"We did not enter the search business. [Google] entered the phone business. Make no mistake they want to kill the iPhone. We won't let them... I want to go back to that other question first and say one more thing. This don't be evil mantra - It's bullshit." - Steve Jobs at an emp...
In the face of stiff competition from the freely available and wildly popular Android software, the Symbian Foundation has had no choice but to follow Google's example.
It has announced that its open source migration project is now complete and that the Symbian platform called...
iPad on Ulitzer - SYS-CON Events announced on Monday that "iPad Developer Summit" will take place November 1-3, 2010, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, California. The Summit is co-located with the 7th International Cloud Conference & Expo and the 9th Internati...
While the market figures out whether it wants one of those new iHyped Apple iPad tablets when they get here in March, what it would do with it if it got one, whether it will kill the Kindle, threaten netbooks or backfire on Apple, note that it’s the first time Apple is using its ...
Netsize previews survey results at M-Days mobile conference and trade show in Munich, Germany
Munich, Germany, January 28, 2010 -- Netsize, a leading mobile commerce and communications enabler, today revealed the first results of the Mobile Tren...
Key Steps to Developing VoIP-enabled Apps for the iPhone
Speaker:
Jan Skoglund
Chief Researcher Global IP Solutions
Track:All Tracks
VoIP-enabled applications on the iPhone present a number of challenges to application developers. Trying to cobble a VoIP solution is likely to cause developers severe headaches, time delays and frustration. This session will discuss the four most challenging components to consider when working to ensure a quality VoIP application for the iPhone.
Speaker Bio: Jan Skoglund is Director of Core Research & Development at Global IP Solutions (GIPS). He has been conducting research into speech processing for over a decade and has a Ph.D in Electrical engineering (Information theory and speech coding). He is also a contributing author to the 'Handbook of Speech Processing and Speed Communication.