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Axxess Launches Mother’s Day Special

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Stuck for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift idea? Never mind flowers or perfume. A local Internet Service Provider (ISP) thinks you should get her Internet Axxess.

In appreciation of moms everywhere, local ISP Axxess has launched a whopping Mother’s Day special which sees its justUncapped 4096 Kpbs account available at R49.60 for the month of May. That same account normally costs R496 per month, translating into a 90% discount. The justSurf 512 Kbps account, usually valued at R129 per month, will cost only R12.90 for the duration of the special, while the 384Kbps account will only cost R8.50. The special will run until midnight on Sunday, May 13 (Mother’s Day).

According to Franco Barbalich, Marketing Director of Axxess, this is the lowest uncapped pricing ever in the history of ADSL in South Africa.

Barbalich says that you don’t have to be a mother or even a father or a babysitter to qualify for the Mother’s Day special. “No, not at all. Any new client that has not used our services before can sign up for this awesome special. And at these prices, it’s the perfect time to test out our uncapped products to see if they will work for them.”

As for what will happen after the special ends, Barbalich says that the prices will revert back to the original price next month. “But if you just need to do some huge downloads this month, then set your account to expire at the end of this month and you will not get billed again.”

We asked Barbalich if the Axxess justUncapped accounts are truly uncapped. What happens if your mama is a torrent freak? Will her account be throttled?

“The justUncapped accounts will be perfect for torrent users,” he says. “The justSurf account is best for normal website surfing and emails.”

For more information, visit the Axxess website.

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MTN extends data promo

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The Internet bundle promotion will now be available until the end of July.

The data deal that saw MTN`s 2GB prepaid Internet bundle reduced by more than 50% has been extended by three months.

Introduced in March, and initially set to expire at the end of April, MTN`s 2GB Internet bundle promotion will now be available until the end of July, the operator announced yesterday.

Mapula Bodibe, MTN SA`s GM of consumer segments, says the promotion has been “well-received”, prompting the operator to extend the cut-off date.

The 2GB Internet bundle, which was reduced from R389 to R189 per month, is available to PayAsYouGo, TopUp and contract customers, and can be purchased as a once-off or on a recurring monthly basis. The bundle comes with a 60-day carry-over period, which means customers will have up to two months to use the bundle from the date of purchase.

Bodibe says existing MTN 2GB users who already have an add-on recurring 2GB bundle will also benefit from the promotion during this period. “Once a customer reaches the 2GB cap, they will be informed accordingly via an SMS notification and their further usage will be charged at an `out of bundle rate` of 19c.”

The 2GB bundle can be purchased as an add-on bundle by existing MTN customers on their phone or any other Internet-capable device, by dialling *141*6# or on www.mtn.co.za/selfservice.

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WiFi test flight hits speed wobble

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Africa`s first WiFi-enabled plane takes to the skies, with tech-hungry passengers pushing the new service to its limits.

Over 100 tech-savvy passengers got to experience Internet in the sky – a first not only for Africa but for the entire Southern hemisphere – on the inaugural WiFi-enabled flight yesterday. WirelessG, Vodacom and Mango partnered to introduce what has been referred to as “the last technical bastion”.

Following years of negotiations, assessment and planning, G-Connect – Internet service provider WirelessG`s in-flight WiFi – debuted on low-cost carrier Mango`s aircraft. The service allows for full on-board Internet connectivity, including sending and receiving e-mails, Web browsing and the use of all social networks. An air-to-land SMS service is also available, managed through a Web service.

The launch function at Lanseria airport yesterday hosted a group of media representatives and VIP guests, 115 of whom boarded the plane to test G-Connect first-hand. While the service experienced a glitch in that only 30% of the group successfully connected to the Internet, WirelessG CEO Carel van der Merwe says the service is fully operational and up-and-running this morning, with an unexpected number of passengers already having signed up.

Budget fail

Van der Merwe says a post-mortem conducted after yesterday`s test flight revealed that connection problems were due to “budget constraints” in terms of IP addresses. “The system is configured to allocate 128 IPs for passengers. Yesterday, while there were 115 passengers on board, many of them had multiple devices and we saw three times the allowed connections, with hundreds of IP addresses constantly requesting access.

