Now 4 billion people know the joy of txt

The humble SMS is 20 years old? and a far more important invention than the flashier inventions that have followed it

Here’s a question: what’s bigger and far more important than Facebook? Hint: it’s very low-tech and doesn’t need a smartphone or even an internet connection. And this year marks its 20th birthday, which means that in internet time it’s 140 years old. Oh, and it doesn’t involve LOLcats either.

Got it yet? It’s SMS ? text messaging to you and me. Or txt msng, if you prefer. Two-thirds of the world’s population ? that’s over 4 billion people ? have access to it because that’s the number of people who have mobile phones, and even the cheapest, clunkiest handset can send SMS messages. It’s had a much bigger impact on people’s lives than anything dreamed up in Silicon Valley.

Interestingly, Silicon Valley played almost no role in it. SMS emerged on our side of the Atlantic and was the brainchild of the kind of European intergovernmental initiative that drives Ukip nuts. The first mobile phones were analogue devices, and the market was bedevilled by incompatible technologies and protocols ? rather like the early market in fixed-line telephony in the United States before the AT&T monopoly was established. But in 1982 a European telephony conference decided to tackle the problem. It set up the Groupe Spécial Mobile (GSM) committee and established a group of communications engineers in Paris.

Five years later, 13 European countries signed an agreement to develop and deploy a common mobile telephone system across Europe. The result was GSM ? a unified, open, standard-based mobile network larger than that in the United States. The first GSM call was made by the Finnish prime minister in 1991, and the first GSM handsets were approved for sale in May 1992.

The idea for SMS emerged during the GSM project. It was based around a really neat trick ? to transport messages on the signalling paths needed to organise telephony during periods when those control channels were quiet. This was a fantastic idea because it meant that there was no extra cost involved in transporting the messages. The only restriction was that they had to be short ? no more than 160 seven-bit characters. So SMS was built into the GSM system from the beginning.

The strange thing was that almost nobody paid any attention at first. As an early mobile phone adopter (I could never understand why telephones had to be tethered to the wall like goats), I noticed SMS but thought it feeble; it looked like a truncated email. And it appeared that most other mobile users thought the same: what could one possibly do with 160 characters? As a result, SMS use remained low for years.

The reason for this became obvious only with hindsight. In the early days of mobile phones only adults could have them ? because they were only available on contract and you had to be over 18 to qualify. And adults didn’t seem to know what text messages were for.

Then, in 1996, something changed: pay-as-you-go sim cards were introduced. Suddenly teenagers could acquire mobile phones. And when they got them, boy did they know what SMS was for. It was a tipping point. The graph turned skywards, and it’s been going in that direction ever since. SMS is now the world’s most intensively used data communication technology. One source claims that over 6 trillion texts were sent in 2010, for example, and that was more than triple the number sent in 2007.

The story of GSM and SMS has interesting lessons for technology policy. GSM came about largely because of Europe-wide governmental action: the establishment of a continent-wide technical standard effectively created an enormous industry and gave Europe a significant lead in mobile telephony. So the right-wing mantra that governments should keep their noses out of technology policy and leave it to the market is sometimes wrong.

Second, the story of SMS shows that the people who effectively invent a technology ? in the sense of determining its use and making it viable ? are not so much the engineers who design it as the consumers who discover what it’s really for. The telephone was originally conceived as a broadcast medium, whereas radio was conceived as a point-to-point medium. Exactly the opposite turned out to be true in both cases. And it was teenagers who “invented” SMS.

Finally, we need to stop being dazzled by the tech sensation du jour (Facebook, Twitter, Angry Birds, OMGPOP etc) and focus instead on something mundane that really works, reaches everyone, provides valuable services for poor people, exploits nobody and is based on a sustainable business model.

So here’s the most important msg 4 2day: txt is gr8.


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


YAHOO XILINX WESTERN DIGITAL Hayden Panettiere Haylie Duff

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Apple orders iCab iOS browser to cripple JavaScript modules

The developer of iCab Mobile, a feature-rich alternative to the Safari Web browser on iPad and iPhone, has been ordered by Apple to remove its ability to download and install JavaScript modules.

