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Archive for August, 2008

Fox Business – alternatives to the iPhone

With all the hype around iPhone it’s nice to see Fox in the USA cover a story about the alternatives to the iPhone which use Windows Mobile.

Scott Rockfeld my colleague from the US does a great job highlighting some of the latest great devices using Windows Mobile software.

Kinoma Play

If you haven’t had a chance to try Kinoma Play yet I’d really encourage you to do so! It’s a Media player/browser that gives you access not only to all the content on your phone but also to online services such as YouTube, Live365, Flickr, Orb and many others!
WMExperts have written an excellent review and also pulled together the video above!
Kinoma Play is free to try and $29.99 to buy!

UK – roaming price cap and the falling Pound

British mobile users face ‘unfair’ roaming cost increase

While Britons face new price increases for making mobile phone calls while travelling abroad, consumers who live in the 15 out of 27 countries which belong to the Eurozone will pocket savings of over six per cent.

The discrepancy will kick in on Saturday, August 30 because Brussels uses the Euro as the currency to calculate to annual maximum mobile phone roaming rates and the value of the pound has declined sharply against the European Single Currency since EU tariffs were first set last year.

Alan Duncan, Shadow Secretary for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, attacked as “unfair” the Brussels method of price fixing using a currency outside Britain and 11 other EU member states.

“This is a crazy way of looking at it. As a member of the EU we should be treated equitably,” he said.

“Charges should be based on fairness and not on the arbitrary effect of currency fluctuations.”

A European Commission spokesman argued that Britain must join the Euro if it wanted to get the full benefits of EU legislation aimed cutting mobile charges for travellers and holidaymakers.

“Exchange rates are not under the control of the Commission. There’s nothing we can do. Only the UK can change this situation by joining the Euro. That is your decision,” he said.

In August last year, the Commission moved to cut roaming charges to a flat rate Eurotariff of EUR 0.49, or 33p at the GBP 0.7867 exchange rate of July 30 2007, for making a mobile phone call while in another EU country.

On Thursday, Brussels made another scheduled cut to the Eurotariff reducing it to EUR 0.46 but at the same time resetting the exchange rate to the July 30 2008 figure of GBP 0.6753 giving a conversion of 36p a minute a nine per cent increase in real cost terms.

One British industry source said: “This is what happens when you have one-size-fits all regulations rather than allowing prices to be set by competition in the market.”

Ofcom, Britain’s telecoms regulator, welcomed the cut and explained that, outside the impact of currency fluctuations, the cost of mobile phone calls made while abroad are dropping for most Britons.

“UK consumers are already paying well below the new cap of EUR 0.46, the average prices for UK consumers is EUR 0.44 and has been for some time,” said a spokesman. “We can not comment on exchange rates.”

A Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform spokesman said: “UK customers have consistently paid rates that are below the new capped prices and this remains the case.”

The Commission is expected to propose further legislation to crack down on overcharging by mobile phone operators later this year.

Brussels regulators are concerned that some mobile operators are charging by the minute rather than second for calls made while travelling between EU states.

Decline is sales of mobile handsets

world mobile phone sales growth slowing: survey

Growth in worldwide sales of mobile telephones will slow sharply in 2008 as consumers face increased economic difficulties, a report by Gartner research institute showed on Wednesday.

The US-based industry research unit predicted 11 percent growth in global sales to 1.28 billion units this year, down from a rise of 16 percent in 2007.

Sales reached nearly 305 million in the second quarter, a rise of 11.8 percent on a year earlier, it said.

“The economic environment continued to negatively impact mobile phones sales in both mature and emerging markets,” Gartner’s head of research for mobile devices said in the institute’s report.

“Replacement sales remained weak as consumers faced higher prices for fuel and food in addition to higher levels of inflation.”

Nokia of Finland, the world’s number one phone maker, sold more than 120 million telephones and boosted its share of the market to just under 40 percent.

Samsung of South Korea had 15 percent of the market with 45 million units sold, shooting far ahead of the former world number two, Motorola, on 30 million.

Oman – second fixed operator

Oman lists 6 bidders for 2nd line

Oman has shortlisted six bidders interested to operate for the sultanate’s second fixed-line telecommunications network, agencies have reported. The Oman government is looking for a company that could invest at least $300m in the first five years of the contract. The package deal eyes a 25-year contract to build and operate the second fixed-line service and a similar 15-year contract for broadband internet services.