Word: uplinked
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...spokesman for AT&T said the company disagreed with those characterizations). Before the reviews emerged, AT&T tried to play down the speed issue and play up the new experience provided by Apple's so-far well-received iPhone software. "It's not just the speed of the uplink," says Carlton Hill, an AT&T Vice-President. "It's about the processor speed on a device and the application design that enhance the customer experience. There are a lot of ways to have an optimized data experience." And the iPhone's web capacities are said to improve dramatically when...
...that night was to make sure we got to New Hampshire after delivering the speech,” he says. “I was making sure the satellite uplink was ready. I was talking to our scheduling director facilitating the movement that night on the plane. All those little details had to be done...
...competitors. "The attack by our fellow Indian media groups has been triggered by our success," says Khanna. "The channel is home to some of India's most experienced and respected journalists." Indian regulators have sent Star a list of 37 questions about that domestic arrangement. Star News' license to uplink from India is now being renewed one week at a time...
...polemical, deep or even outrageously funny. It's just comfy, lively chat, the kind you'd expect from sisters whose lives are quite different--a single career woman, a divorce, a wife who has followed her husband to Thailand and dials into the conversation via a satellite uplink (hence the name)--and yet who share an effortless, chip-proof familiarity. Perhaps because there are so many women, and quite a few men, who can identify with at least one of them, Satellite Sisters has become a surprise hit, currently airing in 70 markets, up from...
...Currently the only outfits affected by the plan are fancy hotels and compounds where foreigners live, but media executives assume that Beijing will try to funnel all satellite television through its company. Foreign TV types are already grumbling about the monopoly's proposed uplink charges. "The fees are prohibitive," says one foreign broadcast executive in China. "But if the market was going to grow in some exponential fashion through this, people would be willing to listen to anything." An executive from a rival company has similar thoughts. He declares that he won't change editorial content to please China...