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  • Tiny wires could be a breakthrough for cheap solar panels

    Chinese solar panel giants are in a bind — they’re churning out too many rock-bottom, commodity solar panels, and losing millions every day. In fact, most solar panel makers are currently laser focused on trying to boost the efficiency of their panels, so that they can sell them at higher prices and actually make some money. A Swedish startup called Sol Voltaics says it can help out.

    WireArraySol Voltaics, which is discussing its product and funding for the first time this week, says it has developed a low cost way to make tiny nanowires out of the semiconductor gallium arsenide. The company turns these nanowires into an ink, which can be layered onto basic solar panels, and boost the efficiency of a standard panel by 25 percent.

    The idea is that solar panel makers would want to buy this technology because they can sell the more efficient panels at a higher price, and raise their margins. In addition, the overall installed cost of the more efficient solar panels (they produce more power) could be lower by 15 to 20 percent.

    Swedish solar innovation

    Founded in 2008, Sol Voltaics won’t be producing its nanowire ink — called SolInk — at pilot scale until 2015, and commercial scale in 2016. But it’s already started to prove its technology works, and has had its nanowire cells certified by research firm Fraunhofer for an efficiency of 13.8 percent. This year the company is focused on demoing how its ink boosts efficiency on a larger scale, and in 2014 they’ll work on perfecting the equipment that its customers will use to cover panels with the ink.

    With just 20 employees, Sol Voltaics has been operating in a relatively lean mode for a solar manufacturing company. To date the startup has raised just $11 million in funding from private and public funders and family offices, including Industrifonden, Foundation Asset Management, Scatec, Nano Future Invest AS, Nordic Innovation and Vinnova. The company hopes to raise another $10 to $20 million this year, and plans to cap all of its funding at $50 million by 2016.

    Aerotaxy

    Sol Voltaics has some well-known names in the solar and venture capital sectors. The company was founded by Lund University Professor Lars Samuelson who is an expert on the type of semiconductor that Sol Voltaics uses to make its nanowires. The company is led by Dave Epstein, who is a serial entrepreneur and former partner with Crosslink Capital, and Magnus Ryde, who was the former CEO of TSMC America, is Sol Voltaics Chairman.

    How does it work?

    Sol Voltaic’s innovation is that it’s figured out how to make tiny wires using the normally expensive but highly efficient semiconductor gallium arsenide. Solar scientists have spent years using gallium arsenide in various ways to make ultra-efficient solar cells, but the only way the material can be cheap enough to actually be used on a commercial scale is if it’s used in very small amounts — hence the nanotech wire part. But, again, in previous years the production of nanowires has also been relatively expensive.

    Sol Voltaics nanowire

    The breakthrough came when Samuelson figured out a way to make the gallium arsenide nanowires in a gas phase instead of in a solid phase. Sol Voltaics calls this their aerotaxy process. Under the right conditions, in an air reactor, the company can grow these nanowires in seconds and store them in a liquid, producing a sort of ink.

    Sol Voltaics wants to take this ink, and sell it to solar panel makers, alongside production equipment that they can use to layer the ink — inkjet style — onto their own solar panels. The nanowires in the ink act as guides for the light and concentrate it. The company says the capital expensive of the ink and machines add 1 to 2 cents per Watt for the panels.

    Apple Solar Farm

    Sol Voltaics is targeting Chinese and other global silicon solar makers that are struggling and producing many of their panels at a loss right now. Proving that the technology can help them out, and is worth the investment, will take quite a few key partners and demonstrations. The good thing, though, is that if one customer starts using it as a competitive advantage and it works, others will want to use it to keep up, too.

    Some of these huge solar maker players will have to survive, and could adopt and invest in new technologies to do that. The ones that do survive, will see the continued solar panel market explode over the coming years. There was a record-breaking 3.3 gigawatts worth of solar panels — or 16 million individual solar panels — installed in the U.S. in 2012, making solar power the fastest-growing energy source domestically.

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  • Booking a doctor online is getting competitive, as medical startup Practice Fusion eyes ZocDoc’s territory

    Two of the biggest names in the growing world of health tech are about to go head to head. On Tuesday, San Francisco-based Practice Fusion, which offers doctors free electronic medical records software, plans to announce that it is launching a new site for booking doctor’s appointments. With its new service, Patient Fusion, the company isn’t just reaching out to patients directly for the first time, it’s moving into territory dominated by another big health tech startup: ZocDoc.

