Category: Software

  • New Surveys Suggest Venture Investing Reset at Lower Level in 2009; We Break Out Data for Boston, San Diego, & Seattle

    DowJones4Q09
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    The picture of venture capital investments in U.S. startups filled in a bit this week, with the results of two more VC surveys aligning generally with the findings we reported earlier this month from ChubbyBrain, the New York data services company that tracks the innovation economy. New surveys from Dow Jones VentureSource and the MoneyTree Report indicate overall venture investing has reset—after falling by roughly a third since 2008—with VC activity strengthening toward the end of 2009.

    The differences are in the details, and one of the benefits of multiple data sources is a clearer perspective on what the differences really mean. Dow Jones VentureSource says the definition it uses for a venture capital deal “is the clearest and best tested in the industry.” Dow Jones includes equity financings and cash investments by professional venture capital firms, corporations, diversified private equity firms, and individuals into companies that have received at least one round of venture funding. ChubbyBrain says it only counts investments by venture capital firms, including corporate venture groups. It does not count angel investments (unless the angels invest with VCs or corporate venture funds), and it does not count contingent funding, strategic corporate funding through R&D partnerships, so-called “venture loans,” or incubator investments.

    Differences in the way each survey defines venture investments can translate into differences in the way data gets counted, which sometimes results in disparate and even contrary findings. What follows is a breakout of the highlights from three nationwide VC surveys (as well as regional data and trends for New England, Washington state, and San Diego) for 2009 and the fourth quarter that ended in December:

    ChubbyBrain noted a dip in VC dollars invested nationwide during the fourth quarter compared with the same period in 2008, with venture investments in cleantech and energy companies showing substantial drops while VC funding for early stage companies—especially Internet startups—increased sharply. ChubbyBrain said nationwide VC investments during the three months that ended in December totaled $5.5 billion in 687 deals (a year-over-year decline of 7 percent). For 2009, which seems to rank as the year VCs would prefer to forget, ChubbyBrain said VCs invested $20.8 billion in 2,461 companies.

    Dow Jones VentureSource said an overall bad year ended on a high note, with VC activity during the last three months marking the strongest quarter since …Next Page »







  • This Week’s Best iPhone Apps [IPhone Apps]

    In this week’s distracted app roundup: Grand Theft Auto, committed! Live video, streamed over 3G! Photos, psycedelicized! Blocks, stacked, smashed, and squeezed through holes! Casual gaming norms, subtly subverted! Spying spouses, caught! Songs, made with magic! Barack, Obama’d! And more…

    If you want to view this post as a single page, click here

    Chomp: Following in the footsteps of Chorus, Zensify Apps and Apple’s own Genius, Chomp is an app for finding more apps. If you’re a regular, well-rounded human, this may sound excessive! If you’re reading this column, less so. Chomp brings a slick, consciously simple UI to the table, and has an extremely handy bookmarking feature. Here’s how you should use it: once you find an app you think you might like, or that made you chuckle (see: Fishbate), bookmark it, and just wait 24 hours. Your wallet will thank me.

    Crush the Castle: Too often on the iPhone, I see castles being defended. This is incorrect! They should be crushed. With trebuchets, if possible. This little gem’s got decent graphics, a great physics engine and respectably deep gameplay. $2.

    Finger Physics: An all-around fantastic stacking game, Finger Physics isn’t the newest app in this roundup, but I’m pretty sure I’ve wasted more time on it this week than all the others combined. It’s a very simple concept built atop a very simple engine: just stack your pieces, some of which have special functions, until you hit your goal. $1, though there’s a meaty free version as well.


    GTA: Chinatown Wars: I’m not sure what I was expecting, really, but this game came as a total surprise to me. I mean, I knew it was coming, I just didn’t expect it to be so good. It’s basically the exact same game you get on the PSP or DS—that is, a sprawling Grand Theft Auto title in a hybrid top-down/3D style, which costs around $30 on those platforms—for $10. Ignoring the character animations, this game is one of the most visually impressive I’ve seen on the platform, I’ve barely even explored the city after a few hours of play, and I’ve only scratched the surface of the available missions. $10.


    iTrust: Displays a fake, dead homescreen, and records any attempted screen presses, so you can show your would-be phone snooper the evidence of their intrusion. I can’t imagine a situation in which this app actually solves a problem, but I can think of plenty of people who’d use it anyway. So yeah, stick it right to that stupid asshole! person you love! For a dollar!


