Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
Grok Headline matches for Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
Gmail's terms of service
Gmail's terms of service
04/09/2004 04:00 PMPrivacy advocates are getting all riled up over Gmail "terms of
service". I kinda of had to laugh as if...
"terms of service"
"terms of service"
03/14/2005 05:53 PMAIM Terms of Service
AIM Terms of Service
03/14/2005 04:47 PM
AIM Terms of Service:
"Although you or the owner of the Content retain ownership of all
right, title and interest in Content that you post to any AIM Product,
AOL owns all right, title and interest in any compilation, collective
work or other derivative work created by AOL using or incorporating
this Content. In addition, by posting Content on an AIM Product,
you grant AOL, its parent, affiliates, subsidiaries, assigns, agents
and licensees the irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide right to
reproduce, display, perform, distribute, adapt and promote this
Content in any medium. You waive any right to privacy. You waive
any right to inspect or approve uses of the Content or to be
compensated for any such uses.
"
So, basically, don't say anything on AIM that you would not like to
see displayed on the
jumbotron or
(perhaps, someday) re-enacted on Time Warner's new AIM-dialog based
reality TV show.
AOL weasels about its Terms of Service
AOL weasels about its Terms of Service
03/14/2005 05:29 PMCory Doctorow:
Last night, I
blogged about AOL's terms-of-service for its services, in which
you waive your privacy right. AOL has done some interviews objecting
to this, saying that the terms are only intended to reach to
message-board postings.
I don't buy it for a second. If AOL meant "you waive privacy in your
message board postings and not your AIM messages" they could say so.
And if they won't say so, why should we believe them?
Link
Update: J sez, "Apple's .Mac service lets you
use the AIM network without clicking through AOL's TOS at all (you get
to use your username@mac.com as your AIM name), and the .Mac TOS says
nothing at all about AIM or AOL, and neither does Apple's privacy statement,
which you agree to when agreeing to the .Mac TOS."

AOL Clarifies Terms of Service for AIM
AOL Clarifies Terms of Service for AIM
03/17/2005 04:22 AMAmerica Online has clarified the terms of service for AOL Instant
Messenger (AIM) in response to a firestorm of criticism that was
sparked when bloggers objected to language concerning users' privacy.
AOL has modified the "Content You Post" section to reiterate that
user-to-user communications will remain private.
AOL fixes its terms of service
AOL fixes its terms of service
03/17/2005 03:56 AMCory Doctorow:
When AOL got called out on its Terms of Service giving it ownership of
your private instant messages and requiring you to waive your privacy
rights, it went into spin mode. It gave press interviews saying that
it didn't intend to use the agreement that it exacted from its users
to abuse their privacy, and said that besides, Microsoft's terms of
service were just as bad or worse (hardly a ringing endorsement!).
Now, though, AOL has done the right and substantive thing in response:
it has rewritten its terms of service so that they clearly distinguish
between the messages you post to public areas and the private messages
you send to your friends. This is absolutely the way that AOL should
be handling this, and they deserve to be congratulated for it.
Link
(Thanks, Andrew!)

VoIP Terms of Service May Surprise You
VoIP Terms of Service May Surprise You
08/10/2004 08:31 AMVoIP terms of service suck
VoIP terms of service suck
08/10/2004 08:59 AMSalshdot takes note of the terrible Terms of Service from many of the
major voice-over-IP providers, including Vonage. I nearly bought a
Vonage subscription three times last year, but each time, their ToS
changed my mind. Who wants to do business with a company that makes
you agree to something really unreasonable before they'll take your
money?
he prime example is Vonage, which states among other things that 'If
Vonage, in its sole discretion believes that you have violated the
above restrictions, Vonage may forward the objectionable material, as
well as your communications with Vonage and your personally
identifiable information to the appropriate authorities for
investigation and prosecution and you hereby consent to such
forwarding.'"
"Don't forget the obligatory 'we can change these terms of service
whenever we like and they become effective immediately when posted to
our website.' Read for yourself here(1), here(2), and here(3). I won't
put up with this kind of thing in my software and I certainly won't
put up with it from my phone company!"
I'm surprised that more VoIP companies don't tout their ToS as
competitive advantages over Vonage -- "Sure they've got a great rate
plan, but if they think you're doing something naughty, they'll rat
you out to the Feds."
LinkSearch Engines' Restrictive Terms of
Service
Search Engines' Restrictive Terms of
Service
01/23/2004 02:21 PMDan Shafer
is alarmed by what look like onerous terms of
service at Google and Yahoo. He raises good questions.
