Thu June 17 2004
Hot-Spots Come To The Hospital Room |
06:20 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones InformationWeek runs an article on how El Camino Hospital in Mountain View, Calif., last week became one of the first hospitals to provide high-speed wireless access to patients and visitors at its hospital campus and two off-site dialysis centers. Access is free, but visitors will be charged $3 for 24 hours of access starting in September. Patients will likely continue getting free access. Patients or visitors need to have their own computers or PDAs. I only hope that WiFi-rays are really not bad for your health... |
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emoveo UAP: Transcoder for Videos on Cells and PDAs |
04:45 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones German company dynetic solutions has developed a software technology and development platform called emoveo UAP that can be used to optimise existing contents for all mobile devices and standards. One interesting extension to this platform is Mobile Video Converter (MVC), which allows video-streaming via GPRS and UMTS to your mobile phone: at the touch of a button, you can watch live events from any place you want. |
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Wed June 16 2004
World's First Mobile Virus |
11:31 PM by faie in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones I remember getting hoaxes via e-mail about mobile phone viruses a few years back. Well, here comes the real thing: According to Reuters, a group of underground virus writers has showed off what is believed to be the world's first worm, named Cabir, that can spread on advanced mobile phones. However, security software companies say the virus had no malicious code attached. This is the first version of a network worm which propagates via mobile phones. The worm is designed to work in smartphones running on Symbian and Series 60 software, Symantec said on its Web site. Nokia, however, was not immediately available to comment. The worm is not regarded as dangerous because even if it spreads it carries no code that destroys files or executes other damaging operations, the security software firms said. The virus attempts to jump from phone to phone by using the handset's wireless short-range Bluetooth connection. It scans the environment for other Bluetooth-enabled devices. Once it has found one, it sends itself disguised as a security file. The file must be accepted by the mobile phone owner and then installed before it can propagate. A spokesman at London-based technology firm Symbian said that, unlike personal computers, it was not possible to penetrate the software of its smartphones without approval. "But we can never say it's not going to be possible. Smartphones have been designed... as open, programmable networked devices," he said, adding that users should be careful before accepting to install new software. In view of this development, could the existence of a malicious, handphone crippling worm be too far behind?? |
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Welcome to our three new editors! |
01:17 PM by Alexander Turcic in Miscellaneous | Announcements It is with great delight that I announce our three new editors who, I am absolutely positive, will help us to shape the future of our growing community! faie from Malaysia, zire71man from Astoria, US, and BobR. Please give those three a heartly welcome! |
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New game flux challenge |
10:49 AM by Zire in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Hey All, For all you PPC people... From the pdamill's site: FLUX CHALLENGE You can download the alpha here. |
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These Are A Few of My Favorite Things... |
10:03 AM by brahamt in Archive | Portable Audio/Video Check out an announcement for the integration between two of my favorite products; the Apple iPod and BMW. Unfortunately, the article does not specifically state my Beemer (a 5 series), but something interesting nonetheless. With Alpine announcing an iPod adapter, you might start to see the iPod replace CD changers and those custom MP3 player solutions. |
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Live Demo of Mobile Phone TV over DVB-H with Nokia's 7700 |
09:19 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones At its annual "Nokia Connection" conference in Singapore, Nokia showcased a live end-to-end mobile phone (also referred to as "media device") 7700 TV broadcast over a handheld Digital Video broadcast which would be introduced at the pilot level in 2005. The Nokia 7700 media device enables users to view web pages with a full Internet browser over high-speed mobile networks on a 65,000 color touch screen optimized for viewing Internet content. Additional features include music and video playback and streaming, an integrated VGA camera, FM radio, multimedia messaging support, as well as a full complement of personal information management features. One step further away from the PDA? |
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WiFi LAN and Bluetooth on one chip |
09:06 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Philips has has announced a new 802.11b low-power WiFi LAN and Bluetooth semiconductor "system-in-a-package" (SiP) solution specifically designed to operate at the same time in small form-factor systems such as smart phones, PDAs and other portable devices. "This means a consumer can use a mobile phone equipped with a Bluetooth wireless headset to make a call while using the same phone to simultaneously check information on the Internet via a WLAN network - without experiencing interference", according to Philips. Philips' new chips will be sampling in July 2004 and will be available in production quantities in Q4 2004. |
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