“This was not a technical or hardware problem, but rather a case of tech-hungry individuals with a desire to test the service to its limits.” He says statistics revealed that 18% of the core system`s capacity was actually utilised.

The most successful devices proved to be Apple and Samsung, says Van der Merwe, with BlackBerry devices on the whole proving unsuccessful. He says this is because devices running on version 5 and lower of BlackBerry`s operating system have a problem with processing power and handling Java Script.

“According to our information, 50% of South Africans still have these old devices. As the system goes on and people begin to learn how it works, they will become more compatible with it. We cannot budget for all devices.”

First flight

According to Van der Merwe, a 6am flight from Johannesburg to Cape Town this morning saw approximately 30 new G-Connect sign ups, with eight of those actively using the service. While exact details are not yet available, he says the flight – the first after the official G-Connect launch – saw significant levels of uptime.

“It is a good sign that so many first-time users have already logged on and actively used the service. It is a new system and a new environment for people and we aim to make it affordable and accessible to passengers, as well as to educate them as to how in-flight WiFi works.”

Van der Merwe says South Africans are “a lot more tech-hungry” than other nations and, while international trends show that approximately 10% of customers use in-flight WiFi where it is available, he expects the South African figure to be much higher than that.

The service, which uses an 8Mbps connection provided by cellular network Vodacom via a Ku-band satellite, is compatible with most WiFi-enabled devices, including smartphones, tablets and laptops. Vodacom says it has converted its satellite infrastructure to ensure the in-flight WiFi service will keep people connected, “even as they travel at over 800kmph”.

Chris Ross, Vodacom`s head of commercial operations, says the development of in-flight connectivity takes the notion of a mobile to a whole new level. “We know how much customers value being connected; in fact 88% of people surveyed said they`d like to have broadband access when they fly.”

There are currently three G-Connect packages on offer, including one-way access, priced at R50 per single sector flight; a one-day pass for R90 (irrespective of the number of flights completed during a 20-hour period); and a per-minute option, billed through G-Connect`s online account – offering land and air convergence at R1 per minute. All three packages offer unlimited data use during the allotted time.

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Review: Battery Booster Ultimate

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One thing almost all smartphone users across the board – us BlackBerry babies included – complain about is inadequate battery life on our devices.

Using a mobile phone merely for talking, receiving and sending texts is almost unheard of nowadays. (How, like, quaint, as the teenagers would say.) With handsets becoming increasingly sophisticated and feature-rich, we expect them to – through the course of an ordinary day – pull triple duty as cameras, handheld computers and multi-media players. No wonder the battery can’t keep up!

All of the phone’s fancy functions – including the ability to receive your e-mails in real time, on the fly – tend to become rather meaningless when the battery dies on you while you’re out and about with no charger or outlet nearby.  In fact, ever since I activated e-mail on my BlackBerry, the handset seems to be tethered to the charger more often than not.

At least there is an app that will see to it that you are never caught unawares by a depleted battery again. Called the Battery Booster Ultimate, it helps users to not only keep an eye on their phone’s energy consumption on a daily basis, but to optimise and extend their BlackBerry’s battery life as well.

Once you’ve downloaded the app (for free) and installed it, you can access it from your phone’s homescreen by clicking on the icon. When you do, you will be taken to a screen with four icons called Graph, Battery, Settings and Estimate.

Selecting the Battery Graph icon takes you to a graph which displays your battery’s percentage levels during the last 24 hours. The Battery icon depicts the current time, the date, a large illustration of your battery’s current fullness level as well as the percentage of charge remaining, the temperature and its strength.

The Settings menu allows you to control several potentially energy depleting activities on your phone. From there, you can change or manage your device’s connection settings (allowing you to activate or deactivate WiFi, Bluetooth and Near Field Communication); set your device to be automatically switched off and back on again at various times during the day; monitor processes in order to be alerted when you’ve left your camera running in the background; set your display’s brightness level and timeout; and enable the Battery Alert function which will warn you when your battery level drops below a certain percentage point.

