Podcasts about mobile communications

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Best podcasts about mobile communications

Latest podcast episodes about mobile communications

SANS Internet Stormcenter Daily Network/Cyber Security and Information Security Stormcast

A Deep Dive into TeamTNT and Spinning YARN https://isc.sans.edu/diary/%5BGuest%20Diary%5D%20A%20Deep%20Dive%20into%20TeamTNT%20and%20Spinning%20YARN/31530 Earth Koshchei Coopts Red Team Tools in Complex RDP Attacks https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/research/24/l/earth-koshchei.html Okta Social Engineering Impersonation Report https://sec.okta.com/articles/2024/okta-social-engineering-report-response-and-recommendation US considers banning TP-Link routers over cybersecurity risks https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/us-considers-banning-tp-link-routers-over-cybersecurity-risks/ CISA Releases Best Practice Guidance for Mobile Communications https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2024/12/18/cisa-releases-best-practice-guidance-mobile-communications

Winners Find a Way
Mastering Strategic Communication with Dr. Michael Gerharz

Winners Find a Way

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 50:02


In this episode, Dr. Michael Gerharz joins Trent Clark to explore the art of impactful communication and its role in executing business strategies. From the importance of simplicity in messaging to aligning teams with actionable goals, Dr. Gerharz introduces his PATH framework for achieving strategic impact. He shares personal stories, including overcoming legal challenges and creating transformative products, illustrating how clear communication can change the game for leaders and organizations alike.  Actionable Advice:  Focus on plain and simple messaging that everyone on your team understands.  Align team actions with your strategy through clear, actionable language.  Encourage bold, transformative choices while staying true to heartfelt values.  Prepare rigorously for challenges and approach obstacles with calm confidence.  View challenges through others' perspectives to bridge communication gaps.  In This Episode, We Discuss:  The common reasons why brilliant ideas fail.  The PATH framework: Plain, Actionable, Transformative, and Heartfelt communication.  How aligning teams around a core promise can eliminate confusion and drive results.  Strategies for overcoming adversity with meticulous preparation.  Why simplicity in communication is more impactful than elaborate messaging.      Connect with Guest:  Website: https://michaelgerharz.com/  LinkedIn: Michael Gerharz on LinkedIn  On Instagram and  Youtube  Podcast: The AHA Effect  Books: The Path to Strategic Impact, The AHA Effect      Connect with Trent M. Clark   Website: Leadershipity.com  LinkedIn: Trent M. Clark  Email: trent@leadershipity.com     Grab a copy of our Book “Leading Winning Teams”  Here: https://bit.ly/4cVWy2t   If you're interested in elevating your team's performance and doubling your organizational value, reach out to Trent for a consultation. Visit Leadershipity.com to learn more or schedule a 15-minute call with Trent.       Listen to More Episodes:   Catch new episodes of the Winners Find a Way Show every Thursday at 10:00 AM Eastern / 700 AM Pacific.     Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and guest and do not necessarily reflect any organisation's official policy or position. 

State of Identity
Mobile Identity: Charting the Future of Digital Security

State of Identity

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 35:01


In this episode of State of Identity, host Cameron D'Ambrosi welcomes Uku Tomikas, CEO of Messente, for an in-depth exploration of the digital identity landscape and the role of mobile communications within it. Discover what's shifting in the digital identity as mobile devices become central to our digital selves as literal authenticators and symbolic representations of our identity. Learn how Messente navigates the changing landscape of digital identity, combating fraud and enhancing security with innovative mobile technology while uncovering key takeaways on the future of authentication, the impact of SMS OTPs, and the revolutionary potential of subscriber data in digital identity verification.  

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman
Accelerating Telco Transformation with Next-Generation Edge AI Innovations - The Six Five On the Road

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 19:15


On this episode of The Six Five - On the Road, hosts Daniel Newman and Patrick Moorhead welcome Lenovo's Kirk Skaugen, Executive Vice President and President, Lenovo ISG, for a conversation on Lenovo's role in transforming the telecommunications industry with innovative Edge AI technologies. Their discussion covers: Overview of Lenovo's announcements at MWC and their implications for the telecommunications sector Lenovo's specific engagements and advancements within the mobile communications industry at MWC How Lenovo stands out in the AI market, particularly in competitive environments like trade shows Learn more about Lenovo.

Predictable B2B Success
Secure mobile communications: How to drive growth and innovation

Predictable B2B Success

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 47:41


In a world reshaped by technological innovation and shifting customer preferences, secure mobile communications has experienced unprecedented disruption. Join us as we delve into the compelling journey of Mobius, a pioneering AI-powered secure mobile communications provider. Our guest, Amit Modi, Chief Technical Officer and Chief Information Security Officer at Mobius, shares pivotal moments in the company's evolution, from inception to engaging with tier-one banks and the challenges encountered.  Discover how Mobius navigates the complexities of mobile communication compliance and addresses the evolving needs of the financial services sector. Amit's insights into customer-centric practices, strategic partnerships, and the integration of AI in secure communication are enlightening and offer a glimpse into the future of B2B success. Explore the intersection of technology, customer engagement, and sales strategy as we unravel the dynamic world of B2B growth and transformative innovation.  Please tune in to Predictable B2B Success as we uncover the keys to thriving in the ever-evolving landscape of secure mobile communications with Amit Modi, an industry leader and visionary. Some areas we explore in this episode include: Leveraging AI for secure mobile communicationsChallenges and pivotal moments in Mobius's journeyStrategies for B2B sales, particularly in engaging with tier-one customersCustomer engagement and listening to customer feedbackTrends in secure communications and the future of the industryBuilding strong channel partnerships and fostering trustAmit Modi's career transition and approach to sales engineeringMobile communication compliance and addressing industry needsGrowth drivers for Mobius in the financial services sectorFuture potential focus on B2B2C targeting business and consumer marketsAnd much, much more ...

