6 Dec
TomTom, Google Maps team up for web-to-GPS interaction
Posted on 2007 under Other Gadgets | No Comment
Archives for the day Thursday, December 6th, 2007
6 Dec
6 Dec
In what’s becoming a common strategy by patent plaintiffs to try and speed up the settlement process, IBM has asked the United States International Trade Commission to ban imports of Asus computers due to claimed patent violations. The two companies had a patent license that expired in December of 2004, and IBM says Asus has continued to use the disputed tech since that time, in both Asus-branded machines and machines it’s OEM’d for others, like Apple and Dell. IBM isn’t getting specific about which patents are being infringed, except to say that it’s three patents that cover “important aspects of computer systems, including power supplies, computer cooling and computer clustering capabilities.” As always with ITC hearings, there’s a 45-day window for the Commission to make a determination, so you may want to snap up that Eee PC sooner rather than later.
Disclaimer: Although this post was written by an attorney, it is not meant to be legal advice or analysis and should not be taken as such.
In a welcome first for domestic airlines, JetBlue will be rolling out free in-flight Yahoo IM and email services to passengers packing WiFi-equipped devices, starting aboard its new “BetaBlue” Airbus A320. Once this test-bed passenger jet reaches 10,000 feet, an in-plane network with three in-ceiling access points is activated, allowing most any wireless gadget with a Flash-enabled browser to view specialized versions of either Yahoo Messenger or Mail through a universal landing page. What’s more, owners of certain BlackBerry handsets like the 8820 or Curve 8320 can keep feeding their addictions non-stop thanks to an agreement between JetBlue and RIM.
Bandwidth for these services is provided by LiveTV, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the carrier that provides the entire fleet with select DirecTV and XM radio channels, and which also happens to possess a valuable 1MHz slice of ground-to-air spectrum that it’s deploying for this very purpose (with the help of some 100 existing cell towers around the country). If all goes well in what is admittedly a beta test, more aircraft will receive the WiFi makeover, and more features — such as access to terabytes of locally-stored multimedia content — will be rolled out, along with additional service providers besides Yahoo. Just don’t expect an open pipe any time soon: that sweet little slice of spectrum is not nearly robust enough to handle the heavy Slinging, VoIPing, and Torrenting you all would obviously be doing.
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