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3 points^^^^^ Is this the cheapest for a Nintendo Wii System? Rs 12,990 http://adexmart.com/...ign=direct_link
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2 pointsFirst look at the OGT Tablet -- The World's Thinnest Android Tablet androidcentral Ask any analyst, technophile, or blogger -- this summer we expect a plethora of Android tablets. Some will be good, some not so much, but the OGT Tablet is something we're going to be keeping our eye on. Not only do they bill it as "the world's thinnest Android tablet" at a trim 7 mm and only 550 grams in weight, it has some very interesting specs. Besides the 1 GHz processor (unknown make at this time) and the 16 GB and 32 GB flavors, the OGT tablet comes with a working microSD card slot out of the box and the industry's first true color display at a whopping 188 ppi (pixels per inch). That's more than the Xoom's 152 ppi, and a lot more than the iPad's 132 ppi. Add in a 5MP rear camera and a 3MP front-facing cam, and both a 3G and Wifi only model, and this one already stands out from the crowd. Or at least it promises to. Will the OGT Tablet be one of the summer's winners? We'll have to wait and see. Product Website http://www.ogtmobile.com/
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1 pointData Plan Related Unified Data Plans Use it any where On Phone or Tethering Mode (Use on RWorld Password or NetConnect ) (RWorld + NetConnect = SimpleNet) = DONE = Achived as MobileNet All SimpleNet plan must be Activated by SMS short code reducing burden on Web World or Customer Care People = DONE Default SimpleNet plan is Rs 0.50 / Minute / IT MUST BE Volume based like Rs 2 / MB = DONE More Dynamic Combo Plans for Voice + Data Usage = Can be done but not need now EVDO Related Automatic EVDO Activation for Fresh OMH or EVDO Based Devices = Comming Soon Unprovisioned / Old Deactivated OMH / Devidce must have EVDO Deactivated Automatically = Comming Soon Provisioned / Newly Activated OMH / Device must have EVDO Activated automatically = Comming Soon Activation / Reactivation / Deactivation of EVDO must be SMS Based = Will be only via Web World Additional MEID Based PPP Login ID ( A0000012345678@ppp.rcom.co.in) and Password sud be password / So all New Device like Samsung Atlas I500 should not require OS Modification to accomodate MDN / MDN based UID Provisioning = Comming Soon Device Related (Handset Change - Non RUIM) As per the old Methos HCC or Retain MDN both method is confusin HCC is either not available or not working on many devices, Retain MDN is too much time consuming and Device goes in Lost state, I appeal RCDMA to come with Voice Portal for Device Swap so no Funny HCC or Retain MDN is Involved
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1 pointGuys ill be sending my list of MEIDs/ESN to tata to be updated in their database.. those who want their handsets to be done please email me on shaikhsadik@gmail.com Its free of cost for end-users... but will be done according to my time.. i might not like too much pressure on follow up.. thanks.. NOTE - THIS IS JUST MEID/ESN REGISTERING.. AND PROGRAMMING IS NOT MY RESPONSIBLITY... ill still try to help though
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1 pointSamsung Galaxy Pro B7510 At Rs 10,446 Only (Normal Market Price is Rs 12,290) Buying Link http://www.letsbuy.c...-galaxy-p-14864 Add to Cart & Then Apply Coupon Code RCOMLSB to get Rs 1,844 Discount Samsung Official Product Page http://www.samsung.c...type=prd_detail
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1 pointHTC DROID Incredible 2 Spec Sheet - YES It's A Global Phone... CDMA + GSM.. Launching on April 28th
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1 pointOptical fiber may be the only way ahead to provide high-speed Internet. But the business case looks tough in the short term. There's a telecommunications crisis brewing in India and it has nothing to do with 2G, 3G or even 4G. India's communication infrastructure at the ‘last mile'--the part that connects your home or office to a communications provider - is rotten. A December 2010 report by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) says that of the 40 million copper loops (that cover the last mile) countrywide, only half are considered usable for broadband Internet connections. This most widely used medium, twister copper wires owned mostly by BSNL or MTNL, are largely old and inadequate for carrying data. Since very few telcos are putting any fresh copper in the ground, the number of usable copper loops for broadband in the country is expected to run out by 2014. The next best option, coaxial fibers that take cable TV into 80 million households, carry mostly low bandwidth analog signals and are managed by thousands of small entrepreneurs with neither the capital nor the knowledge to use them for data. At present, barely 10% of them are equipped with the support infrastructure that will make them capable of two-way data transfer, required for broadband. It is therefore a widely held view in telecom that 3G or 4G wireless technologies are the best way forward, as they don't require roads to be dug up or wires to be strung. But, unfortunately, because