Discovery
Harald Haas

Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 27:15


Imagine a world in which your laptop or mobile device accesses the internet, not via radio waves – or WiFi – as it does today but by using light instead: LiFi. Well, that world may not be as far away as you might think. In fact, the technology is already here; and it's thanks in large part to the engineering ingenuity of Harald Haas, Distinguished Professor of Mobile Communications and Director of the Li-Fi Research and Development Centre at the University of Strathclyde. He tells Jim Al-Khalili about the two decades he has spent researching optical wireless communications, building up to his LiFi breakthrough in 2011, where he made waves in the scientific community and beyond by showing how a simple desk lamp could be used to stream a video. Harald's research could well have a very real impact on people's lives, reinventing the way we connect online – but, as Jim hears, his early life was dogged by a very real fear he may have the same devastating disease that took his mother's life at an early age; an experience that shaped his early years and which has driven him to succeed in his own life and career.

DCD Zero Downtime: The Bi-Weekly Data Center Show
Episode 35 - Taking inspiration from the GSMA in a push to drive the broadband industry with Martin Creaner

DCD Zero Downtime: The Bi-Weekly Data Center Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 36:56


The global interests of the mobile industry are represented by the GSM Association (GSMA).  This governing body was established in 1995 to support mobile operators using the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) standard for cellular networks.  It has become synonymous with the mobile industry and has driven it forward through industry programs, working groups, and initiatives.  The GSMA's legacy has even inspired something similar but for broadband instead, with Martin Creaner, director general of the Worldwide Broadband Association (WBBA) seeking to use this model.  Can the GSMA's model be replicated for broadband as well? Creaner explains why the need for a governing body representing broadband interests is important.  “It's all about creating a member-led organization that creates a platform to drive broadband cooperation and partnership across the whole industry to accelerate broadband adoption everywhere in the world,” said Creaner. If you liked this discussion or any of our other episodes, please give it a like or subscribe on your platform of choice. If we are not available on your favorite podcast player, get in touch.

The Life Scientific
Harald Haas on making waves in light communication

The Life Scientific

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2023 28:11


Imagine a world in which your laptop or mobile device accesses the internet, not via radio waves – or WiFi – as it does today but by using light instead: LiFi. Well, that world may not be as far away as you might think. In fact, the technology is already here; and it's thanks in large part to the engineering ingenuity of Harald Haas, Distinguished Professor of Mobile Communications and Director of the Li-Fi Research and Development Centre at the University of Strathclyde. He tells Jim Al-Khalili about the two decades he has spent researching optical wireless communications, building up to his LiFi breakthrough in 2011, where he made waves in the scientific community and beyond by showing how a simple desk lamp could be used to stream a video. Harald's research could well have a very real impact on people's lives, reinventing the way we connect online – but, as Jim hears, his early life was dogged by a very real fear he may have the same devastating disease that took his mother's life at an early age; an experience that shaped his early years and which has driven him to succeed in his own life and career. Produced by Gerry Holt.

Office Hours with Spencer Rascoff
Community's Diankha Linear on Scaling a Company for Enterprise

Office Hours with Spencer Rascoff

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2023 39:40


Diankha Linear, CEO of Community, an SMS marketing platform for business, speaks with Spencer in this episode of Office Hours. Ms. Linear was an officer and early executive team member at Convoy, serving as General Counsel and corporate secretary—overseeing one of Seattle's largest VC transactions with a Series D Round of $400M, among other roles in the startup. Diankha comes from a strategy and leadership background, built on her years of military education and training with the Army and as a Judge Advocate General (JAG) officer. Ms Linear spent nearly a decade in leadership roles at Nordstrom and Expeditors International of Washington. Her early career was spent at big firm antitrust, complex commercial, constitutional, and employment law counsel. Diankha is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and the University of Washington.   

TapirCast
#182. Hücresel Haberleşme'nin Dünü, Bugünü ve Yarını: Radyo Ağı Yapısı - 22/01/2023

TapirCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2023 27:43


Öğr. Üyesi Cengiz Riva ve Halil Said Cankurtaran'ın yer aldığı TapirCast'in "Hücresel Haberleşme'nin Dünü, Bugünü ve Yarını" serisinin bu bölümünde, radyo ağlarının temel yapısı ve çalışma şekli üzerine konuşuyoruz. Bölümümüze GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) şebekleri ve baz istasyonları hakkında konuşurak başlıyoruz. Sonrasında, planlama aşamasından ve planlamacıların nasıl çalıştığından bahsediyoruz. Ardından, hücrelerin konumlandırılmasında dikkat edilmesi gerekenlere değiniyoruz. Sonrasında, mobil şebekelerin merkezle olan haberleşmesi ve merkez seçiminin nasıl gerçekleştiği üzerine konuşuyoruz. Haberleşme yapısındaki mevcut ve olası problemleri ve bu problemlerin çözümlerini günlük hayattan örnekler ile açıklayarak bölümümüzü sonlandırıyoruz. Keyifli dinlemeler!

Mint Business News
Manchester City signs up Jio Platforms as mobile communications network partner

Mint Business News

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 4:20


In this episode, find out about SEBI's decision to allow govt holding in IDBI Bank to be reclassified as public after divestment, also find out about L&T Realty Developers' plan to sell a stake in Think Tower Developers Business Term of the Day: Plant Load Factor

Podcasts 4 Brainport, featured by Radio 4 Brainport
LiFi, where do we stand in 2022? Prof. Harald Haas about Optical Wireless Communications.

