Sprint Premier getting new premium tier on April 1st, many customers won’t get early upgrades?

Launched in early 2009, Sprint’s Premier loyalty program has been one of the more generous (and easy to understand) perks programs in the American wireless industry: just keep a certain minimum spend per month or stick around for ten years, and boom, you’re eligible. Most importantly, Premier customers are currently able to get new contract pricing after just a single year into their existing contracts, which makes gadget freaks on the network far, far less likely to go bankrupt. Well, mirroring some of the other early upgrade changes we’re seeing in the business lately, it looks like these guys are planning on dialing things back come April 1st (and no, the irony is not lost). Though some Premier customers will still get upgrades after a year, that privilege will be dialed back to members of the new Gold tier which will require ten years of service with Sprint. Yes, that’s right: you’ll have needed to have a line on these guys since before the Matrix Phone came out to get the biggest benefit of the program. If you don’t qualify, you still could get in on the Silver tier, which gives you miscellaneous perks like accessory discounts… but not the full upgrade discount after a year. Instead, you’ll need to wait 22 months, which — at the current rate — is about 47 major versions of Android.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Update: As before, you’ll be able to skirt the 10-year requirement with a minimum spend and at least six months of service; that minimum will be $89.99 a month for individual lines at $169.99 a month for family plans. Whew!

Sprint Premier getting new premium tier on April 1st, many customers won’t get early upgrades? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 22:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSprint Community  | Email this | Comments

iDOS strikes back, returns to the App Store (update: gone again)

iDOS strikes back, returns to the App Store

If you’ve been cheekily holding on to the old version of iDOS, the one that got yanked from the App Store in record time, we’re sorry to say that you’ve got a decision to make. It’s now back and available for download, and if you want to keep your old one you’re going to have to update all your other apps around it. This free version has been simplified somewhat and graced with a suite of formerly freeware apps that we haven’t seen since we lost our giant box of floppies back in 1999, including Wolfenstein 3D and the original Duke Nukem — back when he was kicking butt in 2D. These are the only proggies that you can easily access from within the emulator, but we’re told you can still move others into the /Apps/iDos/documents folder and run them from there. Now if only we could find our TIE Fighter floppies…

Update: So much for that.

[Thanks, Adam]

iDOS strikes back, returns to the App Store (update: gone again) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 22:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAppShopper  | Email this | Comments

Verizon iPhone Ad “It Begins”

The Verizon iPhone is finally here and now so are the ads. After watching the clock ticking and ticking away, waiting for the iPhone, Verizon says, “To our millions of customers who never stopped believing this day would come. Thank you.”

Nexus S comes to Canada courtesy of Mobilicity (and maybe Bell, Telus, and Rogers, too)

Canadians, you must chafe under the yoke of a Gingerbread-free existence no longer, for the Nexus S is coming to the Great White North sometime in March. According to Mobilicity CEO Dave Dobbin, the handset will be available on the company’s AWS band, but he also said that Bell, Telus, and Rogers will carry the Nexus S as well. If true, that means Samsung will be providing another model of the phone with support for WCDMA 850 / 1900 for it to work with Canada’s big three wireless providers. We can only hope that’s the case, as said model would be usable on AT&T’s network — making an awful lot of us living south of Canada quite happy. Peep the video after the break to hear the good news for yourself.

Continue reading Nexus S comes to Canada courtesy of Mobilicity (and maybe Bell, Telus, and Rogers, too)

Nexus S comes to Canada courtesy of Mobilicity (and maybe Bell, Telus, and Rogers, too) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 21:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mobile Syrup  |  sourceHoward Forums  | Email this | Comments

Do iOS icons confirm iPad 2 front-facing cam?

You didn’t hear it from me, but the latest beta for iOS 4.3 for iPad appears to shows icons that indicate a front-facing camera.

Bing for BlackBerry adds local, image search

Microsoft’s Bing team rolls out changes to the BlackBerry version of its Google-rival search app.

Originally posted at The Download Blog

Superheadz create forest with Harinezumi cameras

Superheadz have produced a special installation using its Digital Harinezumi cameras and content created by over thirty international artists, including filmmaker Patrice Leconte, actress and singer Charlotte Gainsbourg, Harmony Korine and more.

Harinezumi no Mori was first shown in Tokyo and abroad last year and this updated version is on exhibition at Shower Room Factory in Shibuya from tomorrow.

This is how Superheadz describe the concept:

In a world where remixes and loops, samplings and downloads, Google, Amazon, and Youtube became our necessity, people have stopped watching television, and going to record shops and book stores. However, to experience Harinezumi no Mori, you just have to get out; and come experience the moment.

superheadz-harinezumi-no-mori-tokyo

The thirty-minute installation is viewable several times a day and each showing is supposed to be different.

We wanted to create something that you can witness only here – something inconvenient, over the top, painful, not portable, anti-mobile, anti-internet. The result was Harinezumi no Mori.

The “forest” (mori) is composed of multiple Digital Harinezumi films, collected from around the world, broken down and reconstructed. Showing on two hundred monitors the installation is promised to be a “spiritual musical”, the footage becoming “like uncontrollable creatures in the woods”.

XBMC comes to the iPad

We were politely asked to keep quiet about this until today, but here’s the truth: XBMC now runs on the Apple A4, period. As in, there’s no reason why you can’t install that shiny new Apple TV 2 version of the media center software on your jailbroken iPad or iPhone 4 too. Find instructions at our more coverage link… then give the hackers and developers a cheer.

XBMC comes to the iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 21:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceXBMC  | Email this | Comments

LaCie gets fancy with Galet USB thumbdrive

LaCie intros a new USB thumbdrive that’s shaped like a pebble and is plated with silver.

Is your Spam Box Lighter today? Here’s Why…

This article was written on May 31, 2007 by CyberNet.

SpamIf your spam box feels a little lighter today, now you’ll know why.  One of the top spammers in the world was recently arrested. He was listed as one of the top 10 spammers in the entire world! I wonder what it takes to make it to that list, or what it feels like to know that you’re on the list! In the Tech World, it’s probably equivalent to being on the FBI’s list of most wanted fugitives. Not good.

Tim Cranton, a Microsoft lawyer was quoted as saying “He’s a huge problem for our customers. This is a very good day.”  Robert Soloway will face charges of mail fraud, wire fraud, email fraud, aggravated identify theft and money laundering. And apparently his spamming business has done well. According to the Associated Press, he’s been driving a Mercedes convertible, living in a “ritzy” apartment in Seattle, and now he’s expected to forfeit $773,000  dollars that he apparently made from his “business.”

What’s also interesting is that he’s previously faced Microsoft. Microsoft won a $7 million judgment against him just two years ago. Additionally, an ISP in Oklahoma won a $10 million judgment against him. Despite this, he still didn’t stop. Now he faces a Federal Court, and hopefully some jail time for what he’s done. Fraud is no laughing matter.

All I can say is Hallelujah! Any decrease in the amount of junk mail I receive is never a bad thing.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts: