AT&T asks court to dismiss lawsuits filed by Sprint and C Spire Wireless

Well, look at Ma Bell now, wishing it’d all just go away. Tied up in lawsuits, the company has filed motions to dismiss the two complaints brought by Sprint and C Spire Wireless (formerly Cellular South), which seek to block AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile. In the filings, it’s argued that the two providers represent their own interests, rather than that of the public. AT&T further reveals that C Spire had pursued private negotiations prior to the lawsuit, where the regional provider agreed to support the merger “if AT&T would agree not to engage in facilities-based competition in Mississippi.” Ma Bell goes on to state, “This inappropriate proposal confirms that what Cellular South fears is competition, not lack of competition.” Given the latest maneuver (which smacks heavily of PR spin), there’s no doubt that lawyers for Sprint and C Spire will have a bit of homework for the weekend.

AT&T asks court to dismiss lawsuits filed by Sprint and C Spire Wireless originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 20:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft’s Virtual Earth 3D A Little Disappointing

This article was written on November 07, 2006 by CyberNet.

Chicago Skyline

I decided to try out the Virtual Earth 3D that Microsoft just started to offer and I can’t say that my experience blew me away. I went to the local.live.com like I was told to do and clicked on the 3D button. Oops, silly me, there isn’t Firefox support so I had to open it in Internet Explorer. Okay, not that big of a deal because I should have expected it.

So I had Internet Explorer open and clicked on the 3D button just to be prompted with a window to install some software. I thought I was viewing this in a browser so that I could get away from installing software? Heck, if I’m downloading something I would rather it be a program that I can use. I was still a little skeptical but played along to try out this “revolutionary” service.

I finished downloading the program and tried to install it on Windows Vista and it just wouldn’t do anything. The progress bar would never move so I ended up restarting my computer a few times, disabling a few programs from starting when Windows starts, and finally got it installed 45 minutes later! By this point I thought that this thing better make me drool.

Okay, I’m all set to go now. Where’s the first place that I go to on the map? Chicago…because it’s where I’m from. I figured that there  would be a limited number of cities available that are able to display 3D buildings but there are always the most popular ones like Chicago and New York City that get done first. As you can see in the Chicago skyline above I was terribly wrong.

After doing a little research I was able to find out that they only support San Francisco, Seattle, Boston, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Baltimore, Dallas, Fort Worth, Atlanta, Denver, Detroit, San Jose, Phoenix, and Houston. Despite my horrible experience with getting everything installed and setup the result was kinda cool. It is neat how they add the texture to the buildings but I just can’t get over not having New York City and Chicago in the mix of available cities.

Microsoft did find ways to make money off of doing this though. They have “billboards” that they display when you are looking at some of the 3D views and they actually fit pretty nicely inside the maps. One of the billboards that I saw was sitting on top of a building and looked almost like a real billboard. I think I was more intrigued trying to find the placement of the billboards than I was looking at the 3D buildings themselves.

Virtual Earth 3D is a cool service but it doesn’t live up to the praise that everyone has been giving it. Hopefully Microsoft expands their coverage to some of the larger and more prominent cities that people would love to see in 3D because this could be useful for tourism.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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FCC Fridays: September 30, 2011

We here at Engadget tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol’ Federal Communications Commission’s site. Since we couldn’t possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there, we’ve gathered up all the raw info you may want (but probably don’t need). Enjoy!

Phones

Read – Alcatel OneTouch 910A
Read – Fujitsu F02D
Read – Fusion Garage Grid 4
Read – Haier HG-M508
Read – Haier HG-Q100
Read – HTC PH39100 (Holiday)
Read – Huawei C8512
Read – Huawei G5510
Read – Huawei U2801
Read – Huawei U5100
Read – Huawei U8350
Read – Huawei U8600
Read – Huawei U8800 Pro
Read – LG L-01D
Read – LG T565
Read – Mobo KRAZE
Read – Motorola P56MD2
Read – Motorola WX306
Read – Nokia 603
Read – Samsung GT-B5510
Read – Samsung GT-I8150
Read – Samsung GT-I9220
Read – Samsung GT-P6810
Read – Sony Ericsson Xperia Active
Read – Virgin Mobile JukeB

Tablets and peripherals

Read – Huawei E173Z-6 USB stick
Read – Samsung GT-7300B
Read – ZTE Smart Tab 7
Read – ZTE Smart Tab 10

FCC Fridays: September 30, 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 19:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pligg Celebrates 1 Year, Releases Spruced Up Beta 9

This article was written on December 18, 2006 by CyberNet.

