Mobile Phone Chargers - Motorola Droid RAZR MAXX Review - (2/20/2012)

There’s one complaint I’ve made with every smartphone I’ve ever tested. It’s something that every manufacturer, from Apple to Sony Mobile and every company in between, has struggled with: battery life. If you use your phone for more than the infrequent text message, you know exactly what I’m talking about. Most phones don’t last a full day of moderate use, let alone heavy use with plenty of phone calls and occasional gaming.

The Droid RAZR MAXX offers an inelegant solution to the problem of battery life. Motorola took the Droid RAZR (which Scott reviewed a few months back), still the slimmest and one of the fastest phones to date, and filled that empty space with battery. The RAZR MAXX has a preposterously sized battery, 3300mAh, more than double the iPhone 4S’ 1432mAh battery and still larger than Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy Note, a tablet/smartphone with a 5.4” screen. The battery in the MAXX is a monster.

Let me give you a sense of scale, just to clarify how massive the battery is. Because the RAZR MAXX runs Android 2.3.6 and the software isn’t optimized for the enormous battery, it gives users a warning when the phone reaches 20% battery life. 20% of 3300mAh is 660mAh remaining. If you had that much power left in your iPhone 4S, it would be nearly half charged, 46%. it would be 40% battery life remaining on the Samsung Galaxy S II, and 37% on the Droid RAZR. The iPad 2 has a battery almost double that size, 6930mAh, and would be 10% remaining on the tablet. That’s easily another hour or two of use.

In my battery test Benchmark, which stresses the phone’s processor in a number of different apps, only low-power Android smartphones like the T-Mobile myTouch or LG Doubleplay matched the longevity of the MAXX. every other high-end Android phone scored half the runtime or worse. nothing with the sort of power today’s high-end smartphones offer even comes close.

Out in the real world, the difference is remarkably clear. Spending a day traveling, bouncing between 4G LTE networks and Wi-Fi, constantly streaming music and using the GPS, intermittently making and receiving calls…the MAXX doesn’t even bat an eye. it boasts 21.5 hours of continuous talk time, and in my testing that is fairly accurate. In two weeks I only recharged the phone five times, even with all notifications active and using it as my sole phone during that duration.

The only potential problem with such a massive battery is the amount of time it takes to recharge. On average to fully charge the phone (from 0-100%) it takes three hours and 50 minutes with the included charger. I don’t see this as a serious issue because the battery life is so long that I expect most users to charge the phone nightly anyways. The real benefit of this battery is if you forget to charge it one night, it will still have enough power for the next day, even under heavy use. Of course, if you forget to charge it after two days, giving the MAXX a few minutes to recoup isn’t going to help.

The major change to the Droid RAZR MAXX from the Droid RAZR is the thickness. at 9mm, it’s still thinner than the iPhone 4/4S (9.1mm), but significantly thicker than the Droid RAZR (7.1mm). In reality, the size difference between the Droid RAZR and Droid RAZR MAXX is barely noticeable. In the hand the RAZR MAXX is huge, as large as the Galaxy Nexus though with a screen .35” smaller. just like the Droid RAZR, the MAXX has a large bezel and frame surrounding the AMOLED display.

Because the MAXX is otherwise identical to the Droid RAZR, both are otherwise the same when it comes to performance and use. The MAXX provides clear and crisp audio for calls and is one of the fastest Android phones on the market today (barely slower than the Galaxy Nexus). The camera takes decent photos and 1080p video. Read more on general use and performance in our Droid RAZR review.

The slight differences include minor UI updates to how some settings look, as well as a software patch to the camera to correct the sometimes poor focusing mechanic. Now autofocus works much better and faster.

My only issue with the Droid RAZR MAXX is the lack of Android 4.0, which Motorola promises to make available in the coming months. with a battery life as long lasting and as potent as the MAXX, Motorola’s smartphone can easily overshadow the Galaxy Nexus in nearly every way. The Nexus will be better suited for users who want immediate access to the latest Android updates. For everyone else, the Droid RAZR MAXX provides not only the best battery life users can find anywhere, on any smartphone, but one of the fastest handsets out too. If you live on your phone, or just hate always charging it and worrying about the battery dying, there is no better handset than the MAXX.

