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August 22, 2008

Intel cuts power cords with wireless power system

Note:  Very interesting technology but I do not even want to think about possible health effects.  If they can light a bulb (Most likely LED Light Bulb) across the room then I would want to see what effect that could have on me and you with those waves passing through us.  We already have cell, wi-fi, wimax, microwave, bluetooth.  Even with that it is very cool to think about. 
 
Intel on Thursday showed off a wireless electric power system that analysts say could revolutionize modern life by freeing devices from transformers and wall outlets. Intel chief technology officer Justin Rattner demonstrated a Wireless Energy Resonant Link as he spoke at the California firm's annual developers forum in San Francisco.

Electricity was sent wireless to a lamp on stage, lighting a 60 watt bulb that uses more power than a typical laptop computer.

Most importantly, the electricity was transmitted without zapping anything or anyone that got between the sending and receiving units.

"The trick with wireless power is not can you do it; it's can you do it safely and efficiently," Intel researcher Josh Smith said in an online video explaining the breakthrough.

"It turns out the human body is not affected by magnetic fields; it is affected by elective fields. So what we are doing is transmitting energy using the magnetic field not the electric field."

Examples of potential applications include airports, offices or other buildings that could be rigged to supply power to laptops, mobile telephones or other devices toted into them.

The technology could also be built into plugged in computer components, such as monitors, to enable them to broadcast power to devices left on desks or carried into rooms, according to Smith.

"Initially it eliminates chargers and eventually it eliminates batteries all together," analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group said of Intel's wireless power system.

"That is potentially a world changing event. This is the closest we've had to something being commercially available in this class." Previous wireless power systems consisted basically of firing lightning bolts from sending to receiving units.

Smith says Intel's wireless power system is still in an early stage of development and much research remains before it can be brought to market.

Rattner spoke of technological transformations he expects by the year 2050.  "You'd like to cut the last cord," Smith said. "It's great that we have wireless email and wireless internet and stuff like that but at the end of the day it would be nice to have wireless recharge as well."

Source: AP 

August 21, 2008

Phreakers take over FEMA phones – thousands lost to overseas calls

The Associated Press is reporting that calls made overseas from a hijacked FEMA phone system racked up a $12,000 USD bill. The Department of Homeland Security has confirmed the FEMA phone system was cracked, and the calls all took place over the previous weekend.

Those of you who know the term 'Phreaker' and realize what happened to FEMA, should relax, and take a pause after laughing for a few minutes. If you are unsure what this is about, Phreakers are people who study, experiment with, and are just plain curious about telecommunication systems.

They are smart, and are the reason behind many of the security systems in place today on the public telephone network.

According to the AP report, the DHS admitted that an individual, or a group of people, used a vulnerability in the newly installed FEMA Private Branch Exchange (PBX) to make about 400 calls to Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, India and Yemen, as well as other countries.

The resulting cost, $12,000 USD, is a huge price to pay for failing to act on a vulnerability report issued by the Department of Homeland Security in 2003, warning of the same sort of attack.

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August 19, 2008

Coweta (GA) 911 now instantly maps cell phone calls

Most Cowetans who call 911 from their cell phones don't have to worry about location errors such as the one that may have contributed to the recent death of a woman in north Fulton County.

When a call comes in to Coweta's 911 center, the location instantly pops up on a map of the county on the operator's screen. Landline calls additionally show the address where the phone call originated.

Cell phones, for the most part, can be instantly pinpointed to within 100 feet, said Eddie Ball, Coweta's 911 and emergency management director.

John's Creek resident Darlene Dukes died Aug. 2. It took 25 minutes for emergency crews to respond to her home, and nearly an hour for an ambulance to arrive. The delay happened because the 911 operator allegedly sent an ambulance to Wells Street in southwest Atlanta instead of Duke's home on Wales Street in John's Creek.

The 911 system showed that the call originated from a cell tower in North Fulton. However, Fulton County's 911 system doesn't map wireless phone calls like Coweta's does.

