&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for February, 2008

Feb 27 2008

China Prepares 4G Mobile Data Specification for ITU

Published by techlover under Blogroll Edit This

China is planning to submit a homegrown fourthgeneration (4G) mobile data specification to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) in either 2008 or 2009, according to Wen Ku of the Chinese Ministry of Information Industry. The Chinese 4G technology will allow users to surf the web and transmit files much faster than current 3G standards, Ku says, giving it strong potential in the wireless multimedia sector. China’s failure to deploy 3G mobile broadband technology, however, which stems largely from an ongoing standards dispute between carriers and the Communist government, has raised doubts about the country’s ability to compete globally in the emerging 4G sector. The search for a dominant 4G standard is set to begin next year, with the ITU begins accepting proposals from countries around the world. The first 4G networks will likely see commercial deployment by around 2010.

Source:
http://www.teleclick.ca/2007/10/chinaprepares4gmobiledataspecificationforitu/

Advertise Here with Today.com

No responses yet

Feb 17 2008

Case Study: Mobile Office Deployment Is Smooth Sailing For Royal Caribbean Cruises

Published by techlover under Blogroll Edit This

The Challenge: Reducing global connectivity costs while increasing coverage

The Solution: iPass Mobile Office and iPass Device Management

The Result: Reduced connectivity costs by 33 percent and support calls by 37percent while increasing coverage

“iPass Device Management exceeded our expectations for migrating users to the Mobile Office service. It was totally transparent from a user perspective, with no deployment-related issues reported.” - Ileana Gonzalez, Manager of Customer Care, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.

Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. is a global cruise vacation company that operates Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises and Pullmantur. The company has a combined total of 34 ships in service and six under construction. It also offers unique land-tour vacations in Alaska, Australia, Canada, Europe and Latin America.

THE CHALLENGE

Providing service in the travel industry requires a fair amount of travel. Just ask Royal Caribbean employees who require reliable access to e-mail, reservations systems and other corporate resources as they sail between countries and continents.

Unfortunately, making a connection was becoming an adventure for many of these on-the-go employees due to the lack of global access points offered by Royal Caribbean’s remote access provider.

“A lack of points of presence was a growing concern, creating productivity issues for employees and IT support staff,” reports Aurora Aday, manager of NetCom Solutions at Royal Caribbean. In addition, the cruise leader was taking a closer look at remote access costs. Royal Caribbean was paying access fees for all users, whether they were active or not, and help desk calls were impacting budgets as well.

After reviewing several proposals, Royal Caribbean decided to make a departure from its previous vendor and move forward with iPass.

THE SOLUTION

Royal Caribbean had an ambitious schedule that involved updating all mobile users within two weeks. However, the company needed a way to install iPass Mobile Office and remove the previous remote access client from 800 notebook systems - many of which are mobile at any given time.

That’s when an iPass representative informed the company about its Device Management service. Device Management is a simple, cost-effective way to manage remote and mobile devices when they connect to the Internet. Among other capabilities, Device Management includes an intelligent software distribution engine.

In January 2006, the IT crew at Royal Caribbean began a rapid migration to the iPass Mobile Office service. First, the help desk team emailed all remote notebook equipped employees a link to download the Device Management agent. Once employees clicked on the link, the Device Management service handled the rest.

Since many Royal Caribbean employees use dial-up links as they travel, downloading the 7.9MB iPassConnect client could have presented complications. Fortunately, Device Management cruises through large software distributions. Its intelligent mobility features allow users to remain productive as downloads occur in the background using spare bandwidth. Dynamic bandwidth throttling trickles downloads to mobile systems during periods of user activity and bursts downloads when connections are idle. The solution’s resumable download feature lets updates continue where they left off over multiple sessions.

THE RESULT

Royal Caribbean achieved its goal of migrating 800 mobile users to the iPass Mobile Office service within two weeks.

“We had a very short window to deploy the iPass Mobile Office service,” says Ileana Gonzalez, manager of customer care at Royal Caribbean. “The training required for Device Management was minimal, and the solution greatly reduced the need for internal resources. Without Device Management our IT staff would have had to create and distribute CDs to many mobile employees.”

“iPass Device Management exceeded our expectations for migrating users to the Mobile Office service. Deployment was straightforward for our users and IT staff,” states Gonzalez. “It was totally transparent from a user perspective. In fact, no deployment-related issues were reported.”

As for the iPass Mobile Office service, Royal Caribbean is equally impressed. According to Gonzalez, “Since using iPass Mobile Office, coverage-related complaints have decreased significantly, and we’ve achieved the cost reductions we were looking for.”

Today, Royal Caribbean only pays access fees for active users using a pooled-minute model, allowing greater flexibility and cost control. The company has realized a 33 percent savings each month over the company’s previous vendor, which charged a license per seat for all potential users. Likewise, the number of remote-access-related trouble tickets is down 37 percent.

Mobile Office also includes Web-based access to iPass intelligent Online Quality (iOQ) reports for real time connection usage and performance feedback. Royal Caribbean runs iOQ reports each month for cost analysis and internal billing allocation to the business units. The company’s help desk also has access to iOQ connection data to accelerate troubleshooting. With all this being said, Royal Caribbean is very happy it got onboard with iPass.

Source: http://www.phoneplusmag.com/hotnews/7bh1313444.html

No responses yet

Feb 08 2008

Chinese Internet Population on Brink of Surpassing U.S.

Published by techlover under Blogroll Edit This

The Chinese government announced late last week that the country’s internet population had soared to 210million people, putting it just 5 million internet users behind the United States.

The state-controlled China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) reported growth of 53% from 137 million internet users at this time last year, a growth rate which virtually guarantees that China will have the world’s largest internet population within the next few months.

Internet penetration in China, however, remains at just 16%, similar to that of the United States in the mid1990s. American internet penetration has since risen to 75% of adults, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project. This figure is even higher when teens are included in the total. (China’s stats include all users aged 6 and up.)

“We’re two countries at very different points along the adoption curve,” commented Pew associate director, John Horrigan. “China is approximately 15 years behind.”

Another key factor which differentiates the U.S. and Chinese internet populations is the use of cybercafes, which are very popular in China among users who can’t afford computers at home. About one-third of Chinese users primarily access the internet on public computers, versus just 7% in the United States.

Also worth mentioning is the notorious presence of censorship in China, which prevents internet users in the country from accessing many of the websites that are taken for granted by users in North America and Europe. Most online video sites, as well as politically charged content that may be critical of communist or authoritarian governments, are difficult or impossible to access for the average Chinese internet user.

Source:
www.teleclick.ca/2008/01/chineseinternetpopulationonbrinkofsurpassingus/

No responses yet

Advertise Here