Archive for the ‘Tech news’ Category

SingTel BroadBand on Mobile price plans

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

SingTel has just launched its Prestige 75 LTE mobile broadband service.

The price plan for the BroadBand on Mobile (BBoM) Prestige 75 LTE is shown here.

SingTel Broadband on Mobile Prestige 75 LTE Price Plan
Price (including GST) $69.90/month
Data Bundle 50GB 3G data (21Mbps) + 10GB LTE data
Excess Charges $0.512/MB, Capped at $94.16/month
Download Speed Theoretical: 75Mbps
Typical range: 3.4Mbps to 12Mbps
Comes with free LTE dongle and free Wireless@SG (3Mbps)

For comparison, here are the price plans for its other BBoM packages.

3G Mobile broadband plan Theoretical speed Typical download speed range Price
Classic 3.6 3.6Mbps 0.8Mbps to 2.1Mbps $29.90
Priority 7.2 (with Priority Pass) 7.2Mbps 1.4Mbps to 3.7Mbps $40.00
Premium 21 (with Priority Pass) 21Mbps 1.7Mbps to 4.8Mbps $59.90

SingTel launches commercial LTE mobile broadband

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

SingTel toady announced the commercial launch of the Mobile Prestige 75 (S$69.90 per mth), the first LTE service in Singapore for both consumer and business customers.

SingTel BBoM Prestige 75 will cover the CBD and more thEventually, coverage will grow to 80% of mobile data users by end 2012 and 95% by 2013.an 100 sites.

Eventually, coverage will grow to 80% of mobile data users by end 2012 and 95% by 2013.

Singapore Telecommunications Limited (SingTel) today announced the commercial launch of its 4G Long Term Evolution (LTE) BroadBand on Mobile (BBoM) service.

Fast speed

The service offers theoretical download speeds of up to 75Mbps and typical download speeds between 3.4Mbps and 12Mbps.

It provides mobile Internet access that is more than three times faster than existing 3G-based services, with only one-fifth of the network latency.

SingTel 4G LTE will enable many bandwidth-intensive applications, such as cloud storage, music/video/HDTV streaming, video conferencing, online gaming, mobile data networking, rich voice etc.

SingTel’s BBoM Prestige 75 LTE will provide performances and services approaching that of fixed line networks. For instance, it will take only 2 min 14s to stream a 3.5 min-long snippet of video from YouTube.

Coverage evolution

At launch, the service provides outdoor coverage in the central financial district and other areas that experience high data usage.

At launch, SingTel BBoM Prestige 75 will cover the CBD and more than 100 sites.

At launch, SingTel BBoM Prestige 75 will cover the CBD and more than 100 sites.

This includes Shenton Way, Orchard, City Hall, Marina Bay, River Valley, Tanglin, Newton, Novena, Kallang, Rochor, Outram, Tanjong Pagar, Jurong West, Boon Lay, Bukit Panjang, Bedok and Changi.

In-building coverage is available in major shopping malls such as Ngee Ann City, Plaza Singapura, Ang Mo Kio Hub, Tampines Mall, West Mall, Parkway Parade and Jurong IMM. Office buildings such as Republic Plaza and Temasek Tower are also covered.

The service falls back to SingTel’s 3G-based Premium 21 service when users roam outside the LTE coverage area.

USB dongle

USB dongle

Mr Yuen said that SingTel is progressively expanding its network, which is expected to be able to provide LTE coverage for 80 per cent of mobile data users by the end of 2012.

By 2013, coverage will be extended to 95 per cent.

BBoM plans

Broadband on Mobile Prestige 75 will initially be available for USB dongle modems only.

Support for LTE-enabled smartphones and tablets will only be available when these mobile devices become more readily available in the market later on in 2012.

Existing 21Mbps 3G Broadband on Mobile Premium 21 customers can upgrade to LTE with a top-up of $10 per month.

The price plans for SingTel’s various mobile broadband plans can be found here.

Love traffic jams – love Clementi and Bukit Timah

Monday, December 19th, 2011

TomTom study reveals the best and worst travel times on Singapore roads.

West and central parts of Singapore experience the largest traffic slowdowns during the morning peak hours.

West and central parts of Singapore experience the largest traffic slowdowns during the morning peak hours.

TomTom did a study on driving times between the City and different suburbs during the peak hours.

The time taken to drive from each suburb to Raffles Place during peak hour in the morning (8-9am) was compared with the time taken during silent hours (1-5am) – when traffic was not a constraint to vehicle speed.

Traffic slowdowns during the evening peak hours in Singapore.

Traffic slowdowns during the evening peak hours in Singapore.