AOL's Terms of Service Update for AIM
Raises Eyebrows
AOL's Terms of Service Update for AIM
Raises Eyebrows
03/14/2005 04:32 PMAmerica Online makes several changes to the AIM terms of service,
including the co-ownership of any content passed through the instant
messaging network.
You get what you pay for - Walmart's 88
cent tunes are Windows only and have a
bogus Terms of Service
You get what you pay for - Walmart's 88
cent tunes are Windows only and have a
bogus Terms of Service
12/23/2003 08:24 AMLessig tells us what's wrong with it .. attackagainst Wal-Mart’s
new .. blog entry from Lawrence Lessig .. WalMart's way to the future
.. licensing agreement
lessig.org/blog/archives/001647.shtml
track this
site | 6 links
Gilmore v. Ashcroft
Gilmore v. Ashcroft
09/15/2004 09:25 AMJohn Gilmore's battle to force the government to explain the basis
upon which it demands that airlines verify an ID before permitting
someone on a plane got a small victory last week. The government had
asked to file its brief, defending a rule that is itself secret, in
secret. The 9th Circuit
said no.
Appreciating Happy Gilmore
Appreciating Happy Gilmore
01/16/2004 10:59 AM How can some people not appreciate the sheer comic brilliance of the
excellent Adam Sandler film Happy Gilmore? I just happened to see it
on TV last night (yeay for Tivo) and the program guide had two stars
next to the movie title. Un-freaking-believable. Heck, even Amazon
users have given it over 4 stars! Now that I think of it, I don't yet
have it on DVD. It's probably time to rectify that oversight, wouldn't
you say?...
John Gilmore interviewed by Greplaw
John Gilmore interviewed by Greplaw
08/19/2004 08:28 PMGilmore v. Ashcroft "Papers Please" case
update
Gilmore v. Ashcroft "Papers Please" case
update
09/07/2004 11:47 PM
Xeni Jardin:
Bill Scannell says,
Lawyers for John Gilmore filed their opposition to a Department of
Justice attempt to file a secret brief in a case that involves secret
law. The case, Gilmore vs. Ashcroft, is now before the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals. DOJ filed a motion last Friday asking the Court's
permission to file their arguments in secret, allowing only the judges
to read their full brief.
DOJ is trying to distract the Court and the public from the real issue
in the case, which is whether or not American citizens can travel in
their own country without official government paperwork. Their
method of distraction: secret law.
In a sharply-worded objection to the government's motion, Gilmore's
lawyers stated that the government's "extreme cry for secrecy,
preventing even plaintiff's counsel from being privy to their legal
arguments because plaintiff's counsel does not meet defendants self
defined 'covered persons who have a need to know' criteria, is
disturbing and illustrates the dangers of secret law."
DOJ motion and Mr. Gilmore's opposition:
Link.
Previous BoingBoing posts on this story include:
Reason Magazine on Gilmore v. Ashcroft; and
Gilmore v. Ashcroft begins today
(Gilmore vs. Ashcroft) 9th Circuit to
DOJ: No Secret Justice
(Gilmore vs. Ashcroft) 9th Circuit to
DOJ: No Secret Justice
09/13/2004 08:10 PM
Mark Frauenfelder:
Score one for John Gilmore, who is suing the Justice Department
because it has secret laws requiring people to show ID when flying on
a commercial domestic plane. Ashcroft tried to file a secret brief to
keep the secret law a secret, but the court said no secrets allowed.
Bill sez: "The 9th Circuit US Court of Appeals rejected a
Department of Justice attempt to file a secret brief in Gilmore vs.
Ashcroft, a case that involves secret law.
"In a one page order, the Court denied DOJ's motion asking the
Court's permission to file their arguments in secret, allowing only
the judges to read their full brief. A DOJ motion to suspend the
briefing schedule was similarly denied."
Link
(Here are
previous BB posts on the subject)
John Gilmore vs. Ashcroft begins today
John Gilmore vs. Ashcroft begins today
08/16/2004 02:15 PMBill sez: "On the 16th of August
2004, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals begins work on the Gilmore vs.
Ashcroft case. At stake is nothing less than the right of Americans
to travel freely in their own country -- and the exposure of 'secret
law' for what it is: an abomination.
"The man who is fighting the good fight is named John Gilmore.
