Main menu:















Your email:  
Subscribe Unsubscribe  

Site search

Categories

Archive

Links

Irish Blogs



siliconrepublic.com rich media site to go live today

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
Ireland’s technology news service, Siliconrepublic.com, will today launch a newly designed website – www.siliconrepublic.com.

The new rich media site will be available to users across the world from this afternoon.
Our aim is to enhance our audience’s experience and to provide new and exciting ways for them to engage with the site content.
Siliconrepublic.com is the definitive source of technology news in Ireland with over 80,000 visitors a month. If it happens in IT, then we will report it. Our visitors have come to rely on us for breaking news. Now we will be able to bring the news to life, with more images, videos and podcasts.
We have introduced new site sections such as Digital Life and New Media to reflect the importance of technology in mainstream business and lifestyle.
Visitors can also expect to see many more product reviews.
We are privileged to report on one of the most fast-changing and exciting of news sectors. We know our audience love technology as much as we do. Now we have a site which reflects that passion.
By John Kennedy, editor, siliconrepublic.com

PrimeCarrier acquired by Flint Telecom

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
A Dublin-based company with a US subsidiary Flint Telecoms has acquired another Dublin-based telecoms software company PrimeCarrier, for an undisclosed sum.

Flint Telecoms is fashioning itself as a ‘on demand’ provider of services to the global telecoms industry and is to offer businesses ‘white label’ services that allow them to function as own-branded telcos.
PrimeCarrier will become a 100pc-owned subsidiary of Flint and will continue to trade under its own name.
The company said all staff will be retained to continue in software product development, marketing, customer deployment and support.
PrimeCarrier’s customers include major telcos including BT, BellSouth, KPN, Tele2, Telenet, Telstra, Vivodi and UPC.
The advantage of the acquisition from PrimeCarrier’s perspective will be access to the lucrative US market, as well as financial security.
The acquisition was fully supported by PrimeCarrier’s former shareholders ACT Venture Capital, Advent Venture Partners and Enterprise Ireland.
Flint chief executive, Vincent Browne, told siliconrepublic.com that the company was looking at strategic options for growing its business.
“In the US today, Flint provides the technology and infrastructure for companies which wouldn’t traditionally offer a voice service but that want to offer their own branded telecoms service.
“Our customers would include cable companies, ISPs and other niche operators who want to offer a Vonage voice service or use our infrastructure.
“PrimeCarrier will remain a separate legal entity operating as it always has been, flying the flag for the Irish technology sector. It will also retain its R&D arm in Galway, the former Ambeo operations.”
Browne said the acquisition supports Flint’s global aspirations, as well as its 100-strong customer base.
“There will be no shift in R&D as far as PrimeCarrier is concerned, its strategic path will be protected. But at the same time, it gives Flint a better base to target emerging operators that want to provide voice over IP service.
“Essentially, we are focusing on the next generation of telecoms carriers,” Browne explained.
By John Kennedy

Global internet advertising to hit US$106bn

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
The projected amount of worldwide spending on internet advertising is expected to hit US$65.2bn in 2008, representing 10pc of all ad spending across all media.

IDC forecasts that the digital ads marketplace is set to grow by between 15pc and 20pc a year to reach US$106.6bn, or 13.6pc of total global ad spend.
“Compared to more mature types of advertising, internet advertising is growing at a phenomenal rate,” said John Gantz, chief research officer at IDC.
“But internet advertising is still relatively new and growing from a much smaller base. By the end of the forecast period, spending for internet advertising will trail direct mail – the third-largest form of advertising – by more than US$30bn, while spending on TV and print ads will each be nearly twice as great as for online ads.”
Gantz said the long-term opportunity for internet advertising can be seen in the disparity between per capita spending.
“Total advertising revenues equate to more than US$105 per inhabitant of the planet, while internet advertising revenues are less than US$50 per active internet user.”
IDC said keyword ads will remain the dominant type of internet advertising throughout the forecast period, capturing more than a third of annual online ad spending worldwide.
Display ads will be the next largest type of internet advertising, capturing more than 20pc of worldwide spending annually through 2011, followed by classified ads with nearly 19pc of all online ad spending per year.
Spending in both categories will be pressured by rich media ads, which are expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of more than 50pc during the 2007-2011 forecast period.
“Marketers already recognise that online advertising must be incorporated into any comprehensive ad strategy. This will continue to drive growth in online ad spending well beyond the forecast period,” said Karsten Weide, programme director, digital media and entertainment at IDC.
“However, there is still a lot of experimentation underway within the category as marketers seek the optimal mix of ad types to reach their target audience. This will fuel spending for all types of online ads.”
By John Kennedy

XP exits (almost) but support remains until 2014

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
If you want to grab a standalone copy of XP the last chance is on 30 June, but if you plan to order a new machine with XP pre-installed prepare to say your final farewell by this evening.

