FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “at&t”

Showing 3,721 - 3,730 of 3,747

TECH

A small price to pay

Database, Published on 20/01/2010

» Your TOT board put huge red Xs across all the recent auctions and three billion baht worth of contracts to build a fibre-optic network for broadband Internet, and vowed to call new contracts; the decision followed remarks by Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva over the high prices of some of the bids, and your TOT will be certain to write new terms of reference for new auctions; the rather complicated auction was run in portions, for various parts of the country, but luckily for TOT turned out to total 3.03 billion baht, a full 0.01 billion below the budget; now they will have to do it all again, and despite what Mr Abhisit says, prices do go up, don't they?

TECH

A bite of the Apple

Database, Published on 20/01/2010

» Google released the Nexus One smart phone, an impressive gadget that will push more improvements in the iPhone, but will not immediately take much more than a nibble out of the Apple; the new phone runs on the Google operating system, and starts life with more than 18,000 apps - about 15 percent of the Apple selection but, on the other hand, able to multi-task, something the iPhone apps won't do; the big deal about Nexus One, however, is only about US and Canada, where Google aims to be, very roughly, what Number 2 yuppiephone firm DTAC was when the Norwegians took it over and it unlocked its phones; that is what Google is doing with Nexus, which is made by HTC of Taiwan and costs $529 or 17,500 baht in real money - but which is unlocked and will work with any carrier; this is a revolution in the US wireless industry, where phones are totally locked into carriers, and if you want an iPhone, you sign a two-year, near-usurious contract with AT&T; phone companies will feature the Nexus One - T-Mobile subsidises it for $179 for Americans who agree in writing to pay $79.99 a month for the next two years, or 6,000 plus 2,700 baht in real money; but Google will sell you the phone for use with any carrier from its website (google.com/phone) and this is the first crack in the phone-company control of the business.

Image-Content

TECH

Working the web

Database, Gotfried. K, Published on 20/01/2010

» I've always loved the expression "Work the web", but what exactly does it mean? How do you work the web? It sort of reminds of that old Microsoft slogan "Where do you want to go today?". It sounds nice, but, what does it mean, if anything?

TECH

New media to continue growing inimportance

Database, Sasiwimon Boonruang, Published on 20/01/2010

» New media will play a more significant role in people's daily lives and offer new opportunities to society, but privacy and security will become matters of greater concern.

TECH

Clearing the road for traffic updates

Database, Suchit Leesa-nguansuk, Published on 20/01/2010

» Advances in technology have led to a revolution in traffic management, with motorists taking it upon themselves to update traffic information via interactive websites such as Twitter.

TECH

The 3G saga continues... for the worse

Database, Don Sambandaraksa, Published on 20/01/2010

» It has been more than a month now since Thailand joined the civilised world when the Turtlephone Organisation of Thailand launched its 3G network in Bangkok and the surrounding areas. I signed up one day after launch. So, how has the experience been? How is the network? How is the customer service and billing?

TECH

Why pirate copies can seem so attractive

Database, James Hein, Published on 20/01/2010

» It is time to say something about Windows 7, or rather some of my reader's experiences with it, which I thank them for sharing.

Image-Content

TECH

Heading for the finnish line

B Magazine, Richard Mcleish, Published on 17/01/2010

» Although the sands are shifting under the mobile phone market, Nokia still manages to hold on to the No1 handset manufacturer slot despite its eroding market share (about 38%).

TECH

Out with the old, in with the new

Outlook, Marius Murdoch, Published on 14/01/2010

» It might seem like the ancient past, but it wasn't so long ago that we lived in the dark ages of dial-up internet, floppy disks, pagers and fax machines. Luckily these old-hats died with dignity, and while we may miss the harrowing screams of connecting modems, good riddance to bad rubbish. But other technologies seem insistent on carrying on, despite smarter and more accessible alternatives gaining saliency in the new decade. What looked to be consumer mainstays seem poised for poor performance and obsolescence this year. Here's a list of some of the stale technologies of 2010.

TECH

Join the thousands and add your voice if you don't trust Oracle

Database, James Hein, Published on 13/01/2010

» You may have noticed that things tend to slow down a week or so each side of the New Year.