Big Bell Dogma: March 2010
As we work to build mobility into every product, service, and process, our greatest inhibitor is the mindset represented by those who defend the tethering of products and processes to specific places. This mindset is fueled by the investments that have been made that establish power in the companies, departments, and individuals that stand in the way of mobilizing our lives and our businesses. These investments are not always in hard assets, but often are investments of time and experience to establish intellectual and relational assets. We should expect our assault on these ways to be defended to the death. Here are recent examples:
- North Korean Executed for Using Illegal Mobile Phone
- Open WiFi To Become A Liability In The UK Under Digital Economy Bill
- Skype pulled from Nokia’s Ovi store in the US, Verizon Wireless to blame?
- Motorola Backflip doesn’t allow non-Market apps, proves AT&T doesn’t get Android
- Skype Deliberately Crippling Functionality of iPhone and WinMo and Verizon Apps?
- Egypt Says No More Mobile Skype Calls
- AT&T, Verizon blast FCC rules for proposed LTE network
- FDA ruling on mobile image viewers could shake iPhone app market
July 19th, 2010 at 6:17 pm
After getting the BACKFLIP in the mail I was satisfied yo know I could update the new firmware. I missed the rush, and it was lucky. I’ve had the Backflip for around a 30 days several factors 3 or 4 crashes in the 30 days not poor for 15-20 apps open New WIFI points, and also a larger edge dada than prior Nokia E61 and N93 Good that the BACKFLIP carries a flex keyboard, the screen is really a bit hard about the edges. You get 500 messages per day from Twitter, Facebook, Yaho, and who ever else yopu want. If you might have 30-60 accurate close friends, this can be a fantastic cell phone if you might have more it’ll grab too significantly data. Just a 30 days but a good mobile phone.