Mobile Phones - RadioShack announces new Mobile Low Price Guarantee, will match competitor’s pricing - (2/14/2012)

RadioShack has announced a new deal that will guarantee customers purchasing a mobile phone the lowest price in town. Through the Mobile low Price Guarantee, the Shack will match a competitor’s lower price for any postpaid or no-contract phone on the day of sale or up to 30 days later. To qualify customers must bring a print ad from a competing retailer to a RadioShack store where it will be verified and the discount will be applied. Sorry, but it sounds like online deals and the like are excluded from this particular promotion. Guess it’s time to start scouring the weekly circulars for the lowest price in town.

RadioShack Introduces Mobile low Price Guarantee for Wireless Phones

FORT WORTH, Texas, Feb. 1, 2012 — RadioShack has introduced a new low price ad match guarantee for mobile phone purchases, giving consumers even more confidence when purchasing their mobile phone from one of the leading national retailers of innovative mobile and technology products, services and accessories.

Starting now, nearly 4,500 company-operated RadioShack stores nationwide will match competitors’ newspaper and circular pricing on identical postpaid and no-contract mobile phones at the time of purchase and for up to 30 days after.

“In a fast-changing and increasingly complex mobility marketplace, it is vitally important for consumers to have the assurance that they have made the right choice. at RadioShack, customers can find the best, most iconic phones, the top carriers and plans, and friendly, expert assistance, all supported by our new low price guarantee,” said Scott E. Young, executive vice president and chief merchandising officer for RadioShack Corp.

“In this challenging economy, RadioShack is focused on delivering our customers greater peace of mind as they consider where and when to buy this essential tool for navigating daily life,” Young said. RadioShack’s mobile low price ad match guarantee is the newest offer in a compelling lineup of mobility value drivers for consumers. with RadioShack’s Trade & Save program, customers can trade in used working mobile phones and other devices in stores for immediate credit toward their next purchase (read more about Trade & Save at radioshack.com/tradein). and RadioShack’s new Mobile Product Support provides customers who purchase a phone or tablet in-store with free specialist support to resolve issues with their mobile phones or tablets, available via phone, live chat, email or online forums at no additional cost for the life of the device (read more about Mobile Product Support at radioshack.com/mobileproductsupport).

With RadioShack’s mobile low price guarantee*, customers can present a print ad from a newspaper or circular with retail competitor’s lower advertised price for an identical postpaid or no-contract phone in store to a RadioShack associate, who will validate the offer and match the lower price. Up to 30 days after purchase, customers also may present a competitors’ lower advertised newspaper or circular price in store to a RadioShack associate, who will validate the offer and immediately refund the difference. RadioShack’s low price ad match guarantee will not match online offers and does not apply to advertised prices for unactivated handsets. other restrictions apply. See stores or radioshack.com for details starting Jan. 29.

-batteries For Sony Ericsson - Intex IN8809: This Phone Projects! - (2/10/2012)

MANILA, Philippines — Smartphones equals functionality, and it is not surprising that they pack just about anything that could be crammed into their relatively small dimension, but here’s a question:

What function that top of the line models such as the Apple’s Iphone, Samsung Galaxy Note, and Sony Ericsson’s Xperia S does not have that Intex’s IN8809 has? Here’s a hint, the answer has very little to do with the functions of a smartphone or for that matter any typical phone.

It has something more unusual and at the same time practical, such as projecting images on a smooth flat surface.  with Intex’s IN8809, a phone is not only a one on one communications device, but also presentation and screening device that communicates ideas and visuals to a broader audience. It is a projector!

As a phone, the IN8809 acts and functions like any decent device. Although it has a bulkier and heavier, it fares no different from other phones. the keypad is big and is easy to type on. Thankfully, this phone functions well when texting fast. the typing configuration is similar to Nokia phones so it’s easy to adapt to and grow on.