Similarly, the time taken to drive from Raffles Place to each suburb during the peak hour in the evening (5-7pm) was compared with the time taken during silent hours.

The spread of traffic degradation seems broader in the morning peak hours compared to the evening peak hours.

The spread of traffic degradation seems broader in the morning peak hours compared to the evening peak hours.

Clementi and Bukit Timah were found to suffer the greatest slow downs during the two peak hours compared to unobstructed driving timings between these two suburbs and the City.

New Zealand based Valerie Cross of TomTom Asia Pacific told me during her visit to Singapore that IQ Routes takes into consideration the different travel times for each road during different times of the day. “That’s because the actual travel speeds of each road varies throughout the day, and IQ Routes takes that into account.”Bishan and Jurong West were another two suburbs that experiences severe slowdowns during the peak hours.

For the evening peak hour, the overall spread of degradation was much smaller than during the morning peak hour.

Tampines is an interesting exception in that is the least affected by the morning peak hour, yet it was most severely affected during the evening peak hour.

There doesn’t seem to be any obvious reason to that.

TomTom derived the traffic data from the logs of portable navigation devices (PND) of its users when the latter connected their GPS devices to the Internet for updates.

The traffic data were extracted without any tags that could be used to identify the PND users.

Historic traffic data along roads are used during route planning by TomTom PNDs.

Historic traffic data along roads are used during route planning by TomTom PNDs.

These historical traffic data is also used by TomTom to inject intelligence into the route planning algorithms of its PNDs, in the form of its IQ Routes feature.

Instead of planning routes based on jam-free traffic conditions and maximum road speed limits, IQ Routes take into consideration the historical and real travel timings of those roads considered for the routes for more accurate “fastest route” recommendations.

It’s as if the PND is a local choosing to drive further on a less congested road in order to avoid a 300m stretch that typically takes an hour due to peak hour traffic.

HD Traffic uses live data for route planning.

The next step beyond IQ Routes is live traffic information, which TomTom offers for 22 countries in the form of its HD Traffic feature.

Unfortunately, it is not available and for the moment, TomTom does not yet have any plans to introduce that to its Singapore users, because of the complexity of setting up its own live traffic sources and integration with other live traffic sources.

Being alive and happy

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

Apple co-founder Ronald Wayne could have been US$36 billion richer had he held on to his 10% in Apple in 1976.

In an Oct. 7 interview with Bloomberg, Wayne, 77, called Wozniak and Jobs “intellectual giants,” but “also felt it was going to be something of a roller coaster,” adding, “If I’d stayed with them, I was going to wind up the richest man in the cemetery.” Instead, he relinquished his stake 11 days after signing.

The $2,300 that he received in 1976 for the 10% stake would have become more than $36 billion today.

Warren Buffet would have hung on.

On hindsight, Wayne doesn’t seem to have any regrets.

He tells Bloomberg, “If I’d stayed with them, I was going to wind up the richest man in the cemetery.”

Read about Ronald Wayne and Apple’s founding in this Bloomberg story.

Apple’s Mac App Store hits 100 million downloads

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

In less than one year, 100 million apps have been downloaded from the Mac App Store.

Apple's Mac App Store tops 100 million downloads.

Apple's Mac App Store tops 100 million downloads.

“With Autodesk products in both the App Store and Mac App Store, we can reach hundreds of millions of Apple users around the world,” said Amar Hanspal, senior vice president of Platform Solutions and Emerging Business at Autodesk. “With our free AutoCAD WS and the more powerful professional drafting tools of AutoCAD LT, we’re using the Mac App Store to deliver new products and reach a growing base of new Mac customers.”With thousands of free and paid apps, the Mac App Store brings the App Store experience to the Mac.

Users can buy apps using their  iTunes account, and download and install them in just one step.

Apple’s App Store now has more than 500,000 apps.

Overall, customers have downloaded more than 18 billion apps and continue to download more than 1 billion apps per month.

The Mac App Store offers thousands of apps in Education, Games, Graphics & Design, Lifestyle, Productivity, Utilities and other categories.

“The Mac App Store has unparalleled reach and has completely transformed our distribution and development cycle,” said Saulius Dailide of the Pixelmator Team. “Offering Pixelmator 2.0 exclusively on the Mac App Store allows us to streamline updates to our image editing software and stay ahead of the competition.”Users can browse new and noteworthy apps, find out what’s hot, see staff favourites, search categories and look up top charts for paid and free apps, as well as user ratings and reviews.

The Mac App Store is included with Mac OS X Lion and is available as a software update for any Mac running Mac OS X Snow Leopard.

