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November 15, 2006 - Toronto Wireless User Group Newsletter [www.torwug.org]


Next session is Thursday November 30th starting at 9 am – registration at 8:45 am.
Location: Oracle HQ in Mississauga – map and location at
http://www.torwug.org/local/events.asp
Coffee etc. served. See you there.

Topic: Client Stories and Client Case Studies.
- Toyota Manufacturing using wireless technologies
- Field Force Automation and accessing Corporate data [RIM]
- Extending ERP systems to outside the four walls [how to do this; implications] [Oracle]

Check out some new job postings on Torwug: http://www.torwug.org/jobs/main.asp
Want to know who does what in Wireless in Toronto ? Check out our supplier grid
New: Submit articles and whitepapers and we will give away a new Blackberry to the best article and best white paper or case study. [info@torwug.org for submissions]
1) Managing the white-collar road warrior – devices, tips and what and what not to do
2) Mobile Technology Shorts: Motorola buys Good; HP Ipaq 6900 launched; 2.6 B worldwide users
3) Business cases
4) Other upcoming events

Online Webinars on security – to register and view them each week go to http://www.cognio.com/

Presentations from the Last event now on line - thanks to the presenters and attendees for coming out.
July 27, 2006 photos July 27, 2006 photos
Click here for more photos from the meeting




  New Polls:

Which statement is most accurate in your opinion?

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Canadian wireless network costs are cheaper than comparable US costs.

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Canadian wireless network costs are 20 % more expensive than in the US.

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Canadian wireless network costs are 50 % more expensive than in the US.

Which one of the following is closer to the truth in your opinion:

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10 % or so of firms are now using or deploying wireless technologies.

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20 % of firms are now using or deploying wireless technologies

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33 % of firms now using or deploying wireless technologies

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Very few firms are actively engaged in any meaningful wireless and mobility deployments.

  Other Events:  

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November 15 and 16, 2006 CareerDoor
Don't gamble with your career! Meet face-to-face and hand your resume directly to the hiring decision makers of top Canadian companies as they participate in CareerDoor Inc.'s HiTech Career Fair. This recruiting event is free for IT, Engineers, New Media and Wireless Professionals, November 15 and 16, 2006 at the LeParc Conference and Banquet Center, 8432 Leslie Street (HWY 7 and Leslie) from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm both days. Register in advance and apply positions at www.careerdoor.com

  Articles:

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Managing the white-collar road warrior – devices, tips and what and what not to do
By: Mary Brandel, Computer World Canada
If you don’t spend a lot of time in hockey arenas, you might not know that a number of them have Wi-Fi hotspots.

But to Tracy Scott Johnson, father of three hockey players and a partner at Ohio-based law firm Calfee, Halter & Griswold LLP, this is not just a well-known fact — it’s a crucial one.
Armed with his BlackBerry 7000 and his wireless laptop, Johnson can travel to his sons’ many tournaments knowing that he has everything he requires to respond to client needs, whether it’s an e-mail reply, a document review or even a court filing.
Full Story

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Mobile Technology shorts:
1) Motorola Inc. agreed to acquire closely held Good Technology Inc., which provides wireless email technology that competes with Research In Motion Ltd.'s BlackBerry system.
Financial terms weren't disclosed.

Good Technology, based in Santa Clara, Calif., makes software that allows corporate users to send and receive email and other data on cellphones and various devices, including Motorola's Q and Palm Inc.'s Treo smartphones.

Good Technology, which was initially launched as a maker of MP3 modules for hand-held devices, transformed itself into a maker of wireless email software several years ago. The company has more than 12,000 business customers, Motorola said.

The acquisition will extend Motorola's mobile computing capabilities and increase the company's enterprise client base, the Schaumburg, Ill.-based company said. The transaction is expected to close in early 2007.

Motorola, Sprint Nextel Team on Multimedia Wireless Phone By Patrick Hoffman

November 9, 2006

Motorola and Sprint Nextel announced Nov. 9 the launching of Motorola's i880, an Integrated Digital Enhanced Network handset wireless phone that will have a 2.0 megapixel camera as well as other multimedia features.