 

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Bank of Beijing Adopting VoIP On Its Trading Floor

IPC Systems, a provider of communications solutions to financial services firms, announced today that Bank of Beijing has chosen the IQ/MAX, IPC's voice over IP-enabled desktop tool, for its trading floor.
 
With its main focus on transitioning to VoIP technology in order to support a technologically modern trading floor over the long-term, Bank of Beijing evaluated numerous vendors after formerly relying on PBX phones. Features of the IQ/MAX turret include call logs and caller ID.
 

The IPC solution allowed the bank to install technology that would have the capacity to grow as the bank's business expands, in addition to serving its immediate demands.

Source: WallStreetandTech.com 

August 15, 2008

Lawsuit takes on Canadian 911 wireless fees

An Ontario woman is trying to obtain class action status on a lawsuit against Rogers Wireless, alleging that the cell phone provider is pocketing more than its due in 911 service fees.

Patricia Robson’s suit alleges no more than 10 cents of the monthly 50-cent fees usually charged to subscribers is actually required by regulators to pay for the necessary telecommunications infrastructure.

The systems are operated by the former phone monopolies and are used to dispatch police, fire and ambulance services. The rest is pocketed alongside controversial “system access“ fees, which range from $6.95 at Rogers and Telus Corp. to $8.95 at Bell Canada Inc. and are the subject of a similar class-action suit that was certified in Saskatchewan last year.

Officials with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission say the regulator sets the monthly rates -- which average about 10 cents a subscriber -- in order to offset the cost of maintaining 911 telecommunications infrastructure across Canada.

While the CRTC acknowledges that wireless carriers may incur costs to connect their subscribers to 911 services, the regulator says it’s up to individual operators to justify higher 911 fees and says there is no requirement to break out a separate charge on subscriber bills. The 911 service charge is 75 cents at Bell and Telus.

Source: Winnipeg Sun 

Cisco retires Linksys reseller program, reseller must become Registered Channel Partner

Note:  Looks like the integration is complete.  Good thing Cisco makes good hardware. 

Cisco appears to be nudging ever closer to dropping the Linksys brand. Today it announces that it has combined the engineering teams for all its SMB products, forming a single group to develop products for the Cisco and Linksys brands. It has also retired the

Linksys reseller initiaive and is urging Linksys' 20,000-strong reseller community to sign up for the Cisco Channel Partner Program.

According to the Cisco press release:

"This process includes bringing the Linksys Business Series products into the Cisco SMB portfolio and providing Cisco channel partners with access to a more diverse solution set to allow for more choice and increased revenue potential."

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August 07, 2008

General Dynamics Awarded NSA Contract to Add Switched Network Compatibility to the Sectera vIPer Universal Secure Phone

General Dynamics C4 Systems has been awarded a $2.8 million contract by the National Security Agency (NSA) to add a new Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) feature to the Sectera vIPer Universal Secure Phone.
 
The new feature, called "PSTN Connect," will enable the vIPer Phone to connect with traditional telephone networks, enabling users of secure desktop phones to use one secure phone on either PSTN or VoIP networks. The vIPer Phone currently operates on Internet Protocol (IP) networks.

"The idea behind PSTN Connect is to provide users with a flexibility they don't have today. For example, the vIPer Universal Secure Phone will appeal to those whose installations currently use the PSTN network, but who plan to migrate to voice over IP; users who currently have voice over IP networks; and others who plan to stay with traditional PSTN," said John Cole, vice president of Information Assurance for General Dynamics C4 Systems. "It's about protecting our customers' investments by providing a product that will accommodate evolving communications technologies."

Introduced in 2006, the Sectera vIPer Phone remains the only voice over IP phone certified by the NSA to protect information classified Top Secret and below over commercial networks. The vIPer Universal Secure Phone, with PSTN Connect, will be submitted for NSA certification testing in the third-quarter of 2008. The vIPer, with PSTN Connect, upon successfully completing certification testing, will provide secure phone users with a cost effective solution for replacing legacy secure phones, including the Secure Telephone Unit (STU-III).