    Since launching in 2007, Practice Fusion has attracted more than 150,000 doctors with its free web-based service for managing patient information, medical billing and other aspects of practice management. But Patient Fusion is now opening up its information to the public for the first time, enabling patients across the country to search for doctors by specialty and location, read reviews from verified patients and instantly book appointments.

    “This is a place where, as an individual patient, your health starts and ends,” said Practice Fusion founder and CEO Ryan Howard.

    patientFusion_searchThe company said Patient Fusion lists information for more than 27,000 verified doctors in the U.S., includes 1.5 million verified doctor reviews (an average of 14 per doctor) and has 3 million open appointment slots available for April alone. While other doctor review sites like Vitals.com and Healthgrades, as well as Yelp, enable anyone — even those who have never seen the doctor — to leave reviews, Patient Fusion only allows patients it knows have visited the doctor to review their experience. ZocDoc similarly provides verified patient reviews.

    The company also estimates that its pool of doctors is three times as large as ZocDoc’s. ZocDoc doesn’t share the number of doctors who pay to list availabilities on the site, but says it’s available in 1,200 U.S. cities and that 2.5 million people use it a month. In major cities like New York, patients might not see a big difference in coverage between ZocDoc and Patient Fusion, Howard acknowledged. And, certainly, it could take Patient Fusion a while to build ZocDoc-like name recognition among consumers. But he added that in more remote parts of the country, Patient Fusion could provide more more doctors and more available slots.

    Another benefit for patients who pick Patient Fusion over other sites: they’ll be able to get instant access to their personal health records. While some doctors on ZocDoc or other doctor discovery and booking sites may use electronic medical record services that enable the easy exchange of medical records, patients using Patient Fusion will not only be able to book appoints online, but access digital lab reports, view real-time updates to their records and potentially benefit from other kinds of digital communication.

    While ZocDoc charges doctors about $300 a month to list their availabilities on its site, Patient Fusion is free to patients and doctors. It eventually plans to serve advertising (as it does on Practice Fusion) but its bigger play is aggregating even more data about patient conditions, medication, treatment outcomes and more. That data (de-identified and in aggregate) gives it an interesting view of health trends and could be valuable to pharmaceutical companies and other health care players.

    According to a survey of health entrepreneurs conducted last November, both Practice Fusion, which has raised $70 million in venture capital, and ZocDoc, which has raised $95 million, were considered two of the health tech companies likely to file for an IPO next.

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  • ForgeRock grabs $15M to push access and identity management software

    When Oracle finished buying Sun Microsystems in 2010, it got Sun’s identity and access management software, among many other technologies, but Oracle already had its own versions in its Fusion line of middleware.

    Within a few months, many of the Sun employees who worked on the identity and access management software — for authenticating and keeping track of the permissions of a given website’s users — started working on their own software based on what was already available in open source, focusing not on enterprises’ internal employees but on end users from all over the world. They started a company of their own, ForgeRock.

    Since then, the company has signed up more than 200 customers, including BSkyB, McKesson and the Vatican. It has opened offices in the U.S., France, Norway and the U.K. Now it’s taken in $15 million in a Series B round, bringing total venture funding to $22 million. Foundation Capital led this round, with previous investor Accel Partners also participating. The company will use the new cash to hire employees and add customers in the U.S. and India, its largest markets, as well as in other countries.

    Oracle remains a competitor, as does CA Technologies. Microsoft also has Active Directory, although AD is more focused on internal uses, said Daniel Raskin, ForgeRock’s VP of marketing. Developers certainly can roll their identity and access management software, but that takes time, and integrating the many access and identity management pieces from Oracle and CA can be complex. ForgeRock wants to keep it simple with open-source code and support through subscriptions. The software can let developers set up single sign-on, authentication, a directory for tracking who has access to which files and other features at scale and a system for keeping passwords updated across multiple applications, Raskin said.

    CA and Oracle are hefty competitors to contend with. But if ForgeRock can keep adding customers and ensuring easy scalability, it might have itself a nice little niche.

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  • Navy plans to equip boats with lasers that obliterate enemies with infrared energy [video]

    U.S. Navy Ship-Mounted Laser
    Pentagon officials on Monday announced plans for a ship-mounted laser to debut next year, Fox News reported. A solid-state laser prototype will be mounted on the backside of the USS Ponce in early 2014 for deployment in the Middle East. The cutting-edge technology will be able to obliterate small boats and unmanned aircrafts with a blast of infrared energy. One Navy official described the device as “a blowtorch,” but with “an unlimited magazine.”