    PhotoTropedelic: Image processing apps are a dime a dozen, so in order to matter, a single-filter app has to be pret-tay, pret-ray, pret-tay cool. The trick here is that PhotoTropedelic doesn’t just run a straight, predictable filter; it interprets sections of photographs and applies different filters to each. Instead of a mishmash of colors, you get stripes, stars, and other designs. Plus you can export to scalable PDF, which you’ll probably want to do after seeing what kind of results you get. At $2, though, the price is a little steep.


    Qik: Qik’s video streaming app used to be tethered to Wi-Fi, which chopped its usefulness by about, oh, 99/100ths. Now you can broadcast video over the air, even from non-3GS iPhones. Free.


    SkyBox: This is a simple concept, executed sparsely: you guide blocks of varying shapes as they fall through holes in walls of varying but generally accommodating shapes. So why is it so intense? I flinch every time my blocks are about to pass through another plane, even I’m sure they’ll be fine. This potency pays of when you get better, making you feel like a REAL BLOCK HERO in the later stages. $2.

    Voice Band: Hey, this doesn’t seem like it should be possible! Sing, hum, or “DUURR” into your iPhone, and Voice Band will approximate your tones into a variety of instrument sounds, and if you have the time, a full track. $3.

    White House: Do you love Barack Obama? Would you like to see and hear more of him, even when you’re away from the TV or computer? Alternately, do you hate Barack Obama? Do you absorb his every word, only to spew it back in his general direction, drenched in venom? Or you really not care, but enjoy the occasional candid photo of a Portuguese Water Dog? Whatever, it’s free.

    This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory. Have a great weekend, everybody!






  • For Developers:Windows Mobile 6.5.3 SDK now finally released

    5710_image_thumb_4ABB0970A mere 3 months after the release of the OS, a SDK for Windows Mobile 6.5 has finally been made available by Microsoft.

    The SDK provide documentation, sample code, header and library files, emulator images, and tools to Visual Studio that allow developers to build applications for Windows Mobile 6.5. Unfortunately the emulator images show no sign of Windows Mobile 6.5.3, which is rather a shame, meaning the devices expected to be released soon will again initially be unsupported.

    The SDK is available in English, German, Chinese, French, Spanish, Italian and Chinese and runs to a download of between 450 and 3700 MB.

    Read more at Microsoft here.

    Apologies to our readers.  After much faffing around I managed to get the images to run on the emulator, and in fact it is Windows Mobile 6.5.3 that has been released.

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  • Motricity Files for IPO

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Bellevue, WA-based Motricity, a mobile software firm, has filed a form S-1 with the SEC, saying it plans to sell up to $250 million in an initial public offering. The company generated more than $100 million in revenue in 2008, and $117.1 million in the 12 months ending on September 30, 2009, but it is not profitable, according to the filing. Motricity was founded in 2001 and is backed by more than $400 million in venture funding from Carl Icahn, Technology Crossover Ventures, New Enterprise Associates, Advanced Equities, Intel Capital, and others. The company moved from North Carolina to Bellevue in March 2008, presumably to be closer to wireless customers like T-Mobile.







  • Palm says goodbye to Treo Pro, does not want to drag it down with the company

    PalmInfocenter has noticed Palm’s last Windows Mobile device, the Palm Treo Pro, recently made a rapid disappearance from Palm’s website and from their online store.

    The only mention of the device is on a still-active product page for the CDMA Treo Pro in Alltel and Sprint.  The handset can also still be bought unlocked in its GSM version from Dell for $179.99 as well as from Amazon.