John made his fortune as a programmer and entrepreneur in the software
industry. Whereas most people in his position would have moved to a
tropical island and lived a life of luxury, John chose to use his
wealth to protect and defend the US Constitution.
"On the 4th of July 2002, John Gilmore, American citizen, decided
to take a trip from one part of the United States of America to
another. At the airport, he was told he had to produce his ID if he
wanted to travel. He asked to see the law demanding he show his
'papers' and was told after a time that the law was secret and no, he
wouldn't be allowed to read it.
"He hasn't flown in his own country since."
Another program which depends on showing ID is the Watch
List and No-Fly List. Airlines are issued these lists by the
federal government and are required to request ID from their
passengers in order to check them against the lists. This has
resulted in countless citizens with names similar to bad
people being harrassed, arrested, or prevented from travelling by
air—including every person named 'David Nelson'.
Link"Gilmore v. Ashcroft, a story of
security, indentification, and secret
laws"
"Gilmore v. Ashcroft, a story of
security, indentification, and secret
laws"
08/18/2004 11:09 AMGmail's new promise
Gmail's new promise
04/15/2004 02:16 PMI can't believe how much flak Google is getting over gmail. Hotmail
and Yahoo feature 5 or more obnoxious ads on every page view,
plus advertising in each and every mail they send
out, but Google creates a better version of web mail and we
have state representitives introd
ucing laws to ban the service before it even launches.
Has the whole world gone crazy?!
They've gone and
updated their policy at gmail, and it boggles my mind that they
even have to go to such great lengths to explain how their subtle ads
aren't the new red menace.
They should introduce a new promise for gmail users. Every message
that gets sent to a gmail account will result in a kitten getting
petted one time. They could rival the old fishcam at
Netscape, by having a big room with a kitten-petting robot showing
everyone how much love the kittens are getting from the PetBot2000.
And remember, no humans would be involved in the kitten
petting.
Would that make things better finally?
"John Gilmore on inflight activism, spam
and sarongs (GrepLaw interview)"
"John Gilmore on inflight activism, spam
and sarongs (GrepLaw interview)"
08/20/2004 02:46 PMMore on Gmail's Virtues and Dangers
More on Gmail's Virtues and Dangers
04/17/2004 09:57 AMTim O'Reilly finds much to praise in
Google's upcoming Gmail service, and is much less concerned about the
privacy issues than I am.
We agree totally, however on a crucial issue: preventing data lock-in.
He says:
"The big question to me isn't privacy, or
control over software APIs, it's who will own the data. What's
critical is that gmail makes a commitment to data migration
capabilities, so the service isn't a one way door to the future. I
want to be able to switch to alternate providers if the competition
makes a better offer. The critical enabler is going to be the ability
to extract my data and connections so that I can work with them on
multiple devices, for example, syncing my laptop or phone with my
gmail account rather than having to work only in a tethered fashion. I
understand why gmail doesn't offer this feature now, but it's going to
be essential in the long term."
Amen.
Gmail's Birthday Presents
Gmail's Birthday Presents
04/01/2005 11:30 AMin praise of gmail's technology
in praise of gmail's technology
07/09/2004 12:12 AMas always, the whining overshadowed some truly impressive coding
Gmail's Similarities To Gator
Gmail's Similarities To Gator
04/26/2004 02:13 AMClickZ has an article that points out for all the complaints about
Google's Gmail offering, one area that people haven't really explored
is how it's
actually similar
to Gator in certain ways. Of course, since so many people hate
Gator, this will automatically be seen as a negative - but what people
hate about Gator is that it gets installed without the user knowing
it, which isn't the case with Gmail. Also, Gator covers up other
sites with popups from competitors, while Gmail just place regular
text ads off to the side. However, there are some similarities - and
you can imagine that companies will get upset when they find out that
next to their own email marketing there is an ad for a competitor.
How long until a merchant sues? There have been a number of similar
cases against Gator (and others) and the results have been mixed
depending on the judge. I stand by my position that throwing up
competitors ads by itself should be perfectly legal - as long as the
user knows what's happening and the software hasn't been put on their
machine without their knowledge. Still, not everyone sees it that way
- and it's likely that an annoyed retailer will sue. Another option,
as suggested by Jeremy Wagstaff, is that companies that advertise by
email
will move to alternatives like RSS. Of course, once Gmail adds an
RSS news aggregator to their Gmail product they'll face the same
issue. Maybe, instead of worrying so much about competitors' ads
showing up, they should just focus on making sure their product is
something people want.
