RoW International Short Takes

Camera phones penetration will double by year-end
The number of consumers that will own camera-enabled cell phones will more than double by the end of 2003 to 55 million from the 25 million units sold last year, according to a new report from the ARC Group. The U.K.-based research firm notes that there will also be an increasing number of replacement buyers, a change from a few years ago when there was significant uptake from first-time cell phone buyers. Future Mobile Handsets 2003-2008 reports that by 2005 130 million handsets with camera functionality will be shipped globally. Additionally, with more 3G rollouts during that time frame, camera phone shipments will jump to 210 million by 2008. The report also states that handset sales will increase this year to 444 million and will reach 689 million by 2008.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

RoW People

International Datacasting Corp. (IDC) executives Ron Clifton, president and CEO, and CFO Marc Santerre have agreed to sit on Storm Internet Services' strategic advisory board. IDC recently finalized the sale of Storm to 4177347 Canada Inc. See news brief in this issue for more information on the sale.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

RoW Short Takes

Capital Hill Group sues LinCsat Communications
The Capital Hill Group Ottawa Inc. is suing LinCsat Communications Inc. for not paying nearly $31,199.40 in services. Additionally, the Ottawa-based lobby firm is seeking interest on the unpaid amount of 24% per year. The Capital Hill Group filed a statement of claim on August 19 in Ontario Superior Court of Justice claiming that LinCsat has refused to pay for services rendered from February 8, 2002 until January 15, 2003.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Studentphonestore.com helping wireless carriers boost penetration among students

A two-year-old company is helping three of Canada's national wireless operators boost penetration levels in the university student demographic by offering the student community sweetheart airtime packages and cell phone prices. Toronto-based Studentphonestore.com has already secured agreements with Bell Mobility, Rogers Wireless Inc. and Microcell Telecommunications Inc. and is currently in discussions with Telus Mobility.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Rogers to boost SMS office staff as carrier scrambles to meet demand

Rogers Wireless Inc. says it will bolster its back-end office staff to deal with mounting demand for short messaging service (SMS)-based marketing campaigns. As the number of SMS users increases by nearly 25% each quarter, Rogers VP John Boynton told a recent conference on mobile marketing that the company is struggling to keep potential customers on top of growth in the industry, and to meet demand for co-branded campaigns between the carrier and other companies.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Canada’s MDS operators seeking flexibility in delivering cable television services

The country's major wireless cable operators are seeking greater regulatory flexibility from the CRTC in the way they use spectrum holdings to deliver television signals to subscribers. Craig Wireless International Inc., Image Wireless Communications Inc. and Look Communications Inc. are each asking the commission for changes to their licences as part of their licence renewal applications.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Industry, Heritage announce Radiocomm Act overhaul to protect DTH players

The departments of Industry Canada and Canadian Heritage will soon introduce amendments to the Radiocommunication Act guaranteeing better protection for the Canadian direct-to-home (DTH) satellite TV industry against the illegal satellite grey and black market. The decision to make changes to the Act follows a Supreme Court of Canada ruling last year stating only authorized Canadian companies could decode satellite signals regardless of the signals' origins.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Sprint Canada proceeds with soft launch of new wireline-wireless bundles

Sprint Canada Inc. will officially unveil details of two new wireline-wireless bundles for the local residential market on September 10, an initiative it announced in conjunction with Microcell Telecommunications Inc. earlier this year (RoW, July 9/03). The Toronto-based competitive local telephone and long-distance service provider quietly announced initial pricing of the offers in an August 30 news release discussing the results of a survey of telephone and cell phone habits and etiquette (RoW Update, Sept. 2/03).

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Hotspot operators to discuss roaming agreements at meeting this week

Canada's three largest independent hotspot operators will be meeting in Toronto today (September 9) to discuss the development of roaming agreements, Report on Wireless has learned. Fatport Corp., Spotnik Mobile Inc. and BOLDstreet Wireless Internet were recently shunned from any participation in the mobile wireless carriers' decision to develop roaming and interconnection standards between their wide area wireless networks (RoW, Aug. 26/03).

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

NL Update

Supreme Court refuses to hear Ledcor case
The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected a leave to appeal the case of City of Calgary, et al. v. AT&T Canada Corp., et al., better known as the Ledcor case. This brings to an end a process that began more than two years ago (NL, Jan. 29/01). The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is urging Parliament to get involved. Cities and telcos now understand the rules for negotiating payment for local rights-of-way.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required