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- Canada - Toronto & Southern Ont.
-- TOTA Mobile/Wireless/Celluar/VOIP Thread
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| Originally posted by Anton Yeah sorry, I saw that thread right after I posted in this one. I got this system information app which has a clear memory function, that seems to work alright for now. I'm sure they will come up with something soon that will let me reboot my phone without it being tethered to itunes. |
GOOGLE OFFERING FREE WIFI AT AIRPORTS
Travelling this holiday season? Hate waiting for your plane without internet?
GOOGLE TO THE RESCUE!!!!!
This holiday season, starting today, google is footing the bill for wifi at 47 airports around the states. Im heading to Miami tomorrow so this is great news!!!
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| Google said Tuesday it will subsidize free wireless network access in 47 airports from now until January 15--and indefinitely in the airports of Burbank, Calif., and Seattle. The promotion, in cooperation with Boingo Wireless, Advanced Wireless Group, and Airport Marketing Income, is the latest effort to use free Wi-Fi to boost a brand. Among others: Yahoo is sponsoring Wi-Fi in Times Square in New York, and Google is sponsoring Internet access on Virgin America flights during the holidays. Among the larger participating airports are those in Houston, Boston, Miami, Las Vegas, Nashville, San Diego, Baltimore, and St. Louis. A full list of the airports is at Google's free holiday Wi-Fi site. The move, though not cheap, is probably smart. Plenty of business travelers have a laptop and time to kill, and today's consumers are increasingly likely to be equipped with laptops, iPod Touches, or other devices that can use wireless Internet access. Google is spending some money for an opportunity to give a lot of people the warm fuzzies when they encounter the Google brand. And in the big picture, Google gets to show people what the world might be like if there were more high-speed wireless Internet access--something the company has been aggressively lobbying for in Washington, D.C. Many people are used to wireless networking in their homes, but it's a different matter on the road. There are downsides, though, too. Having been to dozens of conferences where the wireless Net access collapses as soon as the keynote speech begins, I'm acutely aware that providing large-scale wireless Internet access is technically demanding--and people get unhappy when a promised benefit evaporates. And public, anonymous places such as airports and urban population centers are great spots for hackers to launch main-in-the-middle attacks by offering "Free Wi-Fi," so exercise caution when logging on to these networks. |
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| Originally posted by E2EK1EL No need to be sorry Get SBS Settings, it has a flush memory function in the proccess area |
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| Originally posted by Anton Just grabbed it, took me a while to figure out how to open it but I got it, pretty handy. Thanks for the heads up. |
DAVE Wireless on track for 2010 launch
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| Originally posted by E2EK1EL DAVE Wireless enters cell-site sharing agreement with Bell Mobility Article ToolsEmail this articlePrint this article Smaller | Larger TextShare thisFace Book Digg Stumble Upon Del.icio.us Newsvine Reddit Buzz up! Story Tools TORONTO, Sept. 23 /CNW/ - Data & Audio Visual Enterprises Wireless Inc. (DAVE Wireless) today announced that it has signed a licensing agreement with Bell Mobility for wireless cell-site sharing. |
Rogers, Bell willing to buy WIND�s spectrum

While Canadian carrier hopeful WIND might not be launching any time soon thanks to its foreign ownership structure, outsiders are already drooling at the prospect of buying up all of WIND�s spectrum in the event that it doesn�t launch. WIND CEO Ken Campbell dismissed such things as �media speculation� during our interview with him and repeated ad nauseam that WIND is currently weighing its options, but now more of its would be competitors are speaking up on what might be. Said Rogers CEO Nadir Mohamed on Friday: �Spectrum is a very valuable asset. Rogers for sure would be interested in picking it up.� Snapping up all of WIND�s spectrum wouldn�t be cheap considering it was originally purchased from Industry Canada in 2008 at a cost of $442.1 million Canadian ($420.4 million USD), but the possibility that several of the Big Three would buy it in parcels if the launch never happens remains relatively high. After all, Bell has previously said it would be willing to purchase half of WIND�s spectrum at $0.50 on the dollar.
proud new owner of a nokia e71 
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| Originally posted by smuncky proud new owner of a nokia e71 |
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| Originally posted by monishb should have waited e72 is around the corner |
TELUS sues Rogers over network claims

