deepu
RIM Veteran-
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Everything posted by deepu
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try bittorrent and you will forget all others.........
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Reliance Industries has reported a 38.7 per cent increase in net profit at Rs 1752 crore (Rs 17.52 billion) for the quarter ended September 30, 2004 as compared to Rs 1263 crore (Rs 12.63 billion) for the quarter ended September 30, 2003. According to a release issued to the Bombay Stock Exchange on Monday, total income (net of excise) has increased from Rs 12944 crore (Rs 129.44 billion) in the SQ-03 to Rs 16460 crore (Rs 164.6 billion) in the quarter ended September 30, 2004.
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Do not think it will be available in India in the near future
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Flashget is No. 1
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The best as far as i know in both reliablility and speed is bittorrent. Not one of the above tools can come any where near to this new tool.... Visit http://www.torrentreactor.net/index.php to see the number of downloads available. ABC [Yet Another Bittorrent Client] is a good client for downloading .torrent files. visit http://pingpong-abc.sourceforge.net/ to download ABC [Yet Another Bittorrent Client]
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Considering the number of reliance users, the user base of rimweb is still in thousands.... There is some thing that can be done to avoid that.. Turn off guest browsing... Let everyone take membership to browse the site...
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Firefox is the best I also use Opera some times.... Tabbed browsing was there is Opera first.... There is one thing that Opera has that firefox lacks. Opera can turnoff all images in a website by click of a button
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Which one of the above service is the best. Enter your choice...
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orkut.com seems to be created using asp.net do not know with which tool they did gmail..... it sure is different to other email providers.....
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Reliance Infocomm Plans Ipo In 2005 Reliance Infocomm may go public in 2005, Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries said in New York on Thursday. The sale of shares in Reliance Infocomm will be "as soon as we have finished the roll out of our broadband Internet services," Ambani said. Ambani said the company should announce its initial public offer sometime in late 2005 or early 2006, Bloomberg reports. Ambani was in New York to attend the two-day investors forum that started on Wednesday. Reliance Infocomm, which has emerged as India's largest mobile phone company, is adding nearly 4,000 cities and towns to its mobile network. "With the rapid growth that the telecommunication sector is witnessing, Reliance would not have any problem attracting investors," Bloomberg said, quoting Sanjay Dongre, who manages about$ 237 million in stocks at UTI Asset Management Company in Mumbai. According to the report, Reliance Infocomm posted a net loss of about $85 million in the year ended March 31, 2004, its first year of operations, after it wrote off unpaid bills by some of its customers. It had 8.69 million subscribers at the end of August, compared with 8.33 million in the previous month, including fixed line users, the report said.
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World Phone Internet Services Pvt Ltd launched its World Phone Premium international calling card in Mumbai on Tuesday that will allow Mumbaites to talk in the US for Rs 1.60 per minute. The cards are available in denominations of Rs 100, Rs 250, Rs 500 and Rs 1000 and. It will be available at 600 retail outlets in the city. The calls to countries in the Western Europe or the Far East are priced in the range of Rs 2 and Rs 8. The card was also launched in Goa on Tuesday. Aditya Ahluwalia, chairman WPISPL said, " With an encouraging response in the cities of Delhi, Punjab, Haryana and Himachal, we are confident that residents of Maharashtra and Goa would also appreciate the benefits of a low priced calling card to the US." The company's offer is one third of what operators like Sify, Bharat Sanchar Nigam or Mahanagar Telephone Nigam offer for calls made to the US. According to Ahluwalia, "This is possible because we follow a cost plus basis unlike competitors who adopt the market based pricing." Ahluwalia assured that low price did not mean a compromise on voice quality. The company claims to have a robust back-end support from its US partner GO2call that provides voice over service to over 200 countries in the world. The company is also launching the card in the states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. The marketing strategy includes a distribution network with over 2000 channel partners and resellers within the next six months. The cards would be sold at strategic places like the malls and outlets such as Archies Gallery. They would be available online too on websites such as Rediff. The user has to download the dialer from World Phones's website -- www.worldphone.co.in and then by using the card can place an international call, anywhere from India, from his personal computer. Alternately, one can also install a branded Internet Protocol phone or an Analog Telephone Adapter and place an international call using his account ID number. The ATAs are priced between Rs 4,000-Rs 5,000. The company is negotiating with companies in Korea and China to manufacture the Analog Telephone Adapters and sell it for a competitive price of around Rs 2,000.
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The colors look cool....
