Thursday, April 30, 2009

Cellphones sale drops due to high customs duty …

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Title…

RECORDER REPORT MULTAN (April 30 2009): The mobile industry has attributed the sale of legally imported cellular phones and the drop to Rs500 customs duty per set imposed in the last budget and a regulatory duty of Rs250 introduced in August 2008.

Wholesalers, importers and manufacturers were of the view that invariably high taxes are impeding the growth of this market.

The teledensity in Pakistan has reached 60 percent, but high taxes are proving to be a hurdle in its further growth. However, they were not interested in setting up their manufacturing units in Pakistan, as majority of them have been facing tough financial setback following the slump in demand all over the world. The mobile handset imports have significantly decreased by 76 percent in the three-quarters of the current fiscal year 2008-09, the Federal Bureau of Statistics (FBS) reported.

During July-March 2008-09, the value of mobile handset imports has contracted to $139.480 million, against $581.807 million in the corresponding period of last fiscal year.

Rs750 of duty imposed on mobile phones under the category of luxurious items has in fact encouraged the illegal import that has affected legal trade, which has fallen drastically. He said that as part of their budget proposals, Nokia had requested the Ministry of Finance a method of taxation to 'do away with one duty for all mobile phones' and provide relief to cell phones valued under $100.

A spokesman of Nokia said that they had proposed the government to reduce taxes on mobile phones, as they were a necessity than a luxurious item. Global recession had affected Nokia's expansion plans, forcing it to trade cautiously, as the world's economy was down, he added. Further, he said that though his organisation had postponed some of their future plans for the time being owing to global crises, they were focusing on optimising current capacity and adjusting cost structures of their products to remain competitive in the market and on remaining cost effective for their consumers.

Manufacturers of mobile handset have proposed policymakers to reduce duties on cell phones in order to minimise the burden on customers and to increase business in the country. He said the government should realise the importance of mobile handset in the modern age, as it is an essential item rather than luxury.

'The mobile handset having value of under $100 could not be luxurious item,' he said and added that the government should exempt and reduce the duties on small sized mobile sets so that it could be used by the low income group of the country.

The spokesman also stated that the government should not impose duties more than Rs300 on medium sized sets as well so that it can also generate revenue from its imports and sales. He also declined to disclose any investment plans of his company regarding setting up of manufacturing plants in Pakistan.

Besides, Motoralla, Sony Erricson and LG are considered other preferable brands. The manufacturers of mobile sets have also been facing tough competition with affordable Chinese-made handsets, but they were of the view that their brand conscious customers are in good numbers.

Who is Enemy : Taliban or India or US?

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Over 600 Pakistani civilians have died this year in suicide bombings carried out by the terrorists in FATA/Swat and the Drone Attacks carried out by the United States and by the militants in Balochistan who are backed and funded by India.

The only people who are being killed and harmed are the Pakistanis. They are being attacked from many sides and yet they are still very much unsure about who their enemy is. Overwhelming majority of Pakistanis still don’t consider Taliban terrorists. Many still follow the chain of reasoning that the on going war against terror still only belongs to United States and Pakistan has nothing to do with it. There are almost all the people in Punjab and Sindh who doesn’t understand the gravity of restive situation in the Balochistan. They shrug it off as mere temporary skirmish fanned by Indians and the Karzai administration.

We are right now a confused nation, who doesn’t know it’s objectives, its priorities and it’s vision. There is no clear way for us to go forward. To cure the patient the diagnosis has to be accurate, otherwise the wrong medicine can sometimes kill the patient. In order to find the cure, we have to have the clear road map as where actually we want to go from here. Do we Talibanize the whole country, or do we become a total secular state. Do we give complete provincial autonomy to the provinces or do we become a one unit. Do we declare it as a national policy to tow the American line or do we go against them.

Whatever we do, we cannot do it in the bizzare fasion, which we are doing now. We cannot put the matters on pending for too long now. We have to make decision as nation and make it fast and then stick to it. Because when we set this objective, we would be clearly knowning who our enemy is and then we would be able to fight it conclusively. Because right now we are being hit by from everywhere, retaliating to none.


http://www.pakspectator.com/who-is-enemy-taliban-or-india-or-us/

Twitter users not sticking around: Nielsen

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WASHINGTON: More than 60 percent of Twitter users have stopped using the micro-blogging service a month after joining, according to Nielsen Online research released on Tuesday.

‘Twitter has enjoyed a nice ride over the last few months, but it will not be able to sustain its meteoric rise without establishing a higher level of user loyalty,’ said David Martin, Nielsen Online’s vice president for primary research.

Martin, in a post oan the company blog, said that more than 60 percent of Twitter users fail to return the following month.

‘Or in other words, Twitter’s audience retention rate, or the percentage of a given month’s users who come back the following month, is currently about 40 percent,’ he said.

‘Let there be no doubt: Twitter has grown exponentially in the past few months with no small thanks to celebrity exposure,’ he said in a reference to new users such as US talk show host Oprah Winfrey and promoters such as actor Ashton Kutcher.

‘People are signing up in droves, and Twitter’s unique audience is up over 100 percent in March,’ Martin said.

‘But despite the hockey-stick growth chart, Twitter faces an uphill battle in making sure these flocks of new users are enticed to return to the nest,’ he said.

‘A retention rate of 40 percent will limit a site’s growth to about a 10 percent reach figure,’ he said in a reference to the number of potential users.

Martin said that when Facebook and MySpace were emerging networks like Twitter their retention rates were twice as high and they now have retention rates of nearly 70 percent.

Martin did say that Twitter’s current 40 percent retention rate was better than the 30 percent it enjoyed pre-Oprah.


Source: http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/sci-tech/16-twitter-users-not-sticking-around-nielsen-hs-12

Microsoft preps Windows 7 release

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A release candidate of Windows 7, the next major release of the world's most popular operating system, goes public in trial form in the next week.

Microsoft is hoping it can avoid the negative press that surrounded the launch of Vista, the last major Windows release, almost three years ago.

Windows 7 has been designed to be compatible with Vista so users do not have to invest in new hardware.

A commercial release of Windows 7 is expected in the next nine months.

A test version of Windows 7 will be available to developers from Thursday, while the public can try it out from 5 May.

John Curran, Microsoft UK's director, Windows Client Group, told BBC News that "shortfalls" in the Vista release had caused problems for some users.

"There were challenges on hardware and application compatibility with Vista in the first couple of months - and that has left a little bit of an aftertaste for a segment of people."

When Vista was launched many users expressed frustration that the operating system did not work with all types of existing hardware and peripherals, or programs used commonly on PCs.

And a Vista compatibility programme for hardware proved to be confusing and, in some cases, somewhat misleading.

Mr Curran said Microsoft had "learned lessons" and had been working with partner developers to ensure the same mistakes would not be repeated.

Windows 7 will also have "comparable system requirements" to Vista, which should mean that if your PC is capable of running Vista it will also run the new version.

Negative

Mr Curran said Vista had proved to be a success for Microsoft, despite the negative press that surrounds the operating system.

"Vista is the fastest selling operating system of all time and, in percentage terms, enterprise moved to Vista faster than it did to XP [an earlier version of Windows]," he said.

He said satisfaction surveys for Vista showed 90% of people were either satisfied or very satisfied and 85-90% would recommend it to a friend.

The exact timing will be based on quality
John Curran, Microsoft

Microsoft embarked on a major advertising and marketing mission to improve the image of Vista after the muted reaction around its "The Wow starts now" campaign.

While Vista was released five months after the release candidate was made available, Mr Curran said Windows 7 would only be released when it is ready.

Bottom line

"Obviously in these times everybody is keeping an eye on the bottom line, but we are certainly taking a longer-term perspective here and always have done with Windows franchise.

"The timeline stated all along is that we are targeting Windows 7 within three years of of the launch of Vista and that would be the end of January 2010.

"We feel quite confident we are on trajectory that will deliver on that promise. But the exact timing will be based on quality."

Windows 7 promises a major usability improvement on Vista, and a simplification of security measures which caused frustration for many users.

Mr Curran said Windows 7 would build on the security improvements in Vista, which have seen a fall in the number of malware attacks and critical vulnerabilities identified.

Many beta testers of Windows 7 have reported that it is faster than Vista, especially in terms of start-up and shutdown sequence of the computer.

Mr Curran said that the Microsoft Windows team had been poring over every aspect of the operating system to make improvements.

"We were able to shave 400 milliseconds off the shutdown time by slightly trimming the WAV file shutdown music.

"It's indicative of really the level and detail and scrutiny on Windows 7."

A version of Windows 7 will also be available for netbooks, but with some caveats.

The Windows 7 Starter Edition will have limitations on how many applications can be used concurrently on a machine in order to preserve performance.


Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8026736.stm

Web tool 'as important as Google'

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A web tool that "could be as important as Google", according to some experts, has been shown off to the public.

Wolfram Alpha is the brainchild of British-born physicist Stephen Wolfram.

The free program aims to answer questions directly, rather than display web pages in response to a query like a search engine.

The "computational knowledge engine", as the technology is known, will be available to the public from the middle of May this year.

"Our goal is to make expert knowledge accessible to anyone, anywhere, anytime," said Dr Wolfram at the demonstration at Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

The tool computes many of the answers "on the fly" by grabbing raw data from public and licensed databases, along with live feeds such as share prices and weather information.

People can use the system to look up simple facts - such as the height of Mount Everest - or crunch several data sets together to produce new results, such as a country's GDP.

Other functions solve complex mathematical equations, plot scientific figures or chart natural events.

"Like interacting with an expert, it will understand what you're talking about, do the computation, and then present you with the results," said Dr Wolfram.

As a result, much of the data is scientific, although there is also limited cultural information about pop stars and films.

Dr Wolfram said the "trillions of pieces of data" were chosen and managed by a team of "experts" at Wolfram Research, who also massage the information to make sure it can be read and displayed by the system.

Nova Spivak, founder of the web tool Twine, has described Alpha as having the potential to be as important to the web as Google.

Keyboard
Developers say Wolfram Alpha can simplify language to remove 'linguistic fluff'

"Wolfram Alpha is like plugging into a vast electronic brain," he wrote earlier this year. "It computes answers - it doesn't merely look them up in a big database."

Learning language

The new tool uses a technique known as natural language processing to return answers.

This allows users to ask questions of the tool using normal, spoken language rather than specific search terms.