Mac developers set the prices for their apps, keep 70 percent of the sales revenue, are not charged for free apps and do not have to pay hosting, marketing or credit card fees.

Nokia’s amazing “Prepare to be amazed” launch

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

For its launch of the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710, Nokia has made it clear that it is not just launching these two handsets.

Niklas Savander, Executive Vice President, Markets, Nokia Corporation flew in from Finland to expound the virtues of the Lumia product line in Singapore.

Niklas Savander, Executive Vice President, Markets, Nokia Corporation flew in from Finland to expound the virtues of the Lumia product line in Singapore.

Instead, it is launching a holistic mobile experience for the smartphone user – from the hardware performance to the software user interface, right down to the ecosystem of applications for users and development tools and environment for developers.

Tracey Fellows, Area Vice President, Microsoft Asia Pacific

Tracey Fellows, Area Vice President, Microsoft Asia Pacific

The launch event was a testimony to this holistic approach.

There were customized sessions to woo different segments of that ecosystem.

The first session of the day was a “fireside chat” where Nokia and Microsoft executives briefed developers how they are developing and building the ecosystem.

Nokia is working with global and local developers to create new, innovative and differentiated apps and content for all Nokia devices.

Emphasis has been placed on supporting local developers transition to develop for the Windows Phone platform.

Ask Andrej Sonkin about how excited he is with the Lumia. He is the Head of Smart Devices for Nokia Southeast Asia Pacific.

Ask Andrej Sonkin about how excited he is with the Lumia. He is the Head of Smart Devices for Nokia Southeast Asia Pacific.

It is also partnering with local institutions to actively develop applications.

This was followed by the keynote conference when the actual products were launched, and guests and media had a chance to hands-on the handsets and accessories.

Key executives from both Nokia and Microsoft were on hand for interviews to go into details with their plans for the Singapore market and their local focus, as well as the product specifications for the Nokia Lumia range of products.

The launch event was wrapped up with a bum-boat ride to Clark Quay for a party at Read Bridge.

BBX is now BB10 – or BlackBerry 10

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

RIM has rebranded the  next generation platform for its smartphones and PlayBook tablet to BlackBerry 10.

RIM's new platform for BlackBerry smartphones, tablets and embedded systems.

RIM's new platform for BlackBerry smartphones, tablets and embedded systems.

Research In Motion (RIM) has been barred from using BBX as the name of its new mobile platform during DevCon Asia in Singapore from 7-8 December, 2011.

RIM has rebranded BBX as BB10

RIM has rebranded BBX as BB10

A US District Judge ruled in favour of software company Basis International Ltd who filed for a temporary restraining order. It holds the “BBx”  trademark for its own software.

District Judge William P. Johnson wrote in his ruling that consumers are “likely to be confused by RIM’s use of BBX in connection with RIM’s goods and services”. – Albuquerque, New Mexico.

George Staikos, VP, Web Technologies at RIM announced the rebranding during DevCon Asia.

George Staikos, VP, Web Technologies at RIM announced the rebranding during DevCon Asia.

Basis of Albuquerque had threatened legal action in October after RIM initially unveiled BBX as its new platform for smartphones, tablets and embedded systems.

According to itworldcanada.com, RIM had said at that time that it did not believe the marks are confusing since the two companies were in different lines of businesses.

Let’s just hope that CBS television network does not take issue with RIM over any confusion between the mobile platform and its own version of BB10 – the tenth season of the American reality television series Big Brother 10, which ran in the summer of 2008.

Recycle your printer ink and toner cartridges

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

Brother, Canon, Dell, Epson and Lexmark have joined hands to raise public environmental awareness through the launch Singapore’s first joint cartridge recycling project.

Brother, Canon, Dell, Epson and Lexmark join hands to launch printer ink & toner cartridge recycling initiative in Singapore.

Brother, Canon, Dell, Epson and Lexmark join hands to launch printer ink & toner cartridge recycling initiative in Singapore.

Project Homecoming is an ink and toner cartridge recycling initiative that is led, managed and jointly funded by the five leading printer brands,

It is supported by the National Environment Agency and National Library Board of Singapore.

Takeo Shimazu, Managing Director, Brother International Pte Ltd

Takeo Shimazu, Managing Director, Brother International

Ide Eiji, Managing Director, Epson Singapore Pte Ltd

Ide Eiji, Managing Director, Epson Singapore

The aim to make it easier for the public to recycle their used ink and toner cartridges.

This is the first time globally outside Japan that these five brands have come together to initiate a joint recycling project.