    Palm, who has turned to Windows Mobile in an attempt to save the company in 2005, has recently seen its share price drop a third from a one year high of $18.09 to a low of 11.98 today (and as low as $10 on New Years Eve) after it abandoned its Windows Mobile-based business market in a quixotic attempt to unseat the iPhone consumer king and losing money for 9 straight quarters. With increasing loss of interest in USA and overseas sales below expectation, it is expected by many not to survive the current smartphone wars.

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  • Microsoft Entertainment and Devices Division re-organized

    EDDJust prior to the most important Mobile World Congress in the company’s history, Microsoft has launched a major reorganization of its Entertainment and Devices Division, which is responsible for Windows Mobile, Zune, Media Center and Mediaroom IPTV products.

    The TV, Video and Media group has been moved to the Interactive Entertainment Business Division, which is in charge of Xbox, Games for Windows and Microsoft Game Studios, all under the umbrella of the Entertainment and Devices Division.

    Just when the cosiest arrangement for making the greatest entertainment device possible seems to have been created, ZDNet reports on a rumour that Windows Mobile may be moved to the Windows, Internet Explorer and Windows Live Division. Microsoft has not commented on the rumour, but regarding the integration of their TV and Gaming division said:

    “As a natural evolution of the Interactive Entertainment Business, our consumer products and experiences focused on games, movies, TV and music will move into IEB, led by SVP Don Mattrick. In addition, we’ve formed a new centralized E&D services infrastructure team, which will act as a combined resource across the division. Finally, Enrique Rodriguez has decided to move on from his leadership position running the TV, video and music business and is evaluating his next career opportunity. The TVM first party business, Zune and Windows Media Center will move to IEB, and Mediaroom, the TV platform business, will become a standalone group within E&D, reporting directly to (E&D) President Robbie Bach.”

    While the effect of all these changes on Windows Mobile are not clear, I am sure most of us look forward to a day where all the various properties of Microsoft work together better for a fuller and more integrated experience.

    Read much more detail on the Mary Foley’s All About Microsoft blog here.

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  • Real Names New Head of Music, Media, Tech

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based RealNetworks has announced that Mike Lunsford has been named executive vice president of the Technology Products and Solutions and Media Software and Services divisions of the company. Lunsford, who joined Real in 2008, was previously executive vice president of strategic ventures, in charge of strategy and operations for Rhapsody America, the company’s digital music business with MTV Networks (which he will continue to oversee). The move follows the departure of CEO Rob Glaser and chief operating officer John Giamatteo, announced earlier this month. RealNetworks (NASDAQ: RNWK) is now led by president and acting CEO Bob Kimball.







  • Windows Mobile 7 and Zune Phone could be one and the same

    Freyberry from XDA-Developers has put in to words something I think may well be the case with regards to Windows Mobile 7.

    There are numerous rumours around about things like the “Zune Phone”, and WM7 “Business” and “Media”, but what if the two are interrelated? The “Media” edition could well be a specific build for a Microsoft/Zune branded device.

    I don’t think it will be two versions, rather two “experiences”, which means there will be phones with custom UIs like HTC Sense and other phones with Microsoft’s UI plus additional services (a bit like what Google does with the Nexus one, but in the case of WM7, the Microsoft controlled phones will probably offer additional features).

    So, the Microsoft hardware could well be marketed as the “Zune Phone” and be heavily linked with the Zune services, with OEMs free to continue as they are with WM ad custom UIs. The Microsoft build could also have some of those limitations that are mildly worrying like no multitasking (seems logical given the Zune HD doesn’t support it).

    Would Microsoft doing what Google have done be suicide for the platform, or could it boost sales of their much improved mobile OS? Would you by a Microsoft Phone?

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  • Are developers faking screenshots?

    In what could possibly be another nail in the coffin of Windows Marketplace for Mobile, 1800pocketpc have discovered some possibly faked images.

    image

    The screenshot on the left is from the developer, whilst the one on the right is from a review of the application (Speed City, by OmniG).

    There is a clear difference in the quality of the two renders, with the one on the left seeming much crisper than the one on the right, which some are taking to mean the images are faked.

    I’m not so sure about that though. There is a massive difference between the hardware in a lot of devices, and it could just be that the hardware in the developers device is better at rendering than the reviewers device. The lack of antialiasing is apparent in desktop games when run on different hardware, and I see no reason why it wouldn’t apply to mobile devices using 3D libraries as well.

    Has anyone used this on a different device and gotten images more like those on the left? Let us know below!

    Thanks to Saijo at 1800pocketpc.com for alerting us to this.

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  • Time Inc. Scoops Up StyleFeeder, Ironwood Sets Sights on Potential $266.7 M IPO, FloDesign Reveals $34.5M Financing, & More Boston-Area Deals News

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    It was a short week, but the list of deals that New England’s tech and life sciences firms inked in that span is a long one. Let’s dive in:

    —StyleFeeder, the Cambridge, MA-based personalized shopping website, was acquired by New York magazine publishing giant Time Inc. for an undisclosed sum. Lexington, MA-based Highland Capital Partners and Boston-based Schooner Capital have put $4 million in seed and Series A funding into the four-year-old startup.

    —IkaSystems, a maker of software for healthcare payers, sealed back-to-back investment deals with deep-pocketed private equity funds. Essex Woodlands Health Ventures and Providence Equity Partners reportedly plowed a combined $120 million into the Southborough, MA-based company.

    —North Andover, MA-based Nexamp, formerly known as NexGen Energy Solutions, raised $6.5 million in equity-based financing, according to a regulatory filing. Nexamp helps its customers design, finance, build, and analyze clean energy projects.

    —Cardiorobotics, a startup founded by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh, reported to the SEC that it has raised $5 million in equity investments. The Middletown, RI-based firm makes robots for surgery and other uses.

    —Research-tool giant Thermo Fisher Scientific (NYSE:TMO) of Waltham, MA, announced it would pay $145 million for Ahura Scientific of Wilmington, MA. The deal also entitles Ahura’s investors to potential payments based on sales of Ahura products in 2010.

    —FloDesign Wind Turbine, a Wilbraham, MA-based developer of a new, jet-engine-like type of wind turbine, revealed it closed a $34.5 million Series B funding round last month. Return investor Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield and Byers and new investors Goldman Sachs, Technology Partners, and VantagePoint Venture Partners contributed to the round.

    —Acton, MA-based Lumigent Technologies, a maker of automated governance, risk and compliance software, said it …Next Page »







  • New ROM update for HTC HD2 addresses SMS issue, again

    HTC has released yet another update for the HTC HD2, this time a full ROM update, to address the persistent issue of SMS messages not being sent.

    HTC describes the update as below.

    ROM Upgrade for HTC HD2

    Release Date: 2010-01-22 Category: ROM Upgrade

    An updated ROM is now available for HTC HD2 customers to download. As always, HTC is committed to providing customers with the best possible mobile experience.
    Installation Instructions:

    ROM Version: 1.66.707.1
    Improved Functions:

    Keeping in touch has always been very important, and this update delivers fast and reliable SMS messaging.
    Before you proceed, please confirm that this software upgrade is a newer version than what is currently installed on your device. If it is the same version and your device is operating normally, there is no need to reinstall the software.

    The update can be downloaded at HTC here, and remember to back up your files and data, as this is a full ROM update that will wipe your device.

    Please also let us know if this fixes the issue or not.

    Via Pocketnowtweets.

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  • Garmin Asus Nuvifone M10 Windows Mobile 6.5.3 handset now up for pre-order

    22jan10garmuibwer4

    Slashgear has noticed that Garmin-Asus’s recently rumoured M10 Windows Mobile handset has just popped up for pre-order on Asus’s site.

    The handset, which is reasonably well specced, however lacks 2010 niceties such as a capacitive screen, but does have a 3.5 inch WVGA display, 512 MB RAM and what appears to be a 3.5mm headphone jack.

    Some specs include:

    • 3.5 inch WVGA (800 x 480 pixels) touch screen display
    • Garmin GPS software
    • Wi-Fi
    • GPS (of course)
    • 5MP camera
    • 600MHz processor
    • 512MB RAM, 512MB ROM
    • 1,500mAh battery
    • 4GB of internal memory
    • MicroSD card support (up to 32GB)

    The device, plus a car holder for navigation is available from the 6th February for 13,900 TWD ($435).

    Via Engadget.com

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  • Digitimes confirms Windows Mobile 7 for MWC also

    On this particular occasion, I don’t know if this Digitimes article is quoting us, or providing new information, but the Taiwanese industry gossip rag has some more, if not new, information about Windows Mobile 7.

    Digitimes, who was the original source of the claim that only Windows Mobile “6.6” will show up at Mobile World Congress, now confidently expect Windows Mobile 7 to join its older sibling on the stage.

    They expect Release to Manufacturers in September 2010, with devices showing up either in Q4 2010 or Q1 2011.

    They note, as we ourselves mentioned last week, that Asian localizations have not been completed yet, which has given some the impression the whole OS has been delayed.

    They list the usual suspects as partners, including  Samsung Electronics, LG Electronics, Toshiba, HTC (High Tech Computer), Asustek Computer and Acer, and confirm Windows Mobile 7 will support Zune, Xbox Live and Silverlight.

    Read more about Digitimes’s recapitulation here.

    Via Engadget.com

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  • Taskbar launcher 0.1 makes Windows Mobile 6.5.3 taskbar more useful

    tbl01beta The new taskbar in Windows Mobile 6.5.3 no longer activates the start menu, but drops down a set of notification icons. I believe Microsoft missed a significant opportunity to add a Pre-like task manager there, and I am not the only one who thinks this area can do more.

    RAMMANN on XDA-Dev has created Taskbar launcher 0.1 which creates a customizable drop down launcher which pops up when you tap the task bar.

    The software is only intended for WM 6.5.3 and works for VGA and WVGA resolutions.

    It is still a work in progress, and currently to change the apps one has to edit a text file, but the developer intends to make the process a bit more slick in the future.

    Read more about the app and download it at XDA-Developers here.

    Via FuzeMobility.com

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  • One Man, One Mouse, Three Hours [Image Cache]

    It only took graphic designer Anatoly Zenkov a few hours of Photoshop work to log this exhausting, web-like trail with his cursor. Here‘s how he recorded it, and how you can too. [Flickr]






  • Friend or Foe: How Apple Is Forcing Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and AT&T to Raise Their Game

    Apple's iPhone 3G
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Apple’s increasing overlap with other technology companies—including mainstays of the Seattle and Boston scenes—is one of the biggest business trends of the year. It doesn’t matter whether you are the world’s biggest software company (Microsoft), a Web search and advertising titan (Google), an online retail giant (Amazon), a wireless carrier (AT&T), a digital music startup (see this story on Seattle-based Melodeo), or a mobile advertising network (Cambridge, MA-based Jumptap): Apple is now moving in on your turf.

    I’ve been talking with a number of techies about this tangled web and its implications for innovation. “What’s really interesting is the fact that everybody is sort of co-dependent and sort of competing,” says Steve Hall, managing director of Seattle-based Vulcan Capital. “Where companies start and stop is getting blurrier. AT&T is a network and a carrier, but it’s also trying to push specific devices to gain market share. Apple is a device maker and also an [operating system] and software maker, but it’s dependent on a network like AT&T.”

    This is a relatively new phenomenon, says Hall, an avid iPhone user and longtime technology trend spotter. “In the pre-iPhone days, LG made my phone—who cares? That was decoupled from who was the software provider,” he says. But now with Apple and Google getting deep into the device market and controlling what’s in the mobile platform, “that has loosened the grip the carrier has had on the consumer choice,” he says. That doesn’t bode well for carriers.

    A couple of new developments this week involve Microsoft, Google, and Amazon in particular. For one, there’s a rumor (floated in BusinessWeek) that says Microsoft and Apple are in talks to make Bing the default search engine on the iPhone, instead of Google. Whether or not the alleged talks go anywhere, it’s a very interesting premise, given that Apple and Google are increasingly butting heads in smartphones, mobile advertising, and digital music. (Interesting to note that former Genentech CEO Art Levinson, an Apple board member, left Google’s board in October, following Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s departure from Apple’s board last July; I wonder how long Al Gore can stay involved with both companies.)