    Continue reading…

  • Austin, Texas added to the list of cities to receive Google Fiber

    google-fiber1

    Google Fiber, the ridiculously fast 1 gigabit internet/phone/television service provided by our favorite search giant, now has a new city on its list. Austin, Texas will be next in line to receive Google Fiber, joining Kansas City and the Missouri Metro. No official rollout date yet, but you can bet we’ll keep you updated as soon as we hear something. Hit the break for the full press release.

    Gig.U Congratulates the City of Austin, TX and Google for Gigabit Expansion

    (WASHINGTON) Today, Google announced it will add Austin, Texas to the Google Fiber project, joining Kansas City, Kansas and Missouri as American communities that have the power to bring next generation networks home. Gig.U, a coalition of three-dozen research university communities working together to support educational and economic development by accelerating the deployment of next generation networks, issued the following statement by Executive Director Blair Levin:

    Gig.U congratulates Google and the City of Austin for their initiative to bring a world-leading network to one of the world’s great research university communities. This effort will pay enormous dividends for the country, as it will help develop the human capital America needs to lead a global economy that increasingly creates value with big data and big bandwidth. The Austin project, as well as the recent response to the North Carolina Next Generation Network project demonstrates that university communities are increasingly recognized as attractive partners for next generation network deployments because of the innovative spirit and demand profiles of their residents. We look forward to watching and learning from the exciting growth and innovation to come from the Google Fiber projects, and accelerating such efforts in Gig.U communities throughout the country.

    Come comment on this article: Austin, Texas added to the list of cities to receive Google Fiber

  • ASUS MeMo Pad now on sale for $150

    ASUS-MeMO-Pad

    If you’ve been looking for a tablet to fit into a low budget, ASUS has an answer for you. The MeMo Pad, a 7 inch Jelly Bean powered tablet that’s similar to the Nexus 7, was announced in January, and you can finally get your hands on one for just $149. It only has a 1,024 x 600 display and 1 GHz single-core processor, but hey, it’s cheap. It won’t beat the Nexus 7 anywhere in specs, aside from the micro SD card slot, but it does beat the Nexus 7 in price. And you can even get it in four different colors, which is a plus for some customers.

    source: The Verge

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  • TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 8, 2013

    TalkAndroid_Daily_Dose

    With hectic schedules, it can be hard to keep track of everything in your news feed. That’s why we created the TalkAndroid Daily Dose. This is where we recap the day’s hottest stories so you can get yourself up to speed in quick fashion. Happy reading!!

    Apps

    More evidence of the existence of Google Babel appears in string of code and pop-up message

    Revamped Google Chat screenshots leak, further confirms that Babel is coming soon… very soon

    Facebook Home pre-release gets leaked, gives Android users a half-baked taste of sweet glory

    Photosphere Live Wallpaper lands in Google Play Store

    Tumblr Rolls Out Enhanced Sharing Capabilities with Newly Redesigned Android App

    Carriers

    Best Buy Will Offer T-Mobile Simple Choice Plans By February 2014

    Virgin Mobile offer 100 bucks for T-Mobile customers to switch teams

    Google

    Google could buy WhatsApp for $1 billion

    Phones

    Galaxy Note 3 Will Be First Device With Samsung’s S Orb Photo Feature

    More details surface regarding upcoming Samsung Galaxy Mega 5.8 and 6.3

    Samsung announces the Galaxy Win smartphone featuring quad-core processor, dual-SIM capabilities and a whole lotta Jelly Bean

    Native DUALSHOCK 3 support may be coming to Sony Xperia devices

    Sony’s Xperia ZL heading to Cincinnati Bell on May 1st

    Tablets

    Acer Iconia A1-810 tablet gets outed, flaunts its 7.9-inch display to the general public

    Updates

    T-Mobile Galaxy S II Receives Android 4.1.2

    Miscellaneous

    HTC profits continue in wrong direction in record-setting fashion

     

     

     

     

    Come comment on this article: TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 8, 2013

  • Tumblr Rolls Out Enhanced Sharing Capabilities with Newly Redesigned Android App

    tumblr_app_image

    Not to be outdone by the competition, Tumblr rolled out their newly redesigned Android app today on the Google Play Store. The latest iteration brings with it some pretty amazing updates. The app, which is available immediately for download, has an all new “post anything” screen that lets users post:

    • Photos
    • Videos
    • Quotes
    • Chats
    • Links
    • Text (with a single tap)

    Advanced controls will also enable users to save drafts, queue posts, and customize tweets. Hit the break for a screenshot of the new “post anything” screen.tumblr_share_everything

    Tumblr posted in a blog today that they have “completely redesigned the interface, added fancy post animations, made images pop, and a whole lot more.” So you can expect a clean, unique, user friendly UI with the new release. The latest version also enables users to manage multiple blogs, a welcome addition from its antiquated predecessor.

