Friday 1 June 2012

ESRI honours PTCL with Special Achievement in GIS Award 2012 - Pakistan Daily Times

ESRI honours PTCL with Special Achievement in GIS Award 2012

KARACHI: US-based Environment Systems Research Institute (ESRI) honoured Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL) with the ?ESRI Special Achievement in GIS Award 2012? for its outstanding achievements and organisational performance in geographic information systems (GIS) and programmes.

?PTCL?s GIS programme stood out from amongst more than 100,000 others worldwide for its outstanding use of GIS technology in the existing network,? said founder and President ESRI, Jack Danger. We have selected PTCL for this year?s award on the basis of its innovative applications of GIS technology in Pakistan.

PTCL has been recognised by ESRI for its expert deployment of GIS in Islamabad region based on ESRI?s ArcGIS platform with telecom intelligence added through Telcordia?s NE software for purposes of access network planning and documentation. staff report

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Samsung Galaxy S III on sale in India today, likely to cost Rs 42500 - Firstpost

Samsung’s much awaited smartphone, the Galaxy S III is all set to be released in India today at 1.30 pm IST. Samsung will be broadcasting a live webcast of the event. You can click here for the web-cast.

The world’s largest smartphone maker has not yet announced the final price which will only be revealed at the launch today. However media reports quoting ‘sources’ have said that it will cost Rs 42500 which will put it in direct competition with Apples iPhone 4S. The cost of pre-booking the phone via Samsung’s online store is Rs 2,000. The phone is available in two colours, White Marble and Pebble blue.

The S III was released in Europe on Monday with a music service, MusicHub which is seen as a rival to Apple’s  iTunes. The phone has received rave reviews already and Samsung had nearly 9 million pre-order bookings for the phone before its launch.

The Galaxy S III has 3 versions: 16GB, 32GB and 64GB. Other key technical specifications of the phone are :

Samsung's much awaited smartphone, the Galaxy SIII is all set to be released for sale in India today at 1.30 pm IST. AP

• A 4.8 inch HD Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels.

• An 8 megapixel rear camera with flash and zero shutter lag and a 1.9 megapixel front camera with face recognition related options.

• The device is super light as it weighs 133g and is only 8.6 mm thick.

• It has a Samsung’s quad-core microprocessor and has 1GB RAM.

• S beam which allows users to transport files upto 1GB to another S III without using Wi-fi or data Internet.

In addition Dropbox has promised every consumer who registers the phone free 50GB cloud storage space.

The phone also comes with S Voice command, which is touted as Samsung’s rival to Apple’s Siri. The S III runs on Android 4.0 or Ice Cream Sandwich.

Are you planning to get one?


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Users still getting the message with texts - Irish Times

The Irish Times - Thursday, May 31, 2012

Communication: Text messaging will stay popular over the next five years, despite rising competition from mobile messaging apps, according to research firm Informa Telecoms Media.

Applications such as WhatsApp and Apple’s iMessage may have eaten into SMS revenues, but analysts say operators will still pull in about $722.7 billion between 2011 and 2016 as users send a total of 9.4 trillion messages.

Western Europe will continue to lead in terms of generating revenue, accounting for $174.1 billion over the five years.

In second place, Informa says, will be the Asia Pacific developing market, with a total of $173.8 billion.

Overall, global revenues from text messaging are set to rise at a compound annual growth rate of 3 per cent, although there will be some slowing of growth expected in developed regions, with the potential for a small decline.

“There will not be a uniform decline in mobile operators’ SMS traffic and revenues as a result of the adoption and use of over-the-top messaging services,” says Pamela Clark- Dickson, senior analyst in Informa’s mobile content and applications division.

“Factors such as the operators’ pricing strategies and the penetration of smartphones and mobile broadband in a market will determine how quickly and to what extent substitution occurs.”

However, its share of global messaging traffic is expected to decline to 42.1 per cent, compared with 64.1 per cent recorded in 2011.

Mobile instant messaging, in contrast, will increase from 1.6 trillion messages to 7.7 trillion messages, with a 34.6 per cent share of the traffic.


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Cook, new products, Apple and WWDC - New Zealand Herald

Apple CEO Tim Cook. Photo / AP

Apple and the Press

Tim Cook has been CEO of Apple for over a year now, and has been subject to a lot of examination lately. It's assumed the CEO will keynote this year's World Wide Developers' Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco on the stage former (and late) CEO Steve Jobs so relished, and this is almost invariably the forum for launching new stuff.

I know at least one person going to DubDubDeeCee and I will talk to her afterwards (if you are going, I am interested to talk to you, too, so if you'd like to talk about it after, please get in touch).

You never really know what's going to come out, as Apple is so super secretive, but when the totally new iMac shape (still current, after some gentle form tweaks and a move to aluminium) came out a few years ago, it surprised everybody. That level of surprise is almost impossible these days - both the leaks and the levels of scrutiny have ratcheted up dramatically since then. On the back of that, it's widely expected that new MacBook Pros are a cert, at least in the 15-inch variety, iPhone 5 comes next, and new iMacs with new CPUs are possible.

