Archive for January, 2009

Jan 31 2009

All White Apple Keyboard

Published by under Technology

What happens when you don’t like the look of your Apple keyboard, and you want something more minimalist? You paint it white like Essell.

white apple keyboard

Essell decided he didn’t like the combination of white and silver on his Apple keyboard, and decided to spray it white, I have to admit it looks amazing.

white apple keyboard

I certainly would have a few problems typing on it, but luckily Essell is a a much better touch typist than me.

Essell via Not Cot

This is a Syndicated post from Geeky Gadgets.

Post from http://www.gadgettastic.com

All White Apple Keyboard


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Jan 31 2009

Apple’s iPhone 2.2.1 Firmware Ready for Download

Published by under Technology

Apple just released its iPhone 2.2.1 software update last Tuesday. There’s nothing to get excited about since this latest update has no new significant features except fixes and minor improvements. You can update your iPhone to the latest firmware by simply connecting your device to your computer. iTunes will take care of the download and installation right after you confirm to upgrade your iPhone.

Speaking of the update, it improves Safari’s stability and fixes image issue in which pictures saved from Mail don’t display properly in the Camera Roll. That’s it! Though it has been much rumored that the addition of support for push notifications will be included, it’s simply not in this update.

Don’t worry, it will definitely come in the future, perhaps along with Bluetooth feature, who knows :)

For those having trouble to update it via iTunes (like me), you may download directly via the following links

1. iPhone 2G 2.2.1 Firmware
2. iPhone 3G 2.2.1 Firmware

Both download links have resume support, so you may need to use any download managers to handle the download. Once the download is completed, plug in your iPhone to your PC. Press and hold “shift” button while clicking on the update button (iTunes interface). This will effectively open a windows popup where you can locate the downloaded firmware. The rest is pretty self-explanatory.

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Jan 31 2009

Britain Looks to Expand Broadband and Limit Piracy

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The British government outlined plans on Thursday to bring broadband Internet service to every home in Britain by 2012, and proposed ways to support the music industry and other media businesses by cracking down on online piracy.

music-piracy-britain-uk

The communications minister, Stephen Carter, is eager for the media, telecommunications and technology sectors to pick up part of the slack as other parts of the British economy, including financial services, decline. By 2012, the government said in a report, 20 percent of all commerce in Britain will occur online.

“There is no sector, with the possible exception of energy, that the rest of the economy depends upon more than this one,” Mr. Carter told reporters in London.

The government wants to make broadband a universal service like television, using fixed-line and wireless technologies. About 60 percent of British households currently have broadband.

The report makes frequent reference to President Obama’s economic stimulus plan, which includes billions of dollars for expanding access to broadband. But the British report emphasizes the role of the private sector, calling for steps to remove barriers to further investments.

Matthew Howett, an analyst at Ovum, a telecommunications consulting firm, criticized the report for lacking details on how its goals might be achieved.

“The government must ensure that ‘Digital Britain’ doesn’t become merely a series of reviews, reports and consultations,” Mr. Howett said.

To try to curb unauthorized file-sharing, which the music industry blames for its woes, the report recommends requiring Internet service providers to send warning letters to persistent pirates.

Some British Internet providers have already sent such letters under a voluntary agreement. Under the proposal outlined Thursday, they would be required by law to do so. Internet providers would also be required to turn over personal details of repeat offenders to rights holders, like music companies, so that the offenders could be sued.

The music industry, however, is increasingly reluctant to pursue file-sharers through the courts, fearing a backlash from listeners. The Recording Industry Association of America, which represents the major record companies, moved to end a multiyear legal campaign against file-sharers, for example.

“We do not believe that the form of intervention proposed by today’s report — suing consumers — is the best way forward,” said Feargal Sharkey, chief executive of UK Music, which represents the British music industry.

Instead, the music industry in Britain has been pushing for Internet service providers to take on more of the burden of curbing piracy. Record companies want service providers to cut off service to persistent copyright infringers, something that Eircom, which provides Internet access in Ireland, said Thursday that it had agreed to do.

In France, legislation that would require service providers to disconnect pirates is working its way through Parliament.

The British report also proposes the creation of a “rights agency,” financed by a tax on broadband providers and content owners, to work on ways to protect copyrighted material.

“It may be that such an independent, objective body may be better able to surmount the mutual tension between rights holders, publishers, search engines and other content aggregators, the I.S.P.’s and the underlying communications network operators and instead broker technical solutions that can command widespread adoption and support,” the report said.

The recommendations are preliminary; they are open to comment, and the government intends to make final proposals in June.-Ny Times

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Jan 31 2009

NTT DoCoMo to End 2G Cellular Service in 2012

Published by under Technology

ntt-base-station

NTT DoCoMo will switch off its second-generation cell phone network in just over three years, the company said Friday.

The carrier was first in the world to launch commercial 3G service when it debuted a network in Tokyo in October 2001 and, after some early technology troubles were sorted out, has benefited from a user base that is quick to adopt new technology and a local business model that gives it the ability to dictate technology and features put in handsets by manufacturers.

The company, which has a 51 percent market share, released its last 2G phone in 2004 and saw its 3G subscribers outnumber those on the 2G network in the middle of 2006.

At the end of December 2008, about 88 percent of the carrier’s 54 million subscribers were on the 3G network. The remaining 6.7 million will be offered incentives to make the jump to the 3G network before it closes on March 31, 2012, it said.