    If Tumblr follows the same release pattern as last year, we can expect to see an updated IOS app in the next month or two. Although user feedback has been fairly positive overall, some users are reporting issues with “GIF” support, HTC One S and MyTouch by LG, and the Dashboard being “cut off” on other devices. There are also reported issues pertaining to accessing outside blogs, and the dashboard not recalling where users left-off when returning from blog reviews. Users seem frustrated with having to re-scroll through previously read posts over-and-over again.

    All-in-all, user reviews are positive and this latest release appears to be an improvement on the previous version. I am confident the team at Tumblr will be monitoring user feedback closely and making short work of any minor bugs and glitches reported over the coming days.

    What are your thoughts on the new Tumblr app?

    QR Code generatorPlay Store Download Link

    Source: CNET

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  • HF389 (E911) and HF1686 (public fund investment incl fiber) on House Agenda for Tuesday 4/10

    Thanks to Dave Minke for the heads up!! There’s a House Taxes Committee Meeting scheduled tomorrow (Tuesday April 10) at 12:30 that will include a couple of discussions that might be of interest to broadband folks.

    • HF389 (Lesch) Collection of 911 fees from prepaid wireless telecommunications services and prepaid wireless E911 services provided for, broadband development grant program established, and money appropriated.
    • HF1686 (Lenczewski) Public fund investments authorized, energy improvement repayment provided for, capital equipment financing requirements changed, and street reconstruction bond election requirements changed.

    My plan is to attend the session to take notes and/or record discussion. Here’s more info on the agenda:

    Meeting Time Note: We will recess at 2 p.m, then reconvene at 4 p.m. in room 10 and continue with the agenda until finished.
    Chair: Rep. Ann Lenczewski
    Bill(s) Added
    Room: 10 State Office Building
    Agenda: HF1724 (Davnie) A bill for an act relating to taxation; property; requiring a truth in taxation budget hearing; repealing requirement for notice of proposed property taxes
    Informational Hearing on HF759 (Savick) Volunteer first responder credit provided.

    HF1593 (Persell) Manufactured homes clarified as dealer inventory.
    HF1382 (Anzelc) Municipalities authorized to issue obligations without election for certain street improvements.
    HF1341 (Schoen) Medical device sales and use tax exemption expanded.
    HF1011 (Erhardt) Metropolitan area transit and paratransit capital expenditures additional financing provided for, and obligation issuance authorized.
    HF745 (Erhardt) Municipalities authorized to establish street improvement districts and apportion street improvement fees within districts, adoption of street improvement plan required, and collection of fees authorized.
    HF389 (Lesch) Collection of 911 fees from prepaid wireless telecommunications services and prepaid wireless E911 services provided for, broadband development grant program established, and money appropriated.
    HF1659 (Fritz) Nursing homes and boarding care homes most purchases exempted from sales and use tax.
    HF1686 (Lenczewski) Public fund investments authorized, energy improvement repayment provided for, capital equipment financing requirements changed, and street reconstruction bond election requirements changed.
    HF1660 (Davids) Sales tax exemption expanded for complimentary meals and beverages and certain capital equipment used by restaurants. HF1675 (Barrett) Exempt property held for economic development permitted holding period increased.
    HF1677 (Anderson) Purchases made by cities who did not receive a city aid payment in the previous calendar year exempted from sales and use tax.

  • Number of teens texting while driving has doubled since 2010 despite warnings

    Teenagers-Text-While-Driving
    Despite increased efforts by companies such as AT&T (T) and others to prevent teenagers from texting while driving, a new statistic showed that the problem has become an epidemic. The National Highway Traffic Safety Association revealed that the number of teens who use a mobile device while driving has doubled since 2010 to two out of every five, ArsTechnica reported. The agency also found that at any given time there are more than 600,000 drivers using a cell phone or some other electronic device, while almost half, or 48.6%, of all drivers in the U.S. have admitted to answering incoming phone calls, and one in four has admitted to placing a call.

    Continue reading…

  • Superstorm Sandy and Hurricane Irene aside, folks still want to build up their new data centers in New York

    Lobby at Verizon office at 140 West Street, New York post-Sandy

    Lobby at Verizon office at 140 West Street, New York post-Sandy

    This is surprising — at least to me. Despite the angst that Superstorm Sandy and Hurricane Irene caused data center providers and their customers in the New York metro area over the last two years, businesses still want to expand their data center capacity in that low-lying, suddenly storm-surge-prone area.