The only qualm I have in sending mail or text with this phone is that the there are only two settings in typing— capital and small letters.

There’s nothing in between, so if you have to write something in caps, such as after a period, you have to change the setting. This is kind of a bummer especially when all other phones have this function.

The proverbial icing on the cake in this gadget is its projector. despite having a small size, the phone does its job well in fulfilling its role as a projector.

To go to projector mode, just select the multimedia menu, turn on the projector, adjust the lens, and voila! Instant pocket projector! It is capable of projecting a clear and vivid image while being two meters away from the screen or wall.

This phone can be quite handy especially when you have movies or films inside your phone that you want your friends to see. just a simple switch to projector mode and the whole gang can enjoy what you are watching. Similarly, this device can also be useful for school or business presentations.

One sad thing about the phone is that it turns off its main screen once the projector is on. you may have to navigate the innards of the phone using the projector as your main screen and with the phone tilted to the right. There are no way whatsoever to tilt the image projected unless you tilt the phone. but for prolonged viewing, Intex has included a stand as part of the whole package.

On the audio department, the phone is good in blasting waves, but its limitation as a phone restricts it in making things louder and deeper. a portable stereo is recommended just in case you want to have this device as an all-in-one entertainment system.

Once you have the Intext IN8809 in your pocket, you can don the magician’s hat and pull off a hat trick or two at the office, class, or house. For sure, people will flock to see the gadget. one attribute worth mentioning is that it has a decent battery life, with two days of average texting, and less than a day for a non-stop projection.

True, it’s not much smart phone in a strict sense but, it’s definitely not an ‘idiot phone” either. It functions well as a communication device and gets the job done. So if you want to be the next star of the party, you might want to try getting an Intex IN8809.

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Sim Cards - Carlos Slim Shows Users How to Switch IPhones Away From AT&T - (2/8/2012)

February 07, 2012, 5:49 AM EST

By Crayton Harrison and Scott Moritz

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Billionaire Carlos Slim’s U.S. mobile-phone carrier is instructing users how to switch their iPhones from AT&T Inc. to his prepaid calling plans.

The site for Slim’s Straight Talk service, sold through Wal-Mart Stores Inc., directs users of the Apple Inc. device who have trouble switching away from AT&T to a website that provides instructions. AT&T has a 9 percent stake in Straight Talk’s parent, America Movil SAB, and has members on the board of Slim’s wireless carrier.

America Movil, the biggest U.S. prepaid wireless carrier, is using Straight Talk plans with smartphones to attract users from Verizon Wireless and AT&T. The iPhone instructions are part of Straight Talk’s plan to begin in the next 30 days to offer small chip cards, known as SIM, that users can insert into phones bought from retailers, AT&T or T-Mobile USA, said Walter Piecyk, a BTIG Inc. analyst in New York.

“There is certainly a healthy inventory of used iPhones that consumers can buy at a low cost on EBay, but we believe Straight Talk’s new rate plan could also attract consumers using brand new iPhones,” Piecyk said in a research note today noting the switching instructions.

AT&T sells the iPhone and other smartphones at a loss to get customers to sign up for contracts that typically run for two years. to try to prevent customers from leaving during that period, AT&T “locks” the phones using software so that they only work on its own network. many other carriers also use the same strategy.

An official of Mexico City-based America Movil who can’t be named under company policy declined to comment, as did Ashley Zandy, a spokeswoman for Dallas-based AT&T. Kristin Huguet, an Apple spokeswoman, didn’t immediately return a phone message. Officials of Wal-Mart couldn’t immediately be reached.

–Editors: Ville Heiskanen, Jeffrey Tannenbaum

To contact the reporters on this story: Crayton Harrison in Mexico City at ; Scott Moritz in New York at

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at

-analogue Phones - Make phone calls over the internet - (1/27/2012)

The days of two receivers and a lot of coiled cable are long gone

Keeping household costs down has never been so important, so why not save money by making phone calls over the internet? there are many services that let you do this for little or no cost.

