­T-Mobile UK has announced changes in its unlimited mobile internet tariff, which will now include a fair-use limit of 500Mb for multimedia files.

According to T-Mobile, browsing means looking at websites and checking email, but not watching videos, downloading files or playing games. The change to the fair use policy means subscribers will always be able to browse the internet, it’s only when they go over the fair use amount that they won’t be blocked from downloading, streaming and watching video clips.

The new policy will be effective from 1st February 2011.

The statement from the company concluded that if you want to download, stream and watch video clips, save that stuff for your home broadband.

26% in US used cell phones for activism

A new survey issued unveils that 26% of adult Americans used their cell phones to encourage others to vote in November’s mid-term elections or to report back on conditions at their local voting sites, among other political activities.

In particular, 14% said they used their phones to tell others that they voted, while 12% used their handsets to receive election updates. Another 1% used an election-themed app to keep themselves updated on the election results.

If respondents used their phones to take photos and videos related to the election or contributed money to a campaign, they, too, were counted among the 26% who used their phones for political purposes during election season.

The November survey found that men and women were about as likely to use their phones to send political messages. But it reported more use of phones for politics among the young, affluent and college-educated.

While the majority of American adults — 82% own a cell phone, only 40% turned out to vote this year.

It also noted that this was the first time it had asked questions about use of cell phones in a mid-term election, so there are no comparable data for previous non-presidential elections.

The survey of 2,257 U.S. adults, including 1,918 cell phone users, has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points. The survey was conducted in English and Spanish and included calls to cell phone numbers, a technique that allows the inclusion of households that no longer have landline phones.

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Ericsson, Swedish telecom equipment maker had won a contract to supply Danish operator TDC with a fourth-generation (4G) communications network.

According to the company’s statement, Ericsson will roll out a complete 4G/LTE solution, including radio access and core network equipment, as well as managed services. The company added that the network roll-out will start immediately

According to Industry analysts, the real breakthrough is not possible until 2012-2013.

LTE technology, which is to gradually replacing 3G, enables faster access to mobile Internet services and supports the development of television, videos and photos on mobile phones.

According to TDC, the company wants to introduce 4G in six cities, including Copenhagen, in January 2011.

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Apple has released its latest version of its iOS 4 operating system for developers, the iOS 4.2 beta 3. The new application is added with new features highlighting customizable tones designed to alert users when text messages arrive.
Additional updates include new iPhone 4 wallpapers and enhanced restrictions settings for the Game Center multi-player gaming platform, like expanded controls for adding friends. Apple supposedly immobilized its new AirPlay wireless media streaming solution for applications including YouTube, Photos and Videos.
Game Center restrictions have also been added to iOS 4.2. The users have the option to customize their friend-list. The new update will be compatible with the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch and looks set to be available from next month.

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Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) — T-Mobile USA Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. made the highest offers for U.S. airwaves at a government auction, driving the bidding past $10 billion. T-Mobile, the fourth-biggest
U.S. mobile-phone company, offered $3.05 billion for 77 licenses, according to preliminary results released today by the Federal Communications Commission. Verizon, owner of the second-largest
U.S. wireless provider, offered $2.8 billion for four licenses, including $1.34 billion for the biggest in the northeastern region. Through 20 rounds of the auction, telephone companies have been the most aggressive in trying to expand their coverage to offer more customers high-speed services. The bids are preliminary and the FCC will hold more rounds tomorrow, giving other companies a chance to top today’s offers. The process may last weeks before winners are announced.

“In the end it comes down to willingness to spend,” said Jeff Heynen, an analyst covering broadband and Internet television at Infonetics Research in
Raleigh, North Carolina. “Telcos are the only guys that have the funds to be able to do that.” A joint venture between EchoStar Communications Corp. and DirecTV Group Inc., the two largest
U.S. satellite-television companies, dropped out of the running. The auction of the 1,122 spectrum licenses, which reached $10.3 billion today, may raise as much as $15 billion, making it the FCC’s second-most lucrative sale, according to government projections. Widening, Deepening T-Mobile, a unit of Bonn-based Deutsche Telekom AG, is aiming to catch up with larger rivals Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless LLC in offering videos and games.

New York-based Verizon wants more users for services such as mobile video and has leading bids in the
Great Lakes and southeastern regions. “For T-Mobile it’s widening and for Verizon it’s deepening,” Heynen said. T-Mobile, owned by Deutsche Telekom AG, is making its biggest bids in the western, northeastern and central regions. SpectrumCo LLC, a partnership that includes Comcast Corp., Time Warner Cable Inc., and Sprint Nextel Corp., was the third- biggest bidder, offering $1.54 billion for 79 licenses. “Cable companies as expected are being somewhat restrained and we view their participation as experimental,” said Aryeh Bourkoff, an analyst at UBS AG in
New York. Shares of Verizon fell 16 cents to $34.23 in composite trading today on the New York Stock Exchange. Deutsche Telekom shares rose 16 cents to 11.21 euros in
Germany. EchoStar, located in
Englewood, Colorado, added 15 cents to $33.11, and El Segundo, California-based DirecTV gained 27 cents to $18.06.

Source : Bloomberg

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