Pligg You may have heard of Pligg before, many times referred to as the digg-clone (open source modular content management system).Yesterday they celebrated their one year anniversary and have released their Beta 9 with a huge list of new features, and a great new look.  Previously, their design was nothing to brag about.  The new Pligg has adopted a user-submitted theme which makes the new version look pretty slick, and really adds a lot to the site. So, here are some of the new features in the Beta 9:

  • Added a module system to easily delete features you don’t want
  • RSS Importer
  • Category Manager- allows for sub-categories
  • Table prefixes
  • 5 Star Rating System
  • Administrators can edit story URL
  • “Read more” link in story summaries
  • Added avatars to “who voted for this story”
  • Added discarded PHP to easily view discarded stories

New Modules:

  • Private messaging
  • Google Adsense Revenue Sharing
  • Embedded video for Google, Youtube, and Xoinks
  • Basic version checking
  • Site statistics
  • Random story
  • Ajax contact form

The new Google Adsense Revenue Sharing module is particularly interesting because it gives people an incentive to submit stories.  I can only imagine what Digg would be like if they implemented something similar. 

Users may add an Adsense ID and Adsense Channel (optional) to their account settings. If they set they’re Adsense ID, from that point forward, every time a story they posted is viewed, there’s a chance their ads are displayed. The optional Adsense Channel allows the user to track how many impressions and clicks their ads are getting through their Adsense account. You set the default revenue share percent for all users while implementing the mod, but after that, you may adjust any user’s revenue sharing percent through the user administration menu.

Check out their new demo site which shows off the new theme along with the new features. The embedded videos right within the post make a huge difference, and really stand out.  Similar to Digg, you can view the top stories from today, yesterday, this week, and this month.  Pligg also goes beyond categorizing posts, and also lets you tag them. Pligg is definitely worth checking out as it appears to be a viable platform that could be used to compete with Digg.

News Source: Digg

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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How the Kindle Fire Could Make 7-Inch Tablets Huge

The Amazon Kindle Fire demos an electronic version of Wired Magazine. Photo: Victor J. Blue/Wired.com

Steve Jobs made it clear what he thought of 7-inch tablets in October 2010. They’re “too small,” and as good as “dead on arrival.” But the announcement of and anticipation surrounding Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet may soon have Jobs eating his words.

If you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t heard the news, Amazon debuted its $200 7-inch tablet, the Kindle Fire, this week. Make no mistake: It’s no iPad. There’s no front-facing or rear-facing camera, and it’s only got 8 GB of storage.

But it’s not meant to be an iPad. It’s a completely different kind of tablet, designed for the pure consumer. That is, it’s designed for consumptive behavior: reading, listening to music, watching video content. The lack of local storage isn’t an issue, either; it’s meant to take advantage of the cloud with services like Amazon’s $80 yearly Prime service, as well as Amazon Cloud Drive. And the smaller form factor makes it extra portable, easy to whip out on the bus or the subway (much like a Kindle).

“With a 7-inch device, you can easily take your Kindle Fire with you and hold it in one hand for gaming and movie watching,” Amazon representative Kinley Campbell said via e-mail.

UX design consultant Greg Nudelman thinks that 7-inch tablets could become just as popular as larger 9.7 and 10.1-inch tablets, “but the types of applications and the context and length of use between might be very different.”

The iPad, although portable, is more difficult to manage with a single hand due to its larger size. And while it is certainly geared towards consumptive behavior, the iPad also strives to break the mobile-PC barrier by becoming a tool for creation, with programs like iMovie for iPad and GarageBand for iPad allowing users to produce content rather than just passively take it in. Whether it actually accomplishes that or not is subjective (some scoff at GarageBand’s limited capabilities), but it’s possible, and likely that more apps of this nature are in the pipeline (third-party produced or otherwise).

