Verizon Wireless Now Offers Exclusive Mobile Content from New Beyonce Music Album

Posted by Kim Poh Liaw on November 13th, 2008

Verizon Wireless is teaming with Beyoncé to bring Verizon Wireless customers exclusive content from her new album “I AM… SASHA FIERCE” before its Nov. 18 release date. Beginning this week, fans who want to hear new music from one of the world’s top performers can do so using V CAST Music and VZW Tones on their Verizon Wireless phones. On Friday, Nov. 14, Verizon Wireless customers will be able to download and purchase select full tracks including: “Halo,” “Satellites,” “Broken-Hearted Girl,” “Ave Maria,” “Sweet Dreams,” “Video Phone” and the current single, “If I Were A Boy.” Today, Verizon Wireless customers can download and purchase as ringtones or ringback tones all those songs plus, “Disappear,” “Radio,” “Diva” as well as Beyoncé’s current single, “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” all before the album drops next week.

beyonce

For the first time, Verizon Wireless will have an artist “take over” the V CAST Music handset store. Beyoncé will select her favorite albums, songs, playlists and other material to be featured exclusively on the V CAST Music mobile storefront from Nov. 14 - Nov. 18, giving fans and interested music lovers a chance to see and sample music made by and recommended by one of today’s top performers.

Verizon will also send a video MMS message with a personalized message from Beyoncé directly to select subscribers, enabling them to be the first to download and purchase ringtones, ringback tones and full songs from her entire album. Fans can also text “BEYONCE” to 8901 to download the exclusive titles directly to their mobile phones.

Sony Announces 12.25 Megapixel CMOS Image Sensor “Exmor” for Mobile Phones

Posted by Kim Poh Liaw on November 13th, 2008

exmorSony today announced the commercialization of “IMX060PQ”, a new type 1/2.5 CMOS image sensor “Exmor” for use in camera enabled mobile phones which has a 12.25 effective megapixel resolution. Furthermore, Sony will also commercialize “IU060F”, a type 1/3.2 lens module with 12.25 effective megapixel resolution, and “IU046F”, a type 1/3.2 lens module with 8.11 effective megapixels. Equipped with lens and auto focus functions, the two modules claimed to be industry’s smallest and thinnest in their class. Does this also mean we are on the track to what Ericsson had predicted?

Picture

Above: Lens modules (from left to right) “IU060F”*2 “IU046F”
Below: CMOS Image sensors “Exmor” (from left to right)”IMX060PQ” “IMX046PQ” “IMX045PQ”

Verizon Wireless And Photobucket Launch Instant Mobile Photo Uploading

Posted by Kim Poh Liaw on November 13th, 2008

Verizon Wireless and Photobucket today announced the availability of a new mobile photo service on select Verizon Wireless handsets that enables Verizon Wireless customers to easily send photos from a mobile device to a Photobucket album. The application will launch exclusively for Verizon Wireless customers and cost a monthly subscription fee of $2.99. The subscription fee allows you to send unlimited mobile photos to your photobucket account.

photobucket-mobile

To utilize the application, Verizon Wireless subscribers sign up for a Photobucket account and enter their log-in information to link their Verizon Wireless account to their Photobucket online photo album. Once the accounts are connected, the application instantly uploads photos already saved on the phone to the user’s Photobucket account. The Photobucket Mobile Uploader then automatically sends any future photos directly to the same Photobucket account.

O2 covers almost 100 percent of the population with its mobile network

Posted by Kim Poh Liaw on November 13th, 2008

O2 Germany has announced that the company is now covering 99 percent of the population with its GSM network. By the end of the year, the entire UMTS network will be HSDPA capable. The number of EDGE sites has tripled in the last two months and the HSUPA upgrading will start this year already.

utms-antenna

O2 has reached the key milestone of operating an independent network as the company now achieves an almost 100 percent coverage of the population. Until the full expansion of its own mobile network by the end of 2009, O2 customers will also be able to use the T-Mobile network in areas which are not covered by O2. Moreover, O2 is also rapidly moving forward the optimization of the mobile supply in buildings, and the company continues to catch up with the two big market players.

Furthermore, O2 will start HSUPA upgrading for a more rapid uploading of data in the next couple of weeks.
Based on EDGE the mobile use of data will also become more and more rapidly in the classical GSM network. The number of sites has more than tripled to 2,600 in the last two months.

The LG Swift rushes to Alltel Wireless with Fastap Keys

Posted by Kim Poh Liaw on November 13th, 2008

Alltel Wireless and LG today introduced the LG Swift, a clamshell phone that comes with Fastap Press-to-Experience keys. The Fastap Keypad provides “swift and simple” one-touch discovery, access and use of phone features, services and applications such as Alltel Navigation, Alltel Shop, Email, Alarm Clock and Image Library.

LG-Swift-1

The LG Swift also features external music buttons to conveniently play and manage music. A dual speaker system with stereo sound can be enjoyed using background music mode or using the Bluetooth headset. The phone also includes a 1.3 MP camera with multi-shot and video capabilities, one-touch speakerphone, and an expandable memory slot for song storage.

Alltel Wireless is offering the LG Swift, in a red and blue clamshell design, for $49.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate. This discounted price is for new customers on two-year service agreements, as well as existing eligible customers on qualifying rate plans.

