Mobile Phones UK

Mobile Phones UK
Showing posts with label vodafone mobile phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vodafone mobile phone. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Sony Ericsson joins Vodafone Brighton beach TBA concert: Streets and McFly

Brighton beach on August 10 will see something special and that will be a Vodafone TBA concert that will be aired on weekend TV show T4.

Music stars that will be at this concert will include the likes of McFly, N*E*R*D and The Streets. Sony Ericsson will be joining forces with Vodafone as the official mobile phone partner for this special event which will be for the second year running.

They will use this to promote the Espresso Black W890 Walkman mobile phone, Vodafone has changed the TBA format this year and for the better it must be said.

The event will have more performers and bigger venues, guests will receive free professional images which are of high quality which will be sent in real time to their handsets, all as a memento of the experience.

Consumer Director for Vodafone UK, Ian Shepherd has said “We are poised to deliver a superior music experience this year with a tremendous line up of artists and musicians as well as unique services and content for customers and fans.’

source : http://www.phonesreview.co.uk/

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Vodafone Buys Mobile Phone Social Network ZYB For $50 Million

Vodafone has bought the mobile social networking service ZYB for €31.5 million ($50 million) in a move that will see the Danish company become a part of Vodafone’s Internet Services Division.

The Danish company started up in 2005 with investment of €3 million and offered a free online storage space for users to back up their mobile phone contacts. ZYB later developed into a social networking site when the company realised the potential of having all of a users mobile phone contacts stored in the same database: Users could, if they chose, link up to one another by seeing who else has the same contacts in their database.

ZYB also offers other services such as storing messages, calendar information, and a phonebook to launch later in the year that will display the real-time location of your friends and the time zone they’re currently in.

ZYB’s services, beyond the simple backing up of data, is to allow you to connect to other mobile phone users online and, increasingly, connect with them more easily on your phone using services such as the ZYB Phone Book.

source : http://www.tomsguide.com/

Friday, May 2, 2008

Vodafone's mobile phone lock-down

There's been mounting criticism in the tech blogosphere of Vodafone's move to lock new mobile phones so they can only be used on the Vodafone New Zealand mobile network.

Vodafone will charge $50 to unlock new handsets if people want to shift to another provider here or use someone other than Vodafone overseas for mobile roaming.

Check out the robust discussion on Geekzone where Vodafone has been slammed for what many see as anti-competitive behaviour.

Aardvark chips in here and asks whether the move "could this be the best thing that's ever happened to the grey market phone business".

Parallel imported phones are sold unlocked so can be used on any network. Will Vodafone's lock-in push people away from Vodafone stores?

We've already effectively got lock-in in this country when it comes to mobile. Telecom's phone's don't have SIM cards and use the CDMA technology of which there is only one network - Telecom's (though TelstraClear now re-sell the service). Vodafone has the only GSM network, but New Zealand Communications has built part of a network and even has some cell sites live.

It's no coincidence that Vodafone, after years of selling unlocked phones, is changing its policy as Telecom prepares to launch a GSM network and New Zealand Communications gets into the game as well.

It's speculated that NZC in particular will target Vodafone customers with cheap calling deals and urge them to bring their unlocked phones to the new NZC network. Telecom will be more focused on luring in converts with subsidised handsets procured through its new deal with global mobile phone distributor Brightstar.

Either way, Vodafone customers buying a new handset or people considering joining Vodafone need to be aware that they won't simply be able to pop out the SIM card and put in a rival operator's SIM card to get the alternative service. To allow that to happen you'll have to pay $50 (though I'm sure the geek community will soon have some easy unlocks widely available on the internet).

Vodafone's reasoning for the change is smirk-inducing at best: "This is being done to protect the customers' experience of the Vodafone brand. Vodafone brands its mobiles with both the Vodafone and Vodafone Live! look and feel. If a customers takes a Vodafone mobile to another network, the customer won't be able to access the Vodafone experience and services," said spokesman Paul Brislen.

