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LTE (Long Term Evolution) for public safety | Alcatel-Lucent - 0 views

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    Alcatel Lucent technology to provide LTE in conjunction with TETRA in the 400MHz band
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Google wins YouTube case in Spain | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • Google wins YouTube case in Spain
  • Google has won a landmark ruling against Spanish broadcaster Telecinco
  • Telecinco had claimed YouTube was damaging its business by airing TV shows before they had been broadcast in Spain,
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  • Spanish court said it was the responsibility of the copyright owner to identify and tell Google when material that infringes intellectual property is on YouTube
  • In June this year Google won a similar case against US media conglomerate Viacom,
  • Google could not be held liable for having a "general awareness" that copyrighted videos might be posted to the site.
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Digital Scotland 2020: Achieving World-Class digital infrastructure: a final report to ... - 0 views

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    "4.4 Rural coverage and take-Up With a population density almost an order of magnitude greater than Scotland's, South Korea does not provide many lessons in rural coverage. However, Australia does. Its overall density is 1/20th Scotland's with vast tracks of land populated by less than one person per ten square kilometers and in some cases per hundred square kilometers. As a result Australia has not been able to escape the urban-rural digital divide, which, as already noted, is embodied in its two-track fast broadband deployment strategy. A large 93% of the population will have access to 100 Mbps service, according to the NBN plan, while the remaining 7%--in rural and remote areas-is being promised up to 12 Mbps only.[6]NBN simply assumes that rural and remote areas do not justify FTTH and that they will be served by fixed wireless and satellite technologies. On the mobile side, on the other hand, Australia has relied on competition between its mobile operators (reduced to three after a consolidation) to extend service beyond urban areas. This has generally produced limited results. Subsidies for better coverage have been applied at the state level, however, with Western Australia being an instructive example. Specifically, the Western Australia government conducted a reverse auction tender to improve mobile coverage in selected areas, which resulted in Telstra, the main incumbent operator, securing A$39.2 million in government aid (on top of committing A$106 million of its own funds) for this purpose. Like Australia, Sweden has large unpopulated areas to serve, yet cannot rely on new-generation satellites, which do not reach these areas. Initially Sweden relied on HSPA mobile coverage but it has recently added a national coverage requirement in the context of its 4G (LTE) spectrum auction. Specifically, the Swedish regulator identified rural homes and businesses that need to be covered, requiring 75% of the indicated homes and businesses to be covered by Decemb
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Sky AdSmart launch backed by some of the biggest brands in Britain - 1 views

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    "Sky AdSmart technology works by sending a library of adverts via satellite to the Sky+HD set-top box. It then selects the adverts which best match a household's profile and inserts them into a live ad break. The line-up of adverts is based on a customer's postcode alongside publically available demographic information from third-party providers including the data services company Experian."
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Wi-Fi is drawing power from the mobile phone mast | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • Mobidia found 70% of smartphone internet traffic is carried by Wi-Fi
  • US, the total is two thirds
  • only Japan and Singapore show an even split between networks
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  • superfast mobile broadband
  • unlimited data plans
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