For example, a relatively simple search, such as "who was the president of Brazil in 1923?", will return the answer "Artur da Silva Bernardes".

This technique has long been the holy grail of computer scientists who aim to allow people to interact with computers in an instinctive way.

Dr Wolfram said that Alpha has solved many of the problems of interpreting people's questions.

"We thought there would be a huge amount of ambiguity in search terms, but it turns out not to be the case," he said.

In addition, he said, the system had got "pretty good at removing linguistic fluff", the kinds of words that are not necessary for the system to find and compute the relevant data.

Blair Bush 2006
Searching for 'Blair Bush' could give a different result...

Simple text

However, he said, most users tend to stop using structured sentences fairly quickly.

"Pretty soon they get lazy, and they say 'I don't need all those extra words'."

Instead they tended to use "concepts" similar to how most people use search engines today.

But Dr Boris Katz of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a natural language expert, said he was "disappointed" by Dr Wolfram's "dismissal of English syntax as 'fluff'''.

For example, he said, suppose someone asks ''When did Barack Obama visit Nicolas Sarkozy?"

"Here, understanding the sentence structure is important if you want to be able to distinguish cases where it was Barack Obama who visited Nicolas from cases where it was Nicolas Sarkozy who visited Barack Obama," he said.


...than searching for 'Bush Blair'

"I believe he is misguided in treating language as a nuisance instead of trying to understand the way it organises concepts into structures that require understanding and harnessing."

Dr Katz is the head of the Start project, a natural language processing tool that claims to be "the world's first web-based question answering system". It has been on the web since December 1993.

Like Alpha, the system searches a series of organised databases to return relevant answers to search queries. However, it only uses public databases and runs on a much smaller scale than Alpha.

Dr Katz said it answers "millions of questions from hundreds of thousands of users from around the world" on topics as diverse as places, movies, people and dictionary definitions.

It is also able to compute answers from several sources in a similar way to Alpha.

Web companies have also harnessed natural language processing.

For example, Powerset uses technology developed at the Palo Alto Research Center, the former research laboratories of Xerox.

The company is attempting to build a similar search engine "that reads and understands every sentence on the Web".

In May 2008, the company released a tool that allowed people to search parts of Wikipedia. Two months later, it was acquired by Microsoft.

Dr Wolfram said he has been working on Alpha for several years. However, he imagines that it will continue to evolve.

"In a sense we are at the beginning," he said.

China Mobile to buy stake in Taiwan's

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China Mobile has agreed to buy a 12 percent stake in Taiwan operator Far EasTone. The Chinese operator will buy 444.3 million new shares in FET for TWD 40 per share or a total TWD 17.77 billion. Assuming the deal gets regulatory approval, the two expect to cooperate closely on procurement, roaming services, data and value-added services, and network and technology advancement. China Mobile said the acquistion will help the company provide better services to customers travelling across the strait and business customers operating in both mainland China and Taiwan. China Mobile should also benefit from FET's expertise on the 3G market, which is already advanced in Taiwan but just starting in China.

Source: http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.aspx?cid=669649

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Nokia Siemens to expand Telenor’s network

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Telenor Pakistan has awarded Nokia Siemens Networks a contract to undertake network expansion over a period of five years.

This will enable the service provider to reach out to new subscribers, improve customer experience and introduce additional feature-rich services quickly and cost-effectively.

Under this turnkey contract, Nokia Siemens Networks will undertake site acquisition, construction, network implementation, logistics and project management.

Telenor Pakistan Corporate Affairs Executive Vice President, Irfan Wahab on the occasion stated, “Mobile space in Pakistan is intensely competitive and the low average revenue per user (ARPU) levels combined with acute power shortages add to the challenge. As we started planning for our future growth, we aim to choose our technology infrastructure and solution partner, carefully,” he added.

CTO appointed: In a separate announcement, Telenor Pakistan said it has appointed Khalid Shehzad as Chief Technology Officer.

Formerly, Khalid was heading IT division of the company as Chief Information Officer (CIO). Atiq Ahmed, Director Operations & Maintenance, Technical Division, is taking up an expanded role as Deputy CTO.

The changes in higher management were announced by Telenor Pakistan CEO Jon Eddy Abdullah at the company’s headquarters in Islamabad. The new positions were introduced in the wake of recent merger of Technical and IT divisions in the company.

Source: http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=175101

Widespread violence afflicts Karachi

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KARACHI: At least 25 people were killed and over 40 others injured in a fresh wave of ethnic violence in different parts of Karachi on Wednesday. About 20 vehicles were torched.

Tension and panic gripped parts of the city as unidentified attackers went on a shooting spree, killing most of the victims at point-blank range.

City police chief Wasim Ahmed told Dawn that 20 people had been killed in the violence across the city, including ‘16 Pathans and three Urdu-speaking people’.

Police said that the trouble began early in the morning when armed men who had taken position on the hills in North Karachi fired volleys of bullets upon Zarina Colony, a shanty town in the foothills. A worker of the Muttahida Quami Movement was killed at around 10.30am when he came under fire.

Police said that a sub-inspector and a constable were shot and wounded when law-enforcement personnel went to fetch the body.

The SP of North Karachi, Dr Farooq Ahmed, told Dawn that police and Rangers returned fire, forcing the gunmen to retreat. ‘Later, police and Rangers conducted a siege and search operation on the hills, arrested 16 people and seized some weapons,’ he added.

Witnesses said that special commandos from Rangers also reached the troubled hills and flushed the armed men out of the area. They said a Rangers man was shot and wounded in the action.

Most of the violent incidents took place in Khawaja Ajmair Nagri, Surjani Town and New Karachi Industrial Area. The violence-hit areas wore a deserted look as shopkeepers pulled down their shutters and vehicular traffic disappeared.

An MQM worker was shot dead in Shah Faisal Colony. His body was first taken to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre and then to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital for post-mortem.

Police surgeon Dr Hamid Padhiar told Dawn that 12 people were brought dead to the Abbasi Hospital. ‘Five bodies were later shifted to the JPMC,’ he added.

The director at the emergency centre of JPMC, Dr Seemin Jamali, told Dawn that 11 bodies and 18 wounded people were brought to the hospital. ‘Four wounded victims later died,’ she added.

Civil Hospital’s medico-legal officer Dr Sarwat Channa said that a man was brought dead from North Nazimabad and another man from Teen Hatti.

‘A man with a bullet wound was brought to the facility from Gulistan-i-Jauhar,’ he added. Vehicles were torched in North Karachi, Landhi, Malir and Al-Fallah.

The dead were identified as Zahoor Shah, Sanubar Khan, Din Mohammed, Javed, Jalil, Amjad, Mehmood, Shahid, Juma Khan, Sanwal, Dost Ali, Jameel, Sarfaraz, Khalid, Shah Khalid and Hanif.

Sources said that two bullet-riddled bodies were found at a post office in Sachal area. The bodies were taken to the JPMC late in the night.

Source: Dawn.com

Phishers Hit Facebook with Scam Messages

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Facebook users were hit Wednesday with a phishing attack that tried to steal names and passwords from users of the popular social network... More

Swine flu cases rise to 91 in U.S. with one death

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A toddler from Mexico has died in a Houston hospital. The top U.S. health official says more cases, hospitalizations and deaths are likely.

As the swine flu outbreak spread to four more states overnight, bringing the total to at least 91 cases, the United States reported its first death from the new virus, a 23-month old child who died in a Houston hospital.

The boy was a Mexican national from Mexico City who had traveled to Matamoros on a commercial flight with his family to visit relatives in Brownsville, Texas. After his symptoms grew more severe, he was taken to Houston to seek medical treatment.

Arizona, Massachusetts, Michigan and Nevada joined the list of states with new cases. Texas said its total has now climbed to 16 cases, New York has 51, and California has 14.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there have been more hospitalizations as well and reported on its website that "a pattern of more severe illness associated with the virus may be emerging in the United States."

"We expect to see more cases, more hospitalizations, and, unfortunately, we are likely to see more deaths from the outbreak," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told reporters on her first day at work following Senate confirmation Tuesday... More

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Telenor appoints Khalid Shehzad as new CTO

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ISLAMABAD: After failing in getting a Pakistani visa for Telenor’s nominated Chief Technical Officer (CTO), Sanjay Vaghasia, the Telenor Pakistan has appointed Khalid Shehzad as its new Chief Technology Officer (CTO). Previously Mr. Shehzad was heading the IT division of the Telenor as its Chief Information Officer (CIO). Meanwhile, Atiq Ahmed, Director Operations and Maintenance, Technical Division, is taking up an expanded role as Deputy CTO.

The changes in higher management were announced by CEO Telenor Pakistan Jon Eddy Abdullah at the company’s headquarters in Islamabad. The new positions were introduced in the wake of the recent merger of the Technical and IT divisions in the company.

Jon Eddy Abdullah, highly confident with the move, told, “The products we sell and the services we provide are based on a sound telecom network infrastructure and IT systems. Our core competency in Network and IT must always be the best in the industry. I am extremely confident that, with the new technical leadership, we can reaffirm our solid trust in the foundation of our business - Technology”. Khalid Shehzad brings with him over 14 years experience in the field of IT and telecoms. He has been heading the Information Technology Division at Telenor Pakistan even before the company’s launch in March 2005.

He has previously also managed the Business Support Systems, IT Operations, and IT Security departments as VP IT and CIO. As CTO, he will be heading the Technical and IT Divisions, working closely with Atiq Ahmed, the Deputy CTO. Telenor Pakistan, one of the fastest growing mobile operators in the country, has grown from zero to approximately 20 million subscribers in just four years, becoming the second largest operator in the country. The merger of the Technical and IT divisions has been made to serve the growing needs of the rapidly changing environment in the telecommunications industry. The Telenor Group is an international provider of high quality tele, data and media communication services with mobile operations in 13 markets across the Nordic region, Central and Eastern Europe and in Asia. —RT

Source: http://regionaltimes.com/29apr2009/moneynews/telenor.htm

About the World Telecommunication and Information Society Day

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World Telecommunication Day
World Telecommunication Day has been celebrated annually on 17 May since 1969, marking the founding of ITU and the signing of the first International Telegraph Convention in 1865. It was instituted by the Plenipotentiary Conference in Malaga-Torremolinos in 1973.