The US isn�t the only country to have its two largest wireless carriers in the middle of a legal spat as Canada�s TELUS has filed suit against Rogers Wireless. The reason for the lawsuit has to do with Rogers� claim to �Canada�s most reliable network�, one that is �two times faster than any other.� According to TELUS, such claims became invalid as of November 5th when its very own 21Mbps HSPA network was launched. Looking to resolve the matter out of court, the Burnaby, BC-based company asked Rogers to immediately cease all reliability and speed claims. Rogers did not and one week later the lawsuit was born.
As it stands today, Rogers is refusing to back down from its claims citing independent studies dating back to 2007 which consistently show its networks superior performance. The problem with the position taken by Rogers is it puts TELUS at an unfair disadvantage as its new network has yet to undergo such third-party testing. On the other hand, the Rogers network does include an EDGE network, something TELUS does not have, which one could argue creates a fail-safe of sorts thus lending credence Rogers� claimed reliability. As for what it hopes to achieve with the lawsuit, TELUS is asking that Rogers admit it disregarded the standards set forth in the Competition Act, stop all ads claiming its network to be the fastest and most reliable and, as always, pay for damages incurred.
Bell, who shares its network with TELUS, is not involved in the lawsuit.
(How can you compaire an empty network vs a network with million of users + has 2G network for back up?)
UPDATED 11/24/09
TELUS granted injunction over Rogers ads

In a move that surprised very few, a B.C. Supreme Court justice has granted TELUS a temporary injunction against a series of ads from rival carrier Rogers. As you might recall, it was on November 12th that TELUS filed suit against the Toronto-based company feeling that its ads touting �Canada�s most reliable network� with speeds �two times faster than any other� were �false, misleading, and harmful� to its business. Rogers admitted in court that it no holder holds the top spot when it comes to network speed thanks to TELUS� newly-launched 21Mbps HSPA network, but it did argue and lost on the reliability front. Rogers has filed an appeal and vowed that �further steps will be taken shortly,� but has been ordered to return to court this Friday to discuss the pulling of the ads. Yes, friends, Canada is definitely different than the US
EDIT: 12/01/09
Rogers sues Bell over network claims

The ridiculousness that is Canada�s wireless industry reached unprecedented heights today after Rogers Wireless filed a lawsuit against Bell in B.C. Supreme Court. Rogers is asking that Bell stop touting its new HSPA network as the best thing since sliced bread because �Bell has no valid support to claim faster speed and more reliability on a network that has virtually no customers and no proven track record on this new network.� Principle to Rogers� argument is that �the vast majority of Bell customers are still using an old CDMA network and aren�t enjoying the benefits of the new HSPA network� and that �reliability is not something that can be measured on an empty, unproven network.� This lawsuit falls exactly one week after a B.C. Supreme Court Justice sided with TELUS in its lawsuit against Rogers which forced the company to stop its ads claiming �Canada�s Most Reliable Network� with speeds �two times faster than any other�. We�ll be sure to keep our readers up to date with the latest information as it becomes available, but we can�t help but think these lawsuits will make consumers hate the Big Three even more than they do now. Anyone else feeling this way? Mr. Ken Campbell, how we lookin�?
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Roger's does have a good point, also w/o Edge ... both Bell and Telus HSPA+ network have nothing to fall back on if it goes down.
Nissan's Scratch Shield paint coming to cellphones, invisibleSHIELD feels threatened

Remember Nissan's Scratch Shield paint technology? You know, that stuff we first heard about some four years back? According to a release straight out of Yokohama, the automaker has agreed to license that very tech to Japan's own NTT DoCoMo for "mobile phone application." In theory, at least, the flexible clearcoat will enable certain light scratches to actually heal themselves over time, and the paint itself is tougher to scratch to begin with. There's no specific mention of the who's and when's involved, but we're hoping to see this idea spread to other portable devices in the near future. After all -- who isn't sick of shelling out for some clear skin to protect each and every handheld they own?
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| Originally posted by urban_legend This was my first. I was a late bloomer. |