General Dynamics C4 Systems, a business unit of General Dynamics , is a leading integrator of secure communication and information systems and technology. The company specializes in command and control, communications networking, space systems, computing and information assurance for defense, government and select commercial customers in the United States and abroad.

General Dynamics, headquartered in Falls Church, Va., employs approximately 84,600 people worldwide and anticipates 2008 revenues of approximately $29.5 billion. The company is a market leader in business aviation; land and expeditionary combat systems, armaments and munitions; shipbuilding and marine systems; and information systems and technologies. More information about the company is available on the Internet at .

Source: IT News Online 

August 06, 2008

Digium Announces Keynote Speakers for Expanded AstriCon ‘08

Digium, the Asterisk Company, recently announced that Brian Aker from Sun Microsystems/MySQL and Stefan Öberg from Skype are slated as keynote speakers for AstriCon ‘08. AstriCon, the world's largest, most informative gathering of expert developers and users of the popular Asterisk telephony platform, also announces expanded track sessions to this year’s conference.

Aker, an open source hacker who has worked on various Apache modules, the Slash system and numerous storage engines for the MySQL database, currently serves as the Director of Architecture for MySQL AB. He plans on speaking on the topic of “The Parallel Evolution of MySQL; One Foot in the Commercial World and the other in the Open Source Community.”

Öberg is vice president and general manager for Skype Telecom and Skype for Business. He has previously served in different positions at Tele2, the Swedish telecom operator, initially in Sweden and later in Estonia and Russia. Öberg is also the founder and chairman of Trigger Software, a wholly owned subsidiary to Tele2. His keynote will focus on VoIP for Business.

The contrast between the Skype network and software model and the open source nature of Asterisk and its underlying VoIP protocols may be a controversial topic, but one worthy of exploration. AstriCon is pleased to have secured Öberg as a keynote speaker, and it is certain that his insights will provide an excellent basis for discussions and deliberations well beyond the boundaries of the conference.

Digium, who is the creator and driving force behind Asterisk, anticipates that AstriCon '08 will be the largest and most successful event to date. This year the conference has expanded to five tracks with more than 60 topics to offer attendees more variety and options during this two-day event. These tracks include a business track, technical/introductory track, a carrier/large scale track and two advanced technical tracks.

“Digium is dedicated to making AstriCon into the largest, most exciting Asterisk community event,” said Mark Spencer, creator of Asterisk and Digium’s chief technology officer. “Every year we look forward to offering both experts and those new to Asterisk insight to the new frontiers of our application by providing expert speakers and a variety of informative tracks. Plus, I’m always looking forward to late nights at the Code Zone portion of the conference where we get some really great ideas, innovation and code from our developers and users.”

AstriCon is the pioneer and longest-running event devoted to all things Asterisk, one of the most influential open source projects today. Attendees will learn about trends in Asterisk use, the growing Asterisk ecosystem, the newest applications and a wide range of technical topics from Asterisk developers, users and entrepreneurs.

AstriCon will be held from September 23-25 at the Renaissance Glendale Hotel & Spa in Glendale, Ariz. FierceVoIP and TMCnet will serve as media sponsors and Polycom and Sangoma will be the platinum sponsors for the event. There is a pre-conference tutorial day on September 23rd with various introductory as well as developer tracks. Registration is open at www.astricon.net.

 

Polycom Offers Royalty-Free HD Wideband Codec

Polycom has made its wideband Siren 7 codec for HD voice available without a licensing fee in an effort to accelerate HD voice adoption and demonstrate the company's commitment to open standards.

The royalty-free licensing offer is an extension of the one Polycom offered for its Siren 14 code. The newer 7-kHz version helps improve comprehension, allowing businesses to communicate more effectively and efficiently, says the company.

"Our HD Voice enables companies large and small to improve their speed of business...and offers more than twice the clarity of regular telephone conversations," said Jeff Rodman, Polycom co-founder and CTO of the company's Voice Communications Solutions division, in a statement. "Whether we're working with colleagues overseas or down the street, this means much better intelligibility during those conversations."