Amazon’s decision to debut a smaller-sized tablet was likely influenced by the players in the current tablet market. The 7-inch space has the least resistance, DisplaySearch’s Richard Shim says. Its direct competition is more likely to be the Barnes & Noble Nook Color, which also runs Android and touts a similar form factor, than Apple’s iPad.

That’s exactly what fueled Velocity, makers of the 7-inch Android-running Cruz tablet, to choose that size. “We wanted to avoid the head-to-head comparisons to the 10-inch iPad — ours is a very different product that goes after a different target customer,” marketing manager Josh Covington said.

The smaller size also allowed Amazon to more easily make a splash with a lower price point, something other 7-inch tablet manufacturers are going to have to mimic to stay competitive. Take HTC, which just dropped the price of its 7-inch Flyer tablet from an iPad-range $499 to a more affordable $299.

Samsung also jumped in on the hype, introducing its Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus on Friday. If Samsung can manage a similar price, the Kindle Fire could have another legitimate competitor.

And just in case it crosses your mind, a 7-inch tablet would not be something Apple would likely ever debut. Apple has been tremendously successful with its 9.7-inch iPad, which flew off shelves shortly after its debut and has continued solid sales since. Unless that changes for some reason, there isn’t a need for Apple to break out a smaller iPad, economically speaking.

It’s also not in Apple’s DNA. Since Steve Jobs jumped back on board with Apple in the late ’90s, Apple’s success has hinged on innovation, rather than riding on the heels of successful consumer reaction in markets it doesn’t have a presence in. Take the netbook market for example: Rather than releasing a netbook, Apple introduced the MacBook Air, and later of course, the iPad.

Part of what’s hindered the success of the 7-inch tablet, until now, is that they are perceived to be more like an over-sized mobile phone than a tablet, “and that appears to be the Achilles’ Heel of the mini-tablets,” Nudelman says.

But the genius of the Kindle Fire is that it’s more closely identified with Amazon’s popular e-reader line than with smartphones, so it has a clearly defined place within the user’s mind. And now that Amazon has made that distinction clear, other 7-inch tablet makers can at least attempt to capitalize on that extra portable, media-consumption angle, rather than marketing them against the iPad.

The Kindle Fire’s separation from both larger iPad-sized tablets and large-screened smartphones, both in size and in function, will help secure a solid niche for other 7-inch tablets to follow.


CyberNotes: Photoshop Mistakes…

This article was written on May 23, 2008 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Fun Friday

Today we bring you some of the worst (although we’re sure there’s even worse out there) Photoshop editing jobs out there. Most of the photos come from the Photoshop Disasters Blog which is definitely worth taking a look at…

Notice the extra hand? (Source)

photoshop mistakes 1.png

And yet another extra hand! (Source)

photoshop mistakes 2.png

Since when does the iPhone run XP? (Source)

photoshop disaster 3.png

A third arm… (Source)

photoshop mistakes 3.png

It’s a VT Remote (upside down) (Source)

photoshop mistakes 5-1.png

Born without a belly button? (Source)

photoshop mistake 7-1.png

Missing a head! (Source)

photoshop mistake 8.png

A few extra fingers and hands… (Source)

photoshop mistake 9.png

Ahh! A hand without an arm… (it made the front page of a newspaper) (Source)

photoshop mistake 9-1.png

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Pyramid-Shaped Tablet Makes Debut on The Office

The Office’s Dwight Schrute introduces a new tablet, The Pyramid. Image: NBC

On Thursday night’s episode of the NBC show The Office, viewers got a surprise laugh when character Dwight Schrute introduced us to Dunder Mifflin-Sabre’s new tablet, The Pyramid.

The unique three-sided tablet weighs in at “barely three pounds” without the optional battery back and memory booster. Without the booster, it has “50 L” of memory. I don’t imagine it features any cameras, dual-core processors or other fancy niceties. It does, however, sport a unique triangular shape that would make for a great desk corner paperweight or a terribly heavy boomerang.

If you missed it, you can watch the full episode on NBC’s website, or just check out the clip below.

Unleash the power of The Pyramid!