Broadly termed Voice over Internet Protocol (or VoIP), there are essentially two types of internet phone call. The first uses Microsoft’s proprietary (but very popular) Skype service while the second relies on a widely supported standard called Sip (Session Initiation Protocol).

Skype is great for calls made from computers to other computers or telephones, while Sip-based services tend to be better equipped for direct calls – cutting out the computer.

What you will need to make internet phone callsThe most important requirement is a good internet connection. this doesn’t have to mean a fixed broadband line, as some VoIP services will work over mobile phone networks.

Whether choosing Skype or a Sip-based service, you’ll need a way to make and receive calls. On a computer this means headphones and a microphone, or a dedicated headset (such as this £20 headset from Creative).

However, phone-style handsets that can connect via USB are also available (Maplin has a USB headset for £10).

When it comes to Sip services, the same applies. It’s also possible to buy adapters into which domestic telephones can be plugged (such as Cisco’s £37 Internet Phone Adapter). some services (including Skype) can also make use of a webcam, if you have one, for video calls.

What you can expect from VoIPVoIP services can be basic or as well-appointed as you please. in many cases, for example, VoIP services will include a dial-in number that people can use to call you. to the caller, it looks and operates like any other UK telephone number and they will be charged accordingly.

Other services offer a selection of special numbers, such as those beginning with 08 or with a particular local dialling code – and you can expect to pay extra for these kinds of option.

Also, depending on the specific provider, hardware and software used, it is possible to emulate services associated with traditional landline services, from voicemail to caller ID. indeed, still more may be possible (such as the aforementioned video calls).

Choosing a service providerMany different companies offer internet calls and they all have different pricing plans. We’ll look at some specific examples in just a moment but, as with traditional phone services, the most significant factor can be whether any friends or family already have an account.

If so, joining the same service is generally best. two Skype users, for example, can natter forever, for free, no matter where they’re located.

If you can manage the numbers and passwords, there is no reason you couldn’t set up accounts with several providers – so you can ensure your costs are kept as low as possible, no matter what service your contacts use.

Preparing direct comparisons of call costs is all but impossible because the permutations are effectively infinite. However, for the sake of example, we’ve considered some particular undiscounted BT call costs alongside what’s on offer from internet-telephony providers.

The daytime BT rates for calling landlines in the UK, Spain, Japan, the USA, and Australia are respectively 7.6p, 25p, 11p, 17.5p and 27.5p per minute. Note that call set-up costs may also apply. BT’s full pricing information can be found by clicking here.

Pagers - Energate Launches Broadband Smart-Grid-to-Home Connection - (1/27/2012)

Energate has hit the trifecta in smart grid-to-home energy connectivity: smart meters, old-school one-way radio networks, and now, broadband to the home.

on Friday, the Ottawa-based startup announced it was working on a demand response rollout — not a pilot, but a commercial rollout — with utilities in Canada’s Ontario province, with the city of Peterborough (pop. 74,898) as a first client. It's the first mass DR rollout that uses homeowners’ existing broadband internet connections, rather than radios, pagers or smart meters, to connect to devices in the home that can help manage province-wide peak loads.

Energate is providing devices like smart thermostats, load control switches for water heaters and pool pumps, and home displays to track energy use in partnership with Rodan Energy, the province's biggest demand response aggregator. It's also providing its Consumer Connected Demand Response platform and its CORE middleware to Rodan, which is targeting utilities beyond Peterborough. In fact, as part of a province-wide program meant to get customers to turn over control of key household loads to their utility in exchange for rebates and energy savings, Energate has a target market of more than 4 million customers across the province, said CEO Niraj Bhargavi.

Ontario’s program represents an “integration of a number of the concepts the industry has been looking at: direct load control, time-of-use pricing, and consumer engagement,” Bhargavi said in an interview. Of course, that's what contenders like Tendril, Energy Hub, iControl, EcoFactor, Honeywell, Schneider Electric, General Electric, Radio Thermostat, Verizon and others are also promising, though we can take Google PowerMeter and Microsoft Hohm off the list. What's different in Ontario?