LG-Swift-2

RFID Blocking Wallets by Mobile Edge

Posted by Matthew Olivolo on November 13th, 2008

Identity Theft has become a real threat over the past decade, and recently it has only gotten worse.  Case in point, new Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) chips are now implanted in new Credit Cards and all U.S. Passports.  Although this technology has its benefits, there is one major problem; people can skim your information without even being detected.

The new RFID chips send out a continual signal even when it is in your wallet or purse.  This makes it easy for criminals to steal your information with skimming machines.

There are even videos on YouTube (one below) that shows how easy it is to skim another person’s information from their pocket completely undetected.  The devices are so small and compact, that they can fit into any regular sized bag/briefcase.   The person may be walking next to you on the street and he may be skimming your credit card information. This is a real threat that many technology writers have indicated in a multitude of articles ranging from the Wall Street Journal, The Economist, scores of blog sites and Magazines just to name a few.

The Research & Development Team at Mobile Edge discovered this threat and came up with a simple solution, Mobile Edge I.D. Sentry Wallets.  The RFID blocking wallets come in two sizes, one for credit cards or smart cards, and another for Passports.  Both RFID blocking wallets are lined with an alloy shielding material, protecting your smart card or Passport from would-be thieves.

Made of soft yet durable Lambskin Leather, the Passport Wallet is priced at $29.99 and Credit Card Wallet at $19.99.

Don’t take my word for it; research this for yourself on the Internet.  Here is one article I found recently by John Cox, writer for Network World. To read the full article click on the link below.

UPDATE: Hacker trio finds a way to crack popular smartcard in minutes
People are starting to wake up to the fact that some RFID-enabled smartcards now can be far more easily, and cheaply, cracked than ever before, as a trio of young computer experts recently showed.

These are a particular type of processor-embedded cards. The actual decryption work by the researchers was done on the widely deployed Mifare Classic wireless smartcard, now manufactured by a Philips spinoff, NXP Semiconductors. It’s deployed for contactless payments, such as the nationwide public transit ticketing system in The Netherlands. If decrypted, the card could be rewritten to access additional services, certain limited personal data such as a birth date could be recovered, and the dollar value of the card’s electronic “purse” could be changed.

A recently de-classified study, by a nonprofit Dutch research group, of the claims by the decryption researchers concluded that it is likely they will succeed in recovering the entire encryption algorithm, and eventually build a key cracker. But that will take about six months, the study estimates, and concludes that there are no immediate risks to the Dutch system or its users, and that additional, existing security mechanisms may offer adequate protection.

Visa RFID Credit Card

That MiFare Classic card is the basis of such new systems as the Dutch OV-Chipkaart, being rolled out in The Netherlands as part of a multibillion-dollar nationwide transportation ticketing system, and the so-called CharlieCard, used in the Boston, Mass., subway system. The decryption breach triggered a firestorm of controversy in The Netherlands.

The card uses a proprietary encryption scheme, known as the Crypto1 algorithm, to scramble the data exchanged between the card and the card reader, and to securely authenticate the card and reader to each other.

The newest attack was discussed but not (as previously reported) fully demonstrated at the 24th Congress of the Chaos Computer Club in Berlin last December. Interest in the study has been spreading steadily from the arcane world of security hackers. In a March 6 statement, NXP says it “has established an open dialogue with the researchers and is evaluating possible attacks and countermeasures that could be taken in an overall systems to prevent those.”

One of the researchers is Karsten Nohl, a graduate student in the University of Virginia’s Computer Science Department, in Charlottesville. The other two are Henryk Plotz and “Starbug.” At the Chaos conference, Nohl and Plotz gave some details of an apparently practical, effective way to break the Mifare encryption key, confirming what many cryptographers had suspected. Nohl has not yet responded to several questions sent via e-mail.

The team used an inexpensive RFID reader to collect encrypted data, and then reverse-engineered the chip to figure out the encryption key to decipher that data. They examined the chip under an optical microscope, used micro-polishing sandpaper to remove a few microns of the surface at a time, photographing each of the five layers of circuitry. Nohl wrote his own optical recognition software to refine and clarify the images, and then patiently worked through the arrangement of the logic gates to deduce the encryption algorithm, a task made possible by the fact that the Mifare Classic relies on a secret key of no more than 48 bits.

To read the full article click here.

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Press Release: VERIZON WIRELESS AND PHOTOBUCKET LAUNCH INSTANT MOBILE PHOTO UPLOADING

Posted by MobileBurn.com on November 13th, 2008
Web's Leading Standalone Photo Site Makes Photo Sharing Fast and Easy For Verizon Wireless Customers
Read the full story here.

Alltel launches Fastap equipped LG Swift music cell phone

Posted by Michelle Ruhfass on November 13th, 2008
The LG Swift is a new music centric flip phone for Alltel using the latest Fastap technology, which combines a regular phone keypad with keys for the 26 letters of the alphabet.
Read the full story here.

Press Release: AT&T Welcomes The Nokia 6650 in Time for the Holidays

Posted by MobileBurn.com on November 13th, 2008
Personalization, Style and Speed Merge Into Feature-Packed Device on the Nation's Fastest 3G Network
Read the full story here.

Sony reveals new 5, 8, and 12 megapixel cameraphone modules

Posted by Ricky Cadden on November 13th, 2008
Sony has officially announced its new line of cameraphone modules, boasting lower power consumption. The modules, part of the Exmor range, include a 5 megapixel, 8 megapixel, and 12 megapixel module.
Read the full story here.


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