I have been using the Battery Booster Ultimate for the past three weeks, and it has truly been an energy saver. A few times, after I’ve used the phone’s camera to take pictures or to send pics via BBM or WhatsApp, the phone began buzzing. It was Battery Booster Ultimate’s way of reminding me that I still had the energy-eating camera app running in the background.

If you don’t respond immediately by closing the offending app you’re being warned about, Battery Booster Pro will send you reminders at periodic intervals until you react. The constant buzzing and accompanying pop up box can get a bit annoying (the latter is especially jarring if you are busy doing something else on your phone), but it is certainly effective, because I closed the camera, thereby extending my battery’s life a bit longer. That is, after all, what the app promises to do.

This app was reviewed using a BlackBerry Bold 9790, courtesy of BlackBerry South Africa.

IN SUMMARY
Good:
Battery Booster Ultimate is easy to use with a no-frills design, and does a good job.  Also, it is free, which is always a bonus.
Bad: The Battery Estimation functionality, which is supposed to inform you how much talk time, standby time or music play time you have left on your specific device model, does not work on my handset.
Price: Free (BlackBerry App World)
Link: http://appworld.blackberry.com/webstore/content/42886/?lang=EN

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Review: Logitech Speaker Stand for iPad

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The device is a great complement to an iPad, offering good sound quality and charging capability.

If tablets are for playing Angry Birds on a large screen, then the Logitech Speaker Stand for iPad is for playing Angry Birds in stereo.

But tablets are good for more than just playing games (I say this because I have to remind myself of this, too), and the Logitech Speaker Stand is the perfect complement to some of the other tablet functions, like playing videos and music clips.

It is specifically designed for an iPad, but because it has an audio input, it can be used with other tablets as well as MP3 players.

Look and feel

The speaker stand has a wonderfully simplistic design with robust finishes. The speaker is positioned within the base, while the iPad is held in place on a swivel arm. The arm rotates back and forth and the bezel that holds the iPad in position can also be turned on its side. This allows users to position the iPad in portrait or landscape mode.

The bottom of the stand has rubber pads that allow for sturdy positioning. The power and audio inputs are also situated at the back of the stand, so it can be positioned neatly on a table, without cables cluttering the surface.

Unfortunately, it cannot be positioned at a 90-degree vertical angle to the stand. I found this irritating and an oversight on the design. Having said that, I must admit that I quickly got used to the slight tilt of the iPad screen. Moreover, I found the angle was great for watching content on my desk, and let`s be honest, most iPad users are not going to set their device up to play movies in the living room – the screen is too small for that.

Sound and performance

The Logitech Speaker Stand is a plug-and-play device. The power cable is shipped with the device and users can simply plug it in and connect the iPad.

The speakers themselves deliver good sound quality. I found the sound from the Logitech speakers was a dramatic improvement from the sound delivered by the iPad`s internal speakers, which was incredibly tinny. The volume level was also strong enough to set up the device in the kitchen so my boyfriend, aka slave, could work on my shelves in the study across the room while listening to music.

Without an ample base, I would say this device is not going to replace anyone`s home stereo system. However, I found the speakers could play high-volume sound without distortion.

Another great feature of the speaker stand is that it charges the iPad when it is connected to the dock. It will even charge the iPad while the speakers are powered off, so long as the cable is connected to a power point.

In a nutshell

The Logitech Speaker Stand for iPad is a great complement to Apple`s popular tablet. At R699, I would say its well worth the price. While music collectors may pull their noses up at the sound quality, it certainly offers better sound than the device itself. It also gives most portable speakers a run for their money – with the added feature of being able to charge the iPad.

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Call-back – an outdated technology?

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Wanatel has unveiled the call-back feature on the VOIP market for low-cost international calls.

How many companies with sales reps or drivers are using call-back facilities? How many people are using call-back to call their family overseas from their cellphone?

Call-back has been one of the great features that makes your life easier and helps you control and save on your communication when you are on the move.