First of all, Ontario’s program actually gives utilities direct control over household loads like air conditioners and water heaters, only using broadband connections to a home network, rather than the old-fashioned method of turning them off via radio and pager signals, Bhargavi said. In exchange, the utilities offer rebates or other cash rewards, methods which have netted millions of participants, but are expensive and limited in scope.

At the same time, Ontario is among the first regions in the world to push all its residential customers onto a time-of-use power pricing scheme that charges them more on weekday afternoons and early evening peak times than on off-peak nights and weekends, he noted. the hope is that consumers will choose to use less energy during expensive peak times, helping utilities avoid building new power plants.

That gives utilities an incentive to push connectivity to homes to do things like deliver pricing alerts, offer energy efficiency tips or market home energy audits — all things most utilities do via snail mail nowadays.

Energate is a big player in real-world demand response projects. It’s working with Oklahoma Gas & Electric and Silver Spring Networks on the country’s first wide-scale deployment of utility-linked smart thermostats in homes. OG&E wants 50,000 customers to sign up for pricing programs that give them cheap energy during off-peak hours in exchange for punishingly high rates at peak demand times. Offering them a communications link with the utility to manage it can actually cut energy bills by 30 percent to 50 percent, according to pilot project results.

In OG&E’s case, that communications link is the smart meter, which carries a ZigBee radio inside it that communicates with Energate’s smart thermostats in the home. That’s how most North American utilities have been planning to connect to home area network (HAN) technology they’ve been promising as an end result of smart meter deployments.

Of course, most meters only “talk” to the utility about every hour or so, and most utilities take a day to process the data, making the whole-home usage data you can look up on utility websites a day old at least. OG&E is among the first to actually deliver smart meter-based connectivity to the home, though utilities in California and Texas, among other states, are under the gun to start doing so.

There’s a catch in the case of Ontario, however: most of the smart meters deployed there don't have ZigBee radios, said Louis Szablya, Energate’s VP of marketing. That means that the utilities that pick up the province-wide program have to find alternative ways to reach homeowners — and broadband was a natural avenue.

because not all Ontario residents have broadband, Energate is also providing a one-way option, using the classic model of radio-controlled load switches that turn off HVAC or pool pumps. Utilities have to serve all their customers, not just those with high-speed internet access. for homes that don't have smart meters to measure whole-home power, Energate is working with a partner it intends to announce next week, which supplies a sensor device that can read old-fashioned meters and feed the data to the home network, Szablya said.

Energate isn’t the first company to use broadband to link homes and smart grid — in fact, a lot of today’s home area network trials depend on it. Tendril’s HAN pilot with San Diego Gas & Electric is using broadband for now, and SDG&E hasn’t said just when it will turn on their ZigBee meter-to-home capabilities.

Pilots and studies tend to show that more connectivity and access to real-time data yields bigger energy savings — but again, those are only pilot projects. Energate piloted its own broadband-to-home system in four Ontario cities from 2009 to 2010, and showed that involved homeowners could shave 30 percent from their utility bills, which is similar to results it got with Silver Spring  in Oklahoma.

Will broadband utility-to-home communications take off? Cisco, IBM, Microsoft and other IT giants are exploring whole “smart city” architectures dependent on the concept of universal broadband. but the real world includes far-off farm houses, low-income apartment blocks, mission-critical emergency response agencies and a lot of everyday power users, all with a universal right to reliable power. Companies that want to help utilities crack anything other than the (rich) early adopter market will have to find a way to serve all those customers to make it happen.

Mobile Phone Accessories - Cell phone ban in St. Joseph County court houses - (1/7/2012)

SAINT JOSEPH COUNTY – this week a ban went into effect on cell phones at all court houses in Saint Joseph County.

The big reason for this ban is to prevent people from using them to record court proceedings or take pictures of witnesses or jurors.

A similar ban was on the books at Elkhart County court houses until about six years ago. it was modified because a lot of people were forced to return to their cars to put their phones or find places to put them.

In many cases, those people were there for non-court functions. Now cell phones can be brought in but judges require them to be off during court sessions to prevent problems with courthouse visitors.

