Sunday, May 20, 2007

Camera phone maker mulls gadget's impact <br /> (AP)


By MAY WONG, AP Technology Writer

>






SANTA CRUZ, Calif. - The chilling sounds of gunfire on the Virginia Tech campus; the hateful taunts from










Saddam Hussein's execution; the racist tirade of comedian Michael Richards.

Those videos, all shot with cell phone cameras and seen by millions, are just a few recent examples of the power now at the fingertips of the masses. Even the man widely credited with inventing the camera phone in 1997 is awed by the cultural revolution he helped launch.


"It's had a massive impact because it's just so convenient," said Philippe Kahn, a tech industry maverick whose other pioneering efforts include the founding of software maker Borland, an early Microsoft Corp. antagonist.


"There's always a way to capture memories and share it," he said. "You go to a restaurant, and there's a birthday and suddenly everyone is getting their camera phones out. It's amazing."


If Kahn feels a bit like a proud father when he sees people holding up their cell phones to snap pictures, there's good reason: He jury-rigged the first camera phone while his wife was in labor with their daughter.


"We were going to have a baby and I wanted to share the pictures with family and friends," Kahn said, "and there was no easy way to do it."


So as he sat in a maternity ward, he wrote a crude program on his laptop and sent an assistant to a RadioShack store to get a soldering iron, capacitors and other supplies to wire his digital camera to his cell phone. When Sophie was born, he sent her photo over a cellular connection to acquaintances around the globe.


A decade later, 41 percent of American households own a camera phone "and you can hardly find a phone without a camera anymore," said Michael Cai, an industry analyst at Parks Associates.


Market researcher Gartner Inc. predicts that about 589 million cell phones will be sold with cameras in 2007, increasing to more than 1 billion worldwide by 2010.


Mix in the Internet's vast reach and the growth of the YouTube generation, and the ubiquitous gadget's influence only deepens and gets more complicated. So much so that the watchful eyes on all of us may no longer just be those of Big Brother.


"For the past decade, we've been under surveillance under these big black and white cameras on buildings and at 7-Eleven stores. But the candid camera is wielded by individuals now," said Fred Turner, an assistant professor of communications at Stanford University who specializes in digital media and culture.


The contraption Kahn assembled in a Santa Cruz labor-and-delivery room in 1997 has evolved into a pocket-friendly phenomenon that has empowered both citizen journalists and personal paparazzi.


It has prompted lawsuits — a student sued campus police at UCLA for alleged excessive force after officers were caught on cell-phone video using a stun gun during his arrest; and been a catalyst for change — a government inquiry into police practices ensued in Malaysia after a cell-phone video revealed a woman detainee being forced to do squats while naked.


On another scale, parents use cell-phone slideshows — not wallet photos — to show off pictures of their children, while adolescents document their rites of passage with cell phone cameras and instantly share the images.


One of the recipients of Kahn's seminal photo e-mail was veteran technology consultant Andy Seybold, who recalled being "blown away" by the picture.


"The fact that it got sent wirelessly on the networks those days — that was an amazing feat," Seybold said.


Kahn's makeshift photo-communications system formed the basis for a new company, LightSurf Technologies, which he later sold to VeriSign Inc. LightSurf built "PictureMail" software and worked with cell phone makers to integrate the wireless photo technology.


Sharp Corp. was the first to sell a commercial cell phone with a camera in Japan in 2000. Camera phones didn't debut in the U.S. until 2002, Kahn said.


Though Kahn's work revolved around transmitting only digital still photographs — video-related developments were created by others in the imaging and chip industries — his groundbreaking implementation of the instant-sharing via a cell phone planted a seed.


"He facilitated people putting cameras in a phone, and he proved that you can take a photo and send it to someone with a cell phone," Seybold said.


Kahn, 55, is well aware of how the camera phone has since been put to negative uses: sneaky shots up women's skirts, or the violent trend of "happy slapping" in Europe where youths provoke a fight or assault, capture the incident on camera and then spread the images on the Web or between mobile phones.