It is a really simple technology. A call-back, in this sense, is a method of making local or international calls using a third party. In order to use a call-back service, a subscriber is allocated a unique number in, for example, South Africa, which must first be dialled in order to trigger a return call.

This is known in South Africa as a Direct Dial-In (DDI) number. Where caller ID is available, it may be possible to use the same DDI number for many different subscribers, as the call-back system will be able to recognise each subscriber`s registered number. On hearing a ringing tone, the subscriber simply hangs up and awaits the call-back. On receiving this, usually within a few seconds, the customer picks up the phone and dials the required number.

Most of the premicell companies are offering this system, as a standard feature on their business offering, so it can benefit all the companies, but hardly any VOIP providers are offering it. Why? Is it because it`s an old technology? Is it because there`s not enough volume to justify this development?

Wanatel decided to launch this feature on the VOIP market to offer companies an alternative to premicell at better rates, and help companies manage their mobile phone bills. Call-back is a really cost-effective solution for local and international calls.

The cost of making a telephone call via call-back consists of two parts, as the caller is effectively paying for an outbound and inbound call at the same time. For example, if a customer is calling to Australia landlines from a mobile, it will cost R3.70 with the special rates on a Vodacom contract, while it will only cost R0.3 + R0.9 with Wanatel – R1.2 excl in total!

You are not at the office, or you are not at home and you need to make this urgent call overseas to your main supplier in the USA, or your family in the USA, or you simply want to contact a client and save on your monthly bill. Then simply request one of Wanatel’s DDI numbers.

Wanatel says that it is offering the services in 35 different local areas. And if it is not available, consumers can use one of their national numbers, 087xx.

For more information, visit the Wanatel website.

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Pay for popularity on Facebook?

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The social network trials a feature that lets users pay to make their updates visible to more friends.

Facebook is reportedly testing a new `highlight` feature for its users, whereby they can pay to have a status update appear in more friends` news feeds.

The social giant is reportedly trialling the feature with a select number of users to gauge interest. As noted by TechCrunch, however, if such a feature were to be introduced it could turn many people off the service, should users start `buying` popularity.

It is not known how many users are included in the tests, but the first reports of the service emerged from New Zealand.

Facebook has previously confirmed that the average post from a Facebook user will only be seen by about 12% of their Facebook friends. This is due to the multiple algorithms that the social network uses to determine the relevance of content for users.

Business pages reportedly get about 16% of their followers to see the average post. Businesses do, however, have the option of purchasing extra distribution with the Reach Generator feature.

Changing to a pay-for-views model for all users on Facebook would, however, confuse the social network`s emphasis on providing users with the most relevant updates from the friends they actually want to see updates from.

Facebook is said to be exploring various avenues for differentiating its income and creating sustainable advertising models as it battles with users who are increasingly accessing the service via mobile (which doesn`t display many ads).

Those in the test group are said to have a `highlight` option at the bottom of their posts (next to `Like` and `Comment`). Facebook is reportedly testing different price points, but the average cost is $2 to highlight a story. Users pay for the service via credit card or PayPal.

Facebook`s statement on the issue is: “We`re constantly testing new features across the site. This particular test is simply to gauge people`s interest in this method of sharing with their friends.”

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Twitter fights request for user details

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The site files a motion to overturn a subpoena for the tweets of an Occupy Boston protestor.

Twitter filed a motion in a New York criminal court on Tuesday seeking to quash a subpoena for tweets and account records associated with Malcolm Harris, a Twitter user who was arrested last fall on the Brooklyn Bridge during an Occupy protest.

Prosecutors in Manhattan have sought to build a case around Harris` tweets by arguing that they show Harris was “well aware of the police instructions, and acted with the intent of obstructing traffic on the bridge,” according to court filings.

Harris lost a bid to squash the subpoena in April, after a judge ruled that Twitter holds a licence to its users` tweets.

But the company stepped in on Harris` behalf on Tuesday to argue that the licence did not apply to Harris because Twitter`s terms of service allow users to retain ownership of the content they publish.