Today’s deadline is due to Microsoft’s Windows life-cycle policy for the outgoing operating system. This policy means the last system builder licence available to PC manufacturers is 30 June, so Dell is taking last orders within the next day for its machines with Windows XP.
However, it’s not all bad news for those averse to or not ready to take on the Vista operating system.
Customer support for the product is now extended until 2014 due to overwhelming public demand, which means that security updates and patches will continue to be made available until this time.
PC manufacturers Dell will continue to provide the XP operating system, albeit on a limited basis.
“Customers may continue to get Windows XP Professional by exercising downgrade rights that come with Windows Vista Business or Windows Vista Ultimate licences,” said a spokesperson for Dell Ireland.
“Dell is offering an optional service to install Windows XP Professional for a customer, while also providing them with a Windows Vista licence and Windows Vista operating system DVD.”
This is currently available as an option on the Dell Latitude, OptiPlex and Precision systems at no charge.
The Dell spokesperson also added that from 01 June, 1 Vostro and XPS gaming customers purchasing an XPS 630 or XPS M1730 have had a third-factory install option, where Windows Vista Business or Windows Vista Ultimate can be downgraded to Windows XP Professional.
“This is a Dell-provided service to factory install Windows XP for customers, while also providing the customer with a Windows Vista licence and Windows Vista operating system DVD,” added the spokesperson.
By Marie Boran

WLAN to connect 400 million mobiles by 2012

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
WLAN is being tipped as the next prevalent connectivity technology in mass-market mobile handsets by analyst firm Berg Insight..

The number of handsets with integrated WLAN is forecast to grow from 27 million in 2007 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 71.5pc to reach 400 million in 2012.
WLAN will primarily be used for high-speed internet access in home or office networks and file transfer of, for instance, photos and media libraries, said Berg Insight.
“Mobile operators no longer consider WLAN a threat against data revenues,” said Andrι Malm, telecom analyst, Berg Insight. “As flat-rate plans for data access become the norm, encouraging subscribers to use a local internet connection actually makes a lot of sense as a way to prevent data overload in mobile networks.”
Competing technologies were being viewed more cautiously by Berg Insight. The number of handsets with integrated NFC or FeliCa is forecast to grow from 35 million in 2007 to reach 215 million in 2012, while UWB is not expected to appear in significant volumes before 2010 and will only be featured in 1pc of the handsets shipped in 2012.
By Niall Byrne

Planting the seeds for growth on the campus

[26.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
The smart money is on the next generation of Irish campus companies that could drive future jobs and investment