“when you have to send people out to their cars, if it’s raining, snowing, or any kind of bad weather, you delay them and inconvenience them,” said Judge Bowers. “You generally don’t make them very happy and so we need to balance that out.”

Judge Bowers says he wholeheartedly shares the concern about cell phones being used inappropriately to record any court proceedings.

-cases & Pouches For Sharp - Israel: Pay that cellphone bill or else - (1/1/2012)

JERUSALEM — You arrive at the airport ready for a flight, but are abruptly pulled aside and detained. A routine traffic stop by the police leaves you stranded by the side of the road without your driver’s license. You whip out your credit card to pay for a restaurant bill, and the maître d’ quietly rejects and confiscates your card.

if you are very lucky, a repo man shows up at your house and impassively delivers an injunction: your bank account has a lean on it. Your life insurance has been cashed out and decimated.

What’s going on in Israel, where every month, thousands of surprised citizens face these predicaments?

A Knesset law passed in mid-2010 has enabled banks and large companies to access previously classified private information relating to debtors’ lives and to enact draconian measures, often unannounced.

More from GlobalPost: Israel to shift tax burden to rich and corporations

the law appears to contravene important provisions of the nation’s Basic Law, the body of jurisprudence that stands in the place of a written constitution, such as that of freedom of movement. It has yet to be challenged in court.

But it is one of the realities of Israeli life that provoked the feelings of alienation that spurred the social protests of the past six months. the companies and cartels may be pulling in large profits, but their clients often feel duped.

“I’m just waiting for someone with the means to file a massive class-action suit for damages,” says Jerusalem attorney Abraham Zada Harpaz, who specializes in these cases. “in the past two years you see people simply reduced to rags, down to their last slice of bread, because of this law.”

Banks, companies and debtor’s agencies now have direct computer linkages to records kept by the national Enforcement and Collection Authority. A company claiming even a paltry debt, years old, can easily revoke a person’s permission to exit the country or cancel their driver’s license.

Such is the case of “Ilanit,” a woman whose story was highlighted in a Yedioth Acharonoth exposé of these practices. From 2001 to 2005, Ilanit was a client of the cable company YES. After cancelling the service, she signed up for a rival company, HOT. on Dec. 1 of this year, she received a notification informing her that her travel privileges had been suspended due to a debt to YES.

Upon inquiring, she was told that YES claimed she owed them a converter, now six years old, and that her father, Eli, had been served with a notification of the debt. “I gave them back their converter when I left them, and my dad’s name is not even Eli,” she told Yeditoh Acharonoth, an Israeli daily newspaper.

More from GlobalPost: Israeli protests, even in their end, pose challenge to government

(The law demands timely, signed notification of such claims to the debtor, not to a family member.)

My discovery of the new measures came last March, as I attempted to cross the border into Jordan. Separated from a group of friends, I was pulled into a small office and informed that I was not allowed to leave the country. Why? the officers said I had an outstanding debt in the Rehovoth office of the Collection Authority.

I tried to recall the last time I had been to Rehovoth, possibly 10 years ago. the border police officer could not tell me the amount of the debt, to whom it was owed or why. there was no way to pay the debt and cross the Israeli-Jordanian border. I was, in fact, detained.

Subsequent inquiries revealed that Cellcom, a cellular phone company I cut ties with 12 years ago, after their failure to repair a malfunctioning phone still under warranty, claimed a debt of 8,500 shekels ($2,250). Like most other people embroiled in this web, I have no criminal record.

“They play fast and loose with these notifications,” Harpaz said. “That’s the worst part. and they let the debt accumulate on purpose. It's part of the way they operate. Let’s say someone starts out with a loan from a bank, or a small debt. You can start out owing someone 2,000 shekels (about $530.) no one informs you of the debt. the bank or the company takes it to court and gets a summary judgment in your absence. then you’re immediately slapped with legal fees, interest-rate adjustments and dollar linkage. Before you know it — literally, before you know it — you owe 10,000 shekels ($2,645).