World Information Society Day
In November 2005, the World Summit on the Information Society called upon the UN General Assembly to declare 17 May as World Information Society Day to focus on the importance of ICT and the wide range of issues related to the Information Society raised by WSIS. The General Assembly adopted a resolution (A/RES/60/252) in March 2006 stipulating that World Information Society Day shall be celebrated every year on 17 May.

World Telecommunication and Information Society Day
In November 2006, the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference in Antalya, Turkey, decided to celebrate both events on 17 May as World Telecommunication and Information Society Day. The updated Resolution 68 invites Member States and Sector Members to celebrate the day annually by organizing appropriate national programmes with a view to:

  • stimulating reflection and exchanges of ideas on the theme adopted by the Council
  • debating the various aspects of the theme with all partners in society
  • formulating a report reflecting national discussions on the issues underlying the theme, to be fed back to ITU and the rest of its membership

Source: http://www.itu.int/wtisd/about/index.html

Microsoft and Verizon Plot an iPhone Rival

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Microsoft Corp. and Verizon Wireless are in talks to launch a touch-screen multimedia cellphone on the carrier's network early next year, in an ambitious effort to challenge Apple Inc.'s iPhone, according to people familiar with the matter.

The discussions are a gambit by Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer to energize a mobile business that has lost buzz among consumers and software developers to Apple's iPhone and Google Inc.'s Android.

Microsoft is a major player in software for cellphones, but it is working hard to develop a new device that will rival Apple's.

To read this report in full in The Wall Street Journal, see:
online.wsj.com/article/SB124093915558664239.html

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

3G cell phones to be in-thing within months

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LAHORE: The third generation (3G) mobile service will soon be available in the country, says Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) chairman Dr Muhammad Yaseen.


‘The policy-making process for 3G mobile licensing is under way and the service is likely to be launched within the next five months or so,’ Dr Yaseen told newsmen at the second Global TeleCon 2009 at a local hotel on Saturday.

The PTA chairman said that after deregulation, the telecom sector was making progress. The sector had been providing basic services to 95 per cent of its consumers and required innovation and should now offer value-added services. However, the penetration of the telecom sector in the broadband field was not up to the expectations.

’Ironically, the sector could not provide broadband service in rural areas of the country where the same is required,’ said Dr Yaseen.

Answering a question, the PTA chairman said no unregistered SIM of mobile phones was operating in the country at present. During the campaign launched by the PTA, some 11 million unregistered mobile phone SIMs had been blocked

Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited Senior Executive Vice-President Sikandar Naqvi said through mobile medical units, healthcare services were being provided to the PTCL employees and residents of remote areas where such facilities were not easily accessible.

To a question, he said the PTCL would never go into any kind of price war because the aim of the company was to revolutionise data industry. The focus of the PTCL had been on education sector and in pursuance of this policy, special packages to schools and other educational institutions were being offered. Earlier, Dr Yaseen highlighted the flexibility in the existing telecom policy that accommodated rapid changes and enabled revolutionary advancements.

Speaking as chief guest at the conference, the PTA chairman stressed the need to respond quickly to global telecom transformations with regulations that could suit all players but in overall context favour economic growth and consumer satisfaction in the country.

Higher Education Commission Executive Director Prof Dr Sohail Naqvi said in his keynote speech the use of advanced technology for ease of communication should be beneficial for overall social and educational development of users. He appreciated the positive social change brought about by the robust progress in the telecom sector.

TeleCon 2009 chairman Menin Rodrigues in his welcome speech expressed the optimism that the capabilities of Pakistan’s telecom industry would help steer the country towards a sustainable economic growth.

The day-long conference was participated in by Federal Board of Investment Secretary Tariq Iqbal Puri, former ministers Javed Jabbar and Tariq Ikram, Nust School of Engineering and Computer Technology Director-General Prof Dr Arshad Ali, Virtual University Rector Dr Naveed Malik, PTA member technical Dr Khawar Siddique Khokhar and services division director-general Talib Dogar besides senior officers of telecom companies.

Facebook plans to give developers more access

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The new capabilities would let third-party developers build services that access content uploaded by Facebook users with the users' permission.—Reuters
SAN FRANCISCO: Internet social media company Facebook plans to allow outside developers access to core parts of the website so they can build new services, a person familiar with the situation said.


The person said the company is expected to announce the plans on Monday. The new capabilities would let third-party developers build services that access content uploaded by Facebook users such as pictures and videos with the users' permission.


Facebook, which has more than 200 million active users worldwide, does not plan to charge for the service.
The company is expected to brief developers on the plan, first reported by the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, at an event it is hosting for developers at its Palo Alto, California headquarters on Monday.


Facebook would not comment on the plans to open its service to outside developers, but the company said it was preparing an announcement on Monday related to developer opportunities.


Source: http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/sci-tech/facebook-plans-to-give-developers-more-access-fb

Schwarzenegger, Obama ramp up efforts against swine flu

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California's governor declares state of emergency, opening the door for quicker action by state agencies. Obama seeks $1.5 billion to fight swine flu; Napolitano forming Homeland Security task force.


As isolated outbreaks of swine flu continue to be confirmed around the world, with new cases reported today in Canada, Israel, France, New Zealand, Costa Rica and South Korea, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proclaimed a state of emergency and the White House asked Congress for an additional $1.5 billion to fight the outbreak.

FOR THE RECORD: An earlier version of this article said the Los Angeles County coroner's office reported that two deaths were linked to swine flu. The deaths were not linked to swine flu.

The emergency proclamation orders all state agencies and employees to provide all possible assistance to the Department of Public Health, authorizes that department to enter any necessary contracts for materials and services to combat the outbreak, makes it easier to purchase materials and waives some certification requirements for public health laboratories.

State health officials have been aggressively working to combat the outbreak, and the proclamation is simply one more step in that effort, not an indication that the outbreak in California has become more severe.

President Barack Obama, in a letter to Congress, asked for the money with "maximum flexibility to allow us to address this emerging situation." It said the money could go toward stockpiling antiviral medicine, vaccine development, disease monitoring and diagnosis and assisting international efforts to limit its spread.

"In our opinion, this is about prudent planning moving forward," White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said today that she is forming a special swine flu task force to coordinate U.S. efforts, and noted that the government has now made 12 million doses of antiviral drugs available to states. She said her agency is also resisting calls from Capitol Hill to screen inbound air travelers from Mexico and those crossing at border checkpoints.

"Our focus is not on closing the border or conducting exit screening," she said. "It is on mitigation."

The total number of cases in the United States has now reached 67 and worldwide has climbed to more than 100, not counting the still-unknown number of cases in Mexico. At least some of the new cases, moreover, appear to have risen from human-to-human transmission outside Mexico.

Such community transmission is one of the early earmarks of a pandemic, and if it continues to be observed, experts predicted, the World Health Organization is likely to raise its alert to Level 5, from the currently elevated Level 4. Such an increase might involve more travel restrictions and stronger efforts to control the spread of the virus.

At a morning press conference in Geneva, Dr. Keiji Fukuda, assistant director-general of WHO, said a pandemic is not inevitable, but that if one does occur it is likely to be mild -- a conclusion drawn from the lack of deaths outside Mexico.

But he cautioned that the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed millions worldwide, started out mild also. In the spring of that year, there was a mild pandemic that petered out, only to return with a vengeance in the fall.

"I think we have to be mindful and respectful of the fact that influenza moves in ways we cannot predict," he said.

Moreover, he added, it is unlikely that health authorities will be able to contain its spread. "At this time, containment is not a feasible option," he said.

One ray of good news is that the outbreak may be leveling off in Mexico, where the first cases appeared. Mexican Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova said today that the number of new cases in that country had declined from 141 on Saturday to 119 on Sunday and 110 Monday.

At least 152 people have died in Mexico from influenza and its complications, and more than 2,000 cases have been reported. It is not clear, however, what proportion of those deaths and cases are attributable to swine flu. So far, only 26 of the deaths have been firmly linked to the virus.

This morning, Mexican authorities ordered all restaurants in Mexico City to begin serving only take-out food in an effort to limit spread of the virus. Officials had already requested that bars, movie theaters, pool halls, gyms and churches in the city close. All schools are closed until May 6.

As more countries around the world warned against unnecessary travel to Mexico, soccer's regional governing body, CONCACAF, said it was canceling a beach soccer tournament scheduled for Puerto Vallarta on Wednesday. The group had already suspended an under-17 tournament, the semifinals of which were to be played Wednesday in Tijuana.

Two new confirmed swine flu cases were reported in Sacramento County on Monday evening, bringing the California total to 13. One new case was reported this morning in Indiana, a young adult in the northern part of the state.

Three new cases were also confirmed in Texas, bringing that state's total to six, and 17 probable cases in New York were confirmed. Authorities had previously confirmed 28 cases in New York, two in Kansas and one in Ohio, and more confirmations are expected hourly as testing continues.

New York city health officials also said that two people with swine flu symptoms unconnected to the outbreak at St. Francis Preparatory School in Queens have been hospitalized.

All of the previous confirmed U.S. cases have been mild, but five of them have now involved hospitalizations, Besser said. Three of them were in California and two in Texas.

There have been no known deaths from the virus outside of Mexico. The Los Angeles County coroner's office was reported to be investigating two deaths thought to be linked to swine flu, but in a statement today it said that the deaths were not linked to swine flu.

New Zealand authorities said today that 11 residents who had recently traveled to Mexico showed symptoms of the virus. Swine flu was confirmed in three and the authorities are assuming that all have it, Health Minister Tony Ryall said.

Canadian officials said seven new cases have been confirmed in that country, bringing the total in Canada to 13.

Israel's health ministry confirmed two cases in that country among travelers, and Spain confirmed a second case there. South Korean authorities said they have found a case there in a recent visitor to Mexico. There is also a newly confirmed case in Costa Rica and a "probable" case in France.

Two cases had previously been confirmed in Great Britain.

All of the cases have been mild, but the victims have been hospitalized for quarantine, standard procedure in light of fears about the spread of the virus.

Cuba today became the first country to suspend flights to and from Mexico, ordering a 48-hour cessation. Mexico has been a major transit point for flights to that isolated country. Cuba has not yet reported any cases of swine flu.

Carnival Corp. also said today that it would cancel stops in Mexico for its cruises for the immediate future.