But he likes to focus on the technology's benefits. It's been a handy tool that has led to vindication for victims or validation for vigilantes.


As Kahn heard the smattering of stories in recent years about assailants scared off by a camera phone or criminals who were nabbed later because their faces or their license plates were captured on the gadget, he said, "I started feeling it was better than carrying a gun."


And though he found the camera-phone video of the former Iraqi dictator's execution disturbing, Kahn said the gadget helped "get the truth out." The unofficial footage surreptitiously taken by a guard was vastly different from the government-issued version and revealed a chaotic scene with angry exchanges depicting the ongoing problems between the nation's factions.


Kahn also thinks the evolution of the camera phone has only just begun.


He wouldn't discuss details of his newest startup, Fullpower Technologies Inc., which is in stealth mode working on the "convergence of life sciences and wireless," according to its Web site.


But, Kahn said, it will, among other things, "help make camera phones better."

Friday, May 18, 2007

Ads to cellphone screens set for rapid growth <br /> (Reuters)


By Tarmo Virki

>






PARIS (Reuters) - The more than $500 million mobile
advertising market looks set to multiply in just a few years,
helped by new technologies and the spread of more advanced
phones.


Executives attending Reuters Global Technology, Media and
Telecoms Summit in Paris, New York and Seoul said the demand
for mobile advertising was finally rising after years of high
hopes in the industry.


"I think mobile is one of the great growth opportunities,"
said Randy Falco, head of AOL, the Internet division of Time
Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX - news), which this week purchased mobile
advertising company Third Screen Media.


"It will certainly be in the $4.5 to $5 billion range in
terms of the marketplace (in five years)," he said, adding that
estimates for the annual market now range from $500 million to
$900 million.


"I think you need to be there. That's money that's coming
from some place. It's coming from other media," Falco said.


Martin Sorrell, Chief Executive of WPP Group Plc (WPP.L),
said he sees mobile advertising as an interesting area, which
has much growth ahead.


"My sense is that that is an area that is small but growing
fairly rapidly," he said.


Strategy Analytics, one of the most cautious forecasters on
mobile advertising market growth, has forecast global mobile
advertising market will reach $574 million this year and grow
almost three-fold by 2010.


In addition to media firms and telecom operators, Internet
players Google Inc. (Nasdaq:GOOG - news) and Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) and the
world's top cellphone maker










Nokia Oyj (NOK1V.HE) are also keen
to have a piece of the growing pie.


WHERE'S THE PHONE


Text message advertisements have made headlines in the
United States, where










Hillary Clinton and









John Edwards
use them
in presidential campaigns, but lack of advanced cellphones --
which enable viewing of Internet pages or positioning services
-- has held back wider uptake.


For the next year the industry expects to sell 250 million
so-called smartphones and handset makers including Nokia have
started to ship their first models with GPS chips in them.


Such positioning chips enable shopkeepers to send
advertisements to potential buyers nearby, or pubs to alert
people walking by that happy hour is set to end.


"We know where the phone is -- it's much, much, much more
targeted," said David Erskine, head of Telefonica's (TEF.MC)
European mobile operations outside Spain.


Erskine said the business case for mobile advertising has
not fully proven, but a test the company was running looked
promising.


"The number of hits is really, really powerful," he said.


No. 3 U.S. wireless carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:S - news)
earlier this week launched InterActiveCorp.'s (Nasdaq:IACI - news) mobile
Web search service "Ask Mobile GPS" to help consumers find
friends, shops and services based on their location.


The company does not yet use the service as a platform to
sell ads, but it would enable advertisers to know not only who
called their business having used Ask Mobile's service, but
also to know who walked into their store due to the ad.


Even as bigger rival AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T - news) forecast lucrative
growth from placing ads on handsets, Verizon Communications
(NYSE:VZ - news) said it was taking a cautious approach to creating an
advertising business via its Verizon Wireless joint venture
with Vodafone.


"I am reluctant to say that delivering ads is what our
customers want. At the same time our customers have come to
expect advertising as they look at the Internet," said Verizon
Communications Chief Operating Officer Denny Strigl.