Twitter`s motion offered some insight into the six-year-old company`s legal posture at a time when it is becoming increasingly entangled in criminal prosecutions involving users. In the past year, protesters around the world have relied on the service to organise and disseminate information during demonstrations.

“Yesterday we filed a motion in NYC to defend a user`s voice,” Twitter`s legal counsel, Benjamin Lee, said in a tweet on Tuesday. He added: `#corevalues`.

The Manhattan district attorney`s office served a subpoena for tweets by Harris that are no longer available because Harris deleted them. The tweets cover three months in 2011.

In March, a judge ordered Twitter to hand over information about an account that police said was indirectly tied to the Occupy Boston movement.

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22seven comes out of beta

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After three months of public beta testing, 22seven is officially open, with a new look and updated features.

The personal financial management service, 22seven, which caused a stir in the local banking sector when it launched in January, is officially coming out of beta today.

The service links to users` online banking accounts and draws the information into a single “smart statement”, with detailed categorisation of spending, and mechanisms to assist in meeting savings goals.

Created by former 20twenty CEO, Christo Davel, 22seven uses a combination of gamification and behavioural science to assist users to gain a holistic picture of their financial situation and improve their ability to manage it.

Since its January launch, the service has been in public beta testing phase, and it is now officially open. Users will have 30 days` free access to 22seven; thereafter it will cost R70 per month.

22seven initially ruffled the feathers of major banks, with Absa even going so far as to block Yodlee (the financial data aggregator used by 22seven). However, after some initial apprehension, FNB became the first bank to officially support the service, allowing its customers to make use of the “read only” online banking profile option.

In a message sent to users yesterday, 22seven said it has been using the last three months to test the service “technically, practically and philosophically”.

“We`ve been fixing bugs, getting feedback from users like you, and gauging how much 22seven is helping people do more with their money. What`s been overwhelmingly clear is that the answer is: a lot.”

The new version of the service features a number of enhancements. These include a fresh design – aimed at making the site brighter and simpler. The homepage also has a “conversations” section that is open to non-users as a platform to ask questions and discuss the service. The site has “user stories”, which include testimonials from well-known tech personalities.

Another key update is a change in the way users` balances are displayed. “Banks like to show us our `available balance`. But money we can spend often isn`t our money. Once you`ve logged in, you`ll be able to see exactly how much money you have, already owe and can borrow,” says 22seven.

“22seven`s tools haven`t changed, but the way we`ve presented them has: they`re arranged in a way that helps you look at what you did, are doing and can do with your money. It`s a small, but significant, shift that helps you use your past to explore choices and changes right now, while being more mindful of how you want to use your money in the future.”

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Google+ Hangouts On Air go global

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Now anyone wanting to host a live broadcast will be able to do so online with Google+ Hangouts On Air, which Google has now made globally available.

Hangouts On Air were first introduced late last year to a select number of broadcasters. Google says it has been refining the feature since.

Now, users worldwide who have something to say can go live in front of a global audience. Users can broadcast publicly by selecting the “Enable Hangouts On Air” option within Google+ Hangouts. The broadcast can be streamed to a user’s Google+ stream, YouTube channel or embedded on a Web site.

According to Google, users will be able to see how many viewers they have during the broadcast, as well as record and share the broadcast once off-air.

Google+ engineering director Chee Chew says: “Launching millions of live stations takes some doing, so we’re rolling out Hangouts On Air gradually, over the next few weeks.”

SA is on the list of countries in which the service is currently available. Google says Hangouts On Air will be gradually rolled out to users with YouTube accounts in good standing.

Hangouts has been a key differentiator for Google+ as it has struggled to gain traction against its competitors. The latest update to the On Air feature also marks a significant switch from high-profile broadcasters to all users. It is also notable that now for anyone wanting to broadcast live on YouTube, they will require a Google+ account.

In order to punt the feature, Google has scheduled a number of high-profile Hangouts On Air for May, including Conan O’Brien (8 May), the Global Poverty Project (10 May), Cadbury UK (11 May) and Jamie Oliver (19 May). Details of the times for the broadcasts can be found here.

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