People also hope for some kind of announcement on the Mac Pro: a new model or will it be deleted? But there have been no leaks about that at all. For months.

Apple used to invite journalists but that hardly happens any more - I have, to my great regret, never been to an Apple event, but I really hope to go. One day ...

Apple has a strange relationship with the press. When you try and control a relationship so stringently, mutual trust normally becomes a casualty, and Apple is extremely cautious with any kind of contact that may get out of hand. As an example, I love this passage from CNN Money: "In February of this year, a group of investors visited Apple as part of a 'bus tour' led by a research analyst for Citibank. The session started with a 45-minute presentation by Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's chief financial officer, and the 15 or so investors who attended the session were treated to Apple's unique brand of hospitality: They met in a threadbare conference room in Apple's Town Hall public conference centre at the 4 Infinite Loop building in Cupertino, California, where the refreshments consisted of "three stale cookies and two Diet Cokes," in the words of one participant."

All de rigueur for Apple, I'm afraid. But that's when things changed. What really shocked the investors, as it was so unlike the Old Regime of Jobs, was that CEO Tim Cook popped into the room about 20 minutes into Oppenheimer's talk, sat down quietly in the back, and he listened. He didn't check his email once. He didn't interrupt.

Those three things are all completely the opposite of the late Jobs' self-absorbed manner.

Cook later answered all their questions in a straightforward manner.

People think Cook's an excellent CEO. eWeek gives ten reasons why, starting with the seamless transition from Jobs to Cook with no lag for uncertainty and disquiet.

There may be a sea change at the top, but it hasn't so far led to anything perceptible to the more peripheral characters who need to deal with Apple.

I haven't met Cook (I didn't meet Jobs either), but so far I appreciate his honesty and the fact he's brought some humanity back to The Inc.

Before becoming CEO, Cook strengthened Apple's cooperation with its contract manufacturers in China and took it as a personal blow when the New York Times ran a prominent article critical of the working conditions in China at Foxconn, the Taiwanese contract manufacturer that assembles most of Apple's products. The exposé painted a bleak portrait of the lives of workers in the factories. To be fair to Apple, plants like this manufacture virtually all the products we buy in the West, not just Apple's, but the schadenfreude seemed to single out Apple in particular to carry the can, as this wonderful Joy of Tech cartoon aptly illustrates (thanks to Paul Stower for pointing this out).

It seems staff morale is still high at Apple, but so far under Cook's watch, no dramatically new product has been released - the iPhone 4S might be much better than the iPhone 4, but it's basically an upgraded smartphone. So all eyes turn back to that WWDC keynote (June 11, with the keynote scheduled for 10AM US Pacific Time).

As I have written before, a new MacBook may be the departure-from-form we've all been hoping for, and iOS6 and Mac OS Mountain Lion may also at least have their availability definitively announced. But who knows what else?

Cook, hopefully. Recently, he gave a rare interview which has ramped up the general speculation even more, although inevitably some of this comes from reading between the lines.

Cook sounds a bit modest and unassuming, but almost anybody is by comparison to Steve Jobs - and even by comparison to Steve Wozniak, these days. I have even read about how modest Cook's house is, by Silicon Valley magnate standards anyway. But his All Things D appearance presided over by Apple sycophant (in my opinion) Walt Mossberg was in front of a live audience and preceded by a gospel choir and a marching band, I kid you not. To Cook's credit, his opening words were "I would have never agreed to follow that act if you had told me."

It's a fascinating interview despite the shenanigans.

The AppleBitch blog (excuse the name, not my fault) has indulged in this along with many others, but this site often carries good, informed opinion. Besides, I like its attitude: "What makes us so special? Our opinion does. If you don't like it, contribute to the discussion, or bugger off," which kinda succinctly nails the zeitgeist of opinion blogs, don't you think? And please do note that Mac Planet is also an opinion blog, and not 'journalism'.

Reassuring to the faithful, Cook said that 'not accepting things good or very good, but only the best' is embedded at Apple.

"I'm not going to witness or permit the change of that."

But if your burning question was whether Apple was going to merge the toaster and the refrigerator ... no. As Cook told AllThingsD "That's not what is coming next week."

Phew.

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Thursday 31 May 2012

Local View: Wind power needs to be added economically - Lincoln Journal Star

I have read with interest the differing viewpoints regarding wind power that have been expressed this past week in newspapers and elsewhere.

I am in no way opposing wind as an alternative energy resource. However, adding wind needs to be done in an economic fashion that does not overshadow or restrict other alternatives for cleaner energy. We need to get away from the “all-or-nothing” attitude that seems to prevail over the issue of wind power. It seems that proponents want the wind alternative at any cost, and we should be “all-in”. Should individuals disagree with the timing, amount or cost of wind energy, we are characterized as wanting nothing to do with renewables and are, therefore, against the environment. This could not be farther from the truth.

