Posts Tagged Mobile Phone Screen

FCC pressing for AllVid to replace Cable Cards

Posted by on Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Looks like the FCC wants to replace your Cable Card with, I don’t know, something useful. The new device, dubbed “AllVid,” would work with a variety of media—TVs, computers, and the like—to deliver “multichannel video programming and Internet content.” And I’m the Queen of England~!

AllVid was proposed by FCC president Julius Genachowski at a fancy meeting yesterday. It’s probably a fine idea—I don’t know if you can call the Cable Card any sort of success—but the reception seems mixed. And this is the reaction by other FCC people—they’re all but rolling their eyes, partly because, you know, let the private market work itself out.

I guess the pie-in-the-sky idea is for some company to come up with a brand new, totally amazing device (like our inanimate carbon rod friend here) that allows your to receive over-the-air TV signals, cable and satellite signals, and everything in between, and output said signal to a TV or computer screen or mobile phone screen.

That’s probably not going to happen, no, but I can think of something that’s pretty close: it’s called Usenet. Use it while it’s still around.



Call without a SIM card with Cherry

Posted by on Sunday, 5 July, 2009

The chances of me being genuinely amazed at something I see a Belgian tech company achieve are rather slim. But occasionally, it happens. Last week I went to local entrepreneur meetup BetaGroup and saw five startups pitch their stuff to the 200-person audience.

The last one to get its five minutes of fame was Cherry, a new mobile operator that promised to “revolutionize the telecom world”. Needless to say, I was as curious as I was skeptical.

Then the company’s CEO got up on stage, introduced himself, took out his Nokia smartphone, called some random guy in the audience and had him call him back on his phone afterwards. Projecting his mobile phone screen on a bigger screen for everyone to see, he demonstrated how he didn’t need to launch an application and just browsed his contact list to call the other person. Standard functionality, sure, but the cool part of it was the fact that the phone was lacking the presence of a SIM card, which is supposed to identify you as a subscriber of a telephony service.