Presumably it’s not the fact that iCab can execute JavaScript that’s causing Apple to apoplectically puff and splutter, but rather its ability to download modules. Both Apple and Google frown upon apps that contain market-like functionality, and someone at Apple probably thought that iCab’s JavaScript modules looked like a bit too much like discrete apps.

Alexander Clauss, iCab’s developer, has rather a lot to say on the matter. “Maybe if I would have called the modules ‘smart bookmarks’ and would have made installing them much more complicated, Apple would have never asked to remove the ability to download them from the internet. The great user experience of installing modules has probably created a suspicion that these modules are more than just a piece of JavaScript code. From a pure technical point of view, if Apple does not allow to download modules (JavaScript code), Apple would also have to disallow to load web pages in general, because these do also contain JavaScript code.”

In conclusion, to circumvent Apple’s draconian decree, iCab Mobile now simply comes bundled with some 20 JavaScript modules. The ability to download modules made by third-party developers has been disabled, however — but even then, Clauss says that you can simply contact him and ask for your module to be bundled with the next version of iCab.

Download iCab Mobile for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch ($1.99)

Apple orders iCab iOS browser to cripple JavaScript modules originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 08 Apr 2011 07:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

XILINX WESTERN DIGITAL Hayden Panettiere Haylie Duff Heidi Klum

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Zsa Zsa Gabor family feud over ailing star’s care and finances

Husband and daughter battle for control of Zsa Zsa Gabor’s financial affairs

It is an unglamorous end to a life that symbolised exotic Hollywood celebrity, lavish living and sheer female bravado. For Zsa Zsa Gabor, the Hungarian-born actress who is renowned as much for her nine marriages as for her films, is at the centre of a family feud that was back in the Los Angeles courts last week.

Her husband, Prince Frederic von Anhalt, is locked in a legal battle with Gabor’s daughter, Constance Francesca Hilton, over control of the 95-year-old’s financial affairs and medical care. But if that sounds as if it has the dramatic potential to be a final movie for Gabor, it would be a tragedy. For although the two parties clashed in court last Wednesday, it is not clear how much Gabor herself is aware of the legal situation.

She is bedridden in hospital and has not been seen in public for months. In February her husband threw her a lavish birthday party, though she did not take part ? she had had part of her leg amputated and could not eat solid food. Hilton has claimed that her mother is generally kept sedated.

In the 1950s Gabor became a sex symbol noted for her quips about her love life and an ability to changes spouses with the frequency that other people got new cars. “I am a marvellous housekeeper. Every time I leave a man, I keep his house,” she once said.

“It would be nice to see her final days have a little dignity,” said Andy Mayoras, a legal expert in family fortune disputes and co-author of the book Trial and Heirs: Famous Fortune Fights. “This sort of dispute can be common when there is a second spouse and a previously existing child. But here you have a ninth spouse,” Mayoras added.

The latest round of fighting between Anhalt and Hilton, the daughter of hotel magnate Conrad Hilton, began in March, when Hilton’s lawyer asked a court to oust Gabor’s husband and appoint an independent person to manage her affairs and medical care. Hilton claimed that Anhalt restricted her visits to her mother and prevented them from communicating well. She also said that another visitor saw bedsores on the actress’s body.

In court papers filed earlier this year, Hilton said: “By isolating me from my mother, not only does her current husband deprive her of my love and companionship, but he goes against estate planning documents that appear to reflect her wishes that he not be in sole control of her affairs.”

For his part, Anhalt has rejected the claims and says that Hilton is trying to prise him away from his wife of some 25 years. “It’s all about money. She’s afraid of her mother passing away eventually and there’s nothing,” he once told a newspaper interviewer.

Anhalt has said that he provides the best possible care for the ailing star, but that the pair are in difficult financial straits. He has claimed that he has put their lavish house on the market in order to pay off debts accrued by Hilton in remortgaging the property. He said that monthly payments on the house and on Gabor’s medical bills add up to $30,000 (£18,000), whereas Gabor’s income is just $6,000 a month.

A medical expert, Dr Debra Judelson, also testified that Anhalt is caring for her well. “She is aware of her own bedroom and is calm and well cared for by her husband with the assistance of two aides,” Judelson said last week.

But whatever the truth of the couple’s finances, Anhalt does seem to have behaved strangely. At February’s birthday party, Gabor remained behind closed doors even though many journalists invited to the event had been eager for a picture.

