Saturday, November 6, 2010

Will Enterprise Mobile Security Issues Slow Mobile App Adoption?

You always can get an argument about the importance of data security in an enterprise setting, and that applies to use of mobile devices as data appliances as well.

Nick Jones, Gartner analyst, argues that Android is "probably" the least secure of the mainstream mobile platforms if only because it’s the least mature and has one of the least regulated app stores.

Even the best of them, RIM, is dependent on things outside the platform’s control, such as trusting the person who provides an application, says Jones.

Banks Rush to Fix Security Flaws in Mobile Apps

Wells Fargo & Co., Bank of America Corp. and USAA are issuing updates to some of their wireless banking applications to fix security flaws. Some of the applications store usernames, passwords and financial information as "clear text," the Wall Street Journal reports.

The problem only points out the greater need for security and privacy protection as software ecosystems become more complex.

Friday, November 5, 2010

US News & World Report Goes Digital Only

U.S. News & World Report is going digital-only in 2011. Its last regular print issue will be published in December 2010.

Going forward, the magazine's non-subscription print offerings will be for newsstand sale and targeted distribution. That includes the college and grad guides, as well as hospital and personal finance guides. The magazine also says it will publish four other newsstand special editions, focusing on history, religion and some of the other subjects that have been a success for us in the past.

Clearwire Issues "Going Concern" Warning

As required by law, Clearwire has filed an "on-going concern" statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"Our ability to continue to operate our business is substantially dependent on our ability to raise additional capital in the near term," the SEC filing (10Q) says.  "Our expected continued losses from operations and the uncertainty about our ability to obtain sufficient additional capital raise substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern."

The filing notes that during the first nine months of fiscal 2010, Clearwire incurred $1.55 billion of net losses. The company consumed $840.8 million of cash in operating activities and spent $1.96 billion for capital expenditures.

"As of September 30, 2010, we had available cash and short-term investments of approximately $1.38 billion," Clearwire said. "Based on our current projections, we do not expect our available cash and short-term investments to be sufficient to cover our estimated liquidity needs for the next twelve months."

That's why Clearwire has been out looking for debt, equity or spectrum sales for financing. "Without additional financing sources, we forecast that our cash and short-term investments would be depleted as early as the middle of 2011."

"Thus, we will be required to raise additional capital in the near-term in order to continue operations. Further, we also need to raise substantial additional capital over the long-term to fully implement our business plans," the filing says.

read the whole filing here

Take Viewing Breaks When Watching 3D Sports, ESPN Says

Researchers at ESPN have been testing user reaction to three-dimensional sports programming. While some viewers in an ESPN lab study experienced eye strain and headaches while watching the soccer World Cup in 3D, the adverse effects were reduced after viewers took breaks, ESPN says.

"We think that breaks are a good thing for 3D viewing," says Duane Varan, executive director of the Disney Media and Advertising Lab.

Most adverse effects are reported on the first day that a viewer watches 3D programming, and are reduced in subsequent days as viewers get more accustomed to it.

U.S. International Calling Estimated at Nearly $24 Billion

About 25 percent of U.S adults make international calls, and of those who spend money to make such calls, the average spend is approximately $34 every month, according to Harris Interactive.

With an estimated 235 million U.S. adults, this works out to roughly 58.8 million Americans spending nearly $1.98 billion on international calls outside of the U.S. monthly and $23.8 billion annually.

For adults who make international calls, the majority do so using a landline (51 percent), either a traditional landline service provider (42 percent) or a VoIP service such as Vonage (12 percent). Another 44 percent make international phone calls using their mobile phones.

About 25 percent of those who make international phone calls do so using their computer through software based services like Skype, while 20 percent use calling cards.

BroadCloud Simplifies Hosted UC and IP Telephony

It sometimes is difficult to keep clear the distinctions between hosted and "cloud-based" services, but for BroadSoft, the difference between "BroadWorks" and BroadCloud" is the difference between a service provider hosting the app servers in their own network and having BroadSoft host the apps "in the cloud."

As you might imagine, there is a key difference in terms of how fast a customer can get a branded service up and running, the degree of resilience and the amount of integration work that might have to be done to get a BroadWorks solution up and running.

