Thursday, January 25, 2007

T-Mobile’s exclusive Ameo device



Is it a smartphone? Is it a laptop? T-Mobile’s exclusive Ameo device blurs the form factor design lines

T-Mobile has just announced it will launch the Ameo smartphone device in March on its Web’nWalk price plan. Manufactured by HTC, the Ameo looks more like a mini-laptop than a mobile phone, sporting a massive five-inch VGA resolution touchscreen and a detachable QWERTY keyboard.

T-Mobile hasn’t confirmed its feature set, but if the rumours are true the Ameo’s specifications make it one of the most powerful smartphones on the planet. Read them and weep: it’s HSDPA enabled, has built-in Wi-Fi, quad-band capabilities, Bluetooth, a Windows Mobile OS, three-megapixel camera and a VGA front loaded lens for video calling/conference plus an embedded GPS receiver for sat nav shenanigans.

T-Mobile has yet to announce pricing but as ever Mobile Choice will keep you posted.

T-Mobile ranks 1st

T-Mobile USA Continues to Earn Highest Ranking in Wireless Customer Care by J.D. Power and Associates


BELLEVUE, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Confirming its status as the industry leader in customer care, T-Mobile USA, Inc., today announces it has achieved the highest ranking from the J.D. Power and Associates 2007 Wireless Customer Care Performance Study Volume 1. This marks the fifth consecutive period in which T-Mobile has received the highest ranking in the customer care study.

Once again our customers have spoken, ranking T-Mobile highest in customer care performance for the fifth time in a row, said Sue Nokes, senior vice president of Sales and Customer Service, T-Mobile USA. Its a testament to our frontline employees and their dedication to creating the best possible service experience so our customers are the real winners.

The study provides a detailed report card based on consumer experiences on the phone with T-Mobile customer service professionals, in-person at T-Mobile retail stores, and online at www.t-mobile.com. The study notes:

  • In overall customer care performance, T-Mobile ranks highest among all wireless providers, significantly above all its competitors and the industry average.
  • T-Mobiles Automated Response System (voice-prompted assistance) scores highest among all wireless providers.
  • T-Mobile scores higher than the industry average in customers experiencing a hold time of two minutes or less.
  • In direct dealings with Customer Service Representatives, T-Mobile is at or above the industry average in all nine attributes.
  • T-Mobile scores highest among all wireless providers in the Walk-In retail channel of the study.

The 2007 Wireless Customer Care Performance Study Volume 1 is based on responses from nearly 14,000 wireless customers. Interviews were conducted during June and September 2006.

Within the past six months, T-Mobile has received the highest-ranking award in J.D. Power and Associates studies measuring the following:

  • Overall Customer Satisfaction, for the fourth consecutive reporting period
  • Call Quality; West outright and Southeast in a tie
  • Wireless Retail Satisfaction, for the fourth consecutive reporting period

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

T-Mobile with a hard disk


German wireless phone company T-Mobile unveiled Wednesday its first phone equipped with a hard disk, saying the pocket-sized device with a 13-centimetre screen would go on sale just before the Cebit computer show in March.

T-Mobile, a unit of Deutsche Telekom, said the device, known as the Ameo, used Microsoft's operating system Windows Mobile 5.0. T-Mobile would have 12 weeks of exclusive rights in Germany to sell the Ameo, which was manufactured by HTC.

The Ameo is a development from existing PDA (personal digital assistant) computers, but looks like a miniature laptop computer with its detachable 13-centimetre-wide keyboard and upright display.

Backofen said the Ameo's special feature was its 8-gigabyte hard drive. He added that he could not say when the Ameo would be offered by T-Mobile USA or the group's mobile-phone subsidiaries elsewhere in Europe.

Major communications groups are readying a slew of new products in Germany to coincide with Cebit, which takes place March 15-21 in Hanover.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

T-Mobile on a new thechnology.




LONDONDERRY - T-Mobile USA representatives will take a ride with the town's cell tower consultant to see how effective its cell phone coverage is in an alternate site to the one it has proposed. Consultant Ivan Pagacik will travel with T-Mobile to the Parrish Hills area, one of the highest points in Londonderry, to see if the cell phone coverage there is equal to the coverage expected from Kelley Road, the site at which T-Mobile has proposed locating a 170-foot cell tower.T-Mobile is seeking a variance from the Londonderry Zoning Board of Adjustment to build the wireless structure on Kelley Road, an area zoned for agricultural/residential uses. They also want the board to allow the tower to be 235 feet from an abutting property, where the town requires a 340-foot setback; and allow the 170-foot structure when a maximum height of 35 feet is permissible.T-Mobile has a 2.5-mile area near the town municipal center, on Mammoth Road, where it cannot serve its residential customers and the 11,000 vehicles that travel in the area each day.Kelley Road, just off Litchfield Road, is a short distance from Mammoth Road. The monopole tower would stand in a 50-by-50-foot compound surrounded by an 8-foot chain-link fence.The proposal has met strong resistance from Kelley Road residents, who say the tower would adversely affect their property values and the neighborhood aesthetics.Resident Ryder Daniels, 22 Kelley Road, said in an interview after the Jan. 17 Zoning Board meeting, "It's clear that there are alternate sites for the cell tower than a residential neighborhood within 300 feet of people's homes."The public hearings will continue Feb. 21 at Town Hall in the Moose Hill Conference Room.