    Bing is already available on the iPhone as a downloadable app, or through its website. But the rumored partnership would boost Bing’s profile immediately, and would probably require users to change the search setting to Google (if they want to). One anonymous source with knowledge of Apple was quoted in BusinessWeek as saying, “Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy. Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.”

    Meanwhile, Amazon announced today it is inviting software developers to create applications for its Kindle device, through a new development kit. That’s right, Amazon is going to offer apps (it calls them “active content”)—like games, puzzles, and restaurant guides—in its Kindle Store …Next Page »







  • Firefox 3.6 Download

    Firefox Logo

    Para os mais desatentos, deixo aqui a informação de que o novo Firefox 3.6 já está disponível para download/upgrade.

    Esta nova versão incluí o Personas integrado, o que lhe permite personalizar o look do seu Firefox com os mais de 30.000 skins existentes no directório oficial.

    Além do Personas, o Firefox 3.6 está também mais rápido e apresenta um novo sistema para verificação de actualizações para os seus plug-ins, mantendo assim o seu browser mais seguro e garantindo que tem sempre a versão mais adequada dos plugins.

    Firefox Speed

    A velocidade de renderização das páginas e do javascript foi também melhorada em relação às versões anteriores. Poderá ver mais informações acerca do Firefox 3.6 aqui.

    WebTugaFirefox 3.6 Download

  • $12M for Unidesk

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Marlborough, MA-based Unidesk, a stealth-mode company that provides virtual desktop management solutions, has raised $12 million in new equity financing, according to an SEC filing. North Bridge Venture Partners and Matrix Partners, both of Waltham, MA, are listed as company investors on Unidesk’s website. Unidesk was founded in 2007.







  • Thinking Phone Calls in $1.2M

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Cambridge, MA-based Thinking Phone Networks, a developer of hosted customer communication and relationship management platforms, has raised $1.17 million of a $1.67 million round of equity mixed with options and warrants, an SEC filing shows. President and CEO Steven Kokinos told Mass High Tech that the funding comes from Capstone Partners, a Boston investment bank, and that it will go to expanding the company’s sales department.







  • SPB Helps StarHub to Bring Best Possible Mobile TV Experience to Their Subscribers

    starhub_tv Press Release – SPB Software, a leading mobile applications and games developer announces that one of its most sophisticated solutions, SPB TV has been licensed to become a part of StarHub TV on Mobile – mobile television from the major Singaporean cellular network operator. It is not only the client-side application that is being licensed but also the server-side software installed and integrated with the carrier’s billing system. With this move, StarHub is now ready to supply their subscribers with 24 TV channels in demand (such as CNN, BBC and Bloomberg), all with best possible picture quality and followed by such unique features as picture-in-picture, fast channel switching, integrated TV guide and more.

    The new TV solution currently supports Windows Mobile, BlackBerry and Android-based smartphones, with support for Symbian-based Nokia phones and Apple iPhone to come soon. Several handset vendors, including Acer, HTC, LG, Motorola, RIM, Samsung and Sony Ericsson have acted as launch partners. Complete list of supported handsets is available at www.StarHub.com.

    "Working closely with award-winning software developer SPB, we have empowered our mobile TV customers with the ability to better control their mobile TV viewing with a user-friendly interface and powerful features, – says Mr. Chan Kin Hung, StarHub’s Head of Products and Solutions, – With 24 cable TV channels on mobile, it is important for us to make TV-viewing on mobile as simple as that on television for customers… In a way, we are putting [together] the best of both worlds – rich cable TV content and mobile convenience."

    "SPB Software is proud to have our award-winning SPB TV solution selected by StarHub to enhance their TV on Mobile service. StarHub stands out as one of the leading 3G telcos in terms of mobile TV service and now with the solution from SPB, StarHub’s customers will benefit from the unique user-friendly interface making it one of the most usable mobile TV service available globally today," – concludes SPB Software CEO Sebastian-Justus Schmidt.

    For SPB Software this is the second joint project of SPB TV implementation with a major cellular carrier, the first one being Russian operator SkyLink. Several more similar projects are to follow in the coming months of 2010.

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