In today's technology roundup: MS certifies phones, LG Philips develops A4 colour e-paper, MySpace to protect copyright, and MS patent stance hardest on start-ups.
Anyone with a laptop, cellphone and WiFi or 3G card, can set up office at home, says Konica Minolta South Africa's professional services divisional manager, Juneid Docrat.
The company's instant free fax-to-e-mail facility enables faxes to be delivered directly to an e-mail.
Deon van Heerden will head the company's local operations.
Annex Distribution has positioned UMTS technology at the forefront of its mobile and wireless solution offering.
Celtel Congo has partnered with Ceragon Networks to expand its network in the central African country.
The merger is subject to shareholder approval and is expected to be finalised in Q3 of 2007. [Local rep: Tellumat Telecoms]
Research in Motion plans to expand its support for Windows Mobile-based devices, with a new software application suite.
The briefing will focus on how to ensure commercial SMS communication campaigns comply with legislation and regulation in SA.
In this World Wide Wrap: UK councils take CM seriously, Navy records take top honours, and SAP sells ECM - again.
Research in Motion unveiled the first seamless, enterprise-grade implementation of wireless voice and instant messaging convergence.
Gateway Communications has acquired GS Telecom, gaining a bigger footprint in Nigeria.
Most people don't understand what they are committing to when they sign a cellular contract, says Virgin Mobile.