BroadCloud will include BroadSoft’s current SaaS products, PacketSmart and Casabi, as well as new unified communications services including instant messaging and presence; "BroadCloud Video," a high-definition, always-on, meet-me videoconferencing service, "BroadCloud Web Collaboration," a suite of web-based collaboration options, including screen sharing, a document library, chat, audio and video support and whiteboarding.

BroadCloud PacketSmart is a network assessment and monitoring service, while BroadCloud Casabi enables the delivery of group SMS, personalized content and tools that help keep families organized.

US Smartphone Penetration Leads Europe

It is common for observers to decry some way in which the United States lags other regions by some measure of Internet, broadband or wireless adoption. Sometimes that is accurate, but only for a time. In other areas, the U.S. adoption rate exceeds that of other regions. Smartphone devices and applications and Internet apps provide examples.

"It’s strange that the US, which was light years behind Europe, which itself was light years behind Japan, is now the hotbed of change where this innovation originates," an opinion piece in the Register argues.

Both "Open" and "Closed" Information Models Work on Web

Two fundamentally different models have competed in Web-based information markets.

In one model, an information provider formats the presentation of information, selling advertising space to another party. These sites want search engines to find them. This model involves little gatekeeping of the user. Much of the open commercial Web operates this way.

In the other model, an information provider sells passwords to users. The passwords either allow unlimited access to a wide range of material, or they allow the vendor to track usage and require incremental payments roughly proportional to the material delivered and received. The passwords are a form of gatekeeping, and these sites generally do not allow search to threaten that gatekeeping ability.

The recent testing of "paywalls" for newspaper content will shift some content from an "open" to a "gatekeeper" mode. Will it work? It likely depends on the uniqueness of the content, and whether users can find reasonable substitutes elsewhere on the open Web.

Both ad-supported and "paywall" models can work, but the latter really does require uniqueness, one might argue. The Wall Street Journal has been behind a paywall all along, and has been the salient example of a gated approach that seems to work.

Study Suggests 20% Would Cut Broadband Access Cord and Go Mobile

About 20 percent of fixed broadband access users surveyed by Nokia Siemens Networks in France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom want to "cut the cord" and buy mobile broadband service instead, the Nokia Siemens Networks "Mobile Broadband Study 2010" has found.

More than half of mobile broadband users say they are interested in high-speed mobile broadband or LTE and half of respondents report they already use mobile broadband, mostly on their phones.

Google Instant for Mobile

How Smartphone Users See Themselves, How Others See Them


I'm not sure this cartoon is right up there with the classic "if operating systems were airlines," but it's funny.

For many of you, the "operating systems as airlines" references won't make sense. You weren't born when they were used.

For some of you, the depiction of airlines will make perfect sense. Read it here:  http://webaugur.com/bibliotheca/field_stock/os-airlines.html

Thursday, November 4, 2010

What Does "4G" Mean, Now that ITU Has Defined it Out of Existence?

The International Telecommunications Union has settled on a definition of "fourth generation" networks that requires 100 Mbps in a mobile deployment and 1 Gbps in a fixed deployment. None of the actual 4G networks now in operation or planned are actually going to run that fast. So now users have to decide whether standards are set in the marketplace or by standards bodies.

Xbox LIVE Gold Members Watch 1 Hour a Day of Streaming Video

About 42 percent of Xbox LIVE Gold members in the US are watching an average of an hour of television and movies on their Xbox, every single day.

Two Hours a Day of HDTV Per User Will Require 548 Times More Access Bandwidth

Akamai President David Kenny says that in five years the average user will consume two hours a day of high-definition video. To accommodate this insatiable demand, the Internet will need to increase capacity 548 times from where it is today.

That could have all sorts of implications. People might have to pay much-higher fees for bandwidth. People might refuse to pay, and limit their consumption of HD video. People might decide linear delivery and on-demand consumption (store and forward) actually provides high value at reasonable cost, and wind up watching most of their HD video on linear services that have digital video recorder features.

Application providers or service providers might come up with new ways of alleviating the bandwidth necessary to consume on-demand video. Advertising might wind up being a lot more important than it is today. Or all of the above, and other steps, might have to be taken.

AI is Solow Paradox at Work

An analysis of 4,500 work-related artificial intelligence use cases suggests we are only in the very-early stages of applying AI at work a...