After a slow start, there are promising signs that efforts to turn ideas from Irish universities into products or companies are having some success.
The indigenous technology sector in particular looks well placed to benefit from these initiatives. A recent award for a researcher with the most commercial potential went to a developer of e-learning software.
Other applications include a plug-in product developed at UCD to allow software developers work with a range of hardware, and an automated instant messaging system from Waterford IT (WIT).
Enterprise Ireland (EI), which is heavily backing such research initiatives, hosted its first Applied Research Forum last week, gathering academics to hear about some of the successes and to get feedback on the work undertaken so far.
Introducing the event, Jimmy Devins TD, Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation, said: “There’s a growing storehouse of intellectual property (IP) in our third-level institutions which has the potential to create vibrant new products, services and businesses.”
Minister Devins said there can be a tendency in third-level research to focus exclusively on publishing research papers. “However, it is also vital there are those within the academic community who devote some of their energies to commercialisation of new discoveries and there is huge satisfaction to be had from seeing an idea turned into a product or service which others want to buy.”
Frank Ryan, chief executive of Enterprise Ireland, admitted the research commercialisation system here is relatively new. “Given that significant investment in developing a strong innovation and commercialisation system only really started at the turn of the century, the progress made to date has been remarkable.”
The state agency has invested €275m in third-level research and innovation systems since 2000.
“The outputs are excellent,” Ryan said. “In the three-year period 2005-07, the third-level sector produced 95 licences, 26 start-up companies, along with hundreds of patents and invention disclosures.”
Of that number, 18 of the start-up companies were a direct result of EI funding-applied research. In 2007, there were 136 patents filed and 264 invention disclosures.
EI administers four primary schemes to support academic researchers. The commercialisation fund helps researchers to take the outputs of research and commercial potential and bring them to a point where they are ready to be adopted by businesses.
The IP fund supports third-level institutions and industrial concerns to help in protecting and managing patents.
A technology transfer-strengthening scheme backs the EI staff who are based within the commercialisation functions of the universities. They work directly with the institutions to make sure best use is made of the research outputs with commercial potential. There are currently 10 such offices and Ryan said there would be more on the way.
Lastly, EI offers support for building and managing incubator space within the institutes of technology to encourage spin-offs from these places and to encourage collaboration with firms in the area.
More than €46m has been allocated to these four schemes for 2008, up from €40m last year and €33m in 2006.
It’s hoped some of the best research discoveries will now find a route to market in different ways.
WIT’s Barry Downes, a researcher who has successfully commercialised his work in the past, used funding from EI to create a new spin-out firm, FeedHenry.com.
FeedHenry is a software application for embedding and syndicating content on the internet. “Media companies can distribute content to where their readers hang out,” said Downes. The company is close to signing with several major reference sites and will shortly be seeking funds to expand into international markets, Downes added.
Dr Declan Dagger, a research fellow in the Knowledge and Data Engineering Group (KDEG) in Trinity College, won the inaugural ‘One to Watch’ award at EI’s Applied Research Forum for the researcher whose work is deemed to have the most business potential.
Using the Adapt e-learning system he helped develop, Dagger plans to launch a spin-out company called Empower the User next year which will offer customised e-learning programmes to sectors including legal, medical and teaching.
“Ireland has long been a hub for innovation in e-learning,” Dagger said. “We see a unique opportunity to position ourselves as the next generation of personnel e-learning solutions provider.”
EI also hopes existing companies will be interested in licensing technologies developed as part of academic research. In the past, many Irish tech firms tended to work only with systems they developed but there are encouraging signs of openness to adopting ideas hatched elsewhere.
PixAlert (see panel above) is evaluating some technologies developed at third level, with a view to incorporating them in its products.
Fergus Bolger, chief technology officer of Programming Research, a developer of software language analysis products with an international customer base in the embedded and systems software space, reckons there are many application areas that could complement its product suite.
“We believe there are many opportunities to harness complementary technology, some in conjunction with our own technology, and we are keen to license such suitable technologies from Irish universities.”
As lower-end manufacturing jobs increasingly go elsewhere, a lot is riding on research to help create an ecosystem that will lead directly or indirectly to employment, either from multinationals, existing companies, start-ups or campus spin-outs.
Downes pointed out that as people have left WIT’s Telecommunications Software & Systems Group (TSSG) to join start-ups, they have been replaced and the companies themselves are also expanding.
“The net impact for our region last year was 21 replacement jobs within the TSSG – in fact, we hired several more – and 61 jobs in companies that we spun off last year.
“If you look at the knock-on impact, we reckon we created about 200 jobs last year as a result of our work.”
He also said the amount of funding needed to set up a spin-off in the US was much greater than in Ireland. “It’s substantially more effective than the best universities in the world,” he said. Ireland Inc will hope for similar effects.
Alert to securing a better product through research
Pixalert, a Dublin-based developer of information security software, sees the benefits of partnership with third-level researchers to add to its product.
“If you look at what makes a product great, it has to hit a need: seeing a business problem and having the right features to address it,” says Canice Lambe, CTO, PixAlert.
“If companies don’t have the skills in-house to build it, they can look outside for technology that adds value.
“Most software firms don’t have resources to direct relatively esoteric research so it’s best done at universities.”
An example of this is Professor Padraig Cunningham’s work at UCD’s School of Computer Science & Informatics.
He has developed a machine learning system that can spot if sensitive data is being leaked over a network. PixAlert believes this could be a useful addition to its data auditor tool.
PixAlert is also working with a group from Trinity College Dublin which has developed video analysis technology that could detect pornographic content on an organisation’s network.
“If we can make the product smarter, it means more product sales and better profits,” says Lambe.

16pc of people not recycling electric goods

[25.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
Some 16pc of people are still dumping their electronic items in bins, skips and landfill sites, despite free electronic recycling being widely available.

WEEE Ireland, Ireland’s national compliance scheme for electronic recycling, found that 10pc of people it polled said they do not know what to do with such items.
On a positive note, two thirds of respondents surveyed said they were aware that old or broken electrical goods can be recycled free of charge at recycling centres or at retailers.
The survey found Dubliners and people over 35 years of age were more aware of the availability of free recycling. The survey also showed that males still like to loiter around smelly dumps, with men visiting landfill sites more often than women, while women are more inclined to bring electronic goods to recycling centres than men.
“The fact is people can dispose of old or broken electronic equipment free of charge rather than paying to get rid of such equipment by disposing of it in the black bin, in a skip or at the local dump,” said Elizabeth O’Reilly, compliance manager with WEEE Ireland.
“We would encourage consumers to bring back all old or broken electronic equipment – no matter how big or small – to their local recycling centre or to a retailer when an equivalent item is being purchased.”
The survey polled 1,000 adults and was conducted by TNS mrbi.
Some 100,000 fridges and freezers, 250,000 TVs and computer monitors and two million lamps were collected by WEEE Ireland in 2007, along with one small household electrical item per person.
By Niall Byrne

Has Google bitten off more than it can chew with Android?