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D-Link India, one of the bigger players in networking and communications hardware solutions, will soon introduce their range of IP phones into STD booths across the country. The move is being made to take IP telephony to the masses and to increase the pace of adoption of Voice over Internet Protocol in the country. "We felt that the best way to popularise IP telephones and the technology that goes with it was to use the telephone revolution that Pitroda started. We are working on the pilot batch where around 50 phones will be installed in STD booths in specific cities. The pilot will be conducted through October. By the end of it, if we believe the project is a success, we will work on getting more lines installed across the country," said J V Avadhanulu, director -- software technology of D-Link India's Software and R&D centre. The most likely cities for the pilot would be Bangalore, Delhi and Mumbai and D-Link's investment in the project adds up to approximately Rs 500,000. The IP phones that are to be used were developed in the company's R&D centre based out of Bangalore. They were specially made for countries where broadband penetration was low and where cost played a huge role in technology decisions. "Most IP phones have a DSP and RISC processor. We worked on doing away with the RISC processor, while maintaining functionality. We succeeded and the removal of the extra element has brought down the cost to a huge extent," said Avadhanulu. These phones, which can double as a normal one as well and is available in two models DPH 70 and DPH 80, can be bought for as less as Rs 5,000. The phones are not sold directly by D-Link, but is offered as a package by service providers that the company has tied up with like Net2phone, IPYantra and IQura. He adds, "The service provider is an elemental part of the equation. Ultimately, the adoption of VoIP in the country will depend on the service provider. But traditional ISPs are either not pushing the technology or are pushing broadband for data. Somebody has to drive voice, because VoIP with packet switching is the future." D-Link has sold only a little over 10,000 phones since they were introduced a year ago and this is in spite of the fact that these phones also get shipped to other geographies including Canada, Australia and South East Asia. The R&D centre is working on adding features to the existing phones and bringing out a range of models, which will address various needs, including multi lingual voice prompts. The centre is also looking into working in future areas of communication like WiFi phones. They also aim to become a one-stop solution for voice and data solutions by adding, among others, gateways, routers and firewalls to their offerings by the middle of next year. D-Link India is a part of the multinational D-Link Corporation and its market revenue is close to Rs 375 crore (Rs 3.75 billion). Though a part of the MNC, the fact that the parent holds less than 35 per cent of the Indian operations, enables D-Link India to develop products specifically for the local market. It has a nationwide network of 17 offices, 21 territory distributors, 325 dealers and 3,600 resellers.
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Wonder why they put keypads to such nice phones.... Should have hand writing recognition instead..... That will be much better
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Does the USB cable charge the mobile phone while its connected to the computer. I have an LG RD2030 along with the USB cable.
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I think Oxygen Phone Manager works only with Nokia GSM phones
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Any body has any idea whether such a software is there for Nokia 2280
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Is it fully free for DAPO users
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Difference Between Usb And Serial Connection
deepu replied to prakashkadam's topic in Technical / OS related
This is the article that came in PCQuest Internet connects using Reliance cellphones To use your Reliance cellphone as a modem, you first need to activate data calls in it. To do so dial *412 and wait for a confirmatory SMS. Then get a data cable (easily available from any mobile shop for about Rs 250, for all models of Reliance CDMA phones) and connect your cellphone to your PC/laptop. We tested this on PCQLinux 2004 using Samsung’s N191 CDMA phone. Kudzu (the hardware-detection tool for Linux) will automatically detect the phone as a USB/COM modem, depending on which data cable interface you’ve connected it with, once your OS reboots. Now, you have to configure the wvdial.conf file to dial to the Net. For accessing the Internet, all CDMA providers use a standard number (#777). Now create a dialer in /etc/wvdial.conf which will dial to this number. Don’t use any graphical utility to create it as it may not work properly. The contents are: [Modem0] Modem = /dev/input/ttyXYZ Baud = 230400 SetVolume = 0 Dial Command = ATDT Init1 = ATZ FlowControl = Hardware (CRTSCTS) [Dialer cdma] Username = your_phone_number Password = your_phone_number Phone = #777 Stupid Mode = 1 Inherits = Modem0 In the second line, replace ttyXYZ to ttyS0 (For Com1) or ttyS1 (For Com2). If you are using the USB interface, then replace it with ttyACMx. Here x is the number of devices minus one, which you have connected to your USB port. If you have three USB devices connected, then x= 2. Remember that if the number of devices change, then the value of x also changes. You can also find its value by running the usbview command. Now enter the number of the cellphone you are using, along with the STD code of the home circle, without the first 0, in both the username and password fields. Enter #777 in the Phone field. Don’t forget the Stupid Mode = 1 line or your modem will not work. Now, run the following command from any terminal. #wvdial cdma Here, cdma is the name of your dialer (the line [Dialer cdma] in the wvdial.conf file). You can replace cdma with another name. If you have another modem in the machine, then it will need a similar block of its own in the wvdial.conf file. Obviously, depending on the type of modem and the phone line used, the values in the block will change. -
yes i agree with you... infact when i am finishing the invitation, i am getting six again... till now i have got 18 invitations!!!! It seems gmail is in final stages of testing and hence google is giving more and more invitations to everyone
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i have got six invitation... if u want one contact me.......
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I think GMAIL is in final stage of testing.... ANy one has any idea when it will be publicly available to every one.....
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I think we may soon see CDMA handsets with SIM option similar to GSM handsets. That may change all .....
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I Think For just Rs. 5000 LG 5130 is the best option