But Tom Henriksson, head of Nokia's advertising network for
mobile publishers, said the personal nature of handsets was set
to boost mobile in its battle against PCs for the increasing
amount of digital ad dollars.


"We have good reason to believe mobile advertising will be
a significant market," he told Reuters. "In mobile we see much
higher click-through rates."


(Additional reporting by Sinead Carew, Michele Gershberg
and Gina Keating in New York)

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Cell tracking locates heart recipient <br /> (Canadian Press)




>






SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. (AP) - Police located a 10-year-old boy awaiting a heart transplant by asking his mother's cellular provider to locate her cellphone.


John Paul May of Harrisville had the successful surgery at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh on Saturday night, but came dangerously close to being passed over for the donor heart until police tracked down the boy and his mother at a jazz festival.


The hospital called state police Saturday afternoon because officials couldn't reach the boy's parents to let them know a donor heart had been found. When police couldn't find the boy or reach him by phone, they contacted Sprint Nextel Corp. to get the co-ordinates of his mother's cellphone.


"The only time you can use it is life or death, or to track someone wanted in a homicide," state police Cpl. James Green said. Otherwise, police must get a warrant from a judge.


Using the co-ordinates, state police tracked the phone to a Slippery Rock University building. Police stopped the jazz concert that was happening and announced they were looking for the boy and his mother, Sue.


The crowd of some 500 jumped to their feet and gave the boy a standing ovation as he left, said Steve Hawk, a music professor who conducted the concert.


"I've been in the entertainment business for 30 years and never had such an emotional, shocking event happen at something live," Hawk told the Butler Eagle.


posted by yeni_nr @ 6:12 PM  0 comments

Friday, May 11, 2007

Phones to alert users to save energy <br /> (Reuters)




>






HELSINKI (Reuters) - Your mobile phone could soon be
prompting you to save energy by unplugging the phone's charger
when the battery is full, an initiative










Nokia (NOK1V.HE) said
on Thursday it would roll out across its device range.

Mobile phones sounding a beep and displaying an alert --
"Battery is full, please unplug the charger" -- could save
enough electricity to power 85,000 homes annually, Nokia said.


The phone maker has previously said it had agreed with
other mobile industry companies on measures to reduce energy
consumption and reduce pollution in the sector as part of a
project in partnership with the










European Commission.


Nokia said the unplug alerts are set to first appear on its
1200, 1208 and 1650 phone models.


posted by yeni_nr @ 2:01 AM  0 comments

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Qualcomm talks tough on patents, 4G <br /> (InfoWorld)


John Blau

>






San Francisco (IDGNS) - The race to define and build next-generation broadband wireless networks is in full swing. And though Qualcomm doesn't like to use the term "4G," the company -- a key supplier of chip technology for today's 3G networks -- is already moving to stake its claim in the emerging market for superfast wireless services.


If some companies had hoped to keep Qualcomm out of the picture by pushing OFDM (orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing) as the airlink technology of choice for 4G networks instead of










CDMA -- in which the U.S. company has substantial intellectual property rights -- they could be in for a surprise.


In an interview with IDG News Service, Bill Davidson, senior vice president of investor relations and international marketing at Qualcomm, said the company has more than 1,000 essential patents for OFDM, OFDMA (OFDM Access), and MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) technologies, all of which form the foundation of new 4G technologies, whether WiMax, LTE (Long-Term Evolution), or UMB (Ultra Mobile Broadband). Qualcomm scooped up around 150 OFDM/OFDMA patents through its acquisition of Flarion Technologies.


The following is an edited transcript.


IDGNS: Is OFDM a new area of development for Qualcomm?


Davidson: If you go back to the beginning of Qualcomm, OFDM was considered a path instead of CDMA. The company ended up going down the CDMA route because CDMA was better able to handle all the things you want to do on a wide-area wireless network. We believe that to this day.


IDGNS: Are you planning any more acquisitions of companies with OFDM technology?


Davidson: In the last couple of years, our acquisition activity has stepped up. Flarion was clearly the largest deal of the last few years.