According to Polycom, the Siren 7 wideband audio codec provides audio communications at the half-bit rate or less than traditional wideband codecs.

Source: ProAV Online 

Digium Offers Cepstral "Allison Voice" Text-to-Speech Software for Asterisk

Digium, creators and primary corporate sponsors of the popular Asterisk open source telephony platform, and Cepstral, a speech technology company, today announced that Digium now offers "Allison voice" text-to-speech software.

The Asterisk-based interactive voice response (IVR) application, created by Cepstral through its longstanding partnership with Digium, allows customers to use the world's most widely recognized telephone system voice, that of Allison Smith, to customize messages and to mix dynamic information--that which cannot be pre-recorded--with recorded prompts in the same high-quality, user-friendly voice.

Asterisk is the world's leading open source telephony engine. Its flexibility empowers developers and solutions providers to create advanced voice over IP (VoIP) solutions. Open source Asterisk is available under the GNU General Public License (GPL) and downloaded by developers around the world 3,000 times a day.

The professional-grade Asterisk Business Edition and AsteriskNOW make Asterisk easier to deploy, configure and maintain. Allison is the voice users first hear when installing any Asterisk release. All include a set of pre-recorded Allison voice prompts and Digium offers a service to provide professionally recorded voice prompts.

The service allows customers to tailor their Asterisk voice menus with uncommon names and unusual word combinations. With the Cepstral text-to-speech application now available from Digium, developers can mix pre-recorded Allison IVR prompts with informational messages; custom prompts; emails; dynamic information, such as appointment or account data; or any other English language text or files.

This allows the deployment of Asterisk applications that are of uniformly high quality and that do not require a mix of human-sounding and computer-generated prompts. "Allison Smith's voice is familiar to millions of people--nearly anyone who's used voicemail or an IVR system knows her," said Bill Miller, vice president of product management at Digium. "Cepstral's technology is uniquely able to convey static and dynamic announcements using Allison's voice, giving customers greater flexibility in how they can use Asterisk systems. Now the software is available directly from Digium, with Digium guarantees and support."

Craig Campbell, CEO of Cepstral, said: "By partnering with Digium to create a synthetic version of Allison's voice, we've added the power of speech technology to further enhance the well-known Asterisk brand. The ability to use computer automation to "say anything" in Allison's voice provides a new tool for Asterisk developers and increases the capabilities and value proposition to customers."

Pricing and Availability

The Cepstral Allison Voice Starter Kit is available from Digium for $79.99 for one port. Existing Cepstral customers who want to replace or supplement an existing voice with Allison's voice may purchase the kit for $29.99. For additional details, visit Digium at www.digium.com/cepstral

 

libpri versions 1.2.8 and 1.4.7, and libss7 version 1.0.1 released

The Asterisk development team has released new versions of three libraries used with Asterisk. They are:

libpri-1.2.8:
This release contains a number of bugfixes that had been unreleased for months, along with clarification of the licensing of the source code. The change log is here:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/libpri/ChangeLog-1.2.8

libpri-1.4.7:
This release contains primarily only clarification of the licensing of the source code and some minor build system fixes. There is no need for users of version 1.4.6 to upgrade.
The change log is here:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/libpri/ChangeLog-1.4.7

libss7-1.0.1:
This release contains a number of bugfixes, along with clarification of the licensing of the source code.
The change log is here:

http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/libss7/ChangeLog-1.0.1

Thanks for using Asterisk!

August 05, 2008

Toshiba Strata CIX1200 PBX Supports up to 1,000+ ports

Toshiba today announced the launch of its new Strata CIX™1200 VoIP business communication system, bringing Toshiba quality, reliability and affordability to medium-to-large companies.  Supporting up to 1,152 ports, the Strata CIX1200 is designed for 200 to 1,000 users and delivers networked applications for as many as 128 sites.