Podcasts 4 Brainport, featured by Radio 4 Brainport

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2022 14:47


At the Optical Wireless Communications Conference 2022, Prof. Harald Haas gave a keynote speech on the role of LiFi in 6G . We look back and looks forward into the challanges and the promises of using light to communicate wirelessly. Faster and more secure access to the internet by avoiding the congested radio waves. Lifi can unlock terabit per second connectivity, but is "speed" the only performance indicator? How will the technology develop now that the first generations of systems are already in the market. How does LiFi for consumer mass markets differ essentially from shooting laser beams to satellites. Professor Harald Haas, then Professor of Mobile Communications at the University of Edinburgh but now with the University Strathclyde Glasgow, coined the term "Li-Fi" at his 2011 TED Global Talk where he introduced the idea of "wireless data from every light". The interview is conducted by Jean-Paul Linnartz, not only reporter for Radio 4 Brainport but also TPC Chairman of the OWCC 2022 in the MikroCenterum in Veldhoven, Professor in Wireless and Signal Processing Communications at TU Eindhoven himself and Research Fellow with Signify. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcasts-4-brainport/message

Astro Awani
Notepad with Ibrahim Sani: Development and Utilities of Telecommunications

Astro Awani

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 18:01


Julian Gorman, Head of Asia Pacific for Global System for Mobile Communications speaks with Ibrahim Sani about the Development and Utilities of Telecommunications.

Hidden Layers
Peter DeLuca, T-Mobile

Hidden Layers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2022 29:00


On the latest episode of Hidden Layers, I sat down with Peter DeLuca, Chief Creative Officer (CCO) and Senior Vice President at T-Mobile. In his role, Peter leads the brand, creative and media teams, responsible for bringing the “Uncarrier” brand to life through marketing, across all consumer touch points. During our conversation, we discussed the transformation of the T-Mobile brand and how they leverage their marketing efforts to stand out in a highly competitive marketplace. Check out the episode to hear more!

The Data Standard
NLP for financial companies with Ben Nichols

The Data Standard

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 13:28 Transcription Available


Ben Nichols is the Head of Product at IMS, Inc. Based in Liverpool, New York, IMS, Inc. is a fully integrated service provider of Conversational AI, Robotic Process Automation (RPA), Payments, Print, Electronic, and Mobile Communications. Ben is also an Adjunct Professor of Data Science at Syracuse University, where he conducts lectures on Natural Language Processing, Database Design, and Scripting for Data Science. Prior to that, Ben was Senior Director of Customer Insights at CB4, an AI tool that helps retailers uncover and fix the costliest in-store issues. At CB4, Ben led a team of insights managers, sales solution architects, and data engineers who were responsible for multi-million dollar customer retention, customer upsells, and fulfilling new revenue goals. Before CB4, Ben worked in multiple data intelligence and business analytics roles at organizations like IBM and Morgan Stanley. In this exclusive episode, Ben Nichols shares with us the following aspects of his life and career: Talking from his past experience, he shares with us his views on the differences between working at a large organization vs working at a startup. What are the current capabilities of Natural Language Processing (NLP) and chatbots How cross-channel integration can be fostered using NLP for enhanced customer experience. What are the avenues of NLP Beyond chatbots? Ben Nichols https://www.linkedin.com/in/ben-nichols/ The Data Standard is a community of data scientists, architects, engineers, and enthusiasts. In addition to regular podcasts, we host monthly events, publish through leadership pieces, and offer a stimulating ecosystem for networking and collaboration. https://datastandard.io https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-data-standard https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTuolowXD05RY9DkIWqRT6Q

The Data Standard
NLP for financial companies with Ben Nichols

The Data Standard

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 13:28


Ben Nichols is the Head of Product at IMS, Inc. Based in Liverpool, New York, IMS, Inc. is a fully integrated service provider of Conversational AI, Robotic Process Automation (RPA), Payments, Print, Electronic, and Mobile Communications. Ben is also an Adjunct Professor of Data Science at Syracuse University, where he conducts lectures on Natural Language Processing, Database Design, and Scripting for Data Science. Prior to that, Ben was Senior Director of Customer Insights at CB4, an AI tool that helps retailers uncover and fix the costliest in-store issues. At CB4, Ben led a team of insights managers, sales solution architects, and data engineers who were responsible for multi-million dollar customer retention, customer upsells, and fulfilling new revenue goals. Before CB4, Ben worked in multiple data intelligence and business analytics roles at organizations like IBM and Morgan Stanley. In this exclusive episode, Ben Nichols shares with us the following aspects of his life and career:Talking from his past experience, he shares with us his views on the differences between working at a large organization vs working at a startup.What are the current capabilities of Natural Language Processing (NLP) and chatbotsHow cross-channel integration can be fostered using NLP for enhanced customer experience.What are the avenues of NLP Beyond chatbots?Ben Nicholshttps://www.linkedin.com/in/ben-nichols/ The Data Standard is a community of data scientists, architects, engineers, and enthusiasts. In addition to regular podcasts, we host monthly events, publish through leadership pieces, and offer a stimulating ecosystem for networking and collaboration. https://datastandard.iohttps://www.linkedin.com/company/the-data-standardhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTuolowXD05RY9DkIWqRT6Q

Data And Analytics in Business
E63 - Ben Nichols - Improving Customer Experience with Natural Language Processing in Banking