Blinded by Gmail's Gigabyte?
Blinded by Gmail's Gigabyte?
04/16/2004 09:12 PMOkay, this is getting too stupid. Even Tim O'Reilly seems to be sucked
in by Google's reality distortion field now. I guess they've been
taking lessons from Steve Jobs, because Tim usually isn't this easily
excited by non-innovation. (Or maybe Tim was an early investor in
Google? Anyone know?) Gmail is fascinating to me as a watershed event
in the evolution of the internet. In a brilliant Copernican stroke,
gmail turns everything on its head, rejecting the personal computer
as...
Testing Gmail's Spam filters
Testing Gmail's Spam filters
06/14/2004 11:32 AMEver wonder how long it takes to fill 1GB of mail space with spam?
Aaron Pratt ( prattboy@gmail.com ) is trying to find out. He has asked
people to give his email out to as many newsletters, spammers, any
kind of annoying mail that he can recieve. You can see some of his
results here (mirror)
More…
Google to increase Gmail's inbox to 2GB
and more
Google to increase Gmail's inbox to 2GB
and more
04/01/2005 08:22 AMGoogle on Friday plans to increase the in-box storage of its Gmail Web
mail service from 1GB to 2GB, and it will continue to raise that
ceiling in coming weeks and months, on a rolling basis, to unspecified
heights, according to a Google executive.
Using Up Gmail's Lifetime Supply Of
Space... And Looking For The Delete Key
Using Up Gmail's Lifetime Supply Of
Space... And Looking For The Delete Key
08/17/2004 03:23 PMTDavid writes
"The Gmail team has confirmed that there is currently no
feature to deal with mass deletion of mail and they do not
indicate when or if they will add this functionality. The current
choices are either deal with deleting forever mail 50 threads at a
time or using a third party script. Not a problem for those who
receive 30 emails a day, but a huge issue for those who receive
thousands of emails a day, with the vast majority being spam."
Funny. I had been wondering the same thing, as I've been messing
around with forwarding spam to my Gmail account over the last month
(now pushing about 20% capacity, so a bit slower than the example
above). One change, though, is that you can set the email box to show
100 threads at a time, rather than 50, which should speed up the
delete process slightly. Still, you have to admit that Gmail is a
beta product, and it's quite likely they'll add a "delete all spam"
feature at some point. Either that, or add an option (found on many
other systems) that will automatically delete mail designated as spam
after a specific time period (1 week? 1 month?). I'm not sure it does
much good to get super angry about a beta email product that clearly
tells you you're running out of room, and then... runs out of room. A
related question, though, concerns how good the Gmail spam filter
actually is. In my tests, it's pretty bad. It appears to catch about
70% of spam, which is much lower than most anti-spam solutions. Of
course, with such a low rate, you would figure that there wouldn't be
too many false positives, but that's not true either. It tends to
catch plenty of legitimate email and tag it as spam. Another thing
they will hopefully fix before the system comes out of beta.
Hotmail, Others Follow Gmail's Storage
Boost
Hotmail, Others Follow Gmail's Storage
Boost
06/24/2004 06:17 AMNews: Google to increase Gmail's inbox
to 2GB and more
News: Google to increase Gmail's inbox
to 2GB and more
04/01/2005 09:41 AMGoogle Inc. on Friday plans to increase the in-box storage of its
Gmail Web mail service from 1GB to 2GB, and it will continue to raise
that ceiling in coming weeks and months, on a rolling basis, to
unspecified heights, according to a Google executive.
Gmail's Terabyte Glitch Heightens
Storage Race
Gmail's Terabyte Glitch Heightens
Storage Race
05/19/2004 02:52 PMGoogle confirms that the 1 terabyte of storage space that test users
of its free e-mail service noticed this week was a bug in the system,
not a new height in free space.
Issues with Google GMail's Basic HTML
Interface
Issues with Google GMail's Basic HTML
Interface
03/17/2005 03:41 AMTechWhack Mar 15 2005 9:44AM GMT
Google's Sergey Brin Talks on Gmail's
Future
Google's Sergey Brin Talks on Gmail's
Future
04/24/2004 12:53 PMTerms of Use
Terms of Use
12/25/2003 08:07 AMterms of use
help.xanga.com/about/termsofuse.htm
track this
site | 7 links
Dvd Terms To Know
Dvd Terms To Know
12/04/2003 09:38 AMSiliconValley.com Dec 4 2003 8:44AM ET
2K3 embeds some new terms in our
vocabularies
2K3 embeds some new terms in our
vocabularies
01/03/2004 07:30 PMRunners-up included the high-tech term blog (Web log, or Internet
journal); the newly minted verb google (to rummage through the Web
using the search engine ...
