Thursday, July 7, 2005

Indian Womens Bottom Less Images

Fixed Mobile Convergence ...

Good, the converged fixed / mobile smartphone's go after the announcements by BT and FT.

Now the question a few billion € is who will win between:

Symbian, Palm, RIM, Microsoft, Linux?

Avenues, not very scientific, but good.

FT systematically planting (sorry Jean-Noel) one must assume that Microsoft, bof, it will not do. The supply of residential based on the FT-boi box we know how many more will have to play that, as in Egypt, eh, frogs, flies, grasshoppers. Anyway Pharaoh has relented.

Palm? No. I not feel it at all. Why. Because the.

Symbian either. Too much market share, the! And a bid from Nokia, a bad strategy, over-segmentation of the market is more seasonal. "We are at a crossroads" said Simon Garth vice president of marketing.
"Our perception is simple: people do not want a combined all-in-one. For each use, there will be a specific mobile. Convergence will grow but the market will require customization"
.

Until now, Me, I did not combined all in one, raising their pockets lightened after the portfolio. But hey, RIM / Blackberry is a hit. And the end user almost always right ... Linux? Nah, nah, nah. Linux is as much about the wound-boxes d'Egypte play like Livebox, the necessary developments but it's just an OS ", warns Simon Garth immediately.
" It will take time to develop a serious alternative and homogeneous. This development will require significant costs. Those who think that Linux is free gravely mistaken "
. Pan on the beak!

Da'illeurs Palm whose market share in this niche are dropping from 20 to 10% in one year, PalmSource has even decided to abandon Development of Cobalt 6.1, its new OS designed for smartphones and high-end building on platforms derived from Linux.

Perseverare diabolicum. Mickey Chow has all the racks is very upset by RIM as usual:
"The extension of instant messaging features from the PC with Microsoft Office Communicator, to mobile devices like BlackBerry, is an essential element our strategy of integrated communications. It aims to unify communications between PCs, mobile phones and systems so that everyone can more easily communicate and collaborate more effectively. We look forward expand our development partnerships with manufacturers of mobile solutions like BlackBerry, to expand and further strengthen the interest of Live Communications. "
said Gurdeep Pall, corporate vice president of Real-Time Collaboration Group at Microsoft.
"With Microsoft, we are the benefits of Live Communications Server within the reach of BlackBerry users, and we strengthen the personal and business communications"
says his side Jim Balsillie, Chairman and Co-CEO RIM.

me, now I want a handset in one.

Will you say it will be a RIM !

no hustle.

Now that will be Free? BT's strategy is not dumb, they are not mobile operator alliance with Vodafone?

Free with SFR?

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