Friday 23 March 2012

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Motorola forces Apple to halt iCloud push services in Germany

Apple announced on Friday that it had shut down iCloud push services in Germany, explaining that the move was the direct result of a successful Motorola bid for an injunction against the cloud syncing service over data pushing technology.


The Cupertino, Calif., company posted the news (machine translation) in the support section of its German website, and gave a brief summary of the injunction as well as suggestions for temporary solutions that iCloud users can follow while the company appeals the decision, reports German language site iPhone-ticker.de.


Apple lists the service outage as a "Symptom" (machine translation) on its support document page in an apparent attempt to direct affected iCloud users to the article if they query the site about the push email stoppage.


Besides push mail, the halting of Apple's push services will stop the syncing of calendars and contacts for MobileMe until users change certain device settings. iCloud users will not be affected. 


A rough translation of the summary describes the recent court case in which Motorola Mobility successfully leveraged a data pushing technology patent against Apple in Mannheim. 


The document notes that while iCloud and existing MobileMe users within the borders of Germany can't receive push email at this time, all received messages can still be accessed through either the iCloud website or by reconfiguring an iOS device's settings. All non-mobile products, such as iMacs and MacBook Pros, are not affected as they do not use wireless data pushing services.


Once a user is outside of Germany, they must manually reactivate push mail in the device settings of their iOS device.




"The push e-mail service for users of iCloud and MobileMe mail is currently unavailable within the borders of Germany" | Source: Apple.com




Motorola first filed the complaint at the Mannheim Regional Court in April, 2011, an claimed that Apple's push mail service infringed on an existing patent. Judge Andreas Voss handed down the decision in early February, giving Motorola the ability to enforce an injunction against any Apple product that serves as a data pushing system. 


Because the ruling was "preliminarily enforceable," it can be inferred that Motorola posted the required 100 million euro bond to enforce the injunction. If Apple's expected appeal at the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court finds that the original ruling was incorrect, the RAZR maker will be forced to pay damages in a subsequent hearing.


Push email allows users to receive new mail almost instantly by "pushing" new data to a user's device as soon as it is received at the server. The system is the successor of previous so-called "pull" mail services that require an email client to check the server for new messages as set intervals.


Apple's solution to the push service stoppage is as follows (translated from German support site):


For iCloud Mail:
On the Home screen, go to "Settings" > "Mail, Contacts, Calendars."
Tap "Fetch New Data."
Select a scheduled time to fetch new data.
The "Push" setting must be turned on in order to ensure the continued push for contacts and calendar service.
MobileMe Mail:
On the Home screen, go to "Settings" > "Mail, Contacts, Calendars."
Tap "Fetch New Data".
Select a scheduled time to fetch new data.
Tap "Advanced."
Select a MobileMe account from the accounts list.
Tap "Fetch" under "Select Schedule."
Tap "Advanced" to return to the previous screen.
Repeat steps 5-7 for other MobileMe accounts on your device.



Raj Rajput  [  MBA ] 
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Verizon Wireless Says LTE Service is Back After Outage

, the nation’s largest wireless service provider, says it has restored service on its fourth-generation LTE network after a morning distruption, the third such issue in as many months.
“LTE service is fully restored,” said Tom Pica, a Verizon Wireless spokesman. The company started receiving service complaints at about 6:30 a.m. New York time, said Pica, adding that 3G service, as well as calls and texts were not affected.
Customers in Arizona, Wisconsin and California reported on Verizon’s 4G long-term-evolution or LTE community online forum that disruptions in service began early today.
Verizon Wireless, co-owned by Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) and Vodafone Group PLC (VOD), had two similar LTE outages in December, with service disruption lasting a full day on the first occasion and several hours on the second.
The Basking Ridge, New Jersey-based company hasn’t specified the cause of the latest LTE problems.
Verizon Wireless was the first U.S. carrier to offer LTE service nationally. Rival AT&T Inc. (T) is currently rolling out the service, which is now available in 26 cities, and plans to be nationwide by the end of 2013.
To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Moritz in New York at http://best-mobile-operator-review.blogspot.in/
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at http://best-mobile-operator-review.blogspot.in/



Raj Rajput  [  MBA ] 
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China China Mobile ,
United Kingdom Vodafone,
India Airtel,
Mexico América Móvil ,
Spain Telefónica (Movistar, O2 & Vivo)
France Orange
Norway Telenor
Russia Beeline
Singapore SingTel
Malaysia Axiata Group Berhad
China China Unicom
Finland/Sweden TeliaSonera
Saudi Arabia Saudi Telecom Company (STC)
South Africa MTN Group
United Arab Emirates Etisalat ,
India Reliance Communications ,
Germany T-Mobile ,
United States Verizon Wireless ,
Russia MTS ,
United States AT&T Mobility
China China Telecom
Indonesia Telkomsel
India Idea Cellular
India BSNL
India Tata Teleservices
Italy Telecom Italia / TIM
Malaysia Maxis Communications
Turkey Turkcell
Qatar Qtel   
 




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BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion's (RIM) first entry into the fiercely competitive tablet market, the PlayBook, wasn't exactly well-received by the masses when it was released last April. A variety of factors contributed to the lukewarm reaction, but the PlayBook's lack of a dedicated e-mail client and native personal information management (PIM) apps, such as a calendar and contacts, were the focus of the negativity. The PlayBook also did not connect to corporate BlackBerry Enterprise Servers (BES), making it less than ideal for businesspeople.


