September 24, 2007

Completely free mobile phones (and pizza?)

We’re used to getting mobile phones for ‘free’ alongside a 12-month contract from the likes of O2, Vodafone or Orange, but how about getting a free phone and free calls for as long as you like?

That’s the deal on the table from Blyk, which is targeting students with a new advertising-supported service it says could give up to 4.5m young people in the UK an extra few pounds per month to spend on books (and beer).

Blyk, established by former Nokia president Pekka Ala-Pietila, has teamed up with 30 UK universities to promote the new service inside Fresher’s Week packs, and is offering students 217 free texts and 43 minutes of talk time per month on Orange’s network.

To sign up, students will be required to fill in demographic and lifestyle questions and their answers will be used to target mobile phone-based advertising from the likes of McDonald’s, Cola Cola and L’Oreal. Blyk ‘subscribers’ will be sent a new SIM card, which they can place in their existing phone while keeping their old phone number.

With mobile phones added to the list of free hardware, software and services now available in the UK – a list which already includes free laptops, free broadband and free office software – what’s next for advertising-supported products?

A tongue-in-cheek comment on Buzzmachine blog (as reported in today’s Guardian) suggests “the next step is free pizza, supported by ads on the box”!

September 18, 2007

The green reality

The trouble with green computing initiatives is that it’s often hard to separate marketing from reality. While most people would like to think recent efforts by the world’s biggest IT firms to ‘go green’ have been inspired by a burning desire to save the planet, a cynic would suggest an ulterior motive.

That’s because there’s real marketing value in what’s known as ‘corporate social responsibility’. If companies don’t promote their green credentials they’ll miss out on plenty of opportunities to tell the world that they’re ethically sound participants in what’s become a hot trend over the past couple of years.

Even worse, they could get singled out by Greenpeace as eco-laggards and risk being attacked for dragging their feet in the so-called green revolution. Apple was the number-one target for the environmental campaign group’s criticism when it started publishing its green electronics rankings in 2006 and the public shaming appears to have worked. The Mac maker has redoubled its efforts to focus on the environmental agenda this year and was praised in the summer for beginning to tackle the problem. Greenpeace claims it’s persuaded other IT giants to put environmental issues first too, insisting that well-known companies around the globe have “risen to the competitive challenge” and are now vying for the “top green spot” for low e-waste.

But it’s not just the fear of negative PR that’s inspired companies to take action – many are turning the process around and gaining marketing benefits from touting their eco-crusading. That’s why we’re all aware of the efforts being made by the great and good of the IT industry. Intel and AMD talk up low-power chips, HP and IBM tell us of their efforts to go green in the datacentre, PC World has launched a wooden PC and Fujitsu Siemens has developed a laptop with a biodegradable chassis. Plus, Dell is picking up old PCs left, right and centre to make sure they’re disposed of in an environmentally friendly way, while the WEEE Directive has forced IT suppliers to make sure they’re playing their part.

And it’s not just the IT industry that’s spotted the potential PR benefits of going green. Multinational companies in various industries are planting thousands of trees under the premise that this will offset their carbon footprint, while their CEOs are taking fewer flights to the other side of the world for those half-an-hour breakfast briefings. Everyone has to be seen to be doing something and, if you believe the press releases, these companies are providing the solution to the environmental burden, rather than creating the problem.
What can you do?

However, it’s difficult for the humble end user to measure the benefits of these schemes. While every attempt to protect the environment should be applauded, it’s fair to say that most of these high-profile efforts are so far removed from us that it’s difficult for any individual who’s even remotely interested in ‘being green’ to take comfort from them. But you can make sure you’re doing your bit, and increasingly that means taking a proactive approach.

This month we’ve put together a guide to help you. By following the simple advice in our feature, you can decrease your PC’s power demands, ensure your old IT equipment doesn’t get sent to landfill and ultimately make sure you’re following best practice when it comes to your use of computers. Then, every time a high-profile green effort is announced on the other side of the world, you can be sure you’re doing your bit, too.

September 18, 2007

Your mobile phone versus the iPhone

According to Apple, Nokia and Datawind (with its PocketSurfer 2), the mobile web is the place to be. But if you don’t want to splash out on an expensive new handset to see what all the fuss is about, how about enabling your current mobile phone to receive real web pages with one simple download?

That’s exactly what you can do with Opera Mini 4 beta, and a new update to the mobile browser has just made it even more appealing to those who are intrigued by the possibility of using their phone to browse the web.

Opera Mini 4 is a small download – point your phone to mini.opera.com/beta and you can be up and running in a couple of minutes. It’s set apart from Opera Mobile in that it’s designed to work on the vast majority of Java-enabled mobiles – Opera Mobile is specifically for smartphones with OSes such as Windows Mobile or Symbian.

Once installed, the browser attempts to fit any page on the internet onto the tiny screen on your mobile. Needless to say, you’ll need to do a bit of scrolling and zooming to read any of the text and the necessary compression technology means you’re unlikely to have much joy viewing videos or high-resolution images.