In New York, the accounting firm Ernst & Young initially said one of its employees was among the cases confirmed Saturday, but later backed off and said the case was only suspected swine flu. The victim is the mother of one of the students at St. Francis Preparatory School in Queens, where the outbreak occurred among students who had visited Mexico on spring break. (An earlier version of this story had said the parent was a man.)

The firm said the floor of the office building where she works has been sealed off for cleaning and decontamination.


Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-sci-swine-flu29-2009apr29,0,2342287,full.story

[DIDx.net] 1/2 price for DIDX members to Cluecon 2009

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OSTAG's FreeSWITCH™ is inviting you to Cluecon in Chicago, Il August 4-6, 2009. They are treating DIDX members very special. Register to win a free full conference pass on June 1, 2009. How do you enter? Reply to this email with your DIDX account number, company name, website URL, contact name, email address, phone number, and mailing address. A neutral third party will draw the winner's name from a drawing box.

Sign up at www.cluecon.com for a full conference pass also at half price. Just give them your DIDX account number and tell them Rehan and Suzanne sent you. Also check out our FreeSWITCH and Cluecon interviews with Anthony Minessale, inventor of FreeSWITCH™ and Brian West at http://didx.net/podcast/. DIDXchange is a media partner and first night party sponsor at Cluecon 2009.

Nokia scales back services ambitions, cuts more staff

http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.aspx?cid=669389

Nokia announced plans to scale back its ambitions to expand in mobile services and instead cooperate more with third-party content and applications providers. The handset maker said it will focus spending on fewer services initiatives, in an attempt to simplify and improve the user experience. As part of the announced changes, all mobile games will now become available through the Ovi Store, in addition to through their existing channels. While no specific product changes were mentioned in the statement, this suggest the company may be scaling back its N-Gage gaming services portal in favour of focusing on the Ovi Store. In addition, Nokia will add a variety of third-party partners, such as other image and social networking sites, to the camera and sharing features on its mobile phones. The streamlined services offering as well as planned changes at its its corporate development office will lead to another 450 job cuts worldwide. Nokia said the changes are part of its wider restructuring plans aimed at maintaining profitability through the economic slowdown.

PTCL gets ownership of 3,000 properties

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By Abrar Mustafa
http://www.thenews.com.pk/top_story_detail.asp?Id=21790

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL) was transferred ownership of more than 3,000 publicly owned properties that it could not sell or use for any purpose other than providing telecom services to the customers.

Sources in the Ministry of IT & T informed this scribe that the Government of Pakistan had agreed to transfer the ownership of these properties to PTCL under the privatisation agreement but the provincial and local governments were creating hurdles. These are now being removed and the process has been completed.

These sources said that there were 3,400 real estate assets in the shape of lands and buildings that were given to PTCL by the state and about 200 of such properties were gifted to it by common people. 157 such assets are from the pre-independence days.

At the time of privatisation it was agreed between Etisalat, the successful bidder, and the Government of Pakistan that the management will be transferred rights of ownership of these properties by March 2008. But there were problems in the process which were finally removed by March 2009 when almost 3,000 such transfers were managed. There are disputes over 157 properties and 163 belong to common citizens of Pakistan.

Meanwhile, the PTCL management has stopped payment of three instalments amounting to Rs400 million. A PTCL spokesman when approached said that PTCL was cooperating with the government and working for the betterment of telecom services in the country. He said that the process of transfer of ownership was underway and any issue in this regard will be resolved soon. The PTCL is in touch with the Privatisation Commission and the governments of Sindh and Punjab where majority of such assets are located.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The rising spectre of unemployment

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As defined by the International Labor Organization, “unemployed workers” are those who are currently not working but are willing and able to work for pay, currently available to work, and have actively searched for work. The prevalence of unemployment is usually measured using the unemployment rate, which is defined as the percentage of those in the labor force who are unemployed.
No Census has ever been conducted in any country of those who were employed and unemployed on any particular day so no accurate ratio can be finalized while some predictions can be made. More

Nepal telecom to provide mobile service on Mount Everest

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A Nepali telecom firm is set to be the first to offer mobile coverage at the top of Mount Everest.

Nepal Telecom said that it would set up mobile towers in Thakdin, Manjo, Pheriche and Gorak Shep, to bring the summit within the network coverage.

To read this ANI report in full, see:
www.newkerala.com/nkfullnews-1-27210.html

GM to shutter Pontiac, cut dealers and plants

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The automaker's moves are part of a revised business plan submitted to the Treasury Department. About 21,000 job will be cut by year's end.

In a zero-hour bid to stay out of bankruptcy, General Motors Corp. said today it would fold the Pontiac brand, cut 42% of its U.S. dealers and 28% of its plants by the end of 2010, and offer holders of $27 billion in debt significant equity stakes in the company.

GM will also cease production of Hummer, Saturn and Saab vehicles and shed 21,000 jobs by year's end.

The automaker announced the sweeping moves as part of a revised business plan it is submitting to the Treasury Department.

"The objective here is not to survive, the objective is to develop an operating plan that helps us win," said Fritz Henderson, GM's president and chief executive in a morning conference call. "It's a difficult period, it's a challenging period, it's a very painful period."

Henderson conceded, however, that a bankruptcy filing would still be a possibility if the company is unable to reach accords with stakeholders.

This is the third version of the company's plan since December, and this time it calls for a return to financial viability in a market with industry sales as low as 10 million vehicles in the U.S. on an annual basis. In that time, GM has borrowed $15.4 billion from the federal government.

In March, the Treasury Department's autos task force rejected GM's previous restructuring plan, saying it was insufficiently aggressive.

GM has been given until June 1 to show the Obama administration it has a sustainable business model or it faces being pushed into bankruptcy.

To do that, GM was asked to reduce billions of dollars in obligations to the bondholders and unions for retiree healthcare and to reduce labor costs, as well as show it can turn a profit in a market that's seeing its lowest sales level in three decades.

Chrysler, which has borrowed $4 billion from the government, has also been given until the end of this month to reduce its debt and to cut union costs. In addition, it has been asked to forge a merger with Italian automaker Fiat.

On Sunday, Chrysler reached a deal with the United Auto Workers union and the Canadian Auto Workers union, the latter of which has been ratified and is expected to save the company about $200 million a year in labor costs.

GM is also negotiating with those unions, but today said it had not yet reached an agreement on new concessions with either and would continue talks.

The Chrysler union deals are likely to set a framework for any agreement that GM reaches in coming weeks.

One sticking point for GM has been reducing by as much as half $20 billion in cash obligations to a retiree healthcare trust. The automaker said it would accomplish that goal with a debt-for-equity swap, and would also offer the same exchange to the Treasury in exchange for up to $10 billion in debt and to private holders of $27 billion in GM bonds.

A tender offer extended by the company today would trade 225 shares in the company for every $1,000 in debt, and Henderson said it aimed to cut about $44 billion from its balance sheet.

If successful, it would give the U.S. government at least a 50% stake in the automaker, with the union holding up to 39% and bondholders with an additional 10% share. Current shareholders would effectively be wiped out. Henderson did not give details on how GM would be managed in that scenario, but said that the "administration is not interested in running GM."

Meanwhile, GM said it would soon begin contacting the approximately 2,600 dealers it has selected for elimination and make them undisclosed offers to surrender their GM franchises. That could cost billions of dollars, although Henderson declined to give specifics of the offer.

A big part of that reduction would be eliminating Pontiac, which GM today added to the list of targeted brands. Hummer, Saab and Saturn were already slated for closure. Henderson said that production of all four brands would cease by 2010, although a few Pontiac models could be extended for another year.

In addition, Henderson said that should a potential buyer of one of those brands wish to continue selling the same models, GM would be open to performing contract production.

"It's been my theory that big is only good if you use it to your advantage," said Henderson. "As a company, our overall performance has not been adequate."



By Ken Bensinger
http://www.latimes.com

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Second Global Telecon 2009

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Speakers and industry experts at the 2nd Global Telecon 2009 on Thursday endorsed technology advancement for economic growth and consumer satisfaction as the cornerstone of Pakistan’s telecommunication environment in the immediate future.

Chief Guest on the occasion Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) Chairman Dr Muhammad Yaseen emphasized the critical role of an attractive and collectively favorable telecom regulatory policy. In his keynote address, Dr Yaseen highlighted the flexibility in the existing policy, which accommodated rapid changes and enabled revolutionary advancements.

He stressed on the need to respond quickly to the global telecom transformations with regulations, which could suit all players, but in the overall context favor economic growth and consumer satisfaction in Pakistan.

Higher Education Commission (HEC) Executive Director Professor Sohail Naqvi in his key-note address on the academia-socio perspective, appreciated the positive social change brought about by the robust growth in the dynamic telecom sector but also noted that use of advanced technology for ease of communication should be beneficial for overall social and educational development of the users.

Earlier, Menin Rodrigues, Chairman Telecon 2009 and President & CEO, Shamrock Communications (Private) Limited in his opening remarks welcomed the participants from all over Pakistan, including some from very remote locations. He thanked them for making Telecon 2009 a rich informative experience. He also expressed his optimism towards the capabilities and determination of Pakistan’s telecom industry leaders and experts to steer the country towards a sustainable economic growth.


Source:http://www.propakistani.com/2009/04/26/second-global-telecon-2009/

Telecom sector has tremendous potential to grow despite world recession'

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The contribution of telecom sector to the national exchequer increased to Rs 110 billion in the year 2007-08 on account of general sales tax, activation charges and other steps as compared to Rs 100 billion in the year 2006-07.

Chairman, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), Dr Muhammad Yasin stated this while addressing the 2009 Global TeleCon Pakistan conference held by Shamrock Conferences International here on Saturday. It is being anticipated that the same trend would continue in the current financial year 2008-09, as telecom sector in Pakistan has tremendous potential to grow despite world economic recession, he said.

Present growth of state of the art infrastructures in telecom sector during the last four years has been the result of the PTA's vision and implementation of deregulation policy. With the help of these infrastructures, most modern information and communication services can be accessed, it would not only help the operators to make good revenues, but also subscribers to enjoy the best services at the affordable costs.

As many as 91 million out of 161 million population possess mobile phones in addition to 3.1 million fixed lines. While as many as 2.4 million are using Wireless Local Loop connections.

Although broadband market has shown 148 per cent growth during the current year yet its subscribers' base rests at 0.2 millions that indicates overall slow growth, he added. Although the broadband market has improved many-folds, there are many ways to further uplift the performance and needs to make some concrete efforts in terms of reducing the cost of the computers and customer premises equipment, he added.

The PTA has done great job in the last four to five years and achieved the most important ingredients of deregulation, which is a state of the art infrastructure and low cost access to services. He said the regulations and government intervention by introducing the policies have played their role and now the businesses and entrepreneurship need to continue by using the ICT services of communication and internet.

3G License Auction in 1 month: Hafeezur Rehman

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Long awaited 3G license is likely to be auctioned in three to four weeks, reported “The Peninsula” of Qatar, citing an interview with Hafeezur Rehman, Federal Secretary for Information Technology and Telecom.

Paper further quotes that policy for launching 3G services has already been submitted to the federal cabinet, and its matter of just few weeks to auction 3G spectrum.

He said despite the global recession and a worrying security situation the government wants the 3G services to be available for the Pakistani cellular customers.

He said the base price for auction of the spectrum will be decided by the cabinet besides the policy decision whether the existing operators only will be allowed to participate or more international companies will be invited. “The; ministry has also submitted its recommendations op these matters; but the final decision rests with the federal cabinet,” he added.

He said the policy in this regard will not be discriminating for existing companies or new entrants and the base price will also be set keeping in view the international recession and market trends. He said that the 3G services will be provided in a three phase process.

6 Methods for unity of the Ummah

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1) Salaam: Unity increases by the spreading of salaam.

2) Kalaam: Talking in a soft and polite manner.

3) Ikraam: Fulfilling the needs of someone.

4) Hadiyah: Giving a gift unites the heart.

5) Du'aa: Making Du'aa for the unity of that person.

6) Taareef: In his absence talking about his good qualities.

Why the iPhone is giving Apple telephone-number profits

Nokia has just announced its worst-ever results. The mobile phone business is having to adjust to the idea that perhaps markets don’t expand indefinitely. Gloomy forecasts abound. But then Apple unveils second-quarter profits of $1.21bn (£822m) and $8.16bn in sales - way ahead of Wall Street expectations. And this despite the fact that sales of the company’s desktop and notebook computers were down by 3% - which could be a reflection of general economic conditions, or of the growing popularity of netbooks, a product-genre that Apple executives currently affect to despise. (So stay tuned for the Apple netbook.)

So what’s behind Apple’s rosy numbers? Answer: its new mobile phone business. Sales of the iPhone doubled to 3.79m units from the same quarter last year, a development that also helped its US network partner, AT&T, which saw its profits dip less than expected because of all those new iPhone subscribers.

To read this report in The Observer in full, see:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/apr/26/iphone-apple-sales

The Mobile Internet is Where It’s At

The number of people using mobile devices to access news and information on the Internet more than doubled in the past year, according to figures released by market firm comScore this week.

Young males are the most avid users of mobile news and information, according to comScore, with half of 18-to 34-year-old males engaging in the activity. The mobile Internet is also quite popular among females in the 18- to 24-year-old demographic. The report covered January 2008 to January 2009.

To read this Wi-Fi Planet report in full, see:
www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3811046

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Google Announces New Search Tools

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Google has unveiled two new tools to make searching the web for information and images easier.

Both of the new tools - Google News Timeline and Image Search - come out of Google Labs, which was designed to let users try out new features and tools as they are developed and then comment on them.

According to a blog posted by Andy Hertzfeld, a Google software engineer, Google News Timeline lets users organise results from Google News and other sources in new ways. The tool lets users pull in news results from current sources as well as from archived blogs, newspapers, magazines and even movies and music, Google said.

Users can set a time scale to get results from a specific number of days, weeks, years or decades. The scale can also be set to bring in results only from a particular year.

Essentially, the company said, it's a zoomable, graphical timeline of information. Similarly, the new Similar Images tool can be used to more easily find images that might be difficult to put into words for a regular search.

"Using visual similarity, you don't have to refine the text of your search, instead, you can just click on the link of an image you like," said Chuck Rosenberg, a member of the Similar Images development team.

"For example, if you search for jaguar, you can use the 'Similar images' link to quickly narrow your search to the cat or the famous British car manufacturer. You might try exploring the pyramids of Egypt or discovering the Forbidden City. Or you might go shopping for an evening dress or that perfect pair of shoes. So if you see an image you like, but you're stumped on how to describe it, just click the Similar Images link to see more like it."

In the last several months, Google has been focused on adding new features and tools to its products.

In February, the company unveiled an upgrade to Google Mapsthat allows people to track the exact location of friends or family through their mobile devices. Google Latitude not only shows the location of friends, but it can also be used to contact them via SMS, Google Talk or Gmail.

By Sharon Gaudin

Low Rate VoIP - Understanding Low Priced Internet Calling Facilities

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VoIP or voice over internet protocol is a calling service which is steadily catching up on the radars of people across the world. As it is, VoIP is cheaper and more convenient than most other telephony services, the fixed landline for example. But the catch in low rate VoIP is that the increasing number of VoIP service providers means that there are several services giving the same or nearly same services at variable rates. But how do these rates vary and why? This is chiefly due to a multitude of reasons such as the overall infrastructure of a company, cost effectiveness during operations and similar economic factors.

The recent splurge of VoIP telephony has led to several service providers boasting about the lowest rates associated with VoIP. In fact, these incredibly low rates seem too good to be true. How credible or useful are these unbelievably low priced VoIP services actually? If you are paying next to nothing for long distance calling, does it mean you will have to ‘bear’ your provider? Or does it mean you will have to struggle to talk through static noise in order to get a word across? Not necessarily. Here are some factors which affect the credibility and might influence your decision to choose a particular service:

1. The overall number of features provided by the VoIP provider - ensure that the provider that you sign up with is providing all the basic features listed in their promos. Many upcoming services do not actually provide even a fraction of the services they list.

2. Decide the features you need - if you are looking for a cheaply priced VoIP, then you definitely do not need the fancy features usually provided such as four way calling, redirecting, etc. The essential calling features come at rates near the ground so your search for a decent provider will be effortless.

3. The voice quality should be respectable - As a rule, low rate VoIP providers usually have comparatively bearable voice clarity. If you are looking for basic facilities, ensure that at least the voice quality is respectable enough.

Scanning through consumer and various user reviews can be a good option to discover actually good low rate VoIP services. As these reviews are based on personal experience, one usually gets to have a fairly accurate knowledge about any online service provider beforehand. Communicating directly with the reviewer if possible is advisable due to widespread scamming by marketers. There are websites and blogs which offer excellent reviews and guides on VoIP telephony and a quick search on Google can reveal the popular and reliable ones in the field.

To learn more about low rate voip, as well as the other voice over ip topics, visit http://www.voiceoveripexplained.com

Rights group challenges Israel's Gaza war probe

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JERUSALEM: Human Rights Watch said on Thursday that the Israeli army's investigation of troop conduct during its war on Gaza appeared to be an attempt to cover up ‘violations of the laws of war.’ The army defended its conduct during the massive 22-day offensive against the Hamas rulers of Gaza in December and January, saying five military probes found its forces ‘operated in accordance with international law.’

But Joe Stork, a deputy director of Human Rights Watch, said: ‘The conclusions are an apparent attempt to mask violations of the laws of war by Israeli forces in Gaza.’ The New York-based rights group said the probes ‘lack credibility and confirm the need for an impartial international inquiry into alleged violations by both Israel and Hamas’.

It urged both sides to cooperate with a UN investigation of the conflict.

‘Only an impartial inquiry will provide a measure of redress for the civilians who were killed unlawfully,’ Stork said.

HRW said its own investigation showed Israeli forces were responsible for ‘serious violations of the laws of war, including the use of heavy artillery and white phosphorus munitions in densely populated areas, the apparent targeting of people trying to convey their civilian status, and the destruction of civilian objects in excess of military need.’ Some of the cases of white-phosphorus use demonstrate evidence of war crimes, the group said in a report last month.

Deputy army chief Major General Dan Harel told reporters on Wednesday the military used several hundred mortar shells and naval rounds that contain phosphorous as the active ingredient, as well about 3,000 smoke shells that contain pieces of felt dipped in phosphorous.

The military suspended the use of the phosphorous mortar shells and 76mm naval rounds on January 7 amid international controversy, Harel said, insisting those munitions had only been fired in open areas as markers and range-finders.

He insisted that the way the military used those shells as well as the smokescreen munitions whose use continued after January 7 complied fully with international law.

HRW said its researchers in Gaza found spent white phosphorous artillery shells, canister liners, and dozens of burnt felt wedges containing white phosphorus on city streets and apartment roofs, in residential courtyards, and at a UN school.

Artillery shells containing white phosphorus also struck a hospital and the headquarters of the UN Relief and Works Agency in Gaza City, the rights group claimed.

Official Palestinian figures put the Palestinian death toll at 1,475, including 943 civilians, while the Israeli military says 1,166 Palestinians were killed, including at least 709 ‘terror operatives.’ Thirteen Israelis, three of them civilians, were killed.

www.dawn.com

Facebook to adopt new rules despite vote shortfall

NEW YORK -- Facebook will adopt new rules governing the social network even though a vote fell well short of a minimum threshold.

The new documents specify, among other things, that users own their information, not Facebook. An earlier attempt to push changes led to user confusion and protests over who controls the personal information people share on the site.

More than 600,000 of Facebook's 200 million regular users voted over the past week, with nearly three-quarters in favor of the changes. Palo Alto, Calif.-based Facebook said Friday an outside auditor is verifying the results.

Ted Ullyot, Facebook's general counsel, said turnout is "a small number" compared with the site's user base. Facebook had set a minimum threshold of a 30 percent voter turnout for the vote to be binding. That would have been about 60 million people, or about 100 times the actual turnout.

"We'd hoped to have a bigger turnout for this inaugural vote, but it is important to keep in mind that this vote was a first for users just like it was a first for Facebook," Ullyot said in a blog post, adding that the site will consider lowering that threshold for future votes.

Julius Harper, who co-founded a Facebook group in February to protest the changes to the site's terms of service, said Facebook could have done a better job advertising the vote.

"Not everyone was aware of what was going on," said Harper, a Los Angeles-based video game producer.

By http://www.latimes.com

Friday, April 24, 2009

Pakistan envoy urges British apology over terror arrests

LONDON: Pakistan's high commissioner to London urged Britain on Thursday to apologise over the arrest of 11 Pakistani men in anti-terror raids this month, after the men were all released without charge.

