Samsung promises slimmest-ever phone LCD
Samsung Electronics has developed what it claims is the thinnest LCD (liquid crystal display) panel, just the thickness of a credit card, designed for use in mobile phones.
Samsung Electronics has developed what it claims is the thinnest LCD (liquid crystal display) panel, just the thickness of a credit card, designed for use in mobile phones.
Sydney-based software developer, Open Systems Consulting (OSC), has announced an OEM partnership with mobility software house, Sybase.
Avaya has acquired US-based Traverse Networks for $US15 million in a deal that gives it software for managing applications and voicemail on mobile devices.
Microsoft is at the start of a two-year plan designed to give remote and telecommuting users the power of their desktop in handheld devices by more deeply integrating the company's mobile platform with collaboration software, online services and development tools.
Silicon maker Atheros will put Gigabit Ethernet in all its Wi-Fi access points, to cope with the 200+ Mbit/s speed of the 802.11n Wi-Fi standard.
A cursory inspection of the lifejackets stashed under commercial airline seats could add as much as 30 minutes to an aircraft's time on the ground.
Marvell Technology Group plans to launch a new version of its "Monahans" processor by December to compete better against Texas Instruments and Freescale Semiconductor in the market for chips in 3G (third-generation) cell phones and smartphones.
Wearable computers are starting to appear in warehouses and on the ski slopes.
LG and Samsung have stopped selling notebooks in the retail sector to focus solely on the commercial channel.
A seven-fold increase in wireless and mobile broadband will see subscriber numbers reach one million by 2010, IDC has predicted.