Category: Technology

Sometimes its good to know how to do something!

  • 2 Year Warranty On 10 Year Passport

    RFID Passport TagYou’ve got to hand it to Home Office in the UK or whoever it is that looks after passports – a two year warranty on the new passport chips isn’t exactly great going now is it, considering that most people hold a ten year passport? Think the government are going to start shelling out for new passports if the chips start to go faulty? Unlikely…

    They are so new, no-one knows how long they will last, or how the scanners reading them will work

    (Via)

  • Free Phone Calls Now From Ireland – Thanks Pat

    Just wondering Pat – you don’t happen to have a deal with Red Bull or anything? Must take some energy to launch a few business ventures within weeks of each other – AllFreeCalls.net, Roam4Free and now AllFreeCalls.ie!

    Had picked up on word of the launch during the week and I guess now that it’s out on the Roam4Free blog the news is all official – AllFreeCalls will launch this coming week in Ireland, followed in two weeks by a UK launch. Not only that, but there are 70 destinations plugged into the Irish service. This, I’m definitely looking forward to seeing.

    See my original post for details on AllFreeCalls.net or check the links above.

  • Mobile Phones To Be Banned At Open Championship

    Via the BBC comes news that mobile phones will be banned from the course at the Open Championship this year, following suit with many other golfing and sporting events from 2006. Mobiles were banned at the Ryder Cup in Kildare last year so Irish visitors to the event won’t be strange to the new procedures to be put in place yet it will be interesting to see if there is a knock on effect at other sporting events (soccer, GAA, snooker etc).

    One of the main reasons is down to photos and video footage leaking to the press and the web before authorised journalists have a chance to get their content back to their respective papers. You can’t deny the power of the internet for too long though…

  • Mobile Rights For Women

    Ina has an interesting piece of mobile news looking at women in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa who are being encouraged to use mobile phones to report violations of their human rights.

    Interesting stuff…

  • 3 To Cut Roaming Charges

    3.gifMobile operator 3 have announced that they are to cut all international roaming charges with the unveiling of ‘3 Like Home’, a new package designed to allow existing 3 customers make use of their personal mobile plans when visiting another 3 network abroad.

    What this means – and I’m hoping O2 follow suit – is that you can use your existing minutes and texts bundled with your price plan when you’re out foreign, as if you were on your home network. Charges to receive mobile calls will be wiped and text messages will be charged again as if you’re on your home network.

  • Have You Silenced Your XBOX 360?

    Just wondering, has anyone who reads my posts by any means made any attempt in the past to silence or at least reduce their noise output of their XBOX 360? That or would you know someone (directly) who has gone through the process? A few cups of coffee last night before recording the latest Sound System Podcast brought us around to discussing the noise output of the 360 and how it might be tackled, similar means to reducing noise output to PC cases etc.

    So, if you have made any attempt to reduce the noise output of the 360 I’d be interested to hear what you’ve got to say…

  • Free Phone Calls From The USA

    Pat Phelan has launched All Free Calls…nice going.

    We do not charge you anything to make this call. Because the access number is an Iowa based number, your phone plan will dictate how much it will cost you to call Iowa. Since most phone plans include free long distance, your call is most likely free!

    In three easy looking steps (so long as you’re living in the USA) you can dial a rake of countries for free. If you’ve got relatives living in the US that like to phone home often then this could be the perfect solution for them, especially if they get good rates on phone Iowa or even free long-distance phone calls (depending on your given price plan).

    Kudos 🙂

  • Kiss Goodbye To Cingular

    Cingular WirelessPeople familiar with the US mobile market (including those of you now tracking that Apple iPhone) will be familiar with the name ‘Cingular’ as the wireless mobile network. Well, Cingular is to be no more now that AT&T have announced they plan to scrap the brand, instead moving all their mobile activities under the parent AT&T brand. Nothing like a bit of denormalisation to make things work in your favour.

    Cingular is the largest wireless carrier in the US with over 58m subscribers.

  • Campfire Does The Trick

    CampfireThere’s three of us in the office and we’re all sitting within swinging distance of each other day in, day out. If we’re getting into brain storming sessions, we fire everything down on paper but after a while these important sessions can get lost. So, I spent a bit of time looking for some handy groupware software (free / open source) but couldn’t find anything to my liking that could be hosted on our local server. That in turn lead to a suggestion to try Campfire. All I needed was something that would work in real time, without the need for everyone involved to keep refreshing their screens or all saving in turns to the one document.

