IPTVision > WSJ 'gets it' with online video series

[Paul Kapustka's Blog] Any question that Video on the Net is becoming a mainstream business issue was put to rest last week, when the Wall Street Journal blew out the doors...

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[Pulverblog.pulver.com] The Jeff Pulver Blog: Personal Journal Archives: A visitor to our show floor had a chance to see products and services across the spectrum of IP Communication technologies including: IPTV, MobileTV, Fixed Mobile Convergence, IMS, OSS Services and IP Voice. I saw a number of real interesting new products including a WiFi/GSM phone from Pirelli and a desktop IP Phone that does Skype, not SIP.

Kelseygroup.com[Kelseygroup.com] The Kelsey Group Blog: A Wall Street Journal article today is receiving a log of attention for its speculation that Microsoft could be interested in a sizable equity stake in Yahoo!. The combined forces would be meant to battle Google.

[Qj.net] QJ.NET - Quick Journal "Blog of Blogs" - The best of all QJ Blogs ...: Now, if Boeing and Connexion does not reach a suitable deal, Boeing would be prepared to shut Connexion down, even though the service works as advertised and is used by a handful of international airlines on long-haul flights. Whatever happens in the future, we will surely keep you posted.

http://blog.pff.org [Blog.pff.org] The Progress & Freedom Foundation Blog: Like most expressions of populist idealism, there is much to admire about the most recent exhortation by Professors Lawrence Lessig and Robert McChesney on the issue of "network neutrality." (This is true even though, for the moment, Congress has declined to take the bait, rejecting their calls for stringent rules when the House adopted a telecom reform bill last night.[1]) The professors' op-ed in the June 8th Washington Post implores Congress to "save the Internet" from "deep-pocketed corporations" who aim to be "content gatekeepers" that "sell access to the express lane" and "relegate everyone else to the digital equivalent of a winding dirt road."[2] If nothing else, this rhetoric is stirring. Viewed out of context, it masterfully corners even skeptical readers with all the inescapable "logic" endured by the first person forced to answer: "When did you stop beating your wife?"

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