IDGNS: Do intellectual property rights play a big role in your acquisition strategy?


Davidson: They can and, clearly in the case of Flarion, there was a double benefit. First and foremost, we got the only team -- to this day -- to deploy a working mobile OFDM system. We also got the intellectual property rights that came along with the business. Our acquisitions are focused on accelerating time to market on a build-versus-buy decision and augmenting engineering resources more than we're out trying to grab patents.


IDGNS: What's driving all the interest in OFDM?


Davidson: We're seeing interest in OFDM because spectrum is becoming available in the 10MHz blocks and wider. From an efficiency standpoint, there's not really a benefit for OFDM over CDMA. But when you get into wider branches of spectrum, it can be a little less complex to implement.


IDGNS: But isn't 4G -- in which OFDM will play a big role -- all about newer, faster services?


Davidson: I think OFDM is really just a spectrum play. And frankly, we don't subscribe to the "4G" term. The applications that I've heard discussed aren't a whole lot different from what is being enabled over 3G today.


IDGNS: Isn't 4G supposed to be a lot faster than 3G?


Davidson: Many are talking about data rates that we don't even get on landline systems today. Yes, you can enable HDTV over these enormously wide pieces of spectrum. But what is the practical cost to the end-user?


IDGNS: So do we really need 4G?


Davidson: There is an existing roadmap within existing 3G technologies that provide the very same and, in most cases, better performance than some of the new technologies being proposed by other groups.


IDGNS: So WiMax and LTE aren't necessary?


Davidson: I look at LTE and UMB as being comparable; WiMax is not comparable to those technologies in terms of performance. There is a mistake in the premise that whatever comes along -- what people are calling 4G -- will be something that supplants the existing networks. We've been saying for several years that it will be about multiple airlinks existing in the market and making them work effectively together.


IDGNS: Let me come back to WiMax: Why isn't it comparable to LTE?


Davidson: Because its original legacy is borne out of the fixed environment, there are immediate engineering trade-offs and performance issues that you come up against. There is this concept of link budget, or how effective a technology is over the airlink. WiMax suffers from poor spectral efficiency because of its heritage as not being a mobile standard.


IDGNS: Do you see any intellectual property rights issues with 4G?


Davidson: We believe that our OFDM, OFDMA, and MIMO portfolio is among the strongest out there and clearly believe that it's applicable to any OFDM/OFDMA systems. Unfortunately, those who are supporting WiMax are trying to make it sound that the IP (intellectual property) picture with this technology is very clear and that it's going to be simple. The IP picture in 3G is much clearer today than what exists in WiMax. The number of companies claiming IP that can be contributed to WiMax is enormous.


IDGNS: Will Qualcomm be active in WiMax in any way?


Davidson: As we said several years back when many were trying to say that Wi-Fi would come and kill 3G, to the extent that our customers want the integration of Wi-Fi into our chipsets, we'll accommodate that. We've said the same about WiMax. We're being pragmatic and view that it will be in the market.


IDGNS:










Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said at the company's recent shareholders' meeting that the Finnish manufacturer can't give one company, Qualcomm, a chance to dictate rules for the whole industry. He said the issue is not Qualcomm versus Nokia but rather it's more about Qualcomm versus the rest of the industry. And your opinion?


Davidson: It's amusing to me that Nokia seems to think it's holding up the banner for the entire industry. If not for Qualcomm, there would be far fewer handset manufacturers for them to deal with as competitors and potential competitors. Our business model gives consumers a lot more choice so that Nokia can't dictate pricing into the market. Because we hold intellectual property, Nokia wants to paint us controlling the industry. We enable a lot of competition that causes them a lot of concern -- hence why we're being attacked by them.

posted by yeni_nr @ 7:41 PM  0 comments

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Semiconductor Firm Owned Strong Profit <br /> (Investor's Business Daily)


Vincent Mao

>






Would you buy, hold or sell this stock?


This Sunnyvale, Calif.-based firm manufactures image sensors used in mobile phones, digital cameras and security systems.


