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  • News & article

    Perhaps we can just skip 3G altogether?

    Database, Don Sambandaraksa, Published on 18/08/2010

    » Should we skip 3G and go straight for 4G? Or do we need to walk before we run and evolve? A couple of years ago, I was all for leapfrogging to 4G. Then, the telcos convinced me that 3G had economies of scale that could not be ignored. But more recently, the technical limitations of 3G are becoming more and more painful as smart phones get smarter and notebooks get more bandwidth-hungry.

  • News & article

    Enthusiasts discuss all things Android

    Database, Don Sambandaraksa, Published on 18/08/2010

    » Duocore.tv and Blognone recently hosted an Android Talk event where enthusiasts were invited to come and talk about how they loved their Android phones.

  • News & article

    What a shame

    Database, Published on 18/08/2010

    » Oracle, which recently bought Sun Microsystems - and thus the rights to Java - sued Google for using and misusing Java in the Android operating system and the world's new, most-popular smart phones; Google broke seven different patents, and Larry Ellison's Oracle has demanded a jury trial; Google briefly noted what a shame it is that "Oracle has chosen to attack both Google and the open-source Java community with this baseless lawsuit," and a bunch of lawyers are going to get new Mercedes before this one is finally settled with a huge exchange of money.

  • News & article

    SAS to launch iPad software

    Database, Suchit Leesa-nguansuk, Published on 18/08/2010

    » HONG KONG : World leading business analytics software vendor SAS will launch an iPad version of its software to deliver business analytics on-the-go by the end of this year. Meanwhile it is also aiming to uplift its Thailand office to become a centre of excellence in risk-management and anti-money laundering to reduce a shortage in analytic skills.

  • News & article

    ICT cited as key to stronger, more unified Thailand

    Database, Suchit Leesa-nguansuk, Published on 11/08/2010

    » Thailand has defined its vision to increase and improve its use of ICT to help develop a stronger economy as well as boost social equality and environmental friendliness by 2020, as part of the Smart Thailand concept.

  • News & article

    Google Chrome set to make mark in Thailand

    Database, Sasiwimon Boonruang, Published on 11/08/2010

    » Google officially launched its latest browser, Google Chrome, as an alternative for users to experience speed and simplicity of Internet features, with Thailand becoming a prominent market with a large number of local features.

  • News & article

    Intel on convergence march

    Database, Suchit Leesa-nguansuk, Published on 07/07/2010

    » The demand for rich experience and always-on connectivity, combined with the power of mobility, means that users are no longer limited to the personal computer, as they can take their computing experience anywhere.

  • News & article

    Compassionate thinking contributes to corruption

    Database, Don Sambandaraksa, Published on 30/06/2010

    » So, the new ICT Minister wants to reopen the case file on the not-so-smart ID cards. Good luck. He will need it as the way government works means that most moderate people would probably agree with things.

  • News & article

    ToT opposes allocation act

    Database, Published on 26/05/2010

    » Your ToT said that the Frequency Allocation Act under scrutiny by the senate will cause the loss of 10 billion baht for state coffers if it actually passes; Monchai Noosong, senior executive ToT president for vice, said your ToT and your CAT will lose their duopoly status to something called the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC); that will mean that ToT and CAT can't give concessions to private firms, and that means that the whole business of concession fees will go in someone else's pocket or, worse still, no one's pocket at all; of course your ToT has nothing to lose here, it is only intensely and altruistically concerned with the harm to the national coffers.

  • News & article

    Smaller really is better

    Database, Published on 26/05/2010

    » Scientists at the University of New South Wales' Centre for Quantum Computer Technology (CQCT) showed off the world's smallest electronic switch - four-billionths of a metre, or a few atoms wide; such tiny switches will allow tiny microchips, revolutionise computing speeds and bring in the prototype of an actual quantum computer; lead researcher Michelle Simmons said code-breaking will now take minutes, weather forecasting will take seconds, and financial transactions will be more secure than ever.

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