    GoogleTalk is used in the office between the three of us but it doesn’t allow for group chat. Skype was an option but wasn’t too easily accessible from every location. Campfire on the other hand allowed the three of us to “chat” away for the afternoon. By “chat” of course we were simply using it to fire down ideas. The transcripts of each session are then saved to your Campfire account and accessible by whoever you grant permission to (namely the three of us). Since there are only three of us using it as well we fall into their free user category which suits us down to the ground.

    I log in tonight and there’s been some new additions by Aidan to the transcripts, which is perfect. Someone gets an idea, fires it into the room and its there for everyone to see when they log back in. You can post away to the room on your own and everything you post is saved and archived. Not only that but images are shared and used in real time, files can be uploaded and shared (up to a 10mb limit) also.

    It is the real-time aspect of it though that impresses most. Having only gotten into it today (bar having a previous familiarity with Grouphub through another project) I can certainly see it becoming a very handy tool in the office and would suggest it to anyone looking for something similar.

  • Good Quality From The Oireachtas

    I missed the coverage yesterday but currently have the Joint Committee on Communications, Marine and Natural Resources hearings on the Proposed Broadcasting Bill playing on one of the machines in the office, streaming their broadband feed through Real Player 10 and I’ve got to say, the quality is highly impressive, even at a near full-screen size.

    My interest this morning of course triggered through reaction and feedback from yesterday’s talks in relation to the TV license as it stands now and plans to adapt and modify it to enclose mobile streaming media and the internet.

    If you’re interested, catch the stream here. Bless those massive high-speed Heanet connections…

  • TV License To Cover Internet In Ireland

    The Oireachteas Committe on Broadcasting has been meeting today and at an early stage feedback looks like the TV license is about to evolve in Ireland to encompass the internet, mobile streaming and media and “websites like YouTube” (according to RTE).

    Television is now much more than a ‘box in the corner’, and the concept of a TV licence fee may have to be changed to include developments like mobile phone streaming and websites like YouTube, an Oireachtas committee has been told.

    Not only that, but Ronan Coy (technology expert ) has been quoted as bringing internet-based tv stations and video blogging into the equation as well. Now we’ve to pay to watch clips on video blogs? Where does that leave the likes of BalconyTV? Or down the line the online video development behind KilkennyMusic.com (which I picked up some grant funding for during the week – my thanks to Kilkenny Borough Council on that note). License fees for PC monitors, the use of a video capture card?

    From CitizensInformation.ie

    If your household, business or institution possesses a television or equipment capable of receiving a television signal, you are required by law to have a television licence. Even if the television or other equipment is broken and currently unable to receive a signal, it is regarded as capable of being repaired so it can receive a signal and you must hold a licence for it.

    Last time I heard, TV3 was a license-free station meaning that we’re paying the 158 quid TV license for the divine joy of rubbish acting in Fair City and a handful of other programs. There’s nothing at present, in my mind, to seriously justify paying an ever increasing license fee without a match in services to match.

    I thought the same about the phone and figure that seen as I’m a bill-paying customer of O2 along with the rest of my family, the house phone has become pretty redundant so Eircom can kiss goodbye to their line rental (we still pay line rental to Eircom albeit we’re customers of Chorus – hurry up and unbundle the lot!). As for making landline calls I’m pushing to bring in a VOIP option to the house with a closed wireless network covering all the rooms.

    As it is, the TV in the sitting room is used for DVDs, the TV in my own room used for DVDs and some gaming – everything else comes online. Stream the odd video, download the odd video. If there’s TV on, the liklihood is that TV3 is on to catch a bit of Emmerdale while cooking the dinner during the week – if you’re in the office from 8:30am to 6pm at a minimum (as we all are) then we get the joy of missing the rubbish pumped out in the afternoon. Remember ‘The Afternoon Show’? Good Jesus….

    Does anyone think that RTE should be made optional? Or that you could pay your TV license based on the number of TV channels you receive? We’ve got a big property in Sligo but the TV reception is actually non existant where we are. Are there exceptions to the matter if you can pick up TV3 but you physically can’t pick up RTE / Network 2 without forking out for a dish or a huge roof aerial? (Update: actually, refer to the above quote from Oasis, if its possible to get a signal by some means I guess you’ve got to do it) Next thing you know we’ll have to pay a license fee on mobile phones (already in Germany), radio license for the car and beyond. As for having a TV license to cover EVERY TV set, is that rule still in place?