“The new Strata CIX1200 expands Toshiba’s reach in the medium-to-large market segment, giving enterprises a robust Toshiba solution at nearly double the port capacity of our Strata CIX670,” said Brian Metherell, vice president and general manager.  “As with the entire Strata CIX family, the new Strata CIX1200 gives users Toshiba’s legendary quality and reliability in an affordable VoIP system that can be networked with up to 128 sites. The CIX1200 can be customized using Toshiba’s FeatureFlex® adapatability tool, and provides a smooth migration path from smaller Toshiba systems.”
 
Strata CIX1200 to Offer User Customization
 
Toshiba’s Strata CIX1200 is the only system of its size to allow the user to adapt capabilities to their specific needs. Using FeatureFlex, Toshiba’s feature adaptability and customization tool, the system can be tailored well beyond its standard system features, administrative options and programmable features. It allows enterprises to create user-definable features companywide, by department, or for individual users.  Existing features can be modified, and new ones can be created, including features in CIX call processing, as well as blended features that work between all system applications and resources.
 
“FeatureFlex allows users to customize their own individual features to help them be more efficient with their communications solution,” said Shahin Hatamian, vice president of Product Management.  “FeatureFlex makes the resources of the system available to create new or blended features and applications.”
The CIX1200 contains the same feature-rich functionality as existing Strata CIX communication systems.
 
Strata CIX1200 Can Be Networked up to 128 Sites
 
Strata CIX1200 can be networked with other Toshiba Strata CIX systems, from other CIX1200s all the way down to the small 40-port Strata CIX40.  It can be networked for up to a total of 128 sites to accommodate larger capacity or distributed configurations.
 
“The Strata CIX1200’s networking capabilities make it a perfect solution for a headquarters site that is networked to small or remote offices or retail/restaurant locations,” said Bob Lerche, product manager.
 
Easy Migration to Strata CIX1200 From Other Toshiba Strata CIX Systems
Toshiba has retained its renowned migration path with the Strata CIX1200.  Users of other Toshiba Strata business communication systems can easily migrate their systems to the new Strata CIX1200.  Telephones and almost all system interface cards may be re-used as well as voice mail systems and the Strata MAS with resident applications.  Providing a smooth migration path gives users the ability to retain much of their original investments, while they gain the benefits of the larger system and its additional capabilities.
 
All Applications on a Single Server Delivers Clean Integration, Affordability
 
Toshiba Strata CIX1200 and all other Strata CIX models are compatible with Toshiba’s Strata Media Application Server (Strata MAS), which delivers value-added application processing.  Strata MAS is one of the first application servers to use Host Media Processor (HMP) technology resources as an alternative to Dialogic boards in the server.  HMP is more cost-effective and does not require card slots, making the server more compact and potentially trouble free.
 
Strata MAS integrates all value added applications such as voice mail/unified messaging, IVR, ACD and reporting, Video Conferencing and Collaboration, Web-based Personal and System Administration, and FeatureFlex™ customization tools all on one platform. This provides better application integration and significant cost savings over designs that require separate servers for each application.
 
Source: Toshiba Inc. 

August 01, 2008

Polycom Soundstation 7000 review

Polycom is a name synonymous with audio and video conferencing solutions and it’s a fairly safe bet that if you look in the board room of any large company you stand a good chance of seeing one of their products.

Their analogue products had a great reputation for quality and as the move to IP based telephony continues it’s great to see Polycom aren’t being left behind!

The Polycom Soundstation 7000 is Polycom’s latest VoIP conference phone. It is a full duplex device that both looks nice and also performs extremely well.

The unit features a large backlit LCD screen and a generous sized keypad. The Soundstation 7000 has two connectors for additional microphones and also features a 2.5mm audio connector for connecting the unit directly to a mobile phone or PC.

With an appropriate cable this allows the unit becomes a speakerphone for a mobile phone or allows you to connect directly to the soundcard of a PC and use the Soundstation with a PC based softphone client or sending audio from any other PC application. The unit has no power socket but instead is powered solely by the Ethernet port and is compliant with the 802.3af PoE standard. A PoE injector and AC power adapter are included with the product if you don’t have a suitable PoE switch.
 

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