"The i880 represents Motorola's philosophy of intelligent handset design while delivering an amazing music experience," Peter Aloumanis, vice president of the U.S. Markets Division for Motorola's iDen Mobile Devices, said in a statement. Motorola's U.S. corporate offices are in Schaumburg, Ill.

The i880 targets a range of users from the home consumer to the business professional.

When asked how this product would be beneficial to a business user, Krissy Zotaley, a Motorola representative, said, "The i880 provides business users with the functionality of international, national and short-range walkie-talkie service and multimedia features that they could always take with them."


2) HP launches Ipaq 5900 – GPS, 802.11, and more
Hewlett-Packard's iPaq rx5900 Travel Companion may not be a smart phone, but it is smart. With a GPS receiver, the Windows Mobile-based device offers business travelers effective navigation, connectivity and entertainment options.

eWEEK Labs tested the iPaq rx5900 on the road while covering the 2006 DemoFall conference in San Diego. The device comes equipped with mobile versions of Microsoft's Office suite applications, but we found that the PDA really excelled when it came to navigation.

Our review unit was loaded with Microsoft's Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC with the Security Feature Pack (an update that enables Windows Mobile 5.0-based devices to take advantage of the wireless features in Exchange Server 2003 Service Pack 2.)

The iPaq rx5900 features a 400MHz Samsung SC32442 processor. The device we tested came armed with 80MB of storage memory, 54MB of program memory and 400MB of available memory on the 2GB of GPS-related Flash memory—in short, plenty of memory to meet our various application needs.

The iPaq rx5900 has a manufacturer's suggested retail price of $599, which is high for a GPS-enabled PDA without cellular network connectivity options (like those of Research in Motion's Blackberry 8703e on the Verizon Wireless network).


3) 2.6 B Mobile users in 2006
Dan Nystedt, IDG News Service
Friday, November 10, 2006 08:00 AM PST
The number of mobile phone subscribers worldwide will rise to 2.6 billion this year and 4 billion by 2010, thanks to the development of ultra-low-cost handsets, market researcher iSuppli says.

New subscribers in developing nations such as India and China are behind the rapid increase in mobile phone users, the researcher said, while the mobile industry has rallied to the cause with ultra-low-cost handsets.

Africa and the Middle East are also playing a key role in driving new subscriber growth, said Dale Ford, vice president of market intelligence for iSuppli. He believes mobile phones have become such an important tool for people to live and thrive that they are becoming a basic human right.

Prices As Low As $15

The ultra-low-cost mobile phone initiative started early last year as a way to connect people to existing mobile networks. The GSM Association (GSMA) challenged handset makers to design a phone that would cost under $30. The eventual winner, Motorola, won the contest, as well as a contract to supply the mobile phones to network operators in emerging markets including Bangladesh, China, India and Russia, which ordered millions of the handsets under the GSMA sponsored program.

GSMA came up with the contest idea after taking a close look at the actual extent of GSM network coverage across the globe, and figuring out that over a billion more people could be using mobile networks if they could afford the handsets.

The new GSMA goal is to halve the cost of a handset again to $15 by 2008. Chip makers such as Texas Instruments, MediaTek, and Infineon Technologies, which develop the most costly components inside a mobile phone, say the $15 target is achievable, and that $20 handsets could be out by the end of this year.

China and India

ISuppli believes India will drive growth for ultra-low-cost handsets next year. The nation will be home to 405 million mobile phone subscribers by 2010, up from 140 million by the end of this year, the market researcher says.

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India reports that as of the end of September, there were 129.5 million mobile phone users in the country, a huge increase from 75.9 million at the end of last year.

In China, the figure climbed to 443.2 million at the end of September, up from 393 million at the end of last year, according to the Ministry of Information Industry, that country's telecom industry regulator.

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Business Cases including new additions are here;
http://www.torwug.org/CaseStudies/main.asp

  On Line Demos:

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Wireless Web on line Demo

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Secure Mobile email demo

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