Andrew Koh, Senior Director & General Manager, Consumer Imaging & Information Products Division, Canon Singapore Pte Ltd“We aim to bring greater convenience to the public who are keen on making a personal contribution to recycling efforts across the island, and are proud to be working together as a team to jointly fund and promote the culture of recycling in Singapore,” said Andrew Koh, lead spokesperson for Project Homecoming and Senior Director and General Manager, Consumer Imaging & Information Products Division, Canon Singapore.

“With strong support from the NEA and NLB, we will be able to give back to society through this initiative as socially responsible organisations, while driving home the message of environmental awareness through cartridge recycling as part of joint sustainability efforts from the printing industry.”

Project Homecoming will provide easily accessible cartridge recycling bins at 13 NLB libraries where the public can deposit used ink and toner cartridges from printers of any brand for recycling – even those of other brands not in the Project Homecoming partnership.

The cartridges are then periodically collected for proper recycling.

Loh Teck Heng, Director of Software and Peripherals, Consumer, Small and Medium Business, Dell Asia Pacific and Japan

Loh Teck Heng, Director of Software & Peripherals, Dell Asia Pacific & Japan

Richard Tan, Regional Country Manager, Offshores, Singapore & Taiwan, Lexmark Singapore

Richard Tan, Regional Country Manager, Offshores, Singapore & Taiwan, Lexmark Singapore

Recycling vendors of the joint initiative will collect the cartridges from the boxes and break down recyclable parts including plastics and metal, which can then be made into other products such as pens or petroleum coke (high-grade fuel).

These recycling processes will help minimise waste, landfill and pollution while maximising the recovery of valuable resources.

SITEX 2011 (Nov 24-27) at Singapore EXPO

Monday, November 21st, 2011

This week, the last of four large annual IT exhibitions in Singapore rolls into town on Thursday at the Singapore EXPO. For four days from November 24-27, SITEX will open daily from 11 am to 9 pm.

SITEX 2011, 24-27 November, Singapore EXPO, 11am to 9pm, Halls 4B, 5, 6, Admission Free.

SITEX 2011, 24-27 Nov, Singapore EXPO, 11am to 9pm, Halls 4B, 5, 6, Admission Free.

First established in 1988, SITEX 2011 will be spread over three exhibition halls – Halls 4B, 5 and 6 – at the Singapore EXPO. Admission is FREE.

Date 24-27 Nov 2011
Time 11am to 9pm
Venue Singapore EXPO
Halls 4B, 5, 6
Admission Free

Organised by SiTF, this year’s SITEX will see more than 200 exhibitors pushing infocomm and consumer electronics products from over 500 brands. The organisers anticipate more than 900,000 visitors to trawl through the 269,000 sq ft of exhibition hall space.

Looking ahead, the four major IT exhibitions in Singapore are:

Exhibition Dates Venue
SITEX 2011 24-27 Nov Singapore Expo
IT Show 2012 8-11 Mar Suntec Singapore
PC Show 2012 7-10 Jun Suntec Singapore
COMEX 2012 30 Aug – 2 Sep Suntec Singapore

Microsoft nurtures government-community interaction with GovCamp Singapore

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Microsoft marries the desire of the citizenry for a bigger voice and the Government’s post-election impetus to better cultivate social media – by bringing the community together to examine the role that technology plays in oiling the interactions and engagement.

Panel discussion at GovCamp Singapore

Panel discussion at GovCamp Singapore

Thought leaders, citizens, students, government officials, developers, public servants, web 2.0 advocates, bloggers and community members concerned with technology, open data and open government converged to The Rock Auditorium in Suntec City.

Breakout sessions mooted and voted by participants.

Breakout sessions mooted and voted by participants.

The multi-track conference started at 3pm and will end at 10pm.

Following the opening speech by Jessica Tan, Managing Director, Microsoft Singapore; speech by Guest of Honour, Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State, Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts; Jane Fountain delivered the keynote speech.

One of the breakout discussions at GovCamp Singapore

One of the breakout discussions at GovCamp Singapore

This was followed by a panel discussion between Jane Fountain, James Kang, Prof Ashish Lall, and Dr Pallab Saha – moderated by Rodrigo Becerra Mizuno, Managing Director, e-Government, Microsoft.

The detailed agenda for GovCamp and the full designations of the speakers can be found here.

Another of the breakout discussions at GovCamp Singapore

Another of the breakout discussions at GovCamp Singapore

After the break, participants broke into smaller discussion groups to focus on topics that they had earlier proposed and voted upon. The list of topics for the sessions can be found here.

Overall, the impression I got from the event was that it was well-attended, with good levels of interaction and discussion. Hopefully, there’ll be more of such engagement sessions in the future.