[25.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
In the past few days, Google has had it rough with Android. While the 3G iPhone release date is approaching, Google has had to delay its plans for getting the Android platform onto mobiles, and in the meantime Nokia has just bought the leading smart phone operating system Symbian for €264m.

Google’s main hurdle, it appears, is dealing with the myriad partners in the Open Handset Alliance that all have different requirements from the Android platform.
Speaking to siliconrepublic.com, CEO of Irish mobile firm Mobanode, Shane McAllister said: “Google has set its sights very, very high with Android to build the first complete, open and free mobile platform.
“However, by involving more than 30 technology and mobile partners, the Android birth was never going to be smooth, or timely, as there are just too many voices to be heard”
The Android partners are going to be hard to satisfy, he said: “The carriers have a certain set of requirements, the handset manufacturers another set and the developers another set.
“True, they might be all playing off the same hymn sheet, but certainly they’ll be playing their own instruments and trying to make theirs sound the loudest!”
McAllister said the carriers in particular have their own requirements and want to have the ability to add their own customisations to the platform to set themselves apart from their competitors.
As there are so many players involved in the Open Handset Alliance, McAllister doesn’t think this delay will be the first either: “Contrast the Android development process with that of the iPhone – Apple built the hardware, the software, sold the product and selected the carriers – this was the key to its quick development and its early success.”
So has Google bitten off more than it can chew? McAllister thinks this is a possibility but because the mobile platform is so intrinsic to Google’s success going forward, it will forge ahead as best as possible.
This is a huge undertaking but Google are “hoping to shore up the future mobile operating system space – much like Microsoft with MS-DOS in the late Eighties and early Nineties.
“Will this work? Only time will tell, but Google, above all others, has the resources to see it through, and more importantly, needs it to work as the mobile handset is their future,” McAllister added.
By Marie Boran

Spanish Point lands 400,000 OSI contract

[25.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
Irish start-up company Spanish Point has landed a €400,000 contract to provide Ordnance Survey Ireland (OSI) with a new order processing and business process management platform.

On the back of the deal, Spanish Point plans to create six new jobs and plans to double its profits over the next year. The company is currently housed in the Guinness Enterprise Centre, a business incubation space in Dublin, from which it will graduate in six months after three years.
Spanish Point’s solution will enable OSI to provide a faster and more streamlined service to customers by integrating its sales, map production and financial management systems. It is based on Microsoft Biztalk server technology, which manages the exchange of information between the OSI’s key business systems. It enables real-time sales and production data analysis to assist with decision-making and planning during its current growth phase.
This contract is the latest in a series of e-government projects completed by Spanish Point.
Spanish Point was established in 2005 and has doubled its profit each year since formation.
“As part of the national e-government agenda, we have been driving increasing amounts of our services online,” said Geraldine Ruane, CEO, OSI. “Spanish Point is delivering a system that will make our business more agile, productive and our customer service faster and more efficient.”
Donal Cullen, CEO of Spanish Point, credited the Guinness Enterprise Centre with playing a key part in the success of the company.
“Although we’ve been in our start-up phase, we have had access to services and facilities that traditionally only major corporations have,” he said.
Spanish Point Technologies delivers software architectural services and solution delivery based upon Microsoft technologies such as SharePoint, BizTalk, SQL Server and the .NET environment. Spanish Point is a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner and was awarded the Microsoft World Wide Partner of the Year Award 2007 for Information Worker Solutions.
By Niall Byrne
Pictured L-R: Donal Cullen, CEO, Spanish Point and Geraldine Ruane, CEO, OSI

Tweetness is Amazons weakness

[25.06.2008 first posted on silicon republic]
‘What are you doing?’ Getting your third round of financing if you are the US micro-blogging site Twitter, which yesterday received a substantial investment led by Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com, with his firm Bezos Expeditions.

The entire investment is to the tune of US$15m, according to Michael Arrington of http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/22/twitter-closes-third-round-of-financing-from-spark-capital/”>TechCrunch, bringing total funding up to US$20.4m.
Joining Bezos as the newest member of the Twitter investment team is Bijan Sabet from Spark Capital, a venture fund based in Boston, Massachusetts.. Sabet will also sit on the firm’s board of directors.
“Bijan Sabet and his partners at Spark Capital made a big impression on us. Bijan has a strong sense of where Twitter is heading and sees our service as a new form of communication with the potential to have a real impact in the world,” said Twitter co-founder, Biz Stone, on the official Twitter blog.
But what next for Twitter? Is this funding going to sort out its considerable teething problems where features are routinely disabled due to ’stressing out’ or being way over capacity, or when every second refresh of the Twitter homepage seems to give an error message, again showing a lack of scalability.
Just take a look at the Twitter