of government flip-flops over policy, no operator is anywhere close to getting the required spectrum for providing good quality broadband to millions of consumers. For instance, TRAI estimates that in Delhi a wireless operator relying on even newer technologies like LTE or Wimax will require 280 MHz of spectrum to match the city's broadband requirements by 2012. Instead, in last year's auctions, operators were allotted a mere 20 MHz. Why Fiber Works The likely solution to this problem lies in the work of a Punjabi scientist who, in the 1960s, chanced upon the concept of transmitting light through thin and bent glass tubes after learning that light could travel only in straight lines. If optical fibers had a father, it could well be Narinder Singh Kapany. Kapany's discovery is today fast becoming the medium of choice for many Indian service providers. Enterprise communications provider Tulip Telecom says it has laid more than 6,000 km of optical fiber across 300 cities over the last two years, all of it at the last mile level. State-owned BSNL is offering fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) broadband in cities such as Hyderabad, Jaipur and Vadodara with speeds of up to 1 Gbps. This comes at a cost of Rs.3,000 to Rs.50,000 a month, but at speeds of up to 100 Mbps. Radius Infratel, a Delhi-based broadband infrastructure provider, signed a contract with Ericsson to connect 6 lakh homes and businesses with optical fibers across India. The reason is simple: Optical fiber is really the only choice for high-speed data connectivity in the future. "I can carry anywhere from 4 GB to 16 GB in every core of the fiber. The capacity of the fiber is limited only by the choice of terminal equipment, which means I can offer unlimited bandwidth to my customers," says Lt. Col. (Retd.) H.S. Bedi, Tulip Telecom's chairman. While near-infinite capacity over the long term might be a great proposition for service providers, the flip side to optical fibers is a near-impossible business case in the short term. Fibernomics The cost of optical fiber has been falling rapidly over the years with costs today being around Rs.30,000 a kilometre. In fact, the protective polyethylene pipes are more expensive. A larger chunk of the cost--on average Rs.1.6 lakh a km--is incurred on digging and filling roads and laying cables. Infographics : Hemal Sheth But the largest cost, and the biggest inhibitor to operators laying more optical fiber, is the money to earn 'right of way'--the money paid to municipal authorities for permission to dig up roads. This cost can vary from tens of lakhs in cities to Rs.1 crore for a kilometre in densely populated business districts of Mumbai. "In cities such as Mumbai, the city municipal corporation looks at this as a source of revenue. It is a huge deterrent to service providers," says Vish Iyer, head of Cisco's service provider offerings in India. "One of the factors holding back cable operators from laying optical fiber is the restrictive regime of TV channel prices in India. In a capped price environment, an entrepreneur who cannot sell higher value products will not want to invest in additional infrastructure," says John Medeiros, deputy CEO of the Cable and Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia, or CASBAA. There are also topographical factors that complicate the last mile game. Delhi has more individual homes while Bangalore has more apartment blocks. It's easier to connect apartments in a building than individual homes. One factor that might, however, change the return-on-investment equation in favor of optical fiber is the National Broadband Plan released by TRAI in December 2010. The plan envisages government-owned national and state-level optical fiber authorities that will install and maintain shared optical fiber networks across most Indian cities, towns and villages at a total cost of Rs.65,000 crore. The plan also calls for installing FTTH connections in the 63 biggest cities and fiber-to-the-kerb (FTTK) connections in all other cities. Service providers of all varieties can then lease capacity on this network instead of laying their own optical fibers. From Bane to Boon But the TRAI plans could meander around for years before fructifying. Till then, optical fiber at the last mile will be a source of competitive advantage to those who manage to install it. Not only is it expensive and cumbersome to lay optical fibers, its next to impossible to dislodge an incumbent who's spent the money and effort in getting his own optical fiber running into a customer's offices. "Today, there is inter-city optical fiber available from nine different players on a pan-India basis. With just two to three percent of capacity being utilized, I would say there's unlimited availability. But there's nothing available on the last mile," says Bedi. Courtesy : Forbes
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1 pointU should mention more details for better understanding for replying. First I did.not get why u did *228 after doing activation successfuly .And after activating evo , why u activated your sim ? And dose evo gets incoming call even ur sim is working.? Evo was register or.programed ? Sent from my HERO200 using Tapatalk