Interviews
Interview - Opening up the TV experience
The leading software developer for Windows Mobile platform has developed a solution for mobile operators, that radically changes the user experience for watching TV and video on mobile phones. This set of online services will open up new
Cover Interview - Building a sustainable mobile TV business
OVER THE LAST YEARS, SEVERAL BROADCAST MOBILE TV SERVICES HAVE BEEN LAUNCHED AROUND THE WORLD. SOME SERVICES HAVE BEEN LAUNCHED AS PAY TV SERVICES, AND SOME OTHERS AS FREE TV. AS THE INDUSTRY LOOKS FOR THE RIGHT BUSINESS
Interview - Signaling change
As operators grapple with competing business models, and the dislocation of existing business models, who is there to help them align their networks with these competing demands in a cost efficient way? Keith Dyer speaks to Wolrad Claudy,
Interview - Messaging in context
Mobile Europe: Keith Gibson, CEO, Colibria (pictured). At February's Mobile World Congress there seemed to be a general view amongst the instant messaging providers that mobile instant messaging is too limiting a term to describe the functionality that
Neustar Interview - Building a presence in the future
Sometimes it's good to look back and see where we've come from. And sometimes it's good to look forward. It's even better when you can do both, and we can do that here, because a year after we
INTERVIEW - A secure case for TV future
As the industry grapples with the business models around mobile broadcast TV, Roy Isacowitz, mobile marketing manager of digital TV software specialist NDS, gives Keith Dyer an insight into how the industry might develop, and where the keyBackhaul demands speed and quality
Mobile Europe:
Andy, it’s been a year since we last spoke at this length. In that time data usage of 3G networks has really begun to take off, and there are now a host of live commercial HSDPA networks.
Getting the IP message out
Presence and the benefits of having interconnected IM user communities and services are about to radically change the way users relate to and use their mobile phones, Neustar executives tell editor Keith Dyer.