Data And Analytics in Business

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2021 60:52


Ben Nichols is the Head of Product at IMS, Inc. Based in Liverpool, New York, IMS, Inc. is a fully integrated service provider of Conversational AI, Robotic Process Automation (RPA), Payments, Print, Electronic, and Mobile Communications. Ben is also an Adjunct Professor of Data Science at Syracuse University, where he conducts lectures on Natural Language Processing, Database Design, and Scripting for Data Science. Prior to that, Ben was Senior Director of Customer Insights at CB4, an AI tool that helps retailers uncover and fix the costliest in-store issues. At CB4, Ben led a team of insights managers, sales solution architects, and data engineers who were responsible for multi-million dollar customer retention, customer upsells, and fulfilling new revenue goals. Before CB4, Ben worked in multiple data intelligence and business analytics roles at organisations like IBM and Morgan Stanley. In this exclusive episode, Ben Nichols shares with us the following aspects of his life and career: Talking from his past experience, he shares with us his views on the differences between working at a large organization vs working at a startup. He also explains a few pros and cons for each scenario. The state of the sync between academia and the industry in terms of developing data talents. What are the challenges that academia faces in this regard? How conversational AI and hyper-automation technologies are being used in the financial sector. What are the real-life benefits the credit unions and community banks are getting from this technology? How other industries can also use and benefit from these same tools and technology. Ben also shares his philosophy on product development and management and why we always need to see the bigger picture. What are the current capabilities of Natural Language Processing (NLP) and chatbots How cross-channel integration can be fostered using NLP for enhanced customer experience. What are the avenues of NLP Beyond chatbots? If you are a senior executive working on utilizing NLP technologies for enhancing your customer experience, or if you are an engineer working in analytics product development and management, this is the episode you should not miss! More links about the guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ben-nichols/ What is one book that he would gift to his younger self: How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/567610.How_to_Read_a_Book Organisation: https://imsdirect.com/ BusinessAnalytics, CustomerExperience, DataScience, NaturalLanguageProcessing(NLP), ProductDevelopment, ArtificialIntelligence(AI), MachineLearning(ML), DataAnalytics --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/analyticsshow/message

The History of Computing
A History Of Text Messages In A Few More Than 160 Characters

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2021 16:09


Texts are sent and received using SMS, or Short Message Service. Due to the amount of bandwidth available on second generation networks, they were limited to 160 characters initially. You know the 140 character max from Twitter, we are so glad you chose to join us on this journey where we weave our way from the topmast of the 1800s to the skinny jeans of San Francisco with Twitter. What we want you to think about through this episode is the fact that this technology has changed our lives. Before texting we had answering machines, we wrote letters, we sent more emails but didn't have an expectation of immediate response. Maybe someone got back to us the next day, maybe not. But now, we rely on texting to coordinate gatherings, pick up the kids, get a pin on a map, provide technical support, send links, send memes, convey feelings in ways that we didn't do when writing letters. I mean including an animated gif in a letter meant melty peanut butter. Wait, that's jif. Sorry. And few technologies have sprung into our every day use so quickly in the history of technology. It took generations if not 1,500 years for bronze working to migrate out of the Vinča Culture and bring an end to the Stone Age. It took a few generations if not a couple of hundred years for electricity to spread throughout the world. The rise of computing took a few generations to spread from first mechanical then to digital and then to personal computing and now to ubiquitous computing. And we're still struggling to come to terms with job displacement and the productivity gains that have shifted humanity more rapidly than any other time including the collapse of the Bronze Age.  But the rise of cellular phones and then the digitization of them combined with globalization has put instantaneous communication in the hands of everyday people around the world. We've decreased our reliance on paper and transporting paper and moved more rapidly into a digital, even post-PC era. And we're still struggling to figure out what some of this means. But did it happen as quickly as we identify? Let's look at how we got here. Bell Telephone introduced the push button phone in 1963 to replace the rotary dial telephone that had been invented in 1891 and become a standard. And it was only a matter of time before we'd find a way to associate letters to it. Once we could send bits over devices instead of just opening up a voice channel it was only a matter of time before we'd start sending data as well. Some of those early bits we sent were things like typing our social security number or some other identifier for early forms of call routing. Heck the fax machine was invented all the way back in 1843 by a Scottish inventor called Alexander Bain.  So given that we were sending different types of data over permanent and leased lines it was only a matter of time before we started doing so over cell phones.  The first cellular networks were analog in what we now think of as first generation, or 1G. GSM, or Global System for Mobile Communications is a standard that came out of the European Telecommunications Standards Institue and started getting deployed in 1991. That became what we now think of as 2G and paved the way for new types of technologies to get rolled out. The first text message simply said “Merry Christmas” and was sent on December 3rd, 1992. It was sent to Richard Jarvis at Vodafone by Neil Papworth. As with a lot of technology it was actually thought up eight years earlier by Bernard Ghillabaert and Friedhelm Hillebrand. From there, the use cases moved to simply alerting devices of various statuses, like when there was a voice mail. These days we mostly use push notification services for that.  To support using SMS for that, carriers started building out SMS gateways and by 1993 Nokia was the first cell phone maker to actually support end-users sending text messages. Texting was expensive at first, but adoption slowly increased. We could text in the US by 1995 but cell phone subscribers were sending less than 6 texts a year on average. But as networks grew and costs came down, adoption increased up to a little over one a day by the year 2000.  Another reason adoption was slow was because using multi-tap to send a message sucked. Multi-tap was where we had to use the 10-key pad on a device to type out messages. You know, ABC are on a 2 key so the first type you tap two it's the number the next time it's an A, the next a B, the next a C. And the 3 key is D, E, and F. The 4 is G, H, and I and the 5 is J, K, and L. The 6 is M, N, and O and the 7 is P, Q, R, and S. The 8 is T, U, and V and the 9 is W, X, Y, and Z. This layout goes back to old bell phones that had those letters printed under the numbers. That way if we needed to call 1-800-PODCAST we could map which letters went to what.  A small company called Research in Motion introduced an Inter@active Pager in 1996 to do two-way paging. Paging services went back decades. My first was a SkyTel, which has its roots in Mississippi when John N Palmer bought a 300 person paging company using an old-school radio paging service. That FCC license he picked up evolved to more acquisitions through Alabama, Loisiana, New York and by the mid-80s growing nationally to 30,000 subscribers in 1989 and over 200,000 less than four years later. A market validated, RIM introduced the BlackBerry on the DataTAC network in 2002, expanding from just text to email, mobile phone services, faxing, and now web browsing. We got the Treo the same year. But that now iconic Blackberry keyboard. Nokia was the first cellular device maker to make a full keyboard for their Nokia 9000i Communicator in 1997, so it wasn't an entirely new idea. But by now, more and more people were thinking of what the future of Mobility would look like. The 3rd Generation Partnership Project, or 3GPP was formed in 1998 to dig into next generation networks. They began as an initiative at Nortel and AT&T but grew to include NTT DoCoMo, British Telecom, BellSouth, Ericsson, Telnor, Telecom Italia, and France Telecom - a truly global footprint. With a standards body in place, we could move faster and they began planning the roadmap for 3G and beyond (at this point we're on 5G).  Faster data transfer rates let us do more. We weren't just sending texts any more. MMS, or Multimedia Messaging Service was then introduced and use grow to billions and then hundreds of millions of photos sent encoded using technology like what we do with MIME for multimedia content on websites. At this point, people were paying a fee for every x number of messages and ever MMS. Phones had cameras now so in a pre-Instagram world this was how we were to share them. Granted they were blurry by modern standards, but progress. Devices became more and more connected as data plans expanded to eventually often be unlimited. But SMS was still slow to evolve in a number of ways. For example, group chat was not really much of a thing. That is, until 2006 when a little company called Twitter came along to make it easy for people to post a message to their friends. Initially it worked over text message until they moved to an app. And texting was used by some apps to let users know there was data waiting for them. Until it wasn't. Twilio was founded in 2008 to make it easy for developers to add texting to their software. Now every possible form of text integration was as simple as importing a framework. Apple introduced the Apple Push Notification service, or APNs in 2009. By then devices were always connected to the Internet and the send and receive for email and other apps that were fine on desktops were destroying battery life. APNs then allowed developers to build apps that could only establish a communication channel when they had data. Initially we used 256 bytes in push notifications but due to the popularity and different implementation needs, notifications could grow to 2 kilobytes in 2015 and moved to an HTTP/2 interface and a 4k payload in 2015. This is important because it paved the way for iChat, now called iMessage or just Messages - and then other similar services for various platforms that moved instant messaging off SMS and over to the vendor who builds a device rather than using SMS or MMS messaging.  Facebook Messenger came along in 2011, and now the kids use Instagram messaging, Snapchat, Signal or any number of other messaging apps. Or they just text. It's one of a billion communications tools that also include Discord, Slack, Teams, LinkedIn, or even the in-game options in many a game. Kinda' makes restricting communications a bit of a challenge at this point and restricting spam.  My kid finishes track practice early. She can just text me. My dad can't make it to dinner. He can just text me. And of course I can get spam through texts. And everyone can message me on one of about 10 other apps on my phone. And email. On any given day I receive upwards of 300 messages, so sometimes it seems like I could just sit and respond to messages all day every day and still never be caught up. And get this - we're better for it all. We're more productive, we're more well connected, and we're more organized. Sure, we need to get better at having more meaningful reactions when we're together in person. We need to figure out what a smaller, closer knit group of friends is like and how to be better at being there for them rather than just sending a sad face in a thread where they're indicating their pain.  But there's always a transition where we figure out how to embrace these advances in technology. There are always opportunities in the advancements and there are always new evolutions built atop previous evolutions. The rate of change is increasing. The reach of change is increasing. And the speed changes propagate are unparalleled today. Some will rebel against changes, seeking solace in older ways. It's always been like that - the Amish can often be seen on a buggy pulled by a horse so a television or phone capable of texting would certainly be out of the question. Others embrace technology faster than some of us are ready for. Like when I realized some people had moved away from talking on phones and were pretty exclusively texting. Spectrums. I can still remember picking up the phone and hearing a neighbor on with a friend. Party lines were still a thing in Dahlonega, Georgia when I was a kid. I can remember the first dedicated line and getting in trouble for running up a big long distance bill. I can remember getting our first answering machine and changing messages on it to be funny. Most of that was technology that moved down market but had been around for a long time. The rise of messaging on the cell phone then smart phone though - that was a turning point that started going to market in 1993 and within 20 years truly revolutionized human communication. How can we get messages faster than instant? Who knows, but I look forward to finding out. 

