AirIQ appoints interim CFO

Telematics and location-based services company AirIQ Inc. has named Donald Gibbs interim CFO, effectively June 13. He also been nominated for a seat on the board of directors for which an election will be held at the company’s AGM on June 25. Throughout his career Gibbs has served as CEO and CFO for a number of technology-related companies.

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Epic Data names VP of sales

Epic Data International Inc. has appointed Alex Sventitsky VP of sales. The announcement was made last week. Sventitsky brings more than 25 years of manufacturing solution sales and business development experience to Epic Data. He will be responsible for day-to-day operations of the company’s sales organization with his good understanding of the manufacturing industry, in particular aerospace, defense and heavy equipment – the company’s primary target markets.
Prior to joining Epic Data, Sventitsky held the position of director of global strategic sales at Invensys Wonderware, a provider of industrial automation software solutions. While at Invensys Wonderware, his team grew revenue by more than 40% percent as well as improved customer satisfaction metrics with a number of the company’s largest customers, including Daimler-Benz, Porsche, Phillips, Nestle, Chevron, Mars, General Mills and many others.

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COM DEV launches new satellite development initiative

COM DEV International Ltd. has unveiled plans to develop a micro-satellite platform – an initiative that represents a strategic expansion beyond the company’s traditional role as an equipment, instrumentation and subsystem supplier, designed to take advantage of a trend towards smaller, more responsive satellites. The Cambridge On-based company will fund the program through a contribution of $7 million.

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Bridgewater integrates products with Mformation

Bridgewater Systems Inc. and Mformation Technologies have reached an agreement whereby the two companies will combine each other’s respective technologies. The integration of Bridgewater’s service control and subscriber management system with Mformation’s service manager will allow operators to detect, provision and manage WiMAX devices over the air.

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Technical problems in US spell further delays for digital radio in Canada

An application filed with the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) last week has given broadcasters on this side of the border another reason to take a go-slow approach to hybrid digital (HD) radio. On June 10, 18 radio broadcasters and major vendors asked the FCC to allow digital FM stations to boost their transmitting power 10-fold to overcome technical limitations with technology – namely, interference with existing FM analog stations, problems penetrating inside buildings and reaching fringe coverage areas. The power boost will solve the problem for some broadcasters, but could cause interference problems for some existing analog services.
There are also significant financial considerations. HD radio broadcasters have already invested millions of dollars in digital radio equipment, and a 10-fold power increase would require new capital upgrades.
The news is expected to further delay experimentation and eventual rollout in Canada of HD radio (also called FM-IBOC), according to Wayne Stacey, a leading expert on digital advisor and broadcast industry advisor.
"Everything is now in limbo in the US, so you can imagine no one is any hurry to move quickly on this in Canada," says Stacey, chair of the government/industry advisory group, the Digital Radio Co-ordinating Group.
It’s also doubtful the FCC will decide on the application before summer 2009, particularly if the Republicans lose the White House this November. That would trigger appointments of a new chair and new commissioners at the regulatory body and an updated work plan for 2009.
"The bottom line is that (FM-IBOC) got launched in the US perhaps before it was ready for prime time and now the chickens are coming home to roost and nobody’s quite sure what’s going to happen," he adds. "So you can imagine that Canadian broadcasters are thinking they’ve dodged a bullet here."
There are currently more than 1,700 HD radio stations broadcasting in the US, including some along the US-Canada border. HD radio isn’t currently available in Canada, although Industry Canada announced in October that it would begin accepting applications from FM licensees for experimental transmissions. Eight months later, not a single broadcaster has applied.
"I expect Canadian broadcasters are waiting to see what happens in the US," suggests Stacey. "That probably explains why there has not been any stampede in response to the department’s indication that they would accept experimental proposals."
Industry Canada’s Broadcast Technical Advisory Committee met June 16 in Ottawa to provide industry stakeholders with an update on several broadcasting files, including HD radio. Vassilios Mimis, director of the department’s Broadcast, Multimedia Planning and Technical Policy branch, says there is interest from "a couple of broadcasters" in experimental licences and expects to receive the first applications this year. In the meantime, the branch is working with the broadcasting industry on the technical and administrative procedures governing experimental licences. The final procedures will come later.
"We would like to get some experience from the experimental operations before we rush into final type of technical requirements," says Mimis.
One requirement is that transmissions operate on a "non-interference, no protection" basis. "If an IBOC transmission starts causing interference with existing radio stations then they we will ask them to fix the problem – either the reduce the power and if that doesn’t fix the problem we will ask them to turn the transmitter off," explains Mimis.

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Auction Day 17: No end to auction in sight

It’s time for a new prediction. Despite suggestions from some commentators that Industry Canada’s Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) spectrum auction could end this week, bidding looks ready to continue well into next week – if not longer.

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Barnes to leave CWTA

Peter Barnes, president and CEO of the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (CWTA), will leave the wireless industry association at the end of this month to join Tactix Government Consulting as principal. 

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Brian Adeba joins Tech Media Reports as CCR/CNM editor

Brian Adeba has joined Tech Media Reports as editor of Canadian Communications Reports and Canadian New Media. Most recently, Adeba was a staff writer and columnist with Embassy Newsweekly, an Ottawa-based newspaper that covers international relations from a distinctly Canadian perspective.

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Advocates call for more discussions on proposed copyright bill

A week after Industry Minister Jim Prentice tabled copyright legislation to combat online piracy, calls have emerged for more discussion on the proposed bill to ensure balance for the rights of consumers  and content providers.

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Use spectrum windfall to subsidize broadband for low income families: Goldberg

With revenue poised to hit a record $4 billion from Canada’s AWS spectrum auction, more than twice as much as many had projected, the federal government should consider using part of this unexpected windfall to expand broadband Internet access through a tax subsidy to low income Canadians, the organizer of Canada’s biggest telecom conference announced yesterday.

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