Last year Anhalt announced that he would try to make his wife a mother again by using an egg donor, artificial insemination and a surrogate mother. The plan, which seems to have been dropped, raised eyebrows even among seasoned observers of La-La Land’s more fantastical goings-on.

Not that Hilton is entirely free of eccentricities herself. The 64-year-old is a comedian and has publicly insulted Anhalt during live performances.

He and Hilton are going into mediation over who gets control of Gabor’s affairs, with the results of the process expected to be reported at a legal hearing in July. Perhaps given the characters involved and the feud’s lengthy history, few cynical Hollywood observers expect much in the way of an agreement.


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Jennifer ODell Jennifer Scholle Microsoft HTC Apple

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Where next for Mel Gibson?

There’s only one place for the downward-spiralling, self-imploding star, says former fan John Patterson. Video-on-demand

So this is where it ends for Mel Gibson and the widening gyre of his never-ending slow-motion personal apocalypse: his last movie, The Beaver, was a weird, misfired flop; another project, dealing with the ancient revolutionary Jewish sect the Maccabees, is in turnaround tailspin, after his own writer called him an insincere antisemite and downed tools; he was rudely bounced from the Hangover 2, and his latest completed project, How I Spent My Summer Vacation, directed by his own personal assistant, is due for a video-on-demand only release in the USA ? which, on the totem-pole of desirable distribution-outcomes, is just one notch up from a straight-to-airline sale. The UK, meanwhile, is lucky enough to have it in its cinemas.

Fear not, though; amid his great tribulation, Saint Mel need not repine. He coined a billion shekels off The Passion Of The Christ, and he wasn’t exactly rattling a tin cup outside a 7/11 before that either. But he did seem like a spent force after all those empty-headed blockbusters, and never mind the racially charged rape fantasies directed against his girlfriend, the “sugar-tits” incident, the logorrheic homophobia, the Lefebvrist Catholicism, the private chapel in Malibu and all the rest.

There was a time when it looked like it would all come together for Gibson. Having proven his iconic screen presence in Mad Max and The Road Warrior, he showed in The Year Of Living Dangerously glimpses of the charisma, toughness and vulnerability that one associates with grown-up movie stars such as Bogart and Henry Fonda. It was still discernible in Mrs Soffel and The Bounty and even in his Hamlet. And then he became a brand, and all that dried up, leaving just the money. He had it all, and then he forgot the iron-clad First Law of Tinseltown, as articulated by Artie from The Larry Sanders Show: it’s not the Jews who run Hollywood, “it’s the gay Jews”. And Mel, calamitously, is on the outside with both.

In retrospect, the most autobiographical character Gibson ever played wasn’t William Wallace or Mad Max, but the suicidally self-hating detective Martin Riggs in the Lethal Weapon movies. The more Gibson misbehaves or appears in court, the more we hear of past suicide attempts, extended drying-out periods, anger-management programmes and the whole 12-step horror show.

Grant him this much: raised by his Holocaust-denying, extremist Catholic father Hutton in circumstances that appear almost cult-like and abusive, it’s little wonder he turned out how he did, a cocktail of self-assurance and self-loathing. The “sugar-tits” debacle seems now like the agony of a man who desperately wants us to hate him as much as he hates himself ? and will say anything to get us to that place. I miss the Mel that nearly was.


guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Department of Commerce SAS Edward Jones Wegmans Google

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

ChromeLite: experience the ASCII Web of yesteryear

ChromeLite ASCII extension

Have you ever wondered what the Web was like before the Mosaic Web browser? If you were born in the last 20-odd years, or you only discovered your inner geek recently, did you miss out on monochrome monitors and the dial-up BBS era? Well, here’s your chance to get a sneak peek at history: grab the ChromeLite extension and marvel as the entire Web is transformed into ASCII characters.

Now, ChromeLite isn’t really all that functional. For the most part, it simply strips images and converts text into a monospaced terminal font. There are a few Easter eggs inserted — such as a fun message at the bottom of YouTube (image after the break) — and some fun ASCII art, but that’s about it. Rather oddly, most JavaScript continues to work — so you can still enjoy Google Instant Search!