    Whatever the outcome of the Oireachtas talks I’m hoping that they seriously don’t consider bringing the internet into the TV license. Spells bad news for us gadget fans…

  • Ideal Business Phone In The Nokia E60?

    Gordon Smith over at Silicon Republic has a nice product review of the cameraless Nokia E60. If you’re looking for a strict business phone and don’t need any of the frilly extras offered by more mainstream then the E60, retailing at around E450 sim-free might be right up your street.

    Speaking of which I’ve been meaning to upgrade my own business phone, the ole Nokia 6230i has been serving me well for the past 18 months but its time to start looking for a new model 🙂

  • Looking At The iPhone

    So today has been a day of some serious announcements for Steve Jobs and Apple, in particular the often-rumoured-never-realised iPhone – which has been made official. The little beauty (pictured below) will run OS X, integrates completely with iTunes, iCal and any other iApplication that the Mac can throw at it.

    While the MacWorld expo goes on in San Francisco, The Unofficial Apple Weblog has some good pics and stats on the iPhone. There are some interesting points to note – especially the wifi availability along with the usual bluetooth / gsm / edge etc. Looks like its just Cingular network bound, no mention of sim-free purchase option yet. As for prices you’ll be looking at $499 for the 4GB model, subject to a minimum contract conditions set by the network.

    Update: Its going to be shipping from June with Apple looking to shift 10m units by the end of 2008. Not a bad goal…

  • Live Blogging The MacWorld Conference

    Cheers to Keith for the headsup but MacRumors.com are live blogging Steve Jobs’ keynote address at the MacWorld con out in San Francisco and reading through everything there’s some massive developments being announced. Might be worth noting that the Apple store is currently offline so they can fill it with all the new goodies as they’re announced.

    Apple iPhone

    Apple iPhone running OS X anyone?

    Engadget are also running full coverage with big photos like the one from above (hosted on kenmc.com, couldn’t go robbing bandwidth now could we?)

  • Video Preview Of Windows Mobile 6

    Via… This video will take you through some of the menus and sounds, runs to almost 4 minutes.

    To be honest, looks an awful lot like Windows Mobile 5 and not overly removed from its previous iteration either.

  • Bloody Typical

    You go off and buy an Xbox and all of a sudden they’re ringing the changes

    On the cards…

    • New 65nm Processor
    • HDMI Port (full 1080p resolution)
    • New 120GB hard drive 🙂

    We’ll just have to accessorise all the way so!

  • Choose The Right Mobile Tariff

    According to Fool.co.uk, figures released from the Carphone Warehouse show that mobile users waste UK£30bn every single year, simply because people are on the wrong price-plans.

    It is only within the last three months that I’ve changed over to a post-pay setup and that is was after seven years as a pre-pay customer. Now, its not to say that you’re ‘wasting’ money of your own free will, but just that you could possibly be saving yourself a few quid a month by really looking at your price plan and your monthly – which of course, is always good.

    The article ts slightly geared more towards the UK market given the sterling prices, if you’re looking for a currency converter you can’t go wrong with XE.com. Sounds like a cheesy ad, I know. But if you’re curious about your price plan and want to look at things on a nice, basic, understandable level then give this a read.

  • 50K Mobile Bill For Movie Downloads

    It seems like a 30 year old male resident of Bergamo, Italy, also a subscriber to Vodafone’s ‘Connect 600’ plan on the Italian market has been hit with a mobile bill for just over 50,000 Euro for data downloads. While he assumed that his high priced plan allowed him unlimited data downloads in the month, he would leave his computer on for the night and download the odd movie, likely at around the 700mb mark (as movies go).

    What he should have done was read the small print – the 600 in ‘Connect 600’ standing for 600mb, every TWO months. Extra bandwidth is charged per kilobyte after that.

    Not the kind of phone bill you want after the Christmas period now, is it?

  • Vodafone Hit For 42m Calls And Texts In Two Days

    vodafone.jpgChristmas Day and New Year’s Eve marked a bumper pay for Vodafone this Christmas season as they registered a nice 42 million voice calls and text messages for just those two days alone in the festive season. Softpedia also reports that ‘Fairytale Of New York’, which has to be the country’s favourite Christmas tune, was the most downloaded song for the Christmas period as well.

    Interesting to see what the stats from O2 and Meteor are going to show.

  • Happy New Year From Mobileblogr

    A Happy New Year to all who read mobileblogr. I’m back after an unhealthy Christmas break (great Christmas but a nice sickness thrown in there as well) and will be getting Mobileblogr back in action for the New Year later this evening.