Wajid Shamsul Hasan told the Financial Times that the men, who were arrested in raids across northwest England on April 8 and are now facing deportation, should be allowed to remain in Britain.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said at the time that the raids were part of a probe into a ‘major terrorist plot’, but all 12 men originally arrested – including one Briton – have now been released.

The government's independent review of terror laws, Lord Carlile, has said he would be investigating the anti-terror operation and the arrests.

‘It is clear these people have neither violated UK law nor committed a crime. Why should they be punished? It seems the arrests took place on the basis of a hoax,’ Hasan said.

He said the British authorities ‘owe an apology not only to these boys but also to the government of Pakistan for having not done enough homework (gathering evidence)... The men should be compensated.’

British police defended their actions on the grounds of public safety, and a senior officer insisted no mistakes had been made.

'I don't feel embarrassed or humiliated about what we have done because we have carried out our duty,' Greater Manchester Police's Chief Constable Peter Fahy told reporters Wednesday.

‘I don't think a mistake has been made, no.’

Announcing the release of the suspects, a police statement said prosecutors had advised that there was ‘insufficient evidence gathered within the permitted timescales which would have allowed a warrant of further detention to be gathered or charges to be pursued.’

The 11 Pakistanis have been handed over to British immigration officials, who have said they will be deported to Pakistan.

Brown's spokesman told reporters the government was ‘seeking to remove these individuals on grounds of national security.’

He added: ‘The government's highest priority is to protect public safety. Where a foreign national poses a threat to the country, we will seek to exclude or deport them where appropriate.’

The raids had to be hastily brought forward after Britain's top counter-terrorism policeman, Bob Quick, was photographed holding clearly legible briefing notes on the operation. He resigned over the gaffe.

The notes stated police were investigating a plot that was ‘AQ-driven’, meaning Al-Qaeda.

A Muslim community leader in Manchester, Afzal Khan, criticised the police, saying detectives could ‘not keep getting it wrong’ because such instances were sapping community confidence in the police.

The government has sought to engage Britain's Muslim communities in the fight against extremism following the July 2005 attacks on London by British-born Muslims.

Of the dozen arrested on April 8, one 18-year-old student was released after three days, nine were freed on Tuesday and the final two let go on Wednesday.
Revelations that 10 of the Pakistani men were on student visas have put Brown's government under pressure to tighten its visa rules.

Relatives of the men in Pakistan had pleaded their innocence, and a British-based lawyer for three of the former suspects has vowed to fight any attempt to deport them.

‘Our clients are neither extremists nor terrorists. Their arrest and detention has been a very serious breach of their human rights,’ said Mohammed Ayub.

www.dawn.com

Taliban pulling out of Buner

Taliban swarm Buner
Taliban ambush FC convoy, foil Buner deployment
After Swat and Buner
‘Army alarmed as Taliban eye Mardan, Swabi’


BUNER: Taliban militants from Swat started pulling out of Buner following negotiations with a delegation led by TNSM chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad on Friday.

Taliban leaders, however, made it clear that the militants from Buner would stay in the district as they could not be asked to leave their native areas.

‘Most of our companions from outside have left Buner and the remaining ones would follow suit,’ Taliban leader Ustad Yasir Khan told Dawn.

He said that as he had been assigned responsibility for Pir Baba mosque and adjoining areas, he had to return as the people of Buner had been pressing him to continue in that post.

He said that the residents of Buner had been requesting them to stay back, but wondered why the government was asking them to leave the area.

The district was seized by the Taliban from Swat on April 4 after a foray through the Gokand Pass. They seized key towns on April 11 as law enforcement personnel did not offer any resistance.

Maulana Sufi Mohammad visited Madressah Taleemul Quran in Daggar and held negotiations with Taliban leaders. The Maulana was accompanied by TNSM spokesman Amir Ezzat Khan, Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan, commanders Mehmood Khan and Mufti Aftab.

The meeting was attended by prominent religious figures Maulana Waliullah Kabal Grami, Malakand commissioner Syed Muhammad Javed, Buner TNSM leaders Maulana Salar, Maulana Dawanoor, Pervez Khan and Ishaat Wal Tauheed, Maulana Mesbahuddin, Minhajuddin and Haji Rehman.

It was agreed in the meeting that the local Taliban would avoid display of weapons. ‘I am acting as guarantor of peace in Malakand region. The militants from other districts should leave the area as it is a threat to peace,’ Sufi Mohammad said.

The Taliban boarded their vehicles and left for Swat through the Karakar Pass. Buner Taliban remained inside their camps, including a villa of an influential figure which they had seized in Sultanwas.

TNSM spokesman Amir Ezzat Khan and Commander Mufti Aftab alleged that the media was exaggerating the whole issue, paving the way for a military operation.

They said the Taliban did not want to create problems for the people and their purpose of visiting Buner was preaching. ‘We do not want devastation of Buner by security forces’.

Ezzat Khan said the issue of Sultanwas village would be resolved in two days while that of Shalbandi village would be taken up later.

The Taliban had earlier refused to forgive inhabitants of the two villages, especially some influential figures, as they had raised lashkar against them.

The fresh developments attracted locals and thousands of them visited village Sultanwas and Madrassa Taleem ul Quran in Daggar.

The AFP reported that more than 100 paramilitary troops manned police stations in Buner on Friday. Two platoons comprising 113 men were sent to the rugged region on Thursday and Friday.

‘The provincial government has sent two Frontier Constabulary (FC) platoons to Buner, which have been posted in different police stations to check any attack by militants,’ police official Rasheed Khan said.

Mr Khan said local forces did not have the manpower to climb mountains and other areas infested with militants. ‘We have been assured that eight platoons will be sent to Buner, of which two have already reached,’ he said. Another police official, Arsalan Khan, said two platoons had arrived and had been deployed in police stations.

Taliban spokesperson Muslim Khan said the pulling out of Taliban from Buner was not the outcome of any agreement as they had left Buner of their own accord.

‘Pakistan is our country and we can visit any area including Buner. We stand by the peace agreement, but certain elements have raised unnecessary hue and cry that we came here to occupy Buner. This is wrong,’ he said.

Malakand commissioner Syed Mohammad Jawed told Dawn that the government was serious in implementing the Nizam-i-Adl Regulation and Darul Qaza would be set up in the division soon.

By Abdur Rehman Abid
www.dawn.com

Amazon sees revenues grow 18%, net profit grows 24%

Amazon.com reports a 18 percent increase in revenues to USD 4.89 billion in the first quarter of this year. Excluding the USD 268 million unfavourable impact from year-over-year changes in foreign exchange rates throughout the quarter, net sales would have grown 25 percent compared with first quarter 2008. Operating income increased 23 percent to USD 244 million in the first quarter, compared with USD 198 million in first quarter 2008. Excluding the USD 32 million unfavourable impact from year-over-year changes in foreign exchange rates throughout the quarter, operating income would have grown 39 percent compared with first quarter 2008. The net profit for the quarter grew 24 percent year-on-year to USD 177 million. Amaxon's operating cash flow was USD 1.76 billion for the trailing twelve months, compared with USD 1.04 billion for the trailing twelve months ended 31 March 2008. North America segment sales, representing Amazon's US and Canadian sites, grew by 21 percent to USD 2.58 billion and Amazon's international sales, representing Amazon's UK, German, Japanese, French and Chinese sites, grew by 15 percent to USD 2.31 billion. Excluding the unfavourable impact from year-over-year changes in foreign exchange rates throughout the quarter, International sales grew 28 percent. Amazon expects its second quarter revenues to be between USD 4.30 billion and USD 4.75 billion, or to grow between 6 percent and 17 percent compared with second quarter 2008 and its second quarter operating profit is expected to be between USD 110 million and USD 190 million, or decline between 49 percent and 12 percent compared with second quarter 2008. The second quarter 2008 results include the USD 53 million non-cash gain recognized on the sale of the company's European DVD rental assets.

Source: http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.aspx?cid=668861

Pillion riding banned in Karachi for 30 days

KARACHI: The Sindh government has imposed a ban on pillion riding in Karachi for a period of 30 days.

Capital City Police Officer Wasim Ahmed told that incidents of terrorism and other crimes were on rise after lifting the ban on pillion riding in the city.

He said: “The ban has again been imposed for one month to contain growing incidents of target killing and crimes.

According to a handout issued by Sindh government today (Friday), the journalists, elderly people, children and women are exempted from the ban.

Geo.tv

What are US students learning about Islam?

Politically correct textbooks are distorting key concepts and historical facts.

"History is not history unless it is the truth." – Abraham Lincoln

Most Americans understand history as an objective accounting of past events. In recent years, however, textbook publishers have come under increasing criticism for rewriting history. Claims are presented as facts while controversial material is whitewashed or omitted.

Today these trends are quite apparent in the way public school history books address Islam. In his 2008 study "Islam in the Classroom: what the textbooks tell us," Gilbert Sewall, director of the American Textbook Council (ATC), reviewed 10 of the nation's most widely used junior and senior high school history textbooks. The results should disturb anyone interested in conveying to our children a truthful history of the religion whose extreme adherents drive so many of today's tragic headlines.

At a time when America is locked in a battle of ideas with Islamic extremists and other enemies of freedom, accurate knowledge is indispensable. Yet, Sewall's findings underscore how political correctness is distorting the next generation's understanding of this battle.

Let's be clear. Religion is by nature a sensitive topic to teach in the classroom. And in a world where stereotypes wrongly tar all Muslims as being prone to violence, it's understandable that schools would err on the side of caution. Indeed, they should affirm the piety and charity practiced by hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world, an acknowledgement that should be extended to Christians as well. At the same time, textbooks shouldn't cower from covering the violent periods of Muslim conquest or the Islamic beliefs that fundamentalists exploit for violent ends.

Sewall found that many textbooks gloss over or delete important facts. For example, in the 1990s, "jihad" – which has many meanings, among them "sacred" or "holy" struggle but also "holy war" – was defined in the Houghton Mifflin junior high school book only as a struggle "to do one's best to resist temptation and overcome evil."

The many acts of violence committed on behalf of Islam in the past decade have made that definition incomplete, to say the least. Yet, as ATC notes, "by 2005, Houghton Mifflin apparently had removed jihad from its entire series of social studies textbooks."