ChromeLite was actually made by Google as an April Fools’ joke — and indeed, an annoying ‘you can uninstall this!’ message appears at the top of every page — but we’re kind of hoping that Google, or another developer, takes ChromeLite and turns it into a real ASCII browsing extension with configurable settings. If anything, it will provide an easy way to save bandwidth and CPU time.

Continue reading ChromeLite: experience the ASCII Web of yesteryear

ChromeLite: experience the ASCII Web of yesteryear originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 04 Apr 2011 07:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Hilarie Burton Hilary Duff Hilary Swank Isla Fisher Ivana Bozilovic

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Bowers & Wilkins kicks out P3 headphones, brings upscale sound to the commoners (update)

Image

Were you eying Bowers & Wilkins’ P5 headphones, but put off by the initial $300 (now $250) sticker price and not so inclined to the in-ear C5? Someone at the company heard you, as we’re now getting the P3 for a more affordable $200. What changes when you pocket the extra cash? You’ll get aluminum and other hallmarks of buying the British outlet’s audiophile gear, but the cost trimming brings a special “ultra-light acoustic fabric” instead of sheepskin leather and a more portable folding design instead of the pivoting earcups found on the P5. Bowers & Wilkins is light on performance details, but it promises that the design will be comfortable for long listening sessions, and there are both universal and Apple-friendly in-line remotes to make your phone calls and skip tracks. Black- and white-hued versions of the P3 should be hitting American shops in June.

Update: Ah, some things in this life are just too good to be true. In this case, a B&W representative has just informed us that the stated $250 price point for the P5 headphones was an error within the press release. They are indeed still $300.

Continue reading Bowers & Wilkins kicks out P3 headphones, brings upscale sound to the commoners (update)

Bowers & Wilkins kicks out P3 headphones, brings upscale sound to the commoners (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 May 2012 20:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBowers & Wilkins  | Email this | Comments

JDS UNIPHASE JDA SOFTWARE GROUP JACK HENRY and ASSOCIATES IXYS ITRON

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Android Central 95: The Samsung Galaxy S III

Podcast MP3 URL: 
http://traffic.libsyn.com/androidcentral/sgsiii-final.mp3

The Samsung Galaxy S III podcast



Haylie Duff Heidi Klum Heidi Montag Hilarie Burton Hilary Duff

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Late Morning Links (Theagitator)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics – Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Apple SemiLogic Inc iPad Broadcom Mark Zuckerberg

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Jailbreak iOS 4.3.1 on OS X or Windows with PwnageTool or Sn0wbreeze

iOS 4.3.1 jailbreakA jailbreak of iOS 4.3.1 is now possible with both PwnageTool on Mac, and Sn0wbreeze on Windows. RedmondPie — who else? — has some handy guides that you can follow for all iOS 4.3.1 devices on Windows, for iPhone 4 on OS X, iPad 1 on OS X, iPhone 3GS on OS X, and iPod touch 4G and 3G on OS X.

All iOS 4.3.1 jailbreaks are still tethered, meaning you’ll have to jailbreak your device after every reboot. An untethered jailbreak is slated for release sometime in the next week — but 4.3 was meant to have an untether, too, and that never emerged.

Maybe Apple’s updated security mechanisms will finally keep hackers at bay!

Jailbreak iOS 4.3.1 on OS X or Windows with PwnageTool or Sn0wbreeze originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 28 Mar 2011 06:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Jaime King Jaime Pressly Jamie Chung Jamie Gunns Jamie Lynn Sigler

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Samsung Galaxy S III HSPA+ arriving in May, 4G version hitting North America this summer

Okay, okay, it’s here — but when can you actually get your hands on Samsung’s Galaxy S III? Well, if you’re in Europe, you’re looking at a May 29th release for the HSPA+ version. Those of us in North America, Japan and Korea will have to wait a bit longer for speed — the LTE version of the handset will be hitting those areas in the summer. Specifically, it’ll be arriving in the US in June. In all, the phone will be available on some 296 mobile operators in 145 countries, according to the company.

Samsung Galaxy S III HSPA+ arriving in May, 4G version hitting North America this summer originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 May 2012 14:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


Facebook Apps New York Giants Citigroup Travelers Insurance NASA

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment