TM 17: EU mobile networks consider 'bomb' on Google ads
Tech's Message18 Maj 2015

TM 17: EU mobile networks consider 'bomb' on Google ads

This podcast is an episode of Tech's Message, a weekly audio download from London-based technology journalists Nate Lanxon and Ian Morris. Hear a discussion based on the week's most interesting UK technology news, and other irreverent takes on tech issues deemed important for British ears to hear.






Stories discussed this week

Uber causing decline in London black cab application


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-05-14/uber-s-blitz-on-london-leads-to-steep-drop-in-black-cab-recruits


London’s famous black cabs are in danger of being run out of town by upstart Uber

Data obtained by Bloomberg from Transport for London, the transit authority, show black-taxi license applications are down 20 percent so far this year, with the blame being laid squarely at Uber’s door.

At the same time, the number of budding cabbies looking to take “The Knowledge” -- the notoriously difficult test that all black-taxi drivers must pass -- has fallen more than two-thirds at one of the main examination centers.


'Dr Now' promises London medication delivery within 4 hours

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2015-05/15/dr-now-gp-app-uk

An app that promises users a video doctor consultation within one hour, and medication delivery to London addresses within four, is due to launch in the next month.

Dr Now has been created by doctors to plug the gap in care left by an overstretched NHS. It also follows the 2014 launch of Babylon, a similar remote consultation subscription service setup by former Goldman Sachs banker Ali Parsa.

Dr Now is targeting the portion of the population that have to have time off work to attend doctor's appointments.


iPhone 3GS about to become ‘obsolete’ in June, losing Apple repair support

http://9to5mac.com/2015/05/15/iphones-macs-obsolete-june-apple-repair/

Apple is about to sunset support for a number of iPhones, Macs, and other products as it plans to switch several models to “Obsolete” or “Vintage” status in June, according to internal documents.

When a device receives Obsolete status from Apple — Vintage status only applies to California and Turkey, where the company is required to continue offering support — it no longer offers service or repair support through its own Apple retail stores or authorized service providers. It typically begins the process for models 5-7 years after manufacturing has been discontinued and maintains a list on its website here.

EU carriers plan to block ads, demand money from Google

http://arstechnica.com/business/2015/05/eu-carriers-plan-to-block-ads-demand-money-from-google/

Multiple mobile operators in Europe plan to block advertising on their networks, with one of them planning to target Google's ad network to force the company to give up a cut of its ad revenue, according to a report yesterday in the Financial Times."An executive at a European carrier confirmed that it and several of its peers are planning to start blocking adverts this year," the newspaper reported. "The executive said that the carrier will initially launch an advertising-free service for customers on an opt-in basis. But it is also considering a more radical idea that it calls 'the bomb', which would apply across its entire network of millions of subscribers at once. The idea is to specifically target Google, blocking advertising on its websites in an attempt to force the company into giving up a cut of its revenues."

Blocking ads "just for an hour or a day" might be enough to bring Google to the negotiating table, the executive told the newspaper.

While such a scheme might violate net neutrality rules in the United States, Europe doesn't have anything comprehensive on the books despite years of discussion.

"There are no clear rules on net neutrality today at EU level, leaving 96 percent of Europeans without legal protection for their right to access the full open Internet," the European Commission said.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Avsnitt(335)

Budget 2016's Impact on UK Tech, From 5G to Driverless Cars

Budget 2016's Impact on UK Tech, From 5G to Driverless Cars

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss the UK's Budget 2016 and its impact on the tech sector, including 5G, sharing economy support via tax breaks, the Institute for Coding competition, driverless lorries and cars, a new Broadband Investment Fund, the intention to work with the ‘New Bank Start-up Unit’, and more. If you want a 20-minute explainer about everything tech and digital in this year's budget, this is the episode for you. Plus we discuss Sony and Microsoft's openness to having their Xbox and PlayStation networks interoperate. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

20 Mars 201633min

TETRAPHOBIA! (Or: The Galaxy S7's Mysterious Octacore CPUs): TM 51

TETRAPHOBIA! (Or: The Galaxy S7's Mysterious Octacore CPUs): TM 51

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss whether it matters that the UK, amongst other countries, has potentially got a less powerful octa-core CPU in its Galaxy S7 phones while other regions get a more robust quad-core version. Plus what does a "fear of the number four" -- tetraphobia -- possibly got in common with this situation, and the consumer technology world in general? Could it explain why Samsung has released phones with eight processing cores rather than four in some regions? Probably not. But it was almost certainly why Nokia jumped from the 3xxx series to the 5xxx series, and from the N93 to the N95, and from the C3 to the C5; and why Psion released the Series 3 and Series 5 palmtops in the 1990s but never the Series 4; and why Canon, over in Japan, released the G1, G2, G3 and G5 cameras, but never a G4; and... You get the picture. Plus, a look at the week's UK tech news that doesn't involve superstitious conspiracy theories. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

13 Mars 201630min

NEXT-GEN SMARTPHONE CAMERAS ARE COMING plus BBC Closing iPlayer Loophole, Nook Dies - TM 50

NEXT-GEN SMARTPHONE CAMERAS ARE COMING plus BBC Closing iPlayer Loophole, Nook Dies - TM 50

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and CNET's Andy Hoyle discuss the BBC's plan to close the iPlayer loophole that allows people without a UK license fee to watch catch-up content for free; plus the little-known ebook reader business (in the UK, at least) Nook is pulling out of the British market; and in our major feature section we discuss the future of the photography world in an era dominated by increasingly impressive smartphones. Where do we go from here in the imaging world? How are SLRs influencing smartphone design? Who's partnering with whom to make the next big thing in mobile imagine (hint: Leica and Huawei)? We'll discuss all this and more. Listen now! 782vptpu Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

6 Mars 201639min

TM 49: The 12 Uses For VR You Didn't Know About (From Porn to PTSD Therapy)

TM 49: The 12 Uses For VR You Didn't Know About (From Porn to PTSD Therapy)

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss our highlights from Mobile World Congress: the LG G5, and the HTC Vive. But in more detail we discuss how virtual reality, which stole the MWC show this year, is helping change many other areas of science, entertainment and medicine. These include travel simulators, use in crime scene investigations, sex and pornography, pain relief and other psychological treatments, post-war PTSD therapy for soldiers, training for Nasa astronauts, relief from fears of flying, training sports players, rehabilitating stroke patients, and giving public talks. And although some of this has been underway for two decades in research labs, the consumer availability of affordable devices means this is really just the beginning for virtual reality. 782vptpu Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

28 Feb 201641min

TM 48: Three's ISP Ad-Blocking, Samsung Galaxy S7 and Gear 360 Review, Uber Hacks

TM 48: Three's ISP Ad-Blocking, Samsung Galaxy S7 and Gear 360 Review, Uber Hacks

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss mobile network Three's decision to start offering ad-blocking at the ISP level to a potential 9 million UK subscribers; Samsung unveils it's new Galaxy S7, S7 Edge and Gear 360 VR devices and we get a first hands-on look and report our findings and opinions; plus Nate gets his Uber account hacked and manages to cancel the thief's journey as he's still riding with his driver -- but what happened next? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

21 Feb 201634min

TM 47: Twitter Worries UK Transport Authority, 'BIG EGG' versus biotech [with Olivia Solon]

TM 47: Twitter Worries UK Transport Authority, 'BIG EGG' versus biotech [with Olivia Solon]

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss Transport for London's worries over Twitter's decision to change the social network's timeline to a non-chronologically-ordered format; plus the UK's videogame industry hits a new peak value of over £4 billion; and what biotech-meets-science movement in food has got the American egg industry so panicked -- and what could this mean for British consumers or businesses? WIRED feature writer Olivia Solon joins the show to explain all. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

14 Feb 201632min

TM 46: Ex-Tomb Raider boss opens UK schools, SwiftKey to power Xbox

TM 46: Ex-Tomb Raider boss opens UK schools, SwiftKey to power Xbox

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate is joined by CNET.com's Andrew Hoyle. They discuss the news that Microsoft has bought UK-based startup SwiftKey for a reported $250 million. What might this mean for Xbox and Windows, they wonder? Plus, Europe's top court is looking into whether linking to any webpage or online content without permission could be in breach of the law. Yes, linking. Against the law. One to watch. Plus, Ian Livingstone of Eidos and Tomb Raider fame, is opening two free schools in the UK dedicated to science, technology, engineering, arts and maths. This is great news for the next generation of STEAM students. All that, plus a major reason EA isn't being terrible will become clear this week. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

7 Feb 201632min

TM 45: BREAKING NEWS: BLUETOOTH AUDIO NO LONGER TERRIBLE (and other news)

TM 45: BREAKING NEWS: BLUETOOTH AUDIO NO LONGER TERRIBLE (and other news)

THIS WEEK ON TECH'S MESSAGE Nate and Ian discuss the news that Bluetooth audio is no longer a terrible way to listen to music (or, in other words: Nate buys a pair of really good Bluetooth headphones and discovers 10 years of hating Bluetooth was about three years too long). Plus BT gets EE's network officially in a done-and-dusted deal for £12.5 billion, and we discover just how much combined distributed network resources are required to know some big websites offline in 2016 (clue: it's 500Gbps). Also, iPad Air 3 rumours. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

31 Jan 201631min

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