In discussing sharia law, the Islamic code that can be used to subjugate women and deal death to wayward believers, many textbooks are intentionally vague. Holt Rinehart Winston's 2006 "Medieval to Early Modern Times" junior high textbook states simply, "[Sharia] sets rewards for good behavior and punishments for crimes." Another popular history textbook states, "Muslim law requires that Muslim leaders offer religious toleration."

Descriptions of Islam since 9/11 are particularly disturbing. Though Islamic extremism has become a fact of life throughout much of the world, most of the reviewed textbooks suggest instead that poverty, ignorance, and the existence of Israel are at the root of terrorism. The closest that any textbook gets to suggesting a faith-based component to terrorism is Glencoe's "Modern Times," which states broadly that "Muslims have not accommodated their religious beliefs to the modern world."

The whitewashing of Islam becomes even more noticeable when contrasted with how history textbooks treat Christianity. One book describes the Crusades as "religious wars launched against Muslims by European Christians." But when Muslims attacked Christians and took their land, the process is referred to as "building" an empire.

A McDougal Littell volume claims that non-Muslims in Muslim-ruled territories converted to Islam because "they were attracted by Islam's message of equality and hope for salvation." A good history class should teach students to ask critical questions. Are students asking how much of that "conversion" was coerced by the sword? Sadly, most texts gloss over Muslim leaders' history of enslavement of "infidels" and their brutal treatment of women, which continues today in some countries.

In an interview, Sewall summed up the reactions of textbook publishers to his report. "In a word," he said, "hostile."

Sewall says the pressure tactics used by some Muslim groups on publishers to portray Islam in a favorable light amount to a kind of "cultural jihad." This essentially is what the founder of the Council on Islamic Education, the main Islamic group for vetting textbooks in America, was saying when he described his work as a "bloodless revolution … inside American junior high and high school classrooms."

Sewall understands that historical inaccuracies sometimes take decades to be written out of textbooks. "Once lies are written into textbooks," he says, "they tend to be perpetuated in new editions." Which is one reason why Sewall will continue to make his case to publishers.

I hope Sewall has better success than I had. When I served as undersecretary of the Education Department under President Reagan, I discovered that a "values neutralism" was saturating school textbooks, seriously misleading our children about the nature of Soviet governance by, for instance, stating that women enjoyed the same rights as men and severely downplaying the suppression of basic human rights inherent in communist political systems.

In the same way, students today are being taught a distorted view of Islam. Having been on the front lines in the struggle to achieve the best education for our children, I understand that change will come only when teachers' and parents' voices are heard. Teachers need courage in overcoming political correctness by talking candidly about controversial topics like Islam. Parents must be engaged in their children's education by participating on curriculum committees and communicating with teachers. Parents also should communicate with their members of Congress to ensure that textbook publishers are not being pressured to present a false account of history. Feel-good distortions of history don't help our kids; they just help those who wish to do us harm.


Gary Bauer is a former undersecretary of the Department of Education under President Reagan. He is president of American Values and chairman of Campaign for Working Families.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Warid Facing Rs 10.7 mln Lawsuit for Voilating Contract

A lawsuit has been filed against Warid Telecom by the Chief Executive Officer of UN&I Training Development Consultants (UN&ITDC) Muhammad Umair Akhtar. Lawsuit that values Rs. 10.7 million is against Warid Telecom for violating a contract, which was mutually signed and agreed by Warid Officials and Umair Akhtar, CEO, UN&ITDC.

The court of Civil Judge Lahore Hina Muzafar issued notices to CEO Warid Telecom and other nine marketing and segment operation senior officials in the company. Umair Akhtar, who filed this lawsuit, claimed that Warid violated a contract that was formally approved by Warid’s concerned officials on September, 5th, 2008. Furthermore lawsuit said that contract, which valued Rs. 8 million, was primarily for “ZEM Ground the Underground 2008” (GTU) national music competition in Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad – however, Warid denied to carry forward the agreement despite signed approvals causing loss to Umair Akhtar.

Lawsuit is supported by the contract copy that has all description of the project with due signatures of Warid Telecom’s senior management including the CEO to complete the project within next three months.

Moreover, lawsuit mentions that in order to materialize the GTU project, Umair Akhtar hired contractual staff, designed all artwork with consuming substantial amount and purchased website as well as signed a contract with the third party to conduct a total of 13 events throughout the country within stipulated time according to the contract.

“There was just an email was sent by the Warid Telecom officials which expressed that management has decided to hold the GTU project without mentioning any reason or giving justification to freeze the campaign on September 29 last year”, claimed Umair Akhtar in lawsuit.

“I repeatedly visited and tried to communicate through possible means with Warid Telecom’s head office to know the fact that what happened immediately which forced the telecom company to hold the project even after signing its approval which allowed the me to consume huge funds in order to complete the project but nobody pays heed to the matter except exercising delaying tactics” said the lawsuit.

Consequently, Umair Akhtar was forced to serve a legal notice during December of previous year to the Warid Telecom company to pay a cost of Rs10.7 million as punitive compensation in result of breaching the contract and finally sued the telecom company while having no response from them so far.

Ms. Farah Hussain, Spokesperson for Warid telecom didn’t reply to our emails, calls and SMS – despite she committed that she will do the best to respond with company’s viewpoint over the issue.

Source: http://www.propakistani.com/2009/03/24/warid-facing-rs-107-mln-lawsuit-for-voilating-contract/

Muslim woman's appointment as Obama advisor draws cautious optimism

Dalia Mogahed, a veiled Egyptian American, will advise President Obama on prejudices and problems faced by Muslims. Many Arabs hope it's a step toward reversing stereotyping.
By Noha El-Hennawy
April 22, 2009
Reporting from Cairo -- Egyptians are cautiously rejoicing over the recent appointment of a veiled Egyptian American Muslim woman as an advisor to President Obama.

Dalia Mogahed, senior analyst and executive director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies, was appointed this month to Obama's Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

Arabs are closely watching for signs that the new leadership in Washington is making efforts to improve relations with Islam, which many Muslims believe were severely damaged during the eight years of the Bush administration. The selection of Mogahed is viewed by many in the Middle East as a step by Obama to move beyond the stereotypes and prejudices that Muslims believe they have encountered since the attacks Sept. 11, 2001.

"Dalia Mogahed is the best example of a successful Muslim woman. She proves that the Muslim should be successful in all fields, at least in [her] area of specialization, " a commentator wrote on the website of the independent daily Al Masry al Youm.

The Egyptian-born Mogahed moved with her family to the United States almost 30 years ago. Recently, she co-wrote the book "Who Speaks for Islam?" with John Esposito, an American political science professor who has been criticized by some as an Islamic apologist. Mogahed and Esposito published an opinion piece this month in The Times on American ignorance of Islam and the Muslim world.

"My work focuses on studying Muslims, the way they think and their views," Mogahed was quoted as saying on the website of the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya satellite news channel. "Then I should tell the president about their problems and needs, especially that lately Muslims have been perceived as a source of problems and as incapable of taking part in solving international problems and that they should work on themselves. Now we want to say that Muslims are capable of providing solutions."

Yet, Mogahed's declaration that her loyalty goes first to the United States, published Monday in an interview with Al Masry al Youm, disappointed some people.

"I wish your loyalty was to your Islam first, Egypt second and your Arabism third and then to anything else," wrote a reader identifying himself as the Tiger of Arabs. "I am afraid that they might make a fool out of you and use you as a cover for policies that don't serve Egypt and the Arab and Muslim world."

El-Hennawy is in The Times' Cairo Bureau.


Hasni Essa
Islam for Pluralism
www.latimes.com

Yahoo! net profit falls 78% in Q1, to cut 5% of staff

Yahoo! reported first-quarter revenues of USD 1.580 billion, down 13 percent from the year-earlier period. Excluding the impact of currency fluctuations, sales were down 8 percent. In addition to a slowdown in both display and search advertising, Yahoo! said revenues suffered from the sale of Kelkoo and lower fees from partnerships with internet, voice and music service providers. Operating profit declined to USD 101 million from USD 121 million, and net profit dropped to USD 0.08 per share from USD 0.37 a year ago. Last year, the company booked a one-time gain of USD 401 million in Q1 from Alibaba's IPO. Excluding one-time items, EPS fell to USD 0.15 from USD 0.18. Operating cash flow dipped 6 percent to USD 409 million, while the company finished March with USD 3.691 billion in cash. To free up cash for strategic investments, Yahoo! is cutting another 5 percent from its global workforce, with staff to be notified in the next two weeks. Yahoo! said it's also implementing other, unspecified cost reductions. For Q2, the company forecast revenues of USD 1.425-1.625 billion and operating profit of USD 80-90 million. Yahoo! also announced the appointment of Jeff Russakow as senior vice president of customer advocacy. He will start immediately, taking responsibility for all of Yahoo!'s customer support functions, including audience, small business, ad operations, and search network quality.

Source: http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.aspx?cid=668467

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Nine Ways to Make VoIP Better






First VoIP plundered the PTSN subscriber base, sending the baby Bells’ profit margin into a tailspin. Now VoIP applications have tunneled into every communications technology, bringing VoIP to millions of potential users (billions globally) from every available platform. Today, seasoned startups have staked their success on applications designed to bring VoIP to end-users through blogs and Web sites, cell phones and wifi. Some of these platforms have nearly a half dozen companies fighting for superiority, while others have their market cornered.

Companies like Jajah, iSkoot and YapOn are offering consumer VoIP applications to the 2.14 billion cell phone users around the world, while other VoIP applications have begun to fundamentally change the way we use the Internet. New click-to-call features are bringing voice into seamless integration with blogs and sites – giving such diverse industries as tech support and dating services new avenues for connecting with users.

Here are the top 10 ways to make VoIP even better, including the free and low-cost apps that make it possible:

1. VoIP WEB CONFERENCING

Yugma
WebEx, founded in 1996, has dominated Web conferencing by leveraging its pre-established position as a videoconferencing provider while capitalizing on rapid innovations into web-based business solutions.

But now a plucky startup founded in 2003, Yugma, is hitting WebEx where it hurts. While WebEx has grown fat selling its Web conferencing services for $75 per month per host, Yugma has guaranteed that its basic services will be free, forever.

