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Monday, July 14, 2008

TechCrunch

Apple Sells One Million 3G iPhones First Weekend. Ten Million iPhone Apps Downloaded. - TechCrunch

Despite a few hiccups and stores running out of inventory, Apple was able to sell one million 3G iPhones worldwide across 21 countries its first three days on sale. During that same time, owners of both the new and old iPhone were able to download 10 million apps from the newly launched App Store on iTunes, despite major problems with the iPhone 2.0 software update disabling many people’s phones temporarily on Friday.

That brings the total number of iPhones sold since the launch of the first generation phone to more than 7 million. Apple’s goal of reaching 10 million iPhones sold by the end of the year seems well within reach. In contrast, it took the first iPhone 74 days to reach one million sales, but it wasn’t sold in 21 countries. Apple watchers will be looking for clues about what portion of sales are in the U.S., versus in international markets.

The startup community will be more interested in the download numbers. The 10-million download figure includes both paid and free apps. Apple did not offer a breakdown, but it stands to reason that the free apps made up the vast majority of downloads.

But even if 10 percent were paid downloads, though, and assuming an average price of 4.99, that would be a $5 million weekend. Not a bad start. And it could have been more than that. Seven of the top ten paid apps, including Super Monkey Ball, Cro-Mag Rally, Tetris, and Band, are $9.99. (Coming in at No. 12 is another $9.99 game, Electronic Arts’ official Scrabble, which is also coming to Facebook).

Some of the apps seem to have been rushed out too early, with reports of some of them crashing. So the launch wasn’t perfect. But the demand for the new iPhone and all the apps made for it indicated by these early numbers support the notion that people desperately want the Web and better computing experiences on their phones. Of course, we knew that already.

Friday, July 11, 2008

How Panasonic's X marks the spot - Runway Girl


How Panasonic's X marks the spot - Runway Girl:
"One curious reader asks: 'So, does this mean regular USB - or other non proprietary interfaces - will be supported as well? Is this another apple marketing scheme, or an honest attempt from the aviation industry to integrate personal entertainment?'

It's a good question, deserving of a worthy answer. So I asked Panasonic director, product line management Marshal Perlman to break things down for us (who loves ya, baby?).

Perlman says: 'Our IFE system supports a number of interfaces and the eXport jack only complements USB. In the case of Singapore Airlines, they offer both USB and eXport on their aircraft. This is something that we encourage all our customers to do and our system is easily able to support eXport and USB interfaces simultaneously if so desired by the airline.

'The goal of Panasonic Avionics Corporation in creating the eXport jack was to provide airlines passengers with an easy to use solution for integrating personal entertainment devices with our IFE systems. The alternative to eXport would be an 'octopus' type cable that is less than elegant. The eXport initiative launched by Panasonic Avionics Corporation's R&D team and it is just the one of the many technology advancements that Panasonic plans on introducing."


iPhone killer-app is letting users choose software - Yahoo! News

iPhone killer-app is letting users choose software - Yahoo! News

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The first iPhones won praise for their sleek design and elegant touchscreen, but Apple's new computer phones, arriving this week, will use the power of software to make the device like no phone ever seen.

Whether it's faster Web speeds, security for business users or using the phone's direction-finding capability to let it act as a game controller or location-aware device, it's software, not hardware, that should define the iPhone from here out.

"The emphasis on software shifts the debate from how cool a device it is to what it can do for you," says Tim Bajarin, an analyst with industry research firm Creative Strategies of San Jose, California, and a veteran Apple-watcher.

"It's basically redefining what a phone is," said Raven Zachary, open source software analyst for industry research firm The 451 Group and founder of iPhone Dev Camp, a conference for independent developers of software for iPhones.


Photo courtesy Apple


Get over how it looks. It's the power of the computer inside, combined with supporting technologies that let it perform many powerful tasks no phone has managed before.


The iPhone 3G also works on faster networks, so software runs twice as fast as the first-round devices. This makes it more effective at running complex software with functions that trip up phones on slower networks, forcing users to hop on standard computers to get any real work done beyond replying to e-mail or quickly scanning the most vital work documents.


Furthermore, Apple is eliminating the complexity for users to install and run software on phones.

The new AppStore, offering one-button access to buy and install programs on iPhones, is expected to transform what is expected from software on phones. Unlike PCs, phones tend to offer little or no choice of what programs run on them.


Apple resisted opening up the iPhone to software developers at first, meaning that only Web-based software could run on it. But a change of heart by Apple since October has brought software developers flooding in to take advantage of new powers to run programs on the phone rather than, slowly, via the Web.


Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Software problems bug Apple's launch of new iPhone - Yahoo! News

Software problems bug Apple's launch of new iPhone - Yahoo! News

NEW YORK - Apple Inc.'s new iPhone went on sale Friday to eager buyers worldwide, but there were problems getting the phones to work.
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Kenny Pichardo, 24, was the first to buy an iPhone 3G at an AT&T store in the New York borough of Queens, but he said it took the store half an hour to get the phone working.

iPhone

That boded badly for the approximately 70 people after him in line. Pichardo had camped out overnight to be first.

A spokesman for AT&T Inc., the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in the U.S., said there was a global problem with Apple Inc.'s iTunes software that prevented the phones from being fully activated in-store, as had been planned.


Instead, employees are telling buyers to go home and perform the last step by connecting their phones to their own computers, spokesman Michael Coe said.

When the first iPhone went on sale a year ago, customers performed the whole activation procedure at home, off-loading employees. But the new model is subsidized by carriers, as is standard in the wireless industry, and Apple and AT&T therefore planned to activate all phones in-store.



The new phone went on sale Friday in 22 countries. In most of them it was the first time any iPhone was officially sold there, though several countries have seen a brisk grey-market trade in phones imported from the U.S.


Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Airliners Becoming Authorized iPod Accessories || The iPod Observer - Now Playing


Airliners Becoming Authorized iPod Accessories || The iPod Observer - Now Playing

"Singapore Airlines claims to be the first airline to offer passengers iPod connectivity to their inflight entertainment system (IFE), according to Flight International on Thursday. Other airlines aren't far behind.

Airbus A340-500s operating from Singapore to Newark will have the connections in all the business class seats.

A spokesperson for the carrier confirmed that SIA is the first airline to allow passengers to play music and view video content using their own iPhone or iPod through the airline's IFE system using an integrated cable."


Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Panasonic Avionics Corporation To Supply Air New Zealand with X Series on A320 and B767

Panasonic Avionics Corporation To Supply Air New Zealand with X Series on A320 and B767


"Today Panasonic Avionics Corporation announced that Air New Zealand has chosen Panasonic's X Series to deliver a fresh and uniquely Kiwi experience to Air New Zealand's passengers with functionality initially including AVOD, moving map, games, iPod integration, USB media player, surveys and airline information, while providing Air New Zealand's crew and engineering staff with innovative tools to maintain the system.

LAKE FOREST, California - 12 May 2008 - Beginning August 2008, Air New Zealand passengers on board thirteen (13) A320 and five (5) B767 aircraft will experience a quantum leap improvement with Panasonic X Series in-flight entertainment (IFE) systems. This IFE system offers video and audio on demand (AVOD), games, iPod integration, and games as well as other entertainment options."


Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

TheMoodieReport.com | Emirates takes inflight retail to a new level – 02/12/07

TheMoodieReport.com | Emirates takes inflight retail to a new level – 02/12/07

Noting the power of Emirates’ IFE offer, Daly noted: “As a customer, you can choose from over 1,000 audio and visual channels, 100 interactive games, 300 albums and every UK number one hit from the early 1950s. Not forgetting – in the event that you can’t find anything to watch or listen to – you also have the capacity to send and receive e-mail and SMS messages.”

He linked the breadth of that offer to the boom in Internet shopping and asked what airlines were doing to tap that opportunity. “If someone had suggested even as little as ten years ago that there would be billions of dollars transacted on the web by 2007, they would probably have been laughed at. Don’t you think that it is time to take notice and consider our own position?”

Over the next 18 months Emirates plans a range of developments and experiments including a new dedicated duty free website which will be featured on the IFE system. “It will display the full range of duty free product, will be fully interactive and be presented in a clear and attractive way making it as easy for our passengers to browse product on the web as if they were flipping through the brochure,” Daly said.


Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Screenshots - Emirates ICE In-flight Entertainment

In-flight Entertainment: "Friday, January 11, 2008

Screenshots - Emirates ICE In-flight Entertainment

These photos of Emirates ICE cabin entertainment system were taken in Q3 2006. We believe they are still accurate."



Also see this article: Emirates Inflight Entertainment Enjoys a Hat-Trick.






Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Singapore Airlines offers iPod-friendly skies | Crave, the gadget blog - CNET

Singapore Airlines offers iPod-friendly skies | Crave, the gadget blog - CNET

A day after iPass said it would provide in-flight Wi-Fi roaming, Singapore Airlines announced that it is now offering connectivity for iPods and iPhones on its "KrisWorld" in-flight entertainment system on its Airbus A340-500 planes, according to iLounge. That means you can plug the devices into the system with a standard 30-pin connector and then watch your own video on a personal 15.4-inch widescreen LCD (there's one at each seat in the section) or listen to your playlist on its noise-cancellation headphones, which will break in to tell you when you have to shut it off, presumably.




Other airlines have offered this kind of system, such as United, but they're still relatively rare.


See the Press Release on Singapore Airline's website.

Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Panasonic Avionics Corporation Licenses iDirect's Satellite IP Router Technology to Power In-Flight Broadband System

Panasonic Avionics Corporation Licenses iDirect’s Satellite IP Router Technology to Power In-Flight Broadband System

 

Herndon, Virginia and Lake Forest, California - July 8 2008 - VT iDirect, Inc. (iDirect), a subsidiary of VT Systems Inc. (VT Systems), and Panasonic Avionics Corporation (Panasonic), the world's leading supplier of in-flight entertainment (IFE) and communication systems, today announced a major technology licensing agreement. Panasonic will license iDirect’s satellite IP router technology as a core component of the Panasonic eXConnect in-flight satellite transmission platform. Panasonic eXConnect provides two-way broadband connectivity for a broad range of passenger and crew applications, including Internet access as well as live video programming, telemedicine and the ability to monitor and report critical flight information in real time. iDirect is a world leader in satellite-based IP communications technology.

 

Representing a next-generation solution, Panasonic eXConnect will overcome critical technical limitations of delivering in-flight broadband connectivity and expand airlines’ opportunities to market the service. The system features significantly lighter airborne electronics equipment, an ultra-small satellite antenna, iDirect’s highly efficient spread spectrum mobile waveform and Intelsat’s global Ku-band broadband coverage. In addition, Panasonic eXConnect leverages iDirect’s award-wining “Group Quality of Service” bandwidth management technology, which enables airlines to integrate and deliver a wide range of services beyond basic Internet access. These include live and premium in-flight entertainment services as well as voice applications and allow airlines to capture additional pay-per-use and advertising revenues.

 

By implementing iDirect’s satellite IP router technology, Panasonic is also able to reduce the operating cost and complexity of supporting in-flight broadband connectivity and offer the service for both continental and inter-continental flights.

 

The next-generation system is distinguished by:

 

-More affordable use of satellite bandwidth: Ultra-small satellite antennae on an aircraft require increased transmission powers and satellite bandwidth to maintain a reliable link while in motion. To overcome this challenge, Panasonic eXConnect will feature iDirect’s innovative spread spectrum waveform. The iDirect waveform diffuses the transmission of satellite bandwidth while maintaining a high data rate, which dramatically conserves satellite space segment and lowers bandwidth costs for airlines.

 

 

-Cost-effective network expansion: Through the iDirect satellite router, the eXConnect system leverages Intelsat’s global fleet of 53 in-orbit satellites and on-the-ground teleport facilities. Satellite carriers can be scaled to the bandwidth needs of specific geographical regions, providing a cost-effective means to meet current demand and increase network capacity as demand grows.

 

-Simplified global network management: With iDirect’s Global Network Management System, Panasonic can manage and track each satellite router from a single network management system, instead of using multiple systems typically required to manage a global, hybrid network. In addition, iDirect’s Automatic Beam Switching feature enables the antenna to automatically transfer connectivity from one satellite to the next as an aircraft travels across satellite footprints.

 

“We are proud to be working with iDirect to deliver the next-generation satellite transmission platform for eXConnect. iDirect develops world-renowned technology, leveraging Intelsat’s global satellite fleet and network infrastructure. We believe iDirect is best prepared to help Panasonic provide airlines with a satellite communication technology to reduce operating costs and improve daily operations.”

-Paul Margis

 Chief Executive Officer, Panasonic Avionics Corporation

 

“The core capabilities for in-flight broadband have existed for years, but until recently they were far too inefficient and costly for airlines to operate profitably. iDirect has developed new technologies for the satellite industry to overcome mobile broadband challenges. Today, a powerful combination of next-generation capabilities from Panasonic, Intelsat and iDirect will soon make broadband connectivity a vital new dimension of air travel.”

-David Bettinger

 Chief Technology Officer, iDirect

 

--

Follow this URL to view this Press Release in your browser:

http://www.panasonic.aero/press/PressRelease-Panasonic_eXConnect_iDirect_070808.html

 



Jeff Kemp (Golden, CO), www.jeff-kemp.com.

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