    According to a new survey for Digital Realty Trust, 65 percent of 148 companies surveyed that definitely plan to expand their data centers, want to do so in New York City or its environs. This flies in the face of speculation that big New York area companies would put more of their new data center firepower far from the coast. (GigaOM’s Jordan Novet has ore on the research here.)

    Financial services companies and exchanges clustered in New York obviously need some compute power nearby to reduce latency on trades, but data center experts said those capabilities could be parcelled out judiciously to local data centers while most of the other heavy lifting could be shipped off to data centers located in areas far from the coastal flood plain.

    drtchart

    According to the new research:

    “The majority of respondents who definitely plan to expand in 2013 would prefer to locate a new or expanded data center in New York City (65%); Los Angeles (47%), Dallas (36%), Chicago (31%), San Francisco (30%) and Phoenix (28%) are other U.S. cities mentioned often.”

    Other highlights:

    • Security was cited as the most important factor on decisions about location.
    • Folks tend to opt for a site close to their current work location. 69% choose their home city as one of their expanded data center locations.

    Of course when two 100-year storms hit the same area within two years of each other, you might start evaluating new locations and then the question becomes what areas are not susceptible to natural disasters. As Chris Perretta, CIO and EVP of State Street told GigaOM last year: ”In the Midwest you get tornadoes, on the coast you get surge, in Florida you get hurricanes, in the west you get wild fires, in California you get earthquakes.”

    Given that, maybe these findings are not such a surprise after all.

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  • Digital First Media’s John Paton on newspapers and paywalls

    A company with the name Digital First Media has a reputation to uphold when it comes to thinking about the future of publishing, and CEO John Paton didn’t disappoint in a recent interview with a reporter for one of his chain’s newspapers. Among other things, he talked about paywalls, and also about where he plans to take the company in the future. Here are a few excerpts:

    • On paywalls: “I don’t think paywalls are the answer to anything. If we’re swapping out print dollars for digital dimes, I think paywalls are a stack of pennies. We might use the pennies in transition to get where we’re going.”
    • On the future of print: “Newspapers in print are clearly going away. I think you’re an idiot if you think that’s not happening. I don’t think that news organizations are dying but are newspapers going to stop running in print? Yeah. Absolutely.”
    • On print vs. digital: “We have $1.3 billion in revenue. And of $1.3 billion, $900 million is advertising and $165 million of the advertising is digital advertising. That $165 [million] is going to have to more than double in three years. To do that, we’re going to have to take some risks on the print side. That’s the one thing that scares the [expletive] out of everybody.”
    • On newspapers: “I love newspapers. I’m a newspaperman. My father was a printer. I started off as a copyboy. I love newspapers. But they don’t love me anymore.”

    Paton also talked about the bankruptcy of one of Digital First Media’s subsidiaries, the Journal-Register Co., which filed for court protection last year for the second time — driven by what DFM said were massive commitments related to pensions and other costs taken on when the newspaper industry was better off financially. A group of funds managed by Digital First’s financial backer Alden Global eventually bought the company’s assets back. Said Paton:

    “The process allowed the company to shed a bunch of legacy obligations it could never afford that it incurred when it was a much bigger company. The Journal Register incurred most of its long-term debt, most of its pension obligations, most of its lease obligations when it was nearly twice the size the company that it is today, which is kind of what’s happening to newspaper companies.”

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  • Sony’s Xperia ZL heading to Cincinnati Bell on May 1st

    xperia-zl

    If you’ve been keeping an eye out for either of Sony’s latest flagship phones, we’ve got some good news about the Xperia ZL, just a day after hearing that the Xperia Z may hit our shores relatively soon. The Xperia ZL, which is the non-waterproof/dustproof cousin of the Z will be hitting Cincinnati Bell on May 1st for $249 with a two year agreement. It’s taken awhile for either of these devices to land on any US carriers, but even with Samsung and HTC fighting for the attention of consumers, I still think the Xperia ZL will move a few devices. It’s definitely a high end option for someone looking for something a little different.

    The XL will come sporting a quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro processor, a 5-inch 1080p screen, and that stunning 13 MP camera. It also still has the LTE and GSM bands to work on any carrier in the States, (Band 4 for T-Mobile LTE and Band 17 for AT&T) but there’s no word on if the device will be sim-locked or not. Hopefully not. Hit the press release below for all the details, and be sure to mark the 1st on your calendar if you’re planning on picking one of these up.