The basic environmental concern seems to be with the amount of carbon that is emitted into the atmosphere. If that is the case, we should be focused on all generation resources that help to reduce the growth in global carbon levels. We support a clean environment and have been in favor of a number of proposals, including clean-coal alternatives, which enhance the goal of reducing electric generation’s carbon footprint.

Nebraska Public Power District’s current generation resource portfolio is nearly 50 percent carbon-free. With the goal of 10 percent renewables by 2020, that number will rise to nearly 55 percent. I would challenge those pointing the finger at Nebraska for their lack of environmental stewardship to observe this fact. Then I would suggest they direct their efforts toward other states that aren’t even close to this record and demand that other states come to our level.

It also would be helpful if we could consider the bigger picture. We cannot change our resource portfolios overnight. If supported by the public in general, as opposed to the vocal few, we can make a transition over a reasonable period in the future. To do so too quickly would drive rates up and hurt an already fragile economy.

Electric utilities have done this in the past,  during the oil crisis of the 1970s. They went from having 60+ percent of their generation resources being fueled by oil, to something less than 2 percent across the country today. The electric industry was the only one to make such a profound difference. We did so through the use of coal generation and were applauded for it. Everyone forgets that and now demonizes where we are today.

Give us the time, without threats and penalties, and we once again can make a responsible transition that can benefit all consumers of electricity. Global coal usage is  part of that larger picture. Someone will have to explain to us how shutting down coal plants in the United States and freeing up more exports of coal to countries such as China and India to burn in their plants helps the overall global climate.

There are a couple of other points that should be addressed. NPPD and its customers do, in fact, pay the capital costs, maintenance and operation costs of the wind farms. Those costs, as well as a risk component, are a part of the negotiated rate contained in the power purchase agreements and are paid for by NPPD. There is nothing free about wind power.

A very important second point is that wind only generates approximately 40 percent of the time and would require the cost of backup generating plants. The cost of current wind projects and those projected in the near future (with backup plants), even with federal tax credits, would be more expensive than the blended cost of the resources in our present generation portfolio.

The Nebraska Electric Generation and Transmission Cooperative and its members are indeed concerned about our environment and the future need for electric generation. We have boards of directors, public bodies elected by retail customers to represent them, and those boards want to make sure that any future generation is proposed and built in a responsible, cost-effective manner.

Bruce A. Pontow is general manager of Nebraska Electric Generation and Transmission in Columbus.  


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Of terrorists using Facebook - DAWN.com

THE Australian Ambassador for Counter-Terrorism, Bill Paterson, has claimed that terror outfits that have embraced the rise of technology, the Internet in particular, to spread their messages and attract followers, are using Facebook to recruit loners from western nations like Australia to their cause.

He said social media has also encouraged the rise of home-grown terrorism, particularly among ‘disaffected loners sometimes on the margins of society,’ adding that Norwegian mass killer Anders Breivik is a prime example. He also said that in democratic countries where Internet censorship is seen as an ‘infringement of freedom of information’ or a breach on civil liberties, stopping terrorists from communicating on social media is difficult.

The report does not specify as to what terrorist outfits — Islamist or non-Islamist — are involved. But it does indicate that if depressed western loners can be recruited, they can resort to acts like that of Anders Breivik, the Oklahoma-bombing Christian-convict, the block-buster movie-inspired American schoolchildren cum ‘killer-kids’, then why can’t they recruit poor unemployed individuals from a Third-World country like Pakistan to become merchants of death!

As Paterson suggests financial and psychological rehabilitative measures to let the lone westerners live a peaceful life, why can’t the world come to Pakistan’s help for initiating massive rehabilitative and development projects?

ESCHMALL SARDAR
Peshawar

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iPhone 5 pics show new design leaked - South Asian News Agency

iPhone 5 pics show new design leaked

The photos also suggest that the next-generation iPhone will have the same width, but has a taller screen.

Tech blog 9to5Mac writes, “From a production standpoint, it appears that the metal antenna band is molded into the metal backplates. We assume this is Apple’s way of creating a unibody enclosure for mobile devices. Apple introduced unibody notebooks in late 2008, and the purpose of the unibody is to allow Apple to produce thinner and lighter, yet stronger, devices. Now that most of the phone’s external elements are one piece, Apple is likely able to squeeze more into the iPhone internally. Apple needs all the space they can get with their plans of producing LTE smartphones with proper battery life.”

Amidst a swirl of rumours about Apple’s next iPhone, these images have kick-started debates in the tech world if Apple CEO Tim Cook is planning to release just an update to iPhone 4S or showcase some new features in the upcoming iPhone.

As the tech world regularly speculates on the upcoming Apple iPhone, two tech blogs have released pictures that they claim shows off the upcoming iPhone. The leaked images show that the next iPhone will retain the physical home button and will have a metal back with a smaller dock connector.


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