DUP deal terms 'unacceptable'
DUP deal terms 'unacceptable'
06/30/2004 08:14 AMThe DUP's terms for a deal to restore devolution in NI are
unacceptable, Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams warns.
Blogging terms going mainstream
Blogging terms going mainstream
01/04/2005 07:49 PM
BBC
warns regarding dangers of being "dooced" Not long after making
the
Wired
Jargon Watch, I finally got to see the term
"
;dooced", in action as the BBC posts an article regarding the
growing conflict between employers and employees when it comes to
blogging.
Health terms not often Googled
Health terms not often Googled
11/05/2003 08:21 PMInstead, Google and other software gofers spend the bulk of their time
hunting for pornography, deals on computer gear, and the latest dirt
on favourite ...
Grok Description matches for Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
GrokA matches for Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
Wireless Dial-up Access Connects in
Australia
Wireless Dial-up Access Connects in
Australia
06/05/2005 11:17 PMNebo Wireless has entered an agreement with ATI Australia Pty Limited
to distribute the international version of its Wireless Link. The deal
will provide wireless remote access for dial-up Internet users
throughout Australia. [PRWEB Jun 2, 2005]
"Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Webl0g"
"Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Webl0g"
03/21/2003 09:14 AMGoogle stretches Gmail access
Google stretches Gmail access
03/17/2005 02:47 AMGoogle began randomly offering Gmail accounts to one in twenty
Google.com visitors this week. Previously, users could only create
accounts Gmail accounts by invitation from Google or from an existing
Gmail user.
"We just started offering Gmail accounts to a randomly selected sample
on Google," Google's director of consumer Web products Marissa Mayer
said. "It's a natural step to leverage the wider user base of
Google.com to grow Gmail. Based on the success of this one-in-20
scope, we'll be ramping it up over the next couple of weeks."
Google expands access to Gmail
Google expands access to Gmail
03/17/2005 03:27 AMOK, I may not have been totally on target when I said how Google would
bring Gmail forward…but I was close. Google has decided to
randomly offer Gmail accounts via Google. I think that this stays true
to the idea of keeping the ‘hype alive’ as it makes sure
that people will use Google in order to gain an account….
Direct and Related Links for 'Google
expands access to Gmail'
Update: Google expands access to Gmail
Update: Google expands access to Gmail
03/17/2005 03:10 AMGoogle opened up its Gmail Web mail service to a wider scope of users
on Monday by randomly offering, for the first time, accounts to some
visitors of the main Google.com page.
How can i access gmail and signup a new
mail account??
How can i access gmail and signup a new
mail account??
09/04/2004 03:30 AMTechTree Sep 4 2004 7:08AM GMT
A Net Tax Access Ban Revival, A Gmail
Privacy Skirmish, A Bot Kicking, and
Other Tricks, Treats, and Tales fro
A Net Tax Access Ban Revival, A Gmail
Privacy Skirmish, A Bot Kicking, and
Other Tricks, Treats, and Tales fro
04/30/2004 11:27 PMAVN Online May 1 2004 2:54AM GMT
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.1
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.1
11/15/2003 04:32 PMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.4
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.4
12/09/2003 07:32 PMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.3.1
OraRep StatsPack 0.3.1
07/26/2004 12:37 PMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.2.1
OraRep StatsPack 0.2.1
02/16/2004 02:51 PMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.3.0
OraRep StatsPack 0.3.0
04/19/2004 12:26 PMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.6
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.6
01/05/2004 08:31 AMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.9
OraRep StatsPack 0.1.9
01/22/2004 05:09 AMOracle report generators with tuning hints.
Gmail Adds POP3 Access - Will Not
Advertise On Pop3 Based Emails
Gmail Adds POP3 Access - Will Not
Advertise On Pop3 Based Emails
12/19/2004 03:08 PMGoogle surprised privacy advocates yesterday by allowing POP3 access
to GMail. This effectively shuts down any criticism over GMail privacy
concerns. However, like many of the other free email services that
allow POP3 access, they have not committed to indefinite access.