KBS WORLD Radio News
News(Top News : LG Electronics pulls the plug on its money-losing mobile communications division, citing intense competition.) - 2021.04.05 PM5

KBS WORLD Radio News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021


Last updated : 2021.04.05 The latest news from home and abroad, with a close eye on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula in particular

Future Positive
AI in Contact Tracing and Data Privacy

Future Positive

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 51:02


When it comes to fighting infectious disease outbreaks, contact tracing is a key public health response. Mobile technologies including GPS, Bluetooth, cellphone masts and AI-powered big data analytics, can help collect data that helps decision-makers understand and manage the spread of pandemics like COVID-19 within their own communities. But when using this kind of technology, it’s critical to preserve personal privacy to not only maintain public trust but especially to protect vulnerable individuals during a crisis. This episode explores how privacy-preserving techniques such as homomorphic encryption and solutions for mobile phone contact tracing can be deployed, including real-world examples from Israel and the US. Today’s episode was originally recorded at AI For Good, an annual global summit hosted by ITU and XPRIZE, and while some elements of the conversation are more timely to COVID’s spread in April 2020 at the time of recording, our guests discuss explore how developers are creating tracing software, its importance in early response efforts and technical specifics, all of which are especially relevant challenges still today. Thomas Wiegand is a German electrical engineer who substantially contributed to the creation of the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC and H.265/MPEG-H HEVC video coding standards. For H.264/MPEG-4 AVC, Wiegand was one of the chairmen of the Joint Video Team (JVT) standardization committee that created the standard and was the chief editor of the standard itself. He was also an active technical contributor to both standards. Wiegand also holds a chairmanship position in the ITU-T VCEG and previously in ISO/IEC MPEG standardization organizations. In July 2006, the video coding work of the ITU-T jointly led by Gary J. Sullivan and Wiegand for the preceding six years was voted as the most influential area of the standardization work of the CCITT and ITU-T in their 50-year history. Wiegand is Professor at the Technical University of Berlin and executive director of the Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute, Berlin, Germany. He heads research teams working on : Video processing and coding, Multimedia transmission, Machine learning, Mobile Communications (management) and Computer Vision (management).Kurt Rohloff is the co-founder and CTO of Duality Technologies, a technology start-up enabling privacy-preserving analytics and collaboration on sensitive data. He leads the development of PALISADE, an open source homomorphic encryption software library that encrypts data so that they can be safely used for predictive analytics while preserving private information. Prior to co-founding Duality he was a professor of computer science at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan. He is the recipient of a DARPA Director’s Fellowship. Links: https://dualitytech.com/ https://aiforgood.itu.int/ xprize.org/blog See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

