In today's technology roundup: Robot coach helps errant dieters, online anonymity fuelled Estonia attacks, Google diplomatic on Net neutrality, and Nokia releases first open source phone.
Version 3.1 of Unified Communicator Advanced will allow single-portal access to collaboration tools.
The series features an nVidia graphics processor unit and an Intel GPU. [Local rep: Rectron]
Mimecast provides uninterrupted e-mail access to BlackBerry smartphones in the event of network failures.
Cirrus will deliver FireID's mobile two-factor authentication solutions to UK enterprises.
Africa's largest cellular company grows its subscriber numbers, despite the SIM card registration law.
The handset has many multimedia features and an intuitive TouchWiz 2.0 Plus user interface.
Some of the largest operators in the space believe the least-cost model is dead.
Speculation again surfaces that Cell C could be a takeover target, but Bharti Airtel's rumoured interest is dismissed.
A centuries-old urban legend, apparently calling on blacks to kill whites, moves onto the SMS platform.
The company confirms it is in talks with Orascom to grab a stake in the business.
In this World Wide Wrap: Skype blasts telcos over net freedom, Tesco loses VOIP numbers, and Alteva and Microsoft partner.
In this World Wide Wrap: Israel lifts iPad ban, chip shortage threatens laptop roll-outs, and notebooks drive PC sales.