AT&T Begins Sending Throttling Warnings to Top Data Hogs

Following a trend set by other carriers, AT&T has begun sending SMS warning messages to the top 5 percent of unlimited data users on its network. The message alerts consumers that they are among AT&T’s top 5 percent that billing period, and suggests they use Wi-Fi to avoid reduced data speeds in the future.

Although it’s a pain to those affected, AT&T is being transparent about the issue, giving subscribers a chance to minimize their usage before getting their data speeds choked. Verizon began throttling users who consume a large amount of data, but didn’t initially reveal the policy to the public, describe how it would be implemented or describe if and how users would be notified.

It should be noted, however, that AT&T was the first carrier to introduce the tiered data plan structure to customers, setting the trend for other carriers to follow suit thereafter.

AT&T did away with its unlimited data plan shortly after the iPhone 4 debuted last summer, replacing it with a tiered data structure. However, many users are still grandfathered into the unlimited plan. For more recent subscribers, the most robust data option is a $25 per month 2 GB plan that allows you to go over that limit for $10 per extra GB. AT&T confirmed it would throttle the data speeds of the heaviest users remaining on the unlimited plan on its network in late July.

Verizon has a similar policy. The carrier will reduce data speeds “periodically for the remainder of your then current and immediately following billing cycle” if you fall within the top 5 percent of heavy data users. This is done in order to “ensure high quality network performance” for other users, especially in times and locations where there’s peak demand. According to a developer forum, Verizon will call and then send a letter to users who are about to get their data speeds throttled. Verizon eliminated its unlimited data plan in July and now offers 2 GB for $30/month, 5 GB for $50 monthly and 10 GB for $80 monthly.

T-Mobile offers an unlimited data plan that costs $100 per month, but throttles users who exceed 5 GB in a single billing cycle.

That leaves Sprint as the only carrier that still offers an unlimited data plan without any kind of throttling (unlimited data and minutes for $100/month), but the carrier does tack on a $10 “Premium Data” fee for smartphone owners. Sprint is rumored to begin carrying the iPhone this year, which would make it the only carrier to allow users an unlimited data plan with the popular phone.

Business analyst and Redditor Zaied Ali was one of the recipients of AT&T’s recent round of SMS alerts. He used between 11 and 12 GB of data this month, but normally averages around 6 GB to 7 GB. Ali thinks that AT&T’s throttling policy reduces the utility of his smartphone, since he has to think twice about how he uses his phone.

“What is the point of a Netflix app if we don’t have the back-end to fully support it?” Ali says.

Another Redditor, Skelatwork, amassed a similar level of data this billing period and received an SMS warning. Skelatwork said that he reached the 11 GB mark by listening to podcasts and Pandora on his commute to work. “I have signed a contract for an unlimited data package.  It’s my data, I’m going to use it however I please,” he says. 

A Wired.com poll of 11,000 data plan subscribers showed that 73 percent use less than 2 GB of data each month. Consumer Reports similarly found that the average iPhone user only gobbles 273 MB of data each month. So right now, the throttling issue is generally only affecting a small number of users.

As the use of cloud storage and streaming music and video services becomes more widespread, the issue of these data caps and speed throttling is likely to get more heated.

Updated October 3 at 10:44 AM to clarify that AT&T’s throttling policy only affects customers with unlimited data plans.

via Reddit

Image: TheReverendZ/Reddit


Windows Phone SDK 7.1 goes gold, seven new languages in tow

Mango developers across the globe now have reason to hunker down and bring their apps up to snuff for Windows Phone 7.5. Microsoft has released version 7.1 of its SDK, which means no more coding with beta tools. In addition to the handful of bug fixes and a final spit-shine to the tooling experience, coders will discover the software has been localized to support nine languages, which includes English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Spanish and Traditional Chinese. Redmond is also taking the opportunity to remind programmers that now is an excellent time to check into the App Hub and cross-submit applications into any additional markets where you wish to sell their wares. You’ve got the tools, folks, now it’s time to make it rain.

Windows Phone SDK 7.1 goes gold, seven new languages in tow originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 18:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The New Essential Apps September 2011

iPhones. iPads. Android. Windows Phone 7. We’ve updated all of our essential apps lists to include a few forgotten favorites, some long awaited arrivals and, as always, even more amazing apps. Check them out! More »