More from GlobalPost: Stalwarts of Arab Spring give advice to Occupy Wall Street

“They put a lean on your bank account; they cash out your insurance policies, incurring penalties, and leave you with 20 percent of what you had. They have your passport linked to a no-travel list. and the kick is, you don’t know the first thing about it. and there is no way you can negotiate with them.”

the new practices have become so commonplace that now neighbors involved in banal disputes find themselves competing over who will get to a judge first, in order to claim a debt, and paralyze the life of the other.

Cellphone companies, who operate in an essentially unregulated market in Israel, are notorious.

Andreas Guggenheim, 38, a Chilean who has lived in Israel for the past 8 years with his husband, Felipe Alee, has found himself embroiled in one such muddle. the couple started out with a “family plan” at Orange. about seven months ago, wanting a change, Guggenheim shut down his line and cancelled the service. Alee kept his number, but upgraded to an iPhone. the new contract was passed to Alee’s name.

last September, right around the Jewish New Year, Guggenheim noticed that odd amounts of money ranging from 400 to 700 shekels were regularly being withdrawn from his bank account. Suspecting Alee, he asked, “Honey, have you taken any money out?”

no. It was Orange, the company he had severed his contract with, still charging him.

“It’s a mess. all they can tell me is that we once had an account with two active numbers and now we don’t. They say, ‘We know you haven’t used the phone. and yes, we are charging you.’ To me it looks like when Felipe activated his iPhone they just decided to charge me too. no one at the company can explain what they are doing.”

Guggenheim has refused to pay. Orange now claims his debts have accrued to 3,500 shekels ($925). the company lawyers are after him, and “I’m just trying to shut everything down before they try to take my bank account or do something else. at this point, I don’t know anyone who hasn’t run into this kind of problem. It’s out of control.”

Numerous attempts by GlobalPost to receive a response from Orange and from Cellcom went unanswered.

Israel’s collections agencies are overwhelmed and verging on losing control of the situation. in recent months, the Enforcement and Collection Authority has begun forcing companies to offer their debtors deals whereby some of the hundreds of thousands of open files can be resolved. last month, it was Motorolla. this month, it is Cellcom. Cellcom alone claims more than 27,000 debtors owing debts originating previous to 2009.

some of the “debts” are comically spurious in nature. one of Harpaz’s favorites involves a cellphone company salesman offering a client “free internet” over the phone. Next thing? “the poor guy gets a 3,000 shekel bill at the end of the month, and it is up to him to try to prove that some salesman duped him. Sometimes it’s a student, who can never really pay this off. and then you know what happens. They go to court, they up the charges, and it’ll never end.”

“on the up side,” Harpaz says, “people who really owe money, who took out loans and failed to pay them back, are being forced to come to terms with things.”

globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/israel-and-palestine/111228/israel-debt-cell-phone-bill-corporate-law

Cumbrian mum’s appeal after baby’s pictures go missing

last updated at 10:27, Saturday, 31 December 2011

A heartbroken Cumbrian mum has lost her baby daughter’s first photographs after her mobile phone vanished in the Boxing Day sales.

Tyler Mae Smith’s first Christmas, first birthday and first holiday snaps vanished in an instant after her mum’s handbag containing her mobile phone disappeared.

Mum Paula, of Castle Croft, Egremont, is devastated.

She believes her bag was possibly stolen when she was bargain hunting in Carlisle’s next store on December 26.

Paula said: “I had my bag, it was one that went over my shoulder, and when I looked it had just gone.

“I asked around the shop and it hadn’t been handed in. it must have been cut off or knocked off my shoulder.”

As well as the phone containing the photos, the bag also held Tyler Mae’s Christmas money and vouchers totalling around £200. her mum was shopping to get new clothes for the 22-month-old.

Although next cancelled and reissued the vouchers, Tyler Mae is Paula and husband Russell’s first child, and, for the family, the pictures are irreplaceable.

“I had hundreds and hundreds of pictures on there. Pictures from the day she was born,” said Paula.