PR 360
Discussing the Future of Mobile Communications with Pivotal Commware’s Kent Lundgren

PR 360

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 16:44


In This Episode…We talk with Kent Lundgren about the mobile industry, how they are paving the way for better 5G, messaging to customers, and how they kept the competitors at bay.Show Notes· [00:44] Are you a coffee or tea drinker? · [00:58] Can you explain a little about what Pivotal is about? · [02:06] So Pivotal is mostly about telecoms? · [02:15] How is Pivotal helping businesses with making 5G accessible?· [03:05] How do you message to companies working in the telecoms industry about how you do 5G?· [03:52] Your value prop is being cost-effective and good tech?· [05:02] What have been the growing pains when deploying 5G?· [05:57] Is your messaging in some way saying that Pivotal can make 5G better than the competitor?· [06:53] Has your messaging changed from the beginning of 2020 to now?· [08:42] Has COVID impacted your business at all?· [09:40] Where do you think mobile telecom business is going in the near future?· [11:42] Are we seeing the first steps into a smart city?· [12:02] What are some surprising feedback you’ve gotten from your customers?· [13:08] How have you kept your competitors at bay?· [14:30] Your messaging to businesses is that Pivotal is an all-in-one solution?· [15:10] Fun question: If you could meet any tech inventor, who would it be? · [15:53] Final thoughts People and Companies, We Mentioned in the Show· Kent was our guest today. Learn more about Pivotal Commware.Episode Length: 16:52Thanks so much for tuning in. Join us again next week for another episode!Download Options· Listen and subscribe to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcast, or your favorite podcast player for free!· If you enjoyed this episode, leave us a review!Contact Us! ● If you want to get involved, leave us a comment!● Visit us and give us a ‘like’ on our Facebook page!● Follow us on Twitter.Thanks for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ordinarily Extraordinary - Conversations with women in STEM
Cristine Korowajczuk - Computer Engineer, Wireless Industry, Technical Education, Training, and life long learner

Ordinarily Extraordinary - Conversations with women in STEM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2020 75:51


Cristine works in technical sales and support in the wireless industry. She has spent much of her career doing technical education, training, and documentation. She capitalizes on her insatiable curiosity and need to thoroughly understand things both in her career as an educator and in her role as a mom. Cristine also shares her childhood and educational experience growing up in Brazil.Episode NotesMusic used in the podcast: Higher Up, Silverman Sound StudioAcronyms and DefinitionsComputer Engineering - the branch of engineering that integrates electronic engineering with computer sciences. Computer engineers design and develop computer systems and other technological devices.Russian School of Mathematics - an after school program that provides mathematics education for children attending K–12 of public and private schools. The school provides children the opportunity to advance in mathematics beyond the traditional school curriculum. The founder of RSM is Inessa Rifkin and co-founder is Irene Khavinson (wikipedia)GSM - Global System for Mobile Communications - a standard developed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) to describe the protocols for second-generation (2G) digital cellular networks used by mobile devices such as mobile phones and tablets. (wikipedia)GPRS - General Packet Radio Service - a packet oriented mobile data standard on the 2G and 3G cellular communication network's global system for mobile communications(GSM). (wikipedia)3GPP - The 3rd Generation Partnership Project - unites [Seven] telecommunications standard development organizations (ARIB, ATIS, CCSA, ETSI, TSDSI, TTA, TTC), known as “Organizational Partners” and provides their members with a stable environment to produce the Reports and Specifications that define 3GPP technologies. (www.3gpp.org)Fact CheckWhen did wireless come to Brazil? The history of mobile telephony in Brazil began on 30 December 1990, when the Cellular Mobile System began operating in the city of Rio de Janeiro, with a capacity for 10,000 terminals. According to Anatel (the national telecommunications agency), there were 667 devices in the country. The number of devices rose to 6,700 in the next year, to 30,000 in 1992. In November 2007 3G services were launched, and increased rapidly to almost 90% of the population in 2012 and the agreements signed as part of the auction specify a 3G coverage obligation of 100% of population by 2019. (wikipedia)Claude Shannon - (April 30, 1916 – February 24, 2001) was an American mathematician, electrical engineer, and cryptographer known as "the father of information theory". Shannon is noted for having founded information theory with a landmark paper, "A Mathematical Theory of Communication", that he published in 194

Ascolta la Notizia
Corea del Sud primo paese con copertura 5G nazionale

Ascolta la Notizia

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2019 1:22


La Corea del Sud è il primo paese al mondo con copertura 5G su scala nazionale. Battuti gli Stati Uniti e la Cina nella competizione per il primato mondiale nella tecnologia che rivoluzionerà il mondo delle telecomunicazioni. La Global System for Mobile Communications prevede che l’introduzione di questa tecnologia nel mercato produrrà un tornaconto di 565 miliardi di dollari al 2034. I tre giganti sudcoreani delle comunicazioni, Kt, Sk Telecom e Lg Uplus, mercoledì scorso hanno lanciato il servizio in esclusiva per una decina di persone, tra cui delle famosissime star pop. Da ieri il servizio è disponibile per tutta la popolazione. La nuova infrastruttura consente di scaricare file molto pesanti come un film in meno di un secondo. La velocità di download è di venti volte superiore al 4G. In concomitanza con il lancio del 5G, ha debuttato sul mercato il primo smartphone al mondo in grado di sfruttare la nuova tecnologia. È il Galaxy S10 5G della compagnia sudcoreana Samsung.

