In the start web conferencing calling was planned to be an audio conferencing call. Today it is mainly used as presentation calls which mainly relate with several people at a time. But web conference call is quickly substituting the other forms of conference calls with its multiple uses. The various improvements that have taken place in the information technology during the past two decades have had its echo in the conference call arena.
Filed under: Wireless

Google's plan in the 700MHz auction drama was never much of a secret: it was always assumed that the search giant would
bid enough to trigger the open-access provisions, but wasn't really
interested in winning, and sure enough, the company
confirmed that strategy when the bidding wrapped up. Of course, news travels slow in our nation's capital, and word of Google's dastardly plan to make sure the FCC's
open-access rules were triggered is apparently shocking news to a handful of Republicans, who characterized it as "gaming the system," and asked FCC chairman Kevin Martin if the agency had been "duped." Newsflash to Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich), Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla) and John Shimkus (R-Ill): the FCC, Google, and Verizon
argued about this for months and analysts had a
field day, remember? And then Verizon
gave up the lawsuits, went crazy on the
open tip, and won the auction anyway. Of course, if Verizon hadn't won, Google would have had to make good on that $4.6B bid, which isn't exactly chump change. So, who gamed what? If anything, the FCC's coffers got a little fatter than they would have otherwise, and we're pretty certain consumers will benefit from open-access, so, uh, you guys want to stop wrecking the party now? Cool.
[Thanks, Scott]
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Filed under: Portable Audio, Wireless
Just days after we got wind of the
NFC-ified Nokia 6212 comes word that the
PARTY Black Edition Bluetooth speaker -- that was introduced around a fortnight ago -- will also include the same technology. Yep, a NFC-enabled Bluetooth version will soon be available for purchase, giving owners of
NFC handsets the ability to pair up their device by simply getting up close and personal with the speaker. Specs wise, expect it to boast six total watts of power, a 5-button user interface, eight hours of battery life and an auxiliary input for times when a vanilla DAP will have to do. Word on the street has this one landing in the summertime for £79 ($156), but we've yet to see any official details on US pricing / availability. Check the full release after the jump.
Continue reading Parrot readying PARTY Black Edition Bluetooth speaker with NFC
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Filed under: Wireless

Sure, we've seen the occasional loony
look down upon open WiFi access, but Russia is apparently out to really slow down wireless adoption with its latest directive. Reportedly, the Russian Mass Media, Communications and Cultural Protection Service (or Rossvyazokhrankultura for short -- no seriously, we swear) is looking to have every user of a WiFi-enabled device obtain permission and register said device before hopping on the world wide web. Even worse, it seems as if every single wireless transmitter and device must be registered, meaning that technophiles will be filling out heaps of paperwork in order to get their handset, laptop, DS Lite, PC and hacked-up
Foleo online (legally) via their home-based access point. We're hearing that registering a single PDA or phone would take around ten days, while signing up a new home network would be even more painstaking. We'll spare you the snide
In Soviet Russia... remarks, but feel free to concoct your own below.
[Via
Wi-Fi Net News]Read |
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Filed under: Wireless
Starbucks said it would
transition to AT&T-provided WiFi sometime this spring, and it looks like T-Mobile's getting the boot right on schedule. The first Starbucks to switch over is just 4.2 miles away from AT&T corporate headquarters in San Antonio, at 5321 South Broadway Road, and the rest of the country should come on market-by-market. Anyone else seen any activity? T-Mobile customers still getting access, as promised? Let us know in comments!
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Filed under: Storage

Seagate was
talking a big game last month about how SSD makers like Samsung and Intel were infringing its patents, and the company wasn't joking around, following up all that tough talk with... what appears to be a test case against relatively minor vendor
STEC. Seagate says STEC's drives violate four patents it holds on SSD interfaces and that while "it's not a big financial issue yet," the company wants "to set things straight." As you'd expect, STEC doesn't feel quite as casual about the situation, saying that it's been making SSDs since 1994, before any of Seagate's patents were filed, and that it's going to aggressively defend Seagate's "desperate" claims and seek to invalidate its patents. many of which it believes aren't even relevant to SSD technology. That sounds like a fight to us -- get ready for some nonstop
paperwork legal thrills, people.
Read - NYT article about the suit
Read - Official STEC response
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