“Some of them I didn’t have backed up on the computer at home. you don’t expect this to happen.

“I was devastated, I just wanted to cry.”

Although Paula, 27, reported the bag’s disappearance to police, she says officers recorded the bag as having been lost.

“I think because I didn’t see it go off my shoulder,” she said.

Now Paula is appealing for the Ericsson X10 phone’s SIM card to be handed in so the family can be reunited with the pictures.

She is hoping her plea will appeal to the sentimental side of whoever may have found or taken her bag.

“the SIM is no use to anyone,” she added.

“It’s clutching at straws really. the pictures are everything. They are very special, there’s a lot of first moments that I’ve lost now.”

The SIM card can be returned to Paula by dropping at a News & Star office or by posting to Sarah Newstead, Newspaper House, Dalston Road, Carlisle, CA2 5UA.

First published at 08:06, Saturday, 31 December 2011 Published by newsandstar.co.uk

Mobile Phones With Contract - Apax Said in Talks to Buy France Telecom’s Orange Suisse Unit - (12/30/2011)

December 27, 2011, 8:58 AM EST

by Matthew Campbell and Aaron Kirchfeld

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Apax Partners LLP is entering exclusive talks to buy France Telecom SA’s Swiss mobile-phone unit in a deal that may be valued at about 2 billion euros ($2.6 billion), three people familiar with the matter said.

France Telecom may announce the discussions on Orange Suisse as soon as today, said one of the people, who declined to be identified as the matter is private. The London-based buyout firm beat out bids from EQT Partners AB, Providence Equity Partners inc. and French telecommunications billionaire Xavier Niel, two of the people said.

France Telecom is shedding assets in Europe, where multiple phone companies are vying for a shrinking pool of new customers, to embrace faster-growing markets in Africa and the Middle East. The Paris-based mobile operator, France’s largest, is also in talks to sell its Orange Austria unit to Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa Ltd., people familiar with the situation said in October, and is planning to exit Portugal.

“it makes sense to exit the difficult Swiss market and may give them more flexibility on the cash-flow side,” said Giovanni Montalti, a London-based analyst at Credit Agricole Cheuvreux, who rates the stock “underperform.” “If they enter exclusive talks today and deliver the deal by the end of the year, that would be quite fast.”

Perella Weinberg Partners LP and Lazard Ltd. are advising France Telecom on the Swiss sale. Spokesmen at France Telecom and Apax declined to comment, and officials at EQT and Providence couldn’t immediately be reached for comment by telephone.

Apax’s History

Apax, run by Martin Halusa, has participated in more than 20 deals this year, including last month’s purchase of U.S. wound-treatment company Kinetic Concepts inc., its largest in 2011, according to Bloomberg data. The firm has amassed about half the 9 billion euros it’s seeking for its latest fund, three people with knowledge of the plans said this month.

The decision by France Telecom to pursue a sale of the Swiss unit to Apax follows last year’s bid to merge the business with rival Sunrise, a deal rejected by regulators. Sunrise’s owner, CVC Capital Partners, was earlier excluded from the sale process for Orange Suisse, although the firm discussed assisting Providence with arranging financing in the hopes of attempting another merger, according to people with knowledge of the talks.

France Telecom rose 0.8 percent to 11.97 euros in Paris trading today. The shares have sunk 23 percent this year, valuing the company at about 32 billion euros.

The French phone company, led by Chief Executive Officer Stephane Richard, said Oct. 27 that third-quarter profit fell 6.2 percent as a revenue decline at home overshadowed growth in Spain and some African countries. The company said then that full-year operating cash flow will be “slightly” more than 9 billion euros, compared with a previous forecast of that amount.

Almost half the mobile operator’s 45.5 billion euros in sales last year came from France. in October, France Telecom agreed to acquire Congolese mobile operator Congo-China Telecom, entering its third new country in about a year.

–With assistance from Jacqueline Simmons in Paris. Editors: Julie Alnwick, Elizabeth Wollman

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Campbell in Paris at ; Aaron Kirchfeld in Frankfurt at

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jacqueline Simmons at