Wooshh – Cell C mobile broadband is here
Cell C officially launched their first 21 Mbps HSPA+ mobile broadband services in early September, offering the best mobile broadband prices ever seen in South Africa. Its prices are even competitive as compared to ADSL and other mobile broadband providers.
At launch Cell C offered clients two prepaid broadband packages:
- For R1,499 you will get a modem capable of speeds of up to 7.2Mbps and 2GB of data every month for a period of 12 months.
- For R2,999 you will get a modem capable of speeds of up to 21.6Mbps and 5GB of data every month for a period of 12 months.
The above packages including a
- a white Cell C branded USB Speed Stick
- a Cell C SIM card
Cell C has now complimented its prepaid pricing with accompanying twelve month contract offerings which are significantly cheaper than Vodacom, MTN and the newly launched 8ta.
- The first package offers a modem capable of speeds of up to 7.2Mbps and 2GB of data per month for R149 per month.
- The second package offers a modem capable of speeds of up to 21Mbps and 5GB of data per month for R299 per month.
The contract packages are likely to increase uptake of Cell C's newly launched mobile broadband offerings because it removes the barrier of entry associated with the prepaid packages without compromising much on price.
Cell C's R149 per month package for a modem and 2GB of data is significantly cheaper than Vodacom's R385 per month (for 24 months) for their 2GB broadband advanced service and MTN's R389 for the same offering.
Cell C's 5GB package for R299 is even more competitive when compared to Vodacom's R945 for a modem and 5GB of data.
For those who prefer to buy bundles, the pricing is as follows
| Bundle Size | Cost per bundle (incl.VAT) | Implied rate/MB (incl.VAT) | Validity |
| 100MB | R50 | R0.50 | 30 days |
| 250MB | R100 | R0.40 | 30 days |
| 500MB | R150 | R0.30 | 30 days |
| 1.2GB | R250 | R0.20 | 30 days |
| 3GB | R400 | R0.13 | 30 days |
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Year-End Review and Goal Setting
Yes, it's that time of the year again - time to begin closing the books, reviewing financials, assessing performance and taking a hard look at the bottom line. How did performance match up against your goals? Did your marketing campaigns produce results? What were the effects of any cost-cutting measures you put in place? Where did new revenue come from?
If you can't specifically answer these or similar questions, then your goal for the coming year is simple: Improve your analytics. At the end of the day (or week or month or year), it always comes down to metrics. I have always embraced Tom Peters thinking: "You cannot improve what you do not measure."
That seems like common sense; however, there are still too many businesses operating blindly - businesses that fail to measure anything but the bottom line. And the bottom line will not improve unless you are making sound and informed decisions about every facet of your operation. You cannot make informed decisions without analytics. It all comes down to the data.
Chances are data is collected at every turn in your organization. In fact, the problem can be too much data. Too much information often leads to analysis paralysis. However, the good news is that there are ways to convert that data into actionable information - information you can use to make informed decisions and make them at the exact time they'll do the most good.
In addition to being a time of review, the end of the year is also the time to plan for the future and set goals for the coming year. No matter what goal you set for your organization, your first one should be to establish its metrics. How are you going to measure it? Do not take one step until you decide exactly how you will measure your progress toward your destination. Increasing revenue or decreasing costs are obviously quantifiable and therefore, easily measured. Other goals may be less tangible, but that does not mean there are no metrics to track progress. A brainstorming session can lead to very creative, and sometimes out-of-the-box, measurements.
How you measure is not the critical issue. The fact that you do measure is... because anything that gets measured improves. So decide what you want to improve, set your goals, and then determine your metrics. With that formula, you'll enjoy the year-end review that occurs twelve months from now.
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Google TV launched
The web is now a channel.....
Google has announced a bid to dominate the television screen in the same way that it dominates the web – launching Google TV to software developers in San Francisco, the company set out its ambition to combine “the best of the web with the best of TV”.
Launching in America in the autumn, initially with manufacturers Sony and Logitech, Google TV will integrate video-on-demand services such as YouTube with conventional broadcasts. It will be available both built-in to new TV sets and as a set-top box, and will also offer a range of new services that run over the web. These include instant translation of subtitles into new languages, and the possibility of running applications, many of which have already proved a hit on mobile phones, on television screens. The service will be available in Europe next year.
Central to Google’s new plan is a new search box, which provides immediate access from the top of a TV screen to a users’ recordings, upcoming broadcasts and rental services. The company hopes that it will spell the end of the old fashioned TV guide that now struggles to cope with the hundreds of channels that are offered by satellite and cable TV services. Users of Google’s Android mobile phones will also be able to use the devices as remote controls, and speech recognition will also mean that they can speak into their mobile phones and use voice search to find programmes. Web services such as online photo storage and gaming will now, also, be available on TVs, with Google saying that it hoped the development would lead to more people viewing photographs taken with mobile phones on their TV screens.
In a presentation that was laced with jibes about Apple’s proprietary systems on the iPhone and iPad, Google also announced that its mobile phones will now support the Flash technology made by Adobe that is used on many websites but not currently supported by Apple. It will also now offer enhanced integration between mobile phones hardware, such as cameras, and web sites and online maps.
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Best broadband providers in South Africa
Ookla’s latest Net Index statistics shows which ISPs in the country give the
best broadband speeds
Speedtest.net has become
the de-facto standard to test broadband speeds across the world, and Ookla – the
company behind Speedtest.net – launched their Net Index, a site which publishes
results from their speed tests.
Ookla’s Net Index provides
a variety of services, including download and upload speed indexes, broadband
quality scores and rankings, assessing broadband pricing and providing broadband
value and promise stats.
One of the more interesting
statistics about South Africa is the ranking of Internet Service Providers
(ISPs) in South Africa according to download speed.
According to the results
from 184,442 Speedtest.net tests between 14 November 2010 and 13 December 2010,
Cell C is the best service provider with an average download speed of 4.62 Mbps.
Web Africa is second with 2.81 Mbps and Telkom third with 2.54 Mbps.
The following table
provides an overview of the top ISPs in the country according to Ookla’s Net
Index.
|
SA's
Top ISPs according to Ookla's Net Index |
|
| Service Provider |
Average Download Speed |
| Cell C | 4.62 Mbps |
| Web Africa | 2.81 Mbps |
| Telkom | 2.54 Mbps |
| Internet Solutions |
2.53 Mbps |
| Vodacom | 2.38 Mbps |
| MWEB Connect | 2.11 Mbps |
| MTN NS | 1.88 Mbps |
MyBroadband
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BlackBerry PlayBook landing as soon as February?
Research In Motion may be planning to release the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet as early as late February.
Edel Ebbs, RIM's vice president of investor relations, said yesterday in its fiscal third-quarter earnings call that "no PlayBook revenues [are] included in our Q4 guidance, and we expect the first revenue impact from PlayBook to be in RIM's first quarter." His quote comes from a call transcript published on SeekingAlpha.
Ebbs also noted that RIM's tablet will impact the company's operating expenses on "development, marketing, and launch preparation activities" in its fiscal fourth quarter.
RIM's fiscal fourth quarter ends on February 26, potentially giving it a small window to release the tablet at the end of that month. If not, the PlayBook will likely be released before the end of May.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/business-tech/#ixzz18SGKx5oQ
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All about USB 3.0
Electronics are just getting faster and faster...
This article covers the new skills digital engineers will need to acquire, and explores possible compliance issues related to spread-spectrum clocking. Also covered is how higher speeds will affect transmitter, receiver and cabling system testing. Also discussed is the importance of digital standards and the critical role of measurement expertise in enabling interoperability.
USB is ubiquitous. According to Intel, more than 6-billion USB products have been shipped to date. That's almost enough to equip every man, woman and child on the planet. As if that weren't enough, with the performance enhancements in USB 3.0, the technology is likely to send other interfaces to the sidelines and accelerate its market penetration.
The new USB 3.0 standard (SuperSpeed USB) defines data transfer technology that is ten times faster than USB 2.0. The added speed will open the door for a new round of consumer products and bring smiles to the faces of consumers who want to transfer videos to their smart phones. The higher-speed standard was driven by consumer demand, and from an end-user perspective, it is largely evolutionary.
However, evolutionary does not mean "ho-hum." With a data rate of 5 Gbps and data throughput capability of greater than 200 MBs, the USB 3.0 interface is shaking up the data transfer world. It is faster than eSATA and FireWire, and it is likely to push these interfaces to the brink of extinction.
While PCI Express interfaces are internal buses, adapters are available that let you use this technology to transfer data from one PC to another. With the performance enhancements in USB 3.0, you can forego the adapters and transfer your data with the throughput you would get from using PCI Express. This is not to say USB 3.0 will replace PCI Express technologies –all shipping USB 3.0 hosts are currently PCI Express cards – but it highlights that USB 3.0 transfer rates give engineers in-the-box performance with a technology designed from the ground up for out-of-the-box applications.
The USB 3.0 standard is also shaking up the status quo in engineering labs. USB 3.0 architecture is fundamentally different from USB 2.0. It has a PHY layer – driven by the speed requirements – very similar to PCI Express technology. So engineers who are experts at testing and debugging USB 2.0 technology need to learn new skills. Also, at 3.0 speeds, engineers who are steeped in the digital world have to deal with microwave effects, and they usually have no experience in the microwave realm. Digital designers now have to deal with signal path routing and impedance control, which are critical design requirements for USB 3.0. Receiver design is an order of magnitude more difficult because of the need to implement complex PLLs and active receiver equalization.
One of the biggest changes designers face is the requirement to include spread-spectrum clocking (SSC) in all USB 3.0 products. SSC is required to overcome or reduce EMI issues. For device silicon, it is difficult to implement well-controlled SSC modulation for low-cost designs.
Some motherboards improperly implement centre-spread SSC clocking, which violates the USB 3.0 specification requirements. Centre-spread profiles are centered on the nominal frequency and are modulated above and below by equal amounts, for example +2500/-2500?ppm. Most USB 3.0 devices are not compatible with systems that improperly implement center-spread SSC. When consumers purchase host add-in cards and add them to a system that has a noncompliant system clock, they will be disappointed.
Device vendors have identified ways to work around this issue, for example by turning off SSC. The longer-term solution is to get system vendors to ensure they follow the SSC specification requirements for PCI Express and USB 3.0. For this reason it is important to address this issue within both the PCI Express community and the USB-IF compliance program.
Further complicating the task of designing USB 3.0-compliant devices is the standard's backward compatibility requirement. As the USB standard has evolved, its data rates jumped from 1,5 Mbps and 12 Mbps (USB 1.1) to 480 Mbps (USB 2.0), and now to 5 Gbps (USB 3.0). Because each variant of USB has its own compliance test specification, the coexistence of different data rates and signal levels significantly increases device complexity and test requirements but allows backwards compatibility that gives consumers the flexibility to mix and match peripherals with different speeds and throughput rates. This flexibility is one of the major advantages of USB.
The ten-fold increase in data rate in the USB 3.0 standard also creates new challenges in testing the transmitter, receiver and cabling system. To test SuperSpeed transmitter compliance and channel effect, engineers need a high-bandwidth oscilloscope to measure the transmitted waveform using compliance patterns. Because of the very long channel topologies allowed for USB 3.0, engineers are required to test transmitter and receiver compliance through the long channel. This means they will be testing their PHY characteristics through 3 m of cable and an additional length of PCB trace, 5" for the host and 11" for devices.
The goal, of course, is for the engineer's USB 3.0 product to pass the compliance tests to ensure electrical interoperability. However, passing compliance tests with one or more samples of a product is no guarantee that under different conditions or for different process corners, the product will still have no problems. Margin testing provides the additional confidence designers need.
Test and measurement companies like Agilent are critical to the testing process. We provide the instruments to ensure engineers can characterise their components and devices according to the standard. In many cases, we also help them with the methodology for conducting their tests. We not only sell a box, we also help them characterise their devices in the best and most efficient way.
To sell a complete characterisation solution, we need to understand the specification intimately. Because Agilent is a contributing member of the USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF), we not only understand the specification, we help shape it.
This new USB 3.0 standards will enable significant increases in performance in a bevy of electronic devices.
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Google Nexus S
Google's spanking-new smartphone--made by Samsung and available at Best Buy--packs widely used components like a SanDisk 16GB NAND flash module and a baseband processor--used for 3G--from Infineon, according to teardown virtuoso iFixit. (Note that Intel is in the process of acquiring Infineon's wireless business unit so that would technically put Intel inside the phone.)
The Nexus S is cut from the same cloth as the Samsung Galaxy S, boasting many of the same hardware specs, according to iFixit. Departures from the Galaxy S include NFC (Near Field Communication) support--for exchanging data between devices over very short distances--and a Super AMOLED display.
iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens, however, takes Google/Samsung to task for a feature he believes could be construed as a little misleading. "We feel the phone's curved glass is more of a gimmick than anything else," Wiens wrote in a note sent out Thursday. "Our teardown reveals that only the glass itself is curved, but that the LCD and touch screen are just as flat as any phone's. Although Google/Samsung technically doesn't lie on their site--they clearly mention a curved glass panel, not curved LCD--we still find their 'Contour Display' name a bit misleading," according to Wiens. (A CNET Review also cited this feature as a bit gimmicky.)
Other highlights from iFixit:
Display: The Super AMOLED (Active-Matrix Organic Light-Emitting Diode) display eliminates the digitizer and integrates the capacitive touch sensors into the display though the display itself is as "flat as a board, just as any other phone on the market," according to iFixit.
Processor: a S5PC110A01 1GHz Cortex A8 Hummingbird Processor based on an ARM design. 1GHz processors have become the norm for high-end smartphones, though higher-speed dual-core processors are expected next year.
Memory: Main system memory is supplied by Samsung, while the flash memory for storage is from SanDisk. The SanDisk flash uses multi-level-cell, or MLC, technology. MLC allows flash chipmakers to increase data density at a lower cost.
3G: An Infineon 8824 XG616 X-Gold baseband processor and a Skyworks SKY77529 Tx Front-End Module for Dual-Band GSM/GPRS/EDGE.
Audio: a Wolfson Microelectronics WM8994 ultra-low power audio codec.
Battery: a 1500 mAh, 3.7 V, 5.55 Watt-hour Lithium ion cell provides up to 6.7 hours of talk time on a 3G network, and up to 14 hours on a 2G network. "That's slightly higher than the 1400 mAh and 1420 mAh battery ratings of the Nexus One and iPhone 4, respectively," according to iFixit.
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Blu-ray disc production on the rise
Blu-ray is poised to cement its position in the entertainment space.
This year, worldwide "pre-recorded" Blu-ray disc production is expected to reach more than 400 million units, representing a 60 percent increase over 2009 production, research firm Futuresource announced today. But that figure will pale in comparison to Blu-ray shipments just a few years from now.
Futuresource said that in 2014, it expects 2 billion Blu-ray discs to be shipped worldwide.
Much of the growth in the Blu-ray market is due to "growing player ownership and falling disc prices," Futuresource senior consultant Michael Boreham said in a statement. Boreham also said that increasing Blu-ray popularity is helping to drive more "copy depth" in retail stores.
However, it's the prospect of 3D that could play an integral role in the popularity of Blu-ray going forward.
Fiona Hoy, a market analyst at Futuresource, said in a statement that "3D is ideally suited" to Blu-ray, and starting in 2012, the analyst believes there will be "very strong demand for 3D content, which will fuel additional [Blu-ray sales] growth."
Futuresource's prediction wasn't arbitrarily decided. Reports surfaced earlier this week, claiming Panasonic would hold the exclusive rights to the 3D Blu-ray version of "Avatar" through February 2012. After that time, the film will be made available as a standalone product. Futuresource said "Avatar" is already boosting demand for 3D Blu-ray content, indicating that it could have sizable impact on the market after Panasonic's exclusivity deal ends.
As successful as Blu-ray is expected to be in the coming years, the technology it's replacing, DVD, won't have the same luck.
Research firm In-Stat released a study recently that found total disc sales are expected to drop by $4.6 billion between 2009 and 2014. The research firm confirmed that Blu-ray sales will increase over that period, but they won't grow enough to offset the significant sales declines of DVD.
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Free Internet/Wi-Fi with MacBooks
WirelessG and South Africa’s official Apple distributor, Core Group, have partnered to offer all purchasers of a new MacBook, MacBook Pro or MacBook Air device free Wi-Fi access to the value of 1GB per month for 12 consecutive months at any of the 1,800 WirelessG Wi-Fi hotspots in South Africa.