    Cincinnati Bell Becomes First U.S. Carrier to Offer Sony Xperia™ ZL Smartphone

    World’s Most Compact Premium Smartphone Available from Cincinnati Bell on May 1

    CINCINNATI–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Cincinnati Bell, the region’s leading provider of communications services for homes and businesses, today announced it will begin selling the new Sony Xperia™ ZL, a premium smartphone with a razor-sharp 5-inch high-definition Reality Display. The Xperia ZL from Sony will be available from Cincinnati Bell online and in stores by May 1 for $249.99 after mail-in rebate with a two-year equipment agreement.

    “We’re excited to add the Sony Xperia ZL to our line of premium smartphones. With this extraordinary device, customers can connect with each other using the best technology Sony has to offer,” said Mike Vanderwoude, senior vice president/general manager, Consumer Markets. “The Xperia ZL on Cincinnati Bell’s 4G wireless network creates an unbeatable combination.”

    The Xperia ZL has all of the specifications and premium features expected from a technology innovator like Sony. A razor-sharp 5-inch full HD (1920x1080p) Reality Display brings Sony’s long-standing TV expertise to the smartphone delivering optimized color, contrast and clarity. Intelligent camera capabilities previously only available in Sony digital cameras make taking high-quality images easier than ever, no matter what the conditions.

    One-touch connections via NFC (Near field communication) enable consumers to easily share music, photos, and video from their Xperia ZL with other NFC-enabled devices including Sony speakers, headphones and TVs. For example, with the latest NFC-capable BRAVIA TV, simply touch the Xperia ZL to the TV remote control and enjoy photos or browse the Xperia ZL’s interface on the large TV screen. In addition, the Xperia ZL’s infrared capability offers remote control of TV’s and other home entertainment devices.

    Xperia ZL Key Features:

    • 5-inch 1920x1080p full HD Reality Display with Mobile BRAVIA® Engine 2
    • 13MP camera with Exmor RS for Mobile, HDR video (1080p), Superior Auto and Noise Reduction to effortlessly capture razor-sharp pictures and videos in any conditions
    • Battery STAMINA for improved standby time
    • NFC-enabled and Infrared capable
    • 1.5 GHz asynchronous quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro processor with 2GB RAM
    • Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean)
    • Compatible network bands: HSPA+ 1,2,4,5,8 and EDGE 850/900/1800/1900

    The Sony Xperia ZL will be available for purchase on Cincinnati Bell’s website, www.cincinnatibell.com, and in Cincinnati Bell stores by May 1 for $249.99 after mail-in rebate with a two-year equipment agreement.

    About Cincinnati Bell

    With headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio, Cincinnati Bell (NYSE: CBB) provides integrated communications solutions—including local and long distance voice, data, high-speed Internet, entertainment, and wireless services—that keep residential and business customers in Greater Cincinnati and Dayton connected with each other and with the world. In addition, enterprise customers across the United States rely on Cincinnati Bell for efficient, scalable office communications systems and end-to-end IT solutions. Cincinnati Bell is the majority owner of CyrusOne (NASDAQ: CONE), which provides best-in-class data center colocation services to enterprise customers through its facilities with fully redundant power and cooling solutions that are currently located in the Midwest, Texas, Arizona, London, and Singapore. For more information, please visit www.cincinnatibell.com.

    About Sony Mobile Communications

    Sony Mobile Communications is a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Sony Corporation, a leading global innovator of audio, video, game, communications, key device and information technology products for both the consumer and professional markets. With its music, pictures, computer entertainment and online businesses, Sony is uniquely positioned to be the leading electronics and entertainment company in the world. Through its Xperia™ smartphone portfolio, Sony Mobile Communications delivers the best of Sony technology, premium content and services, and easy connectivity to Sony’s world of networked entertainment experiences. For more information: www.sonymobile.com.

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  • Apple ‘iPad mini’ trademark application back on track after USPTO withdraws objections

    Apple iPad Mini
    Apple’s (AAPL) quest to trademark the term “iPad mini” is now back on track now that the United States Patent and Trademark Office has withdrawn its main objections to trademarking the name of the company’s smaller tablet. MacRumors reports that the USPTO withdrew its “primary objection to Apple’s application related to all of the elements of the ‘iPad mini’ name having been judged as descriptive rather than contributing to a unique product name.” MacRumors notes that the USPTO’s original objections were fairly easy to overturn since the company merely needed “to show that the ‘iPad mini’ term was an extension of its already distinctive ‘iPad’ trademark and submit a new specimen satisfying the examiner’s objection.”