But the reality is that this is the end of the good times for Vodafone mobile users in terms of having the freedom to roam overseas on other SIM cards to get cheaper local rates. Phone locking is widely practiced overseas where in the big markets there are as many as six operators competing using the same technology.

Phone locking is legal in most countries - apparently its banned by law in Belgium, but its common in the rest of Europe, Asia, the US and in Australia. Most operators charge a fee for having a phone unlocked. Vodafone Australia has a website for people wanting to unlock their phone

In places like Britain there's a bit of an underground market in unofficial mobile phone unlocking. You'll find people on the fringes of London's markets offering cheap and quick, though warranty-voiding, SIM unlocks.

Is phone locking fair? As some have pointed out, it seems reasonable that if you've received a subsidised handset as a result of signed up to a fixed term contract, say 24 months, its fair that you should be penalised for breaking that contract both in terms of early termination fees and an unlock fee.

But what about pre-pay users who generally get much less in the way of subsidies and people buying phones at full price? Those people have a right to be annoyed about having their phone locked and having to pay $50 just so they can take it elsewhere.

It's like Orcon or Ihug charging you to have your wireless router unlocked so you can move to another broadband provider. Anyway, I doubt the Commerce Commission will have a go at Vodafone over this, based on international experience.

So be warned. If you're travelling regularly and are used to buying pre-paid SIM cards overseas to cut down on calling charges while you are away make some careful decisions before you upgrade to a new phone. Your next handset may leave you locked out of the networks you've connected to in the past.

What do you think? Is this fair play for Vodafone or has the mobile operator crossed the line? Do you think it will hurt the company's handset sales? Anyone know any good SIM unlocks?

source : http://blogs.nzherald.co.nz/

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Vodafone UK and Warner Launch New Madonna Mobile Content

Vodafone and Warner Music International have completed an agreement allowing new music and mobile content from Madonna’s highly anticipated new “Hard Candy” album to be distributed and promoted exclusively to Vodafone customers around the world, prior to the April 28th global release of Madonna’s 11th studio album for Warner Bros. Records.

Starting on April 21st, a total of seven tracks from “Hard Candy”, with songs by the multi-platinum, Grammy-winning singer, songwriter and video visionary, will be released at a rate of one a day counting down the week before the album is available. Each track will remain live for 24 hours for download before being replaced by the next one.

In addition, Vodafone customers in selected markets including Spain, Portugal, Germany and Belgium will get exclusive mobile access to the newly released single “4 Minutes”, effective immediately.

As part of this unique music experience, Vodafone customers in all participating territories will have access to Madonna’s mini site on Vodafone live! which will include one week of exclusive, associated mobile content, including ringtones, ringback tones and SMS tones.

“As the number one digital music service provider in the mobile telecommunications industry in Europe, Vodafone has revolutionised the way people experience music on their mobiles and the collaboration with Warner Music builds on this heritage,” said Frank Rovekamp, Global Chief Marketing Officer, Vodafone Group. “Through our unique insight into what our customers want and how they prefer to listen to music this is yet another example of delivering superior music experience to customers.”

John Reid, Vice Chairman WMI and President, Warner Music Europe, said, “We are delighted to be able to debut such a rich menu of content from ‘Hard Candy’ through Vodafone live! This is an innovative way to reach millions of Madonna fans around the world, building anticipation and excitement around this landmark release and helping to create a real event for Vodafone customers.”

Vodafone is the number one digital music service provider in the mobile telecommunications industry in Europe and number two digital music service provider overall in Europe. Leading the mobile music industry the company uses music to build the Vodafone brand and awareness of products and services across its 250 million+ customer base globally.

Madonna, the multi-Grammy-award-winning singer, songwriter, producer, cultural icon, world renowned stage performer, video visionary, children's book author, director and documentary film maker has sold over 200 million albums in the course of her unprecedented two decade plus career and has just been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

source : http://www.3g.co.uk/