NTT DoCoMo’s 3G network is based on the WCDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) standard that has become the dominant 3G technology in use worldwide. In contrast, its 2G network is based on the home-grown PDC (Personal Digital Communications) standard that was developed by NTT DoCoMo but never got any support outside of Japan.

The intention to switch off 2G was announced as NTT DoCoMo released its financial results for the first nine months of its current fiscal year, which covers the April to December period of 2008. Revenue during the period was ¥3.4 trillion yen (US$37.6 billion), a 4 percent drop on the same period in 2007, while net profit rose 16 percent to ¥438 billion.

During the last three months of the year, NTT DoCoMo managed to reduce its churn rate and the number of customers coming to the carrier from competitors was more than the number leaving for competitors.-PC World

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Jan 31 2009

Dell to Make iPhone Rival?

Published by under Technology

Just when you thought there are enough not-so-good looking and overrated phones out there, Dell is expected to announce two iPhone and Blackberry competitors sometime next month. Code-named MePhone (hopefully not the final name), the phones will run on Google Android and Microsoft Windows Mobile respectively.

dell_iphone

Following rumors going back as far as July 2007, the Wall Street Journal announced this morning that Dell will introduce in February at the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona two new mobile phones, set to go head to head with market leaders Apple and Research In Motion.

One of the phones will be touchscreen-only while the other will feature a slide-out keyboard, similar to the T-Mobile G1. It is not known which of the models will feature Windows Mobile and which will run on Android and other technical specifications are not available yet either. Also, no partnership with any U.S. wireless carries has been announced.

Now, if we are to take this rumor seriously, Dell’s “MePhone” is supposed to go on sale on September 9. WSJ’s report also mentions that the Dell phones’ focus will be on “customization,” but it doesn’t say whether it’s software or hardware customization — so nothing is clear on this front either.

We need to keep in mind is that apparently no final decision has been made regarding the launch of these MePhones. Dell’s mobile devices can be called off at any time before launch, just as it happened last November with the company’s effort to launch a new iPod competitor. -PC World

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Jan 31 2009

Japanese electronics giants face tough months ahead

Published by under Technology

Shares in the Japanese electronics giants Toshiba and Nintendo plunged on Friday after the companies warned late on Thursday of disappointing earnings ahead.

japanese-market

The problems facing Japanese companies were highlighted after a government report early Friday showed a record decline in industrial production last month.

Toshiba, Nintendo, Sony and NEC Electronics, some of the biggest names in consumer electronics and technology, all reported disappointing results and gloomy outlooks on Thursday, further proof that the slowdown had expanded well beyond big-ticket items like cars and houses, and revealing the extent of consumer pessimism around the globe.

Toshiba, whose products span chips to household appliances, said it now expected a record net loss of 280 billion yen ($3.13 billion) for the business year ending in March, rather than the 70 billion yen profit it had forecast in September, setting off a decline of 14.8 percent in its share price on Friday.

Toshiba lost 121.1 billion yen in the last three months of 2008 and said it would halve capital spending, to 230 billion yen.

“Demand does not seem to be getting any better from the fourth quarter on,” Naofumi Hara, senior vice president at Sony, told a news conference, according to Reuters.

As the global economic downturn drags on, ordinary consumers everywhere, scared by mounting job losses and the stock market rout last year, have slowed spending to a trickle. Companies, too, have cut back investments on anything from factory machinery and research to photocopiers, computers, information technology upgrades and business travel.

As a result, companies in virtually every sector of the economy, from the software giant SAP to automakers around the world, have had to lay off workers, further depressing consumers’ confidence.

Government data on Friday showed Japanese industrial production fell a record 9.6 percent in December, underscoring the point that Japan’s recession deepened much more rapidly than most observers had expected during the last three months of 2008.

Analysts are skeptical that a recovery will come any time soon.

“Given the current severe market conditions, Toshiba’s expectation of the time it will need to recover its profitability and financial profile may prove overly optimistic,” Kazusada Hirose, a senior analyst at the ratings agency Moody’s wrote on Thursday after downgrading the company.

Adding to the gloom Thursday, the games maker Nintendo cut its outlook, setting off a 12.4 percent plunge in its shares on Friday.

Although Nintendo remains one of the few Japanese consumer electronics giants to still expect a handsome profit for the current business year, its popular Wii game console has turned out not to be as recession-proof as many analysts had thought. Nintendo now expects profits of only 230 billion yen, rather than 345 billion yen, for the current business year.

NEC Electronics, which makes chips, warned of a full-year net loss of 65 billion on Thursday and announced job cuts.

And Sony, the sprawling consumer electronics company behind the Walkman, PlayStation 3 game console and Bravia TV sets, last week issued its second profit warning in three months. The company now expects a net loss of 150 billion yen, rather than a profit of 150 billion yen, for the year through March.

Quarterly results announced by Sony on Thursday revealed that the bulk of the bleeding stems from the electronics division. That includes Sony’s television brands, which are suffering both from collapsing demand and fierce price pressure as competition from other manufacturers heats up.

Sony shares, which fell sharply after last week’s profit warning, slid another 5 percent on Friday.

The announcements, along with the latest economic data, underscore the depth of Japan’s recession in the last three months of last year.

Japanese companies have been racing to cut output and lower costs, and more job cut announcements and profit warnings are expected to become a familiar feature of the current earnings season. NEC Electronics and Toshiba between them announced on Thursday that they were shedding 5,200 temporary staff, adding to the thousands of job cuts already announced by Sony and other Japanese companies.-Ny Times

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