8 posts tagged “aatski”
Awesome program. I was reading a document that came with the raccoon installer from the Nokia wiki. I spotted this url www.comvu.com In less then 5 minutes I have had an account running AND the comvu software installed on my mobile. About seven minutes later I was to witness my own live video-stream on the internet. From the interface on my mobile I was able to share this stream directly to youtube. Awesome stuff. Try it. This platform goes to boom! Watch my words. Bob, Roll'em out in holland! I will sure help you with technique and guerilla.
At the NDSM were our office is at we have some very nice neighbors. They run the King Shilo Sound System.
Summer is coming and they are building new speakers. I made a short video-portrait with my telphone.
Enjoy!
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]