With Yugma you can invite up to 10 other people to simultaneously view documents and applications of any format; you can host an unlimited number of sessions (one session at a time) and you can collaborate on both PCs and Macs at the same time on any Web browser (including Safari), any application, and almost any operating platform (Linux coming soon) – with the flexibility to launch “on the fly.”

It's easy to install, easy to use, highly reliable and platform independent. Does WebEx have a widget its paying clients can post on their product sites, blogs, intranet or student collaboration sites? No. Does Yugma? Of course, and for free. Does WebEx support VoIP technology? Only for its public relation conference calls when it announces the acquisition of a smaller company.

Does Yugma work with VoIP? Yugma is specifically designed to seamlessly interact with all VoIP providers globally.

2. VOIP MICRO-BLOGGING

Twitter

Call it microblogging or text blasting – Twitter allows you to do it for free. From your phone, an IM client or from Twitter’s Web site, you can send a text message to multiple friends’ phones simultaneously or straight to your MySpace page. The only catch: Twitter wants you to keep it short – posts are limited to 140 characters, and the topic is always, "What are you doing?"

All your recent twitters are then saved on your profile page along with links to your friends’ Twitter pages, a thumbnail photo and a short bio. Plus, you can search Twitter’s 100,000 members to see what they are doing.



3. VOIP ON YOUR CELL PHONE VIA WIFI

Gizmo Call

Gizmo Call gives users two options that will make unlimited worldwide calling accessible and cost efficient. Any wifi-routed call to another Gizmo Project user is free, with no time limits or fees, and calls to landlines and cell phones start at 2 cents per minute.

Gizmo has announced an official partnership with Nokia, whose n80i is the ultimate next generation telephone – a mobile that smoothly transitions from cell technology to wifi. But the n80i still costs nearly $500, so this plan isn’t for someone looking to lower their total voice costs. To buy tomorrow’s phone today, it’s going to cost some of the money you saved yesterday.

But look on the bright side, by buying into the Gizmo-Nokia partnership, you’ll be a year ahead of mainstream phone culture. If your personal image depends on having the next best thing, you better get an n80i with Gizmo before your clients do.


Truphone
Truphone offers a VoIP-over-WiFi service that currently works on four Nokia cell phone models in the U.S. and U.K., including the Nokia n80i.

Installation on these phones is simple: Sign-up, pick your phone model and latest OS version, and enter your phone number. Truphone sends a text message to your phone that guides you through the simple installation process. Then you select your wifi settings. Making calls is simple: Click on the phone number you wish to dial, then choose from a cellular or a VoIP connection.

Not only is Truphone available in a wider selection of Nokia phones, its call quality also surpasses Gizmo, which has trouble with its packets when connected at a low bandwidth. Additionally, the U.K.-based Truphone understands international calling from mobiles better than Gizmo, giving Truphone an advantage in the global market.

4. VOIP CLICK-TO-CALL BLOG WIDGETS

Jaxtr

Living and shopping in an online community has until now been a solitary and silent experience, with 90 percent of the transactions occurring through email, blog posts or other keyboard functions. Sure, Skype and webcams have stimulated our other senses, but audio/visual elements have until now been in the HOV lane of the information superhighway. The next generation of multimedia convergence is upon us, and it’s unifying voice with Web surfing. Long after Google’s click-to-call went belly-up, several new services are filling the void.

Jaxtr offers a new widget designed for blogs or e-commerce sites allow users to contact you by phone without giving your phone number away to the entire Internet. In over 30 countries in four continents, Jaxtr is catching on, and it’s still only in beta!

Direct CallBack
Direct CallBack is a direct competitor of Jaxtr. DCB allows a visitor of your Web page to call directly to your cell phone. All you need is a phone that accepts text messages; you don’t even need a computer.


CallWidget
Or, if you want visitors to leave their number so you can call them back at your convenience, you can use the CallWidget, which allows anyone to call you for free without them having to register. Designed for e-commerce site owners, CallWidget lets customers get in touch by phone for free, without you having to take a phone call in the middle of the night.

Jangl
Jangl has created a feature-rich Jaxtr competitor, with all the blogging widget flexibility of Jaxtr plus additional features like voicemail integration and a real-time accept/decline feature.

Online, you can post a Jangl Widget on your online profile, blog or personal page. When readers see your widget, they can simply enter their own phone number, click Go, and instantly get a Jangl phone number to call you. Your number and their number are both safe. This is a great way to connect when dating, expand your friends list, talk with your blog readers or sell products online.

Offline, you can give out your Jangl ID just like you would your regular phone number – put it on a business card or a napkin. When site visitors call the first time, they’ll be asked to leave a short message introducing themselves. When you get a Jangl call, you'll hear the caller's introduction and then have the ability to accept or reject it in real time. Jangl works on your mobile, home, work or VoIP phone.


5. VOIP-TO-CELL CALL-BACK APPLICATIONS

Jajah

Several companies are competing over the same cheap telephony turf – using VoIP plumbing to redirect cell phones that allow callers to make long distance and international calls for next to nothing. Chief among them is Jajah.

Jajah made a name for itself when it released a Web-based callback system, a sort of long-distance rate run-around. Type in your number and the number you want to call, and Jajah calls you both, connecting the call via VoIP to your existing phone line, which now includes cell phones from any global carrier and Apple’s upcoming iPhone.

RebTel

RebTel, a Luxembourg company, is hot on Jajah’s heels. With over 36 countries to call for free from the U.S., RebTel offers 10 international calls per month for free without any time restrictions. On the downside, the call procedure is trickier than Jajah’s: The person receiving the call has to call back to the number RebTel transmits through the receiver’s caller ID (also sending it as a text message). The receiver hangs up while the caller stays on the line. The receiver calls back the number sent by RebTel and the two talkers are connected.

A little too complicated to become the next Skype, but with the right marketing plan, a company with a name like RebTel could do well in certain rebel-friendly markets like in the Southern U.S. or with "Star Wars" fans.

Hullo
Hullo combines Jajah-style VoIP calling from cell and landlines with the PC-to-phone capabilities of Skype. Trying to separate itself from the field, Hullo offers a feature-rich environment that powers one of the most flexible calling services ever offered. Currently, Hullo is not accepting new users because its beta test period has ended. So while the design team is working out the kinks, here are some of Hullo’s features that you can look forward to when it relaunches:

  • Hullo Chat: Turn a regular phone call into a conference call, during the call, just by clicking on your buddy list.
  • Hullo Handoff: Move a call from your cell phone to your desk phone when you get into the office, without disconnecting the call.
  • Hullo Blast (coming soon): Send a voicemail to everyone at once by selecting them from your buddy list.

Talkster
Talkster is the only service that lets you talk to your Instant Messenger buddies on MSN, Google Talk and Gizmo Project – without the need for any software on your phone or PC, special devices, networks or data plans from your carrier. A mobile phone with a browser will work, even a phone without a data plan can work if you set the call up online with a PC.

There are only two steps to make a call to your buddies or any telephone number using Talkster. First, choose your friend from a buddy list or a telephone number for one of your contacts. Second, Talkster triggers your phone to call in to one of its local access gateways, or calls you back on your phone. Once your call is connected over the standard cellular voice network to the gateway, your contact's phone or instant messenger client will ring on the other end and you are talking – just like you would in a regular phone call.



6. VOIP ON YOUR CELLPHONE VIA A DATA NETWORK

Fring

Unlike Jajah and its clones, fring brings VoIP to your cell phone in totally different way – harnessing your mobile data network. fring allows users to make free mobile calls, send instant messages to other fring users, and communicate with PC-based VoIP applications such as Skype and Google Talk.

But “free” is a loaded term with this service. It’s free once you pay your mobile carrier’s data network plan. If you’re paying by the kilobyte, fring is far from free. The fring Web site is a basic, text-only page with entry windows for your phone number and email address. You sign up, and download fring onto your phone like a ringtone.


7. FIND THE CHEAPEST VOIP RATES VIA SMS

YapOn

Unlike Jajah and its brood that use your mobile calling minutes, or fring, powered by your provider’s data network plan, YapOn targets another blade in your Swiss Army telephone: SMS text messaging technology.

With its ‘Text to Talk’ feature, YapOn can provide mobile subscribers across the globe, regardless of carrier, the ability to access the most competitive long-distance rates directly from their mobile device.

Step 1. Register at YapOn’s Web site.
Step 2. Text YapOn to the number you want to call.
Step 3. YapOn calls you back and connects you, charging a low rate plus a 30-day free
trial. Great for cheap international calling with your mobile phone.

YapOn also offers ‘Quick Connect'’, which enables YapOn subscribers to initiate long-distance calls (landline and mobile) via YapOn’s web interface.



8. USE VOIP AND SKYPE ON YOUR CELL PHONE

iSkoot

Run by two Israeli brothers from their Cambridge, Mass., headquarters, iSkoot enables users to make unlimited, superior quality calls via their cell phones’ voice network to other Skype users, or through SkypeOut to nearly any phone number on the planet.

In January 2007, Skype confirmed that iSkoot met its usability and quality standards, making iSkoot the first and only third-party mobile client to be Skype-certified. Skype’s approval of iSkoot has left competitors, like Mobivox, out in the cold. Having dominated the Skype-to-cell market, iSkoot is venturing into other social-networking sites, seeking to unite cell phone consumers and computer users under a single product. As iSkoot Founder and CEO Jacob Guedalia said, “We would like iSkoot to be known as the company that brought Internet calling to all mobile phones.”

9. GET A VOIP SWITCHBOARD

GrandCentral

Using VoIP architecture, GrandCentral allows you to control which of your phone numbers ring when you get a call, plus it provides you with feature-rich options that will re-invent the role of telecommunications at the office.

When a call comes in, the GrandCentral interface will first show who’s calling. Then, you can accept the call or send it to voicemail, like any other phone system – or, you can utilize GrandCentral’s unqiue features. You could accept the call while recording it. Or, using GrandCentral’s trademarked ListenIn feature, you can listen in real time as your caller leaves a voicemail with the ability to take the call at any time. It provides unrivaled flexibility with no hardware to buy.

GrandCentral also allows you to consolidate your voicemail in a Web interface, which lets you to organize your contacts into groups and set up automatic behaviors and filters for each incoming phone number. GrandCentral is not yet available outside the U.S. or even in every area code. But it's growing, currently in all but 14 of the lower 48 states.

By
Jim Higdon
voip-news.com