The coal war heats up
Coal is a major source of energy in the U.S. just as the U.
Coal is a major source of energy in the U.S. just as the U.
commentary Saturation of the Australian marketplace with mobile devices early next year is, analysts claim, unlikely to slow the pace of innovation and competition in the wireless sector.Rather, according to some analysts, the heat is only likely to intensify.
Broadband provider lays off several employees due to "business transformation" in order to be able to compete more effectively, says local report.
The Spanish telco is paying hundreds of millions of euros to gain a bigger stake in of one Telecom Italia's major shareholders.
Motorola has published its timetable for upgrading existing smartphones and tablets to Android 'Ice Cream Sandwich' 4.0.
The government has denied a claim by a minister that the upcoming Communications Bill green paper will include website-blocking requirements for copyright enforcement.Mark Prisk, the minister of state for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), said on Tuesday that the government was "closely considering whether to block access to websites that infringe copyright".
Sprint has some new managed telepresence service offerings for its enterprise customers after forming a new partnership with Tata Communications.
It was fascinating how quickly observers moved from being impressed by Telstra's 4G announcement, to predicting it would compromise the NBN's underlying assumptions, to refuting those predictions. Yet on deeper reflection, we have to consider the possibility that Telstra has perhaps saved the country from a huge mistake. Here are a few of the benefits we can expect if we discontinue the NBN right away and learn to love 4G.
The European Commission has asked the European Parliament not to vote on the contentious Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement in June.The Parliament is likely to reject ACTA , but the Commission has argued that the vote should not take place until the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has delivered a verdict on the treaty's compliance with fundamental rights.
Tom Watson, a longstanding parliamentary proponent of digital rights, has put forward an early day motion against communications minister Ed Vaizey's anti-net-neutrality stance.Watson tabled the EDM on Wednesday, after Vaizey indicated the government would not legislate to preserve net neutrality.