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| Originally posted by smuncky proud new owner of a nokia e71 |

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| Originally posted by monishb should have waited e72 is around the corner |
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| Originally posted by Orko Nice! I'll trade you for my iphone ![]() I'm thinking very hard about selling my iphone and getting the e72. |
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| Originally posted by Orko I'm thinking very hard about selling my iphone and getting the e72. |
Globalive is a GO!
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...article1396853/
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| Originally posted by dEsidEL Globalive is a GO! http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...article1396853/ |

Future Shop - Cellshop
John: Do you have any phones or pricing for Wind?
Sales Rep #1: Whats what?
Sales Rep #2: Never heard of that brand._
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| Originally posted by E2EK1EL Future Shop - Cellshop John: Do you have any phones or pricing for Wind? Sales Rep #1: Whats what? Sales Rep #2: Never heard of that brand._ |
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| Originally posted by Orko getting the e72. |
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| Canada Govt Overturns Regulator's Decision on Globalive Article EmailPrinter FriendlyShare: ↓ More Text (Adds context in paragraph 10.) By Caroline Van Hasselt Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES OTTAWA (Dow Jones)-- Canadian Industry Minister Tony Clement said Friday the Canadian government is permitting Globalive Communications Corp. (GLC.YY) to enter the Canadian market without delay, overturning a controversial regulatory decision that would have killed the company's bid to become the country's fourth national wireless carrier. "Today is a great day for Canadian consumers," Globalive Chief Executive Anthony Lacavera told Dow Jones in an email message. At a celebratory event with employees in downtown Toronto, Globalive said it intends to launch in Toronto and Calgary as early as next week. "We are going to change the structure of the industry in Canada," Lacavera told employees, eliciting thunderous applause from employees who congregated at Queen's Quay Terminal on Toronto's lakefront. Wind Mobile phones will be sold through Blockbuster retail outlets. Data, as well as voice, will be available nationwide. "There will be quite a few Mobile Wind phones under the Christmas tree," Wind Mobile Chief Executive Ken Campbell said. "No system access fee, and we won't even charge you to call 411." He said pricing details will be released shortly. As reported, in October, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ruled that Globalive, the wireless upstart being bankrolled by Egyptian giant Orascom Communications Corp., didn't meet Canadian ownership requirements, even though Industry Canada said it did. The federal cabinet had the right to overrule the CRTC's decision. "It's disappointing, as we think Globalive quite clearly does not meet the requirements for Canadian control," said Jacqueline Michelis, a Bell Canada spokeswoman. "We'll be taking a close look at the reasoning behind this decision." Analysts aren't surprised by the decision, given that Globalive paid a hefty C$442 million for wireless spectrum last year. "We suspected that they wouldn't be completely shut out," said Chris Diceman, DBRS Ltd.'s senior vice-president. The big three incumbents, Rogers Communications Inc. (RCI), BCE Inc. (BCE) and Telus Corp. (TU), have lobbied vigorously to protect their turf. In an ironic twist of circumstances, Rogers's own wireless roots in the early 1980s were also bankrolled by a foreigner, U.S. giant Ameritech, when the original co-founders were struggling to launch Cantel. Diceman points out another relevant example, the failed privatization of BCE. While the ownership issue was clear on the equity component for a privatized BCE, a large portion of its debt, which represented a significant part of the new entity's enterprise value, would have come from foreigners, just like Orascom's loan to Globalive, Diceman says. In that case, the CRTC gave its blessing to BCE's landmark C$52 billion leveraged buyout, which was led by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Board (OTP.YY) and two U.S. hedge funds. Ultimately, the LBO died in 2008 after BCE failed to secure a clean bill of financial health from auditor KPMG. The decision is another blow to the besieged CRTC, which also finds itself under fire in the ugly fee-for-carriage slugfest involving the regulator, and the country's television broadcasters and cable-TV operators. Last month, Heritage Canada ordered the CRTC to seek input from consumers on that issue. Globalive, which plans to launch in Canada under the popular European brand,Wind Mobile, had hoped to begin offering wireless services this year. The CRTC's decision delayed the plans of all potential new carriers, including Dave Wireless and Public Mobile, while unwittingly giving an edge to the incumbents, which have geared up their marketing campaigns and launched new higher-speed networks, Diceman says. Now that the government has smoothed the way for Globalive, Canada is expected to see a sea change in the wireless market next year. "It'll be an all-out marketing war for customers," Diceman predicts. The incumbents are arguing that the government's decision opens the door to liberalizing Canada's stringent telecom foreign-ownership rules, which prohibit international companies from owning more than 20 percent of the operating company's voting stock and one-third of the holding company for a combined 46.7%. As well, 80% of the board must be Canadian. The decision is unique to Globalive, and is not expected to change the ownership rules. Clement made it clear that the government's decision is consistent with the current rules. Orascom controls a 65% equity stake, but maintains a 20% voting equity in Globalive's wireless business. The big three carriers have previously rattled their sabers, threatening potential lawsuits if Globalive had been allowed to launch its network. Unlike other upstarts, such as Fido and Clearnet, both of which were absorbed by the incumbents, Globalive poses a far more dangerous threat to their oligopoly, given Orascom's heft and wireless expertise. "We knew the incumbents wouldn't make it easy for us, but we expected that after we launched," Campbell said. The decision roiled the incumbents' share prices. In Toronto Friday, Rogers is down 3.3% to C$32.27, Telus is off 1.7% to C$33.10 and BCE is down 1.3% to C$27.64. -By Caroline Van Hasselt, Dow Jones Newswires 416-306-2023; [email protected] (Carolyn King in Toronto contributed to this article.) |
if i ever leave my job, i'll go for wind. otherwise, i'm just getting too great of a deal with my EPP.
WIND Pricing

