 |   GOLFnSUN Enjoy the sun Premium join:2002-03-03 Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast
| Online banking & credit cards coming to mobile web
2 Separate stories show how the US is finally following the lead of Japan & S.Korea for mobile banking and credit card access.
»news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-100511···1_3-0-20
Visa is adding a wireless twist to the old phrase "Charge It." The credit card processing giant announced Thursday several initiatives to allow its credit card toting customers the ability to transfer money, make payments, and receive real-time account notification alerts on their Nokia and Android cellular phones. Visa also struck a mobile deal with U.S. Bank. »news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-100511···1_3-0-20
Sprint Nextel announced Thursday a new downloadable application that will let its subscribers bank and pay bills from their cell phones.
The new application called MyMoneyManager will provide online banking access to accounts with BB&T, Citibank, IBC Bank and PNC Bank. Subscribers with accounts at these banks will be able to check balances, pay bills, and find nearby branches with ATMs using the application on their phone. Sprint subscribers must have a Web-enabled phone and a wireless data plan to access the service.
The MyMoneyManager application is available at no additional charge to Sprint data subscribers. In the future, Sprint plans to preload MyMoneyManager on phones. It will also include additional banks and other financial service providers. -- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page Ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya punk? | |
|   GOLFnSUN Enjoy the sun Premium join:2002-03-03 Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast
| Gartner study: IPTV Growth of 64% in 2008
»news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080925/med···industry
Worldwide subscriptions to Internet-based television platforms are on track to reach 19.6 million subscribers in 2008, a 64 percent increase, according to analysts at Gartner.
Revenue from worldwide Internet protocol television is forecast to reach $4.5 billion, up 93.5 percent from a year earlier, with Western Europe boasting the largest number of IPTV subscribers and North America the largest market for IPTV revenue.
It forecast that 1.1 percent of households worldwide would be using IPTV in 2008, and expects that to rise to 2.8 percent by 2012.
"Before 2008, the IPTV operators' emphasis had been to spread their footprint and effectively provide a 'me too' solution to cable and satellite, said Jopling. "In the future, especially in the developed markets, we will see an emphasis on innovation and differentiated pay-TV services."
Gartner defines IPTV as a managed broadband network which delivers high picture-quality television and video content to a user's TV set via a set-top box. Content delivered over the Internet or only to a computer is not included.
-- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page Ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya punk? | |
|  |   JasonOD
@comcast.net
| Re: Gartner study: IPTV Growth of 64% in 2008 (buffering...buffering...) IPTV is such a waste of bandwidth when compared with existing cable solutions. So I'm not surprised they've only got 19 million worldwide to show for it, but how that equals 1.1 percent of worldwide households is beyond me.
IPTV will become a great way for watching what whenever, but it just won't be an effective way to deliver TV to the typical wideband (in more ways than one) channel surfer. | |
|  |  |  EPS
join:2008-02-13 Hingham, MA | Re: Gartner study: IPTV Growth of 64% in 2008 Hm, it depends what you mean by IPTV- U-Verse's system seems to work pretty well. But unicast streams over the unmanaged internet seem less likely. | |
|  zod5000
join:2003-10-21 Edmonton, AB
·TELUS
·TekSavvy Solutions..
| Increased bandwidth demand. Everyone else seems to see that legal video would start catching up with illegal video one day.
Instead of trying to bring in caps and kick high consumption users of ISPs, may they're a good testing ground for your infrastructure, before the masses start finding legal way to consume just as much bandwidth. | |
|  |  lordofwhee
join:2007-10-21 Everett, WA | Re: Increased bandwidth demand. Why upgrade when you can go the cheaper route, which also happens to be gloriously anti-competitive? | |
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