Yesterday, RIM shored up some of these holes in its PlayBook software with the much-anticipated release of PlayBook OS 2.0. PlayBook users now have native e-mail and PIM, and the tablets can be connected to Microsoft Exchange servers for access to corporate mail, contacts and calendar--though not via BES. What follows is a quick list of facts that all BlackBerry and IT managers who are responsible for RIM smartphones and tablets should know about the new PlayBook 2.0 software.


1) BlackBerry PlayBook 2.0 Native E-Mail, PIM Apps


With the PlayBook OS update, corporate BlackBerry PlayBook users can now securely connect to their organizations' Microsoft Exchange Servers for access to Outlook e-mail, contacts and calendar. The native applications will work over a BlackBerry smartphone's wireless connection if the tablets and handheld are "Bridged" using the BlackBerry Bridge app, so Wi-Fi isn't necessary to access native e-mail and PIM. However, the PlayBook doesn't connect to Exchange via BES, like the current crop of BlackBerry smartphones. Instead, the PlayBook supports Microsoft ActiveSync for Exchange access.


This new support is notable because RIM has traditionally avoided ActiveSync like the plague, in an attempt to build loyalty around its BES software. And because PlayBooks don't connect to BES, IT managers cannot use BES software to secure and manage them. To address this new need for tablet management options, and for security and management features for additional mobile platforms including iOS and Android, RIM has released BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.


BlackBerry Mobile Fusion is a software tool that works in conjunction with the latest version of BES to help IT remotely manage PlayBook, iPhones, iPads and Android smartphones and tablets, via a Web-based Mobile Fusion Studio console. And RIM yesterday released the initial version of BlackBerry Mobile Fusion, which currently only works with the PlayBook and not iOS or Android devices. (Interested parties can get a 90-day free trial for up to 500 users for a limited time. And the full version of Mobile Fusion with iOS and Android support is expected in late March.)


The BlackBerry Device Service component of Mobile Fusion Studio allows IT to manage PlayBook tablets and apply "key settings and IT policies" to PlayBooks remotely after admins associate the tablets to specific users. (That association must be made via a USB connection to a PC with RIM's BlackBerry Web Desktop Manager software installed, according to RIM.)


2) BlackBerry Mobile Fusion Security and BlackBerry Balance


As stated above, PlayBook tablets do not connect to BES software, and as such, they cannot take advantage of the security safeguards in BES. But that doesn't mean that IT managers can't securely manage PlayBooks thanks to BlackBerry Mobile Fusion and RIM's BlackBerry Balance technology, which effectively separates personal user data from "work" or corporate data stored on or accessed via PlayBook.


And the secure, corporate sections of the BlackBerry PlayBook fully support hardware encryption, so organizations that require this feature will be able to secure and employ PlayBooks in the enterprise.


The relationship between the personal and secure, corporate "silos" within the BlackBerry is rather complicated, so I won't get into too much detail here. But to simplify, the corporate silo secures data via XTS-AES-256 encryption along a security record that includes 512-bit random salt and several attributes of the file, according to BerryReview.com. The security record is then encrypted using another 512-bit random domain key. The process is similar for BlackBerry Bridge data which is isolated into its own perimeter and encrypted with XTS-AES-256 encryption. Unfortunately, the PlayBook does not encrypt users' personal data, but corporate data is protected.



Raj Rajput  [  MBA ] 
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When AT&T started slowing down the data service for his iPhone, Matt Spaccarelli, an unemployed truck driver and student, took the country’s largest telecommunications company to small claims court. And won.


His award: $850.




Pro-tem Judge Russell Nadel found in favor of Spaccarelli in Ventura Superior Court in Simi Valley on Friday, saying it wasn’t fair for the company to purposely slow down his iPhone, when it had sold him an “unlimited data’’ plan.


Spaccarelli could have many imitators. AT&T has some 17 million customers with “unlimited data’’ plans who can be subject to throttling. That’s nearly half of its smartphone users. AT&T forbids them from consolidating their claims into a class action or taking them to a jury trial. That leaves small claims actions and arbitration.






Raj Rajput  [  MBA ] 
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