The stock made up a lot of lost ground after a nasty plunge several years ago.


The company's fundamentals were strong. Earnings growth skyrocketed 225% to 1,700% in the previous four quarters. At the time, analysts expected a 133% surge in the upcoming quarter.


Sales growth was healthy: The company owned four consecutive quarters of triple-digit revenue gains.


Also, the company's after-tax profit margin had jumped to 17% from 9.6% five quarters earlier.


Institutional sponsorship was rising. A total of 166 funds owned shares of the stock, up from 110 three quarters earlier.


Lastly, semiconductor issues were going strong at the time.


With those factors in place, what would you do?



posted by yeni_nr @ 9:47 PM  0 comments

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Icahn takes aim at Motorola's Zander <br /> (Reuters)


By Sinead Carew

>






NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire investor Carl Icahn on
Tuesday took direct aim at Motorola Inc.'s (NYSE:MOT - news) Chief
Executive Ed Zander on Tuesday, as he stepped up his efforts to
win a seat on the mobile phone maker's board.


In a letter to investors, published as a full-page
advertisement in the Wall Street Journal, Icahn said Motorola
"suffered a critical failure in oversight and leadership."


Icahn, who said he was seeking one board seat and not
control of the company, used the letter to air his most pointed
criticism yet of Zander since late January when he began his
quest for a board seat. The vote is scheduled for May 7.


Citing a Journal report that Zander was apt to say that he
loved his job, but hated his customers Icahn said the comments
sounded like "something straight out of 'Alice in Wonderland."'


Icahn said Motorola, which has seen its shares lose about a
third of their value since mid-October amid weak handset sales,
had been "shaken by leadership setbacks that ... could have,
and in fact should have, been averted."


Motorola shares were up 28 cents or 1.62 percent at $17.71
in early afternoon trade on the










New York Stock Exchange.


The company fought back by repeating its opposition to
Icahn and questioning how he would balance the trading
restrictions a Motorola directorship would bring with his
responsibilities to his own investors.


"If there were an opportunity for Carl Icahn's funds to
sell Motorola shares at a favorable price, would he simply
resign from your Board to take advantage of it?," Motorola said
in an amended proxy statement filed with regulators.


Motorola filed a first-quarter loss earlier this month and
said its 2007 outlook was significantly worse than expected due
to a lack of advanced phones and a tough pricing environment.
The company has been criticized for a stale product line as it
has not followed its aging Razr phone with another hit.


TIME TO IMPROVE


Jefferies & Co analyst Bill Choi said Icahn was hoping to
stir up discontent among already unhappy investors.


"Some investors are obviously frustrated at how quickly
things have demised. Icahn is trying to play to some of the
investor sentiment," Choi said. Pressure on Zander would
increase unless he brings improvements, Choi added.


"I think he has some time but he needs to show progress in
the second half of this year," Choi said.


Motorola, which has said Icahn is unqualified for its board
because of his lack of industry experience, said it had offered
help Icahn to find a "mutually acceptable" candidate.


Icahn has accused the current board of being passive, and,
if elected, would as the board's biggest stockholder, speak for
large shareholders by asking tough questions if he were
elected.


"I am convinced that significant stockholder representation
in the Motorola boardroom, even by a single director, is
absolutely necessary at this troubled company," he said.


Some buyside experts said Icahn may have a good chance of
winning a seat after leading proxy advisory firm Institutional
Shareholder Services (ISS), whose clients hold $25.5 trillion
in investments, recommended voting Icahn onto the board.


Jane Snorek, an analyst at First American Funds, which
holds Motorola shares among its $100 billion of investments,
also said that without concrete financial arguments, many ISS
clients would be unlikely to dismiss the firm's endorsement.


"I think he definitely will get elected," said Snorek. "If
you're a shareholder, I don't know why you wouldn't vote
(Icahn) on. I can't think of one good reason."


Icahn said he and affiliates own over 68 million Motorola
shares, or a roughly 3 percent stake, with a value of over $1.2
billion.

posted by yeni_nr @ 6:28 PM  0 comments