Air Heads
The Best way to do a bad back announce is not prepare it - David Rogerson (Episode. 11)

Air Heads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2019 16:03


David Rogerson teaches the newly developed Mobile Communications course as part of the Advertising and Digital Media Faculty at Macleay College in NSW.With a 20+ year career history in the media and digital communications industry, David has a reputation for directing and delivering award winning excellence in communications strategies having been a winner and finalist across numerous Australian Commercial Radio Awards. He is currently the managing director of his own consultancy company, Strategic Media Solutions, which provides marketing, media and communications services to a range of corporate and small business clients.

Constellations, a New Space and Satellite Innovation Podcast
41 - Always-On Connectivity, Flat Panel Antennas and End-to-End Mobile Communications

Constellations, a New Space and Satellite Innovation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2018 24:45


From connected cars, planes and boats there is an ever increasing need for “always-on” seamless broadband connectivity while on the move. There are still obstacles to overcome in order to reach uninhibited, global connectivity. Bill Marks, Chief Strategy Officer and Executive Vice President of Kymeta explains how flat-panel satellite antenna systems address these challenges and is making the vision of always-on mobile and global broadband connectivity a reality. He shares insights into flat-panel antenna trials and evaluations on yachts, buses and SUVs and the feedback from customers that has helped advance the technology. Bill also talks about the challenges in making the technology work and deploying it on a mass scale and what makes their offering unique in the market. The application of the technology for mission critical efforts such as disaster recovery and military communications-on-the move is also discussed. Finally, find how Bill thinks the mobile communications market will evolve and change in the next five years as flat panel technology becomes even more mature and widely deployed.

INSPIRED EDINBURGH - THE HOME OF POWERFUL CONVERSATIONS
EP70: Professor Harald Haas - Wireless Data From Every Lightbulb

INSPIRED EDINBURGH - THE HOME OF POWERFUL CONVERSATIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2018 75:10


Professor Harald Haas is Chair of Mobile Communications at the University of Edinburgh, and is the initiator, co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of pureLiFi Limited, as well as the Director of the LiFi Research and Development Center. In his 2011 TED Global talk “Wireless Data from Every Light Bulb”, he first introduced and coined the term ‘Li-Fi’, a technology for wireless communication between devices using light. The talk has since been watched online more than two and a half million times. Li-Fi was listed among the 50 best inventions in TIME Magazine and his work has since been covered in other international media such as the New York Times, BBC, MSNBC, CNN International, Wired UK, and many more. In 2014, he was selected as one of ten RISE Leaders in the UK, in 2015 he gave a second TED Global talk, which has been viewed more than two million times, in 2016 he received the outstanding achievement award from the International Solid State Lighting Alliance, and in 2017 he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. As well as countless other awards, he holds 31 patents and has more than 30 patent pending applications; he has published 400 conference and journal papers including a paper in Science, and he has published two textbooks with Cambridge University Press. His Google Scholar h-index is currently 69, and his work has been cited more than 23,000 times.   00.00 Trailer 00.12 Introduction 02.10 Reflecting on Professor Haas’ first TED talk 04.20 Professor Haas’ background and early life 05.10 The desire to move and travel 07.30 Professor Haas’ career aspirations 09.00 Professor Haas’ career path 10.30 Professor Haas’ earliest memory of LiFi 13.30 What is LiFi and how does it work? 16.30 What is this the equivalent of? 18.00 100 times faster than WiFi? 19.40 What are the main benefits of LiFi? 22.00 Dispelling limitations with LiFi 24.00 What impact could LiFi have on the world? 27.20 How challenging is it to roll this out globally, and how potentially disruptive could LiFi be? 31.00 The progress of LiFi so far 32.30 When does Professor Haas expect it will be fully available worldwide? 33.50 Biggest technological advances 35.00 Professor Haas’ views on artificial intelligence 37.00 Do we run the risk of making ourselves redundant? 41.00 Automation and universal basic income 43.30 Scotland as a technological ecosystem 44.40 What could we do better? 46.20 Views on investment in early stage companies? 47.40 How has Professor Haas evolved as a person throughout his life? 48.30 The biggest challenge Professor Haas faced 49.00 Professor Haas on purpose 50.30 Professor Haas on his own purpose 52.20 Professor Haas not being defined by LiFi 52.50 Professor Haas on his legacy 54.30 What drives Professor Haas? 56.20 Making the world a better place 57.50 Professor Haas on his worldview 59.40 Moving to Canada 1.00.20 Definition of success 1.02.40 Does Professor Haas feel successful? 1.03.30 Life goals 1.04.30 How much does Professor Haas work? 1.05.30 Best piece of advice 1.06.20 Whose advice was it to move away from Germany? 1.07.40 What would Professor Haas say to his 20 year old self? 1.08.50 Changing the world   You can find Professor Haas at: https://purelifi.com/ https://www.facebook.com/pureLiFi https://twitter.com/purelifi https://www.linkedin.com/in/hhaas https://twitter.com/dlarah15   Find Inspired Edinburgh here: http://www.inspiredinburgh.com https://www.facebook.com/INSPIREDINBURGH https://www.twitter.com/INSPIREDINBURGH https://www.instagram.com/INSPIREDINBURGH

TechLaw10
Episode 229: Technology In Sports - What Is Fair Game?

TechLaw10

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2018 16:19


TechLaw10 hosts Jonathan Armstrong and Eric Sinrod discuss how mobile communication has revolutionized bicycle racing (including the Tour de France) and other sports.

Breaking Health
Looking for Secure Mobile Communications within Hospital Walls? PatientSafe Has an App for That

Breaking Health

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2016 55:56


The business of building mobile networks that can operate safely and securely within hospital walls is complicated and competitive. President and CEO Si Luo explains how PatientSafe Solutions is taking a “one base at a time” approach to building a leader in this area.