But for anyone who fails to see the need to view internet pages on a mobile, it’s worth a look. I’ve been playing with Opera Mini on my Sony Ericsson for the past month or so, during which time I’ve used it to catch up with news via BBC News online, monitor football scores, check up on the PCAdvisor.co.uk home page and even make changes to PCA online stories via our content management system. Plus, since an update at the start of the month, you can now view web pages in landscape as well as portrait modes.

Is this a realistic competitor to the mobile internet features of Apple’s iPhone? Definitely not, but it does give Opera a niche in low-end handsets. And judging by the comments on the PC Advisor forums today, there are as many people happy to stick with outdated phones as there are those desperately waiting for the iPhone’s UK release on November 9.

September 3, 2007

Why iTunes TV has bragging rights over the BBC

Last week’s launch of on-demand TV shows via Apple iTunes has left many wondering whether UK broadcasters’ efforts to make their content available online is too little, too late.

All the hype surrounding the BBC’s iPlayer service and similar online strategies announced by Channel 4, Five and ITV pale in comparison to that drummed up by Apple’s launch. TV shows and movies have been available via iTunes in the US since 2005, and by the start of 2007 over 50 million shows had been downloaded via the service.

So what does iTunes offer that the BBC and Channel 4 don’t? If you forget the quality of the content provided by the various suppliers, and even ignore the fact that traditional UK broadcasters are offering programmes for free, whereas iTunes users have to pay £1.98, one clear difference stands out – flexibility.

The BBC, for example, must pay close attention to the rights held by content makers, so it has to impose restrictions on the types of shows available via iPlayer, and you’re only able to view programmes for 30 days after you’ve downloaded them. It’s early days for the BBC’s on-demand service, so those users who have managed to negotiate its early quirkiness (see the user comments at the bottom of our review of the iPlayer beta for more details) are probably quite happy to put up with this restriction, for the moment.

But in the coming months and years, are demanding internet users who expect access to everything at a time that suits them likely to put up with this? Sure, you have to pay a premium for iTunes content, but at least you can view it when you want, and as many times as you’d like.

We’d like to hear your view on internet TV downloads. Let us know in the comments section below and answer today’s PCA poll in the left-hand panel of the site.

August 29, 2007

Find out who’s top of the ISP speed league

We all know by now that ISPs’ promised broadband speeds should be taken with a pinch of salt. But comparison site Broadbandchoices.co.uk claims to have exposed the full extent of the disparity between what individual ISPs claim they offer and what they deliver.

According to BroadbandChoices’ July survey – based on speed tests performed by users – Tesco customers are most likely to achieve the broadband speeds they pay for. But even the supermarket giant has little to be proud of – its customers get 53.8 percent of the maximum speed Tesco promises them. Broadband subscribers using other ISPs get a far worse deal, however – on average they get 39 percent of the speed promised to them.

So where does your ISP stand? Here’s the full list:

1. Tesco 53.8%
2. AOL 48.3%
3. Virgin Media 41.1%
4. Tiscali 37.3%
5. Madasafish 35.3%
6. Sky 34.9%
7. Pipex 33.8%
8. Orange 32.9%
9. Eclipse Internet 32.5%
10. Karoo.co.uk 32.3%
11. BT 30.8%
12. Demon 30.3%
13. TalkTalk 29.9%
14. Plus Net 28.5%

August 28, 2007

Free music: Is Deezer the new Napster?

Five years ago a host of peer-to-peer services claimed they had the legal basis to challenge old media’s archaic views on music copyright. Sean Fanning’s Napster was born on the premise that we shouldn’t have to pay inflated prices for music, and for a while, it seemed he was going to get away with it. Fast forward to 2007, and Napster is a legitimate service, Apple’s iTunes is the world’s most influential music downloading service and even the likes of Kazaa and Limewire are attempting to go legit. But despite these high-profile about turns, the free music bandwagon keeps on rolling.

Read more

August 21, 2007

Does your mobile fancy a Quickie?

In fifteen years, the mobile phone has evolved from a brick-sized telecommunications device owned by business execs to a pocket-sized gadget even pre-teens regard as a must. The upshot is that we can’t leave home without one, we can’t remember phone numbers and we live in constant fear of the battery life indicator. We could be standing in the middle of Trafalgar Square but once the phone’s out of juice we’re effectively cut off from the world. But fear no more.

Read more

August 14, 2007

iThumb hoax as dumb hoodwinked by dumber

Rip-off Britain hits new Linux PCs

July 16, 2007

Does Apple’s iPhone (yawn) really provide the “real internet” on a mobile device? Not according to the following blog, which says the PocketSurfer 2 makes a better effort at it.

Flawed iPhone & the truth about mobile web

July 11, 2007

Are you:

1.Sick and tired of the iPhone#

or

2.Intrigued to see what would happen if you put it in a blender.

If so, see the following

Kill the iPhone


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