  • Virgin Mobile offer 100 bucks for T-Mobile customers to switch teams

    Virgin-Mobile-t-mobile-switch-ad-feature

     

    T-Mobile’s newest wireless plans have certainly gone without notice from its competitors, so it’s expected that we’ll see an onslaught of ads highlighting that there are more than a few alternatives out there for folks to choose from. In addition to its incredibly inexpensive monthly plans, Virgin Mobile is trying to entice customers by offering a sweet $100 credit to any existing T-Mobile customer that wants to switch services. All that’s needed? T-Mobile customers will just need to bring their phone number over to Virgin Mobile in order to be eligible— that’s it.

    Naturally T-Mobile’s mobile plans will offer the most bang for the buck in the long run for most folks (in terms of overall value), but at least Virgin Mobile is giving consumers yet another chance to save an extra dollar or two.

    source: AllThingsD

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  • The downsides of a gig: what other towns have learned after getting a gig

    If you are even remotely interested in broadband, then you’re aware that Google Fiber is coming to Austin. I’ve confirmed it, local Austin news has confirmed it, a gigabit-touting organization has confirmed it, and Google may even have inadvertently confirmed it. It’s happening. Now the big questions are about the details. We’ll find that out tomorrow at the 11 a.m. CT press conference.

    But after the city and Google answer the questions about where they plan to expand, if they will employ the same tactics as it did in Kansas City and other key details, here are a few ways concerned citizens and business leaders can pry a little deeper under the surface. Getting a gig is great, but as Kansas City and other gigabit towns can tell you, there’s a big learning curve.

    As Google even pointed out during its launch in Kansas City, equipment and event services such as SpeedTest.net weren’t ready to support gigabit connections. Now Ookla, which runs Speedtest.net, can support a gig, but devices like laptops that don’t support 802.11a/c standards might not. Mike Farmer, the CEO of Leap2, a Kansas City, Kan., startup that has a gig, says that his current MacBook is a bottleneck because, unless he hard-wires it, it can’t support a gig.

    Is there anybody out there?

    Mike Farmer of Leap2 praising the Google Fiber box.

    Mike Farmer of Leap2 praising the Google Fiber box.

    But he has a bigger problem as well. “I can watch seven simultaneous YouTube streams in 1080p high-def and Netflix, while still having 750 Mbps left over,” he told me. When I asked what he does with the remaining 750 Mbps, there is silence. And that’s one of the downsides.

    The great thing about having a broadband connection is you are connected with billions of people around the world. But if you start building out gigabit-ready applications, or even applications that require 100 Mbps, you’re going to shrink your audience. The Fiber to the Home Council recently estimated that there are more than 640,000 North American households now receiving 100 Mbps service through a FTTH network. I’ve covered this before, but it bears repeating as Google plans to bring its gigabit service to Austin.

    As Farmer says, “We have a car that goes 500 mph, but there’s only one road.” But Farmer and people in Chattanooga, Tenn. which is home to another gigabit network, have gotten together to discuss their plight and are planning to create a virtual co-working space using an always-on high-definition camera between their offices.

    Farmer is part of a group of Kansas City startups renting a home in a residential area so they can play with Google Fiber. Venture capitalist Brad Feld bought a house in KC and set up an incubator program there too. However, the flip side of the entrepreneurial enthusiasm around Google Fiber is that others in town aren’t prepared for a gigabit connection.

    How to handle the gigabit in civic institutions?

    fiber.google-640x423Aaron Deacon, managing director at the KC Digital Drive, told me that schools, for example, are trying to understand and find money for the gear they would need to support a gigabit. He explained that Google provides a gigabit drop to the school, so then the question of how to deploy that technology throughout the build or buildings is left up to the administrators. Do they just provide a computer lab where the termination point is and hope for the best, or do they invest in gigabit capable Wi-Fi access points?

    These issues, from a lack of know-how to an inability to brainstorm applications, is the reason that U.S. Ignite was founded almost a year ago. the program aims to teach people what to do with a gigabit connection. The first lesson? It’s not just about speed. Jake Brewer, a spokesman with U.S. Ignite, says speed is only one aspect. Another is about giving neighborhoods the ability to control their broadband destiny.

    What does a gigabit app even look like?

    For example, the three things Ignite wants people thinking about is speed (upload and download), the local cloud and software-defined networking. Much like the deeply nerdy SDN stuff happening inside data centers, Brewer wants to add programmability and intelligence to the wide-area network. Advantages of this are many, from being able to easily reroute traffic on congested routes to being able to allocate network resources to a specific application to guarantee high-quality service.

    As for that local cloud, it may be as simple as storing data closer to the end users or as complicated as creating a town that can harness its compute to double as a data center. For a list of awesome gigabit applications that Brewer and Ignite have helped devise, check out their post from last week.