Lecture Mobile Communications, Summer Term 2016
Lecture 8: Mobile Communications, Chapter 8 - Network Protocols/Mobile IP

Lecture Mobile Communications, Summer Term 2016

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 113:58


Lecture Mobile Communications, Summer Term 2016
Lecture 4: Mobile Communications, Chapter 4 - Wireless Telecommunication Systems

Lecture Mobile Communications, Summer Term 2016

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 406:36


Ohio Ministry Network
Synergy 16 | Going Mobile: A Guide to Church Apps And Mobile Communications

Ohio Ministry Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2016 41:18


Ohio Ministry Network
Synergy 16 | Going Mobile: A Guide to Church Apps And Mobile Communications

Ohio Ministry Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2016 41:18


Verge of Discovery
032: LiFi is the future of WiFi with Dr. Haas

Verge of Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2016 35:36


Professor Haas received the PhD degree from the University of Edinburgh in 2001. He currently holds the Chair of Mobile Communications at the University of Edinburgh, and is co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of pureLiFi Ltd as well as the Director of the LiFi Research and Development Center at the University of Edinburgh. He first introduced and coined LiFi. LiFi was listed among the 50 best inventions in TIME Magazine 2011.

Startup Grind
Women Role Models in Technology with Suzan DelBene (Drugstore.com/US Congress)

Startup Grind

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2016 50:55


United States Congresswoman Suzan DelBene. Prior to her election as the representative for Washington’s 1st congressional district in 2012, Suzan held various tech exec roles including as the Co-Founder and VP of Drugstore.com which sold to Walgreens for $409M. Suzan has also served as the CEO of Nimble Technology and as Microsofts VP of Mobile Communications. Earlier in her career at Microsoft, Suzan worked on the famed Windows 95 operating system. She has a degree in biology from Reed College and a MBA from the university of Washington.    Startup Grind is Brought to You By:    Soylent: Easy, sustained energy that goes where you go. Learn more at Soylent.com

Tam Dalyell Prize Lectures
Prof. Harald Haas - My Li-Fi Revolution

Tam Dalyell Prize Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2014 76:41


In the 2014 Tam Dalyell Lecture, Professor Harald Haas, Chair of Mobile Communications at The University of Edinburgh, reveals an amazing innovation that could change wireless communications forever. The Li-Fi system uses standard light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to transmit electronic data signals, which will enable users to access the internet through the ordinary lighting systems in schools, workplaces and homes. This revolutionary invention has the potential to bring cheap, energy efficient and super-secure wireless access to the world. Recorded on Sunday 13 April at the University of Edinburgh's Playfair Library.

KCIABC Today
Perry Puccetti on Mobile Communications

KCIABC Today

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2012 11:41


Perry Puccetti is president and CEO of The Triple I Corp., an Overland Park-based technology consultancy. On Nov. 15, he'll use his expertise to help business communicators evaluate when and how to most effectively use mobile communication. Instead of focusing on merely the technology ("We need an app now!") Perry advocates that communicators clear identify their audiences and goals. He'll also review three areas that every mobile strategy should focus on: revenue, brand and productivity. Register for the breakfast at Kansas City Cafe here: http://tinyurl.com/a446dy7 About KC/IABC The Kansas City chapter of IABC, 2012 International Chapter of the Year, includes approximately 200 members, in and around Kansas City, who are employed as communications professionals for major corporations, agencies and non-profit organizations. Many KC/IABC members are self-employed as freelancers or run their own companies. IABC Kansas City also welcomes student members and works with local IABC student chapters serving as a resource for young communicators entering the industry. In addition to our membership, our chapter's activities include hundreds more communicators who are not yet members but join us for luncheons, conferences or special interest groups. Non-members are welcome at all of our events.

IBM Rational software podcast series
Object Management Group's TelcoML - example of a mobile communications API

IBM Rational software podcast series

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2012 12:40


Many existing Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), such as the GSMA OneAPI, define commonly supported set of lightweight and Web friendly interfaces to support mobile development, in an operator agnostic manner. With TelcoML delivery teams can build a component library of OneAPI objects, which are enabled for deployment in devices and operator networks alike. TelcoML provides a modeling view of the API, resulting in greatly improved time to market and superior mobile services and applications. Irv Badr, speaker.

Inaugural lectures (audio)
Inaugural lecture: Prof Harald Haas

Inaugural lectures (audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2011


Professor Harald Haas, Chair of Mobile Communications, presents his inaugural lecture "Shedding light on future wireless communications". Audio version. Listen to podcast

IQPCAus6
IQPC podcast with Mary Brittain-White, Retriever Communications

IQPCAus6

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2010 12:13


Welcome to the podcast for for Field Service Management 2010. This interview is with Mary Brittin-White, Managing Director, Retriever Communications. Field Service Management 2010 has been developed through extensive research with over 80 Managers responsible for improving field service operations within organisations across the Australasian region. The summit, building on the success of an excellent inaugural event in 2009, offers a unique opportunity to share and discuss views with leading practitioners from across Australia and beyond on the core serviceprinciples - the latest thinking in optimal service delivery, cost reduction, organisational change management, and technology adoption to exceed customer expectations. Join this interview LIVE, visit www.fsmaustralia.com.au, or call Will or Nigel at IQPC on +61 2 9229 1000.

IQPCAus6
IQPC podcast with Mary Brittain-White, Retriever Communications

IQPCAus6

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2010 12:13


Welcome to the podcast for for Field Service Management 2010. This interview is with Mary Brittin-White, Managing Director, Retriever Communications. Field Service Management 2010 has been developed through extensive research with over 80 Managers responsible for improving field service operations within organisations across the Australasian region. The summit, building on the success of an excellent inaugural event in 2009, offers a unique opportunity to share and discuss views with leading practitioners from across Australia and beyond on the core serviceprinciples - the latest thinking in optimal service delivery, cost reduction, organisational change management, and technology adoption to exceed customer expectations. Join this interview LIVE, visit www.fsmaustralia.com.au, or call Will or Nigel at IQPC on +61 2 9229 1000.