Special thanks to Emery for sending this over.
Chat: $15 per month
Unlimited WIND to WIND calling (Canada wide)
Unlimited incoming text
100 province-wide voice minutes
50 text messages
Always Talk: $35 per month
Unlimited WIND to WIND calling (Canada wide)
Unlimited province-wide calling
Unlimited incoming text
50 outgoing text messages
Always Shout: $45 per month
Unlimited Canada-wide calling
Unlimited incoming /outgoing text messages
Voicemail
Data Plans
Infinite Mobile: $35 per month (used with any voice plan)
Unlimited internet for phones (tethering too)
Infinite Laptop: $45 per month
Unlimited internet for USB data sticks
Possibly there will be a web on your phone only type data plan for $10/mn.
BlackBerry data plans
Social BlackBerry: $10 per month
Unlimited instant messaging, Facebook and MySpace.
Infinite BlackBerry: $35 per month (used with any voice plan)
Unlimited internet for BlackBerry
Addons:
Voice: 10c Per Minute with the $15 plan
SMS: 10c each
MMS: 20c each
Voicemail: $5
Long Distance:
$20 for unlimited North America
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| Originally posted by E2EK1EL WIND Pricing ![]() Special thanks to Emery for sending this over. Chat: $15 per month Unlimited WIND to WIND calling (Canada wide) Unlimited incoming text 100 province-wide voice minutes 50 text messages Always Talk: $35 per month Unlimited WIND to WIND calling (Canada wide) Unlimited province-wide calling Unlimited incoming text 50 outgoing text messages Always Shout: $45 per month Unlimited Canada-wide calling Unlimited incoming /outgoing text messages Voicemail Data Plans Infinite Mobile: $35 per month (used with any voice plan) Unlimited internet for phones (tethering too) Infinite Laptop: $45 per month Unlimited internet for USB data sticks Possibly there will be a web on your phone only type data plan for $10/mn. BlackBerry data plans Social BlackBerry: $10 per month Unlimited instant messaging, Facebook and MySpace. Infinite BlackBerry: $35 per month (used with any voice plan) Unlimited internet for BlackBerry Addons: Voice: 10c Per Minute with the $15 plan SMS: 10c each MMS: 20c each Voicemail: $5 Long Distance: $20 for unlimited North America |
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