Verizon is unveiling the new Blackberry Storm on Friday, the phone costing $199 with a two-year contract and a $50 mail-in rebate. Reviews are rolling in, and seem to be scattered across the board, though trending slightly toward the negative. PC World calls the device "awkward and disappointing," noting that the device's click-touch screen is "more confusing than helpful" and a "failed experiment." Engadget seems to think the device is beautiful, but notes that the Storm is "not as easy, enjoyable, or consistent to use as the iPhone," and the unit's trademark click screen "just isn't all that great." Additional reviews ( Boy Genius, CNET, Associated Press, Wired) all suggest the Storm is close, but no cigar. 20 comments story continues..46 comments Last week a Washington Post reporter managed to take down McColo, a California-based host thought to host a handful of botnets responsible for roughly 75% of the world's spam, as well as being a host for anti-malware scams, child porn websites and child porn payment data. The Post (via Techdirt) now has a follow up report that suggests McColo came online briefly last weekend so that Russian criminals could transfer data and regain some control over botnets. Swedish telco TeliaSonera quickly pulled the plug on McColo's new data pipe when notified. However, they were online long enough for spammers to regain 10,000 to 15,000 of an estimated 100,000 infected PCs. 10 comments
Wednesday Evening Links07:02PM Wednesday Nov 19 2008 by Revcb9 comments According to the latest report by broadband stat farm Point Topic, the total number of global broadband users just passed 400 million, and is expected to reach 680 million by 2013. The report notes that in five years, China will be well ahead of the U.S. story continues..18 comments Outfits like Wired Magazine spent much of the nineties predicting intelligent refrigerators that would know when they were empty; washing machines that would call you when something was wrong; remote wireless sensors that would start the oven, open your garage door, and turn on the lights when they detected you arriving home after a busy day at the office. But the bursting of the dot-com bubble resulted in talk of smart homes being put on the shelf for a while. story continues..31 comments As expected, Microsoft today unveiled their new revamped GUI for their Xbox 360 gaming console. Dubbed the " new Xbox experience, (NXE)" the most notable update for broadband users is the ability to stream Netflix films. You'll need to be an Xbox Live Gold member and Netflix subscriber to take advantage of the 10000 SD and 300HD programs Netflix is offering via the gaming console. Some content is missing -- MTV noting that films from Columbia Pictures, which is owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment, are locked down in a licensing dispute. Meanwhile, the Netflix Blog discusses the technical specifics of their streaming service. 65 comments After months of contentious debate, it looks like Canadian regulators are poised to finally rule on the dispute between Bell Canada and independent ISPs tomorrow. According to the CBC, the CRTC will issue their ruling tomorrow morning, after delaying their decision twice. Earlier this year, Bell Canada began throttling the traffic of wholesale competitors before delivering it to them, and without telling them. While Bell claimed the move was to handle congestion, follow up inquiries showed little to no congestion -- leading to the assumption that Bell simply didn't want any competitors offering DSL service that was superior to their own, throttled Sympatico service. 26 comments AT&T and the State of Connecticut haven't exactly been getting along. The State has angered the powerful telco by requiring AT&T U-Verse adhere to cable franchise law (a fight AT&T won), requiring AT&T grant homeowner consent before plunking bulky U-Verse VRADs down in front of customer homes, and via CT Attorney General Richard Blumenthal's ongoing investigation into poor AT&T customer service in the state. story continues..35 comments The FCC recently began investigating the TV pricing of several large cable operators and Verizon (but not AT&T), though we've discussed how the inquiry might be a little hollow, and ignores the FCC's own failed policies. While most carriers responded in detail regarding concerns that carriers were bumping channels into costlier digital tiers, Comcast apparently phoned in their response, according to MultiChannel News. Federal Communications Commission Kevin Martin on Tuesday suggested that Comcast is looking at a fine as punishment for filing an incomplete response to the agency's investigation into the movement of analog channels to digital tiers. "They didn't even answer the questions directly. They had a narrative but they didn't even answer the specifics of the questions directly," Martin said, referring to Comcast. Of course Comcast is already appealing the FCC's toothless sanction for throttling P2P traffic, and is eagerly anticipating Martin's exit under an Obama administration. However, it's unlikely that they're going to like the new FCC boss (whoever it is) any more, given that those in charge of selecting him (or her) are very pro-consumer. 22 comments Microsoft announced that they'd be discontinuing their OneCare security suite, a subscription service that includes anti-virus, anti-spyware and firewall functionality. Replacing OneCare will be a free service code-named "Morro" that will include protection from viruses, spyware, rootkits and trojans. According to a Microsoft press release, the new product will drop in the second half of 2009. While the release claims Microsoft is interested in increasing the protection rates in non-developed countries with less broadband, McAfee tells CNET that two years after its release, Microsoft's paid offering only managed to net a 2% market share. The OneCare blog has a FAQ for impacted subscribers. 37 comments Harvard Law Professor Charles R. Nesson, the founder of Harvards Berkman Center for Internet and Society, is suing the RIAA for their scorched earth legal tactics against file traders. story continues..75 comments
Wednesday Morning Links08:27AM Wednesday Nov 19 2008 by Revcb3 comments
Tuesday Evening Links07:01PM Tuesday Nov 18 2008 by Revcb6 comments For a few years, Autonet Mobile has been promoting their in-car Wi-Fi hotspot, which uses a Sprint wireless broadband connection (kind of a 3G EVDO Wi-Fi MVNO 4x4, you dig?) to provide connectivity on the go. Their Wi-Fi router has shown up via a few scattered rental agencies at the rock bottom price of $10.95 per day, but the device seemed to be in a perpetual state of "coming soon" when it comes to direct purchase via the product website. story continues..20 comments Sprint's battle with a midwest CDMA affiliate named iPCS probably isn't what the struggling carrier needs right now. Just last week iPCS managed to force Sprint to shutter their Nextel network in eighty one markets where iPCS operates. Earlier this year iPCS also filed suit to stop Sprint's plan to create a national mobile WiMax business, aka New-Super-Mega-Ultra Clearwire. This week an Illinois court blocked iPCS's effort, though Telephony Online reports the fight is far from over, and iPCS could block deployment in any of their markets such as Grand Rapids, Michigan. 26 comments If you had any doubts that cable has been beating up the telcos a bit the last few quarters, the latest data from Leichtman Research should eliminate them. According to Leichtman, the twenty largest cable and telephone providers in the US representing about 94% of the market acquired approximately 1.3 million net additional high-speed Internet subscribers in the third quarter of 2008. Of those 1.3 million new customers, cable operators added 870,000, or 67% of them in the third quarter. "Over the past two quarters the top cable providers accounted for 71% of the net broadband additions, adding over 900,000 more broadband subscribers than the top telcos," says Bruce Leichtman. 51 comments User Kayrac  writes in to note that to celebrate the fifteenth anniversary of Checkpoint Software, the company is offering, just for today, a free copy of their normally $20 ZoneAlarm Pro software package (download link here). Checkpoint Software purchased the popular Zone Alarm firewall back in 2003 for a cool $205 million, causing some consternation around these parts as to whether the product quality would decline. Whether that happened depends on who you ask ( strange glitches do seem more common), but hey -- free is free. Perhaps it's time for our obligatory bi-yearly discussion about the best software firewalls in the comment section below. 75 comments The Obama camp has pegged two long-time net neutrality advocates to head up their Federal Communications Commission Review team, according to Wired. One is Wharton professor Kevin Werbach (see his CircleID articles), who was a former FCC staffer, and is organizer of the annual tech conference Supernova. story continues..198 comments Last December, UK telco British Telecom called running fiber to the home " premature," instead opting to milk copper for a little longer (like a few baby bells we know here in the States). Then last July, the telco stated that barring "regulatory certainty" (industry code for government doing exactly what the phone company tells them to) they'd be spending $3 billion to offer a combination of both fiber to the node (FTTN) and fiber to the home (FTTH) technology at speeds up to 100Mbps. story continues..4 comments ·more stories, story search, most popular ..
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