    And there’s the “downside” of getting a gig. Once you have it, the real work begins.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Revamped Google Chat screenshots leak, further confirms that Babel is coming soon… very soon

    Babel Chat-580-90

     

    We already know that Google’s revamped all-in-one chat service is very much real and definitely on the way, but we finally have a concrete idea of how it will look when it is unveiled to the masses, courtesy of some leaked screenshots obtained by the gang at techradar. As you can see in these screenshots, the new version of Google Chat service will feature a complete revamped to its UI by including a more threaded messaging style and the use of newer graphics which include the use of new emoticons to be used by both Babel chat and a Hangout within Google+. Oh and Google seems to be intent on getting feedback as quickly as possible by including a “What do you think about Babel in Gmail?” notification when you over over the Feedback button.

    Babel hangout edited-580-90
    Babel_hoverover-580-75

    Unfortunately, there are no additional details to confirm anything else (such as what Google is doing with WhatsApp) for now, though all indications point to the arrival of Babel sooner than we think.

    source: techradar

     

     

    Come comment on this article: Revamped Google Chat screenshots leak, further confirms that Babel is coming soon… very soon

  • President Obama Asks Americans to Stand Up and Call for Action to Reduce Gun Violence

    Today President Obama traveled to Connecticut, where he told families of the children and teachers who died at Sandy Hook Elementary that we have not forgotten our promise to help prevent future tragedies and reduce gun violence in our country.

    “In fact,” he said, “I’m here to ask you to help me show that we can get it done.”

    Your families still grieve in ways most of us can’t comprehend. But so many of you have used that grief to make a difference — not just to honor your own children, but to protect the lives of all of our children. So many of you have mobilized, and organized, and petitioned your elected officials … as citizens determined to right something gone wrong.

    And last week, here in Connecticut, your elected leaders responded. The Connecticut legislature, led by many of the legislators here today, passed new measures to protect more of our children and our communities from gun violence. And Governor Malloy signed that legislation into law. 

    So I want to be clear. You, the families of Newtown, people across Connecticut, you helped make that happen. Your voices, your determination made that happen. Obviously, the elected leaders did an extraordinary job moving it forward, but it couldn’t have happened if they weren’t hearing from people in their respective districts, people all across the state. That's the power of your voice.

    “So Connecticut has shown the way,” he said. “And now is the time for Congress to do the same.”

    President Barack Obama delivers remarks on gun violence

    President Barack Obama delivers remarks on gun violence, at the University of Hartford in West Hartford, Conn., April 8, 2013.

    (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

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  • News story: ‘True Blue’ plans announced

    The meeting was chaired by Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude and attended by representatives of the Thatcher family, Buckingham Palace, St Paul’s Cathedral, the Ministry of Defence, Metropolitan police, Foreign Office and Downing Street.

    It was agreed that the funeral service of Lady Thatcher will take place on Wednesday 17 April at St Paul’s Cathedral. Other issues discussed included the details of the funeral procession, invitations, matters of foreign protocol, the role of the military and the service at St Paul’s.

    There will be similar meetings between now and the day of the funeral service.

    The title for the operational plan for Lady Thatcher’s funeral is ‘True Blue’.

    Flags are being flown at half-mast at UK government buildings and UK embassies around the world. They will be at half-mast for the rest of today and again on Wednesday 17 April when they will be lowered at sunrise and raised again at sunset (8am to 8pm).

    Books of condolence have been opened at the Grantham Museum and Finchley & Golders Conservatives. They are open daily and both venues are looking at keeping them open over the weekend. A book of condolence will be opened in central London. UK embassies around the world will also open books of condolence (unless security arrangements make this impractical).

    The Number 10 website attracted more than 35,000 visits yesterday, with more than 2,400 comments received from the public via our online condolence page since it went live last night.

  • Google Fiber has cost less than $100 million to launch so far

    Google Fiber Nationwide Cost
    Google’s (GOOG) gigabit broadband Internet service has been well received by the lucky few who have it, while the rest of us have been left eagerly awaiting for it to arrive in our hometowns. Google Fiber is currently available in Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas, and is rumored to be launching in Austin, Texas later this year. Carlos Kirjner and Ram Parameswaran of Bernstein Research estimate that it cost Google $94 million — $42 million in Kansas and $52 million in Missouri — to build the Fiber infrastructure and connect homes in its current markets, TechCrunch reported. The analysts believe the rumored Austin rollout will cost the same or even less than the offerings in Kansas City, although they remain skeptical of a nationwide build out.

    Continue reading…