New Tech & Services
New Tech & Services

VoIP in the Palm of your Hand

Anyuser Global’s tiny VoIP IMphone flash drive brings voice communications to any PC. Scheduled to go on sale in Japan this August, the unit streamlines installation into a USB plug and play solution. All the VoIP software and circuitry is packed right inside along with 64MB of flash memory. That means PC vagabonds can use it on any machine with an Internet connection – at Internet cafes, friends houses, conducting “Alias” style international intrigue. Not bad for a unit the size of a packet of gum.

SalesForce.com Partners with KDDI

KDDI has allied with San Francisco-based CRM solution provider salesforce.com to deliver wireless CRM functionality to mobile phones. Available to salesforce.com Professional Edition and Enterprise Edition subscribers in Japan, the service enables users to download data from the service to KDDI phones and then view, edit and input new data that can be synchronized with search data both offline and online. The pilot will be extended to customers between 1 August 1 and 30 September, becoming generally available in October at a cost of JPY 1,575 incl. tax per month, per user.

KDDI and Salesforce.com to Launch Free Trial Service in August

KDDI Corporation, Japan’s leading fixed line and mobile phone service carrier and salesforce.com, the market and technology leader in on-demand CRM, today announced a strategic partnership to deliver on-demand mobile CRM solutions for the Japanese market. Known as “salesforce.com Mobile Edition for au,” the innovative joint offering will deliver comprehensive, wireless CRM functionality that enables users to benefit from their salesforce.com data anywhere, anytime using KDDI’s mobile phones and wireless network. Available to salesforce.com Professional Edition and Enterprise Edition subscribers in Japan, the solution enables users to download data from the salesforce.com service to KDDI phones; view, edit and input new data that can be synchronized with salesforce.com; and search data both offline and online.

DoCoMo's Premini II S: Lightweight Phone Fun

DoCoMo's Premini II S: Lightweight Phone Fun

DoCoMo’s tiny Mova Premini mobile-phone series by Sony Ericsson is getting a color boost for summer. New Premini II S color combinations of orange/silver, white/lavender, and blue/green push the palm-size handset beyond its mini-macho borders into new territory.

For the Premini II S, the company created a playful Flash movie site called Premini TV. Click on ‘Color Shuffle’ and ‘Light On’ plus the colored dots positioned above them for light effects, then run the mouse over the musical Premini II S handsets covering the screen. It may not sell any phones but it’s fun and DoCoMo needs to keep that frontal lobe awareness with younger consumers.

Nintendo Goes Wild for WLAN

Nintendo Goes Wild for WLAN

Nintendo confirmed plans to set up around 1,000 wireless LAN access points to support online gaming for its dual-screen handheld DS system. The Japanese-language Nikkei Business Daily reported the Kyoto-based game giant planned to push connectivity in conjunction with the release of new online games. In a telephone call with WWJ a Nintendo spokesman confirmed that though no press release had been issued, those statements were made at a company event. Access points will reportedly be set up in game stores, electronic boutiques, etc., by the end of this year.

Skype Powers VoIP in Japan with Fusion

Skype Powers VoIP in Japan with FusionCostly Japanese domestic phone prices are looking to take a tumble with low-priced hybrid fixed-line/IP telephony services. The newest team-up pairs Japan’s Fusion Communications with Skype Technologies. Fusion’s patent-pending gateway technology takes incoming number-based calls and works with Skype’s database to route them to Skype IP telephony subscribers using the 050- prefix, similar to NTT Communications’ Click-2-Connect IP phone service, also using the 050 designation. Skype works with Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and PDAs using Pocket PC. Users typically connect through their PC. Is Skype, the no-cost free Net telephony provider, finally going to turn a profit?