised thousands of people around the world with her amazing, soulful voice, and appeared on a Dutch television show. She told about her audition for the Dutch Popstars - The Rivals, and how she got rejected. She still believed in herself, uploaded more than 40 clips, and now has over 12.000 subscribers on YouTube.
I accidentally stumbled up on this movie while searching for something completely different.
The best things in live are discovered by accident. This is definitely worth to look at.
FUN
source: DailyMotion (cool vid channels here) and StumbleUpOn
This is not a danger. It's an extra service for the users of expensive payed mobile hand-sets. It's not important that you can be reached by voice-calls, It's important here how you can reach someone else with your voice.
Skype is taking over the role of the 1960 switchboard operator here. This will give some more extra space on the
"new" networks. 3g+4g.
News by Brad Kellett on Thursday February 22, 2007.
Note: Sponsored advertising links, if any, are in green.
In a move that could benefit end users greatly, VoIP service
provider Skype has petitioned the FCC to apply the 1968 Carterfone
decision to wireless phone networks, opening up the possibility of
easier use of services similar to Skype on mobile handsets. The
Carterfone decision allows customers to attach any device to the phone
network, provided it does not harm the network itself, which Skype sees
as extending to allow any application to run on any device that can
access the network. Currently, mobile operators limit the kind of data traffic permitted
on their phone networks, especially in the case of applications like
Skype that can steal revenue from them by allowing cheap VoIP calling.
Skype's argument for opening up data networks is that doing so would
offer "tremendous new sources of price competition provided by entities
such as Skype." The principal behind the Carterfone decision currently applies to
the wired phone network and cable TV networks. Government regulation
applying the principal to mobile phone networks would require carriers
to allow any application on any compatible handset to be used on their
network. [via Ars Technica]
The computer-voice is very not done, but worth the decyphering...
I have stripped that Nokia movie you pointed me to. The only thing that is very interesting in this movie is the interface. How it could look and interact with me. I slowed the tempo of the animation and putted a “new“ track under the film. Breathe, something everybody does but not everybody realizes, it’s automatic, automated, programmed.
When jou walk you first have to learn to walk. It is a process of learning how not to fall.
The process of walking becomes an automated process. Your brain has no priority anymore with monitoring this process. There’s an agent that continuously monitors this process, asking the brain, you, what to do when you misstep. The brain now will intervene, corrects and tells the agent to add some new functions to the program of walking. Connects the dots.
I can have loads of contacts, and still be alone. If I connect myself to one person, me to point, me, to peer perhaps, I have connected myself in a one-way manner. If the other point, or peer allows me to connect I have a dialogue. New information involving this connection will automatically push this towards me. Now we can start a dialogue that runs automatically until one stops feeding this dialogue, or connection. Though, leaving the line in tact. A natural, transparent, automatic process. An automotive process.
Like breathing.
The phone must play the role of this “agent”.
If you can just be the architect of your own network, the master-connector, you can create any network you want by just connecting the dots, teaching your agent…
people, push, personalized, places, and more…
Since I put the"hybrid" post on my blog, a GoogleAd keeps popping up in my vox after I log out.
It brings me to this company.
The interesting part is that they promise me the improvement of my own body.
Featuring hands-free operation, robust wireless capabilities, and built-in GPS tracking, emergency search and rescue, healthcare, homeland security, maintenance, law enforcement, logistics, transportation, and defense applications...
Hmmm... that would make meRobocop...