WirelessG is the company behind G-Connect, South Africa’s first fully converged pre-paid Internet product.
“Based on the successful Apple iPod Touch/G-Connect partnership and the substantial hike in demand for both the Apple iPod touch and G-Connect broadband services, the decision was made to extend our joint venture campaigns to the Apple Macbook devices. The bundling of G-Connect broadband services and the Apple MacBook and iPod devices are purely driven by user experiences relating to value for money, quality and reliability offered by both brands,” says Carel van der Merwe, CEO of WirelessG.
“The offer provides all official MacBook purchasers with free Wi-Fi for a year, where users can also purchase additional 3G and ADSL access from a single online G-Connect account. The offer also includes full time support and 24/7 standby assistance to Apple Macbook customers” says van der Merwe.
“When the opportunity presented itself to partner and offer our customers another great promotion bundled with ’go virtually anywhere’ G-Connect Wi-Fi access, we knew they would be getting the full Apple mobility and connectivity experience straight out the box,” says Rutger-Jan van Spaandonk, executive director at Core Group.
G-Connect Wi-Fi access can be topped up at competitive rates, and users can also get access to the full collection of G-Connect connectivity options ranging from 3G to Wi-Fi and ADSL. There are no contracts and Internet access is pre-paid.
This offer is valid nationwide when purchasing an Apple laptop at an iStore, Project 3 or Digicape.
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Time Magazine: Person of the Year
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been named as Time magazine's Person of the Year for 2010 because of his influence on news trends and culture.
Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been named Time's “Person of the Year” for 2010, joining the ranks of winners that include heads of state and rock stars as the person the magazine believes most influenced events of the past year.
New York - Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been named Time's “Person of the Year” for 2010, joining the ranks of winners that include heads of state and rock stars as the person the magazine believes most influenced events of the past year.
At 26, Zuckerberg is the youngest “Person of the Year” since the first one chosen, Charles Lindbergh; he was 25 when he was named in 1927, Time said on Wednesday. Zuckerberg beat out Britain's Queen Elizabeth II by just two weeks: She was 26 when she was named in 1952.
Incidentally, Queen Elizabeth II has recently joined Zuckerberg's social networking behemoth.
Time's “Person of the Year” is the person or thing that has most influenced the culture and the news during the past year for good or for ill. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke received the honour last year. The 2008 winner was then-president-elect Barack Obama. The 2007 winner was Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. Other previous winners have included Bono, President George W. Bush, and Amazon.com CEO and founder Jeff Bezos.
In naming Zuckerberg, Time cited him “for changing how we all live our lives”.
In a posting on his Facebook page, Zuckerberg said on Wednesday that being named Time's “Person of the Year” was “a real honour and recognition of how our little team is building something that hundreds of millions of people want to use to make the world more open and connected. I'm happy to be a part of that.”
Zuckerberg has put himself on the map not only as one of the world's youngest billionaires, but also as a prominent newcomer to the world of philanthropy.
Earlier this year, he pledged $100-million over five years to the Newark, New Jersey, school system. Now, he's in the company of media titans Carl Icahn Barry Diller and others who have joined Giving Pledge, an effort led by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and investor Warren Buffett to commit the country's wealthiest people to step up their charitable donations.
Zuckerberg owns about a quarter of Facebook's shares.
Zuckerberg has built Facebook into an international phenomenon by stretching the lines of social convention and embracing a new and far more permeable definition of community. In this new world, users are able to construct a social network well beyond what would ever be possible face-to-face.
“I'm trying to make the world a more open place,” Zuckerberg says in the “bio” line of his own Facebook page.
Born in Zuckerberg's Harvard dorm room, the site has in six years grown to more than 500-million users worldwide and a dollar worth in the billions.
Facebook was the subject of director David Fincher and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin's film The Social Network. It features a dark portrayal of Zuckerberg by Jesse Eisenberg, as well as the direction he's taking his company and his status as one of America's most influential figures.
The film has been picked as the best of the year by the New York Film Critics Circle, the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Board of Review. On Tuesday, it received six Golden Globe nominations, including best picture, drama, going up against its chief rival, the British monarchy tale The King's Speech, which led with seven nominations. - Sapa-AP
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