P900 prints to HP via Bluetooth
P900 prints to HP via Bluetooth
05/25/2004 02:16 AMinfoSync May 25 2004 5:56AM GMT
P800, P900 PC Suite updated
P800, P900 PC Suite updated
12/12/2003 06:50 AMinfoSync Dec 12 2003 6:13AM ET
P900 Bluetooth & Infrared Issues
P900 Bluetooth & Infrared Issues
12/28/2004 09:34 AMAll About Symbian Dec 28 2004 12:33PM GMT
Another Sony Ericsson P900 review
Another Sony Ericsson P900 review
02/10/2004 02:41 AMHoward Chui takes on the P900, Sony Ericsson's successor to their
popular P800 smartphone:Virtually all usability issues users had with
the P800 have been addressed...
Problems with Sony Ericsson's P900?
Problems with Sony Ericsson's P900?
12/02/2003 01:23 AMThe Inquirer is reporting that some problems have arisen with Sony
Ericssons' new P900 smartphone and that they're so bad that cellular
carrier Orange has recalled the first shipments made in the UK. Of
course, they don't specify what those problems might be, only that a
"usually reliable source" had indicated that something was wrong. Read
UPDATE: Sony Ericsson is denying that there is any problem, and The
Inquirer is now admitting that their source could have "confused the
P900 with the SX1" from Siemens, which still isn't out yet. Read...
Sony Ericsson P900 smartphone
Sony Ericsson P900 smartphone
12/03/2003 12:41 AMReg Review
P900 Bluetooth not trouble-free
P900 Bluetooth not trouble-free
01/22/2004 08:45 AMinfoSync Jan 22 2004 10:36AM GMT
Layla, P900 Upgrade: Rumor No More
Layla, P900 Upgrade: Rumor No More
05/04/2004 01:58 PMWe've gotten a hold of the internal documents from Sony Ericsson that
move the P900 upgrade (codename: Layla) from vapor to confirmed. It's
clear from the information that the Layla isn't finalized, and to
expect some changes as the "ergonomics [are] being evaluated." Even
better, the Tri-band phone is tweaked...
AirG Extends Mobile Games Offering in
Australia: AirG Provides New JAVA
Content to Virgin Mobile Australia
AirG Extends Mobile Games Offering in
Australia: AirG Provides New JAVA
Content to Virgin Mobile Australia
04/02/2005 04:53 AMAirG, the most innovative supplier of advanced multiplayer mobile
entertainment solutions has been chosen by Virgin Mobile Australia to
expand its JAVA games content service and manage all provisioning for
future content releases, including testing and quality assurance.
[PRWEB Apr 2, 2005]
RSS Feed Reader for Sony Ericsson P900
RSS Feed Reader for Sony Ericsson P900
01/09/2004 09:54 PMSteve at Burningdoor has beta 3 of his RSS Feed Reader for Sony
Ericsson P900. New in this version: updating feeds automatically at a
specified time period and updated feeds highlighted. There's also talk
of getting the app to run on the Nokia 6600 -- check the discussion
for details....
Sony Ericsson's Maybe Possibly Hopefully
P900 Upgrade
Sony Ericsson's Maybe Possibly Hopefully
P900 Upgrade
05/04/2004 11:07 AMIt doesn't get much more speculative than this post on Mobileburn
about an upgrade for Sony Ericsson's P900 (code-named: Layla), but if
their sources hold, it looks like the upgraded version will include a
new flip-out QWERTY keyboard on the inside (as opposed to just the
outside), as well as...
A how-to guide for iSync and the Sony
Ericsson P900
A how-to guide for iSync and the Sony
Ericsson P900
07/21/2004 09:27 AMFor the last two weeks, I have been unable to sync a P900 phone with
an Apple PowerBook using Apple's iSync application. Yesterday
afternoon, I solved these problems thanks to a fellow Apple user
Brandon Jenkins.
I have reco...
Race Bluetooth car with Sony Ericsson
P900
Race Bluetooth car with Sony Ericsson
P900
12/17/2003 01:08 PMinfoSync Dec 17 2003 11:27AM ET
P800 users petition for P900
functionality.
P800 users petition for P900
functionality.
11/03/2003 09:08 PMInfoSync:
P800
users petition for P900 functionality. I never expected new
features, but it would be nice to have the bugs fixed.
Sailing Clicker Comes To P800/P900
Phones
Sailing Clicker Comes To P800/P900
Phones
01/06/2004 10:45 AMThe company's expanding support for two newer popular phones -- the
Sony Ericsson P800 and P900 models. By Peter Cohen (MacCentral via
MyAppleMenu)
Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service