Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
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Sam Varghese
Friday, 12 January 2007 05:02
The talks on the One Laptop Per Child project will be of interest if only because there has been some controversy over the choice of wireless chipset chosen for the project. Theo de Raadt, the founder of the OpenBSD project, has given voice to concerns, pointing out that "I think it is seriously hypocritical for OLPC to be heading towards Linux BIOS (goal: to not run vendor code) while at the same time they go signing NDA’s with Marvell for the wireless driver (goal:to run vendor code), and then won’t participate with other groups who want Marvell to release documentation for their wireless chips."
One member of the media will be presenting at the conference - Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier, editorial director of Linux.com, will be speaking on the "best ways for projects to promote themselves and ensure success."
This seems an opportune time to mention that the conference has a media sponsor this year, the second time this has happened. To my mind this is an obnoxiouspractice but maybe the organisers know better. It normally means that a media outlet pays for the "privilege" of getting faster and probably easier access towhatever schlock the organisers want to dish out. What deal the organisers have cut with Builder AU, the media sponsor, is not known.
This year, there is also a visible change in the way the organisers are catering to the media - in past years it was well nigh impossible to get a commitment from those behind the show to organise press interviews. This year, the organisers appear to be taking a more educated approach. The linux.conf.au website says: "We'll have a press conference during linux.conf.au and we can also set up personal interviews for you. Just let us know who you are interested in chatting to and we'll make sure it happens."
A prominent name missing among the major sponsors is Novell. Probably the company did not think it a good idea to put its name up in neon lights at this time, when it is not exactly popular in the community, along with the likes of IBM and HP; Novell has opted to be a "supporter", the lowest category of sponsor, along with MySQL AB. Sun Microsystems is missing altogether but Google, Ubuntu and Intel are there.
Let the talking begin.
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