A
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Amateur
radio (ham radio)
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Amateur radio, also known as ham radio, is a hobby enjoyed by several hundred
thousand people in the United States and by over a million people worldwide.
Amateur radio operators call themselves "radio hams" or simply
"hams."
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App-based marketing
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App-based marketing: This is mobile advertising involving mobile
apps.
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Augmented reality (AR)
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Augmented reality (AR) is the integration of digital information
with the user's environment in real time. Unlike virtual reality, which
creates a totally artificial environment, augmented reality uses the existing
environment and overlays new information on top of it.
Boeing researcher Thomas Caudell
coined the term augmented reality in 1990, to describe how the head-mounted
displays that electricians used when assembling complicated wiring harnesses
worked. One of the first commercial applications of AR technology was the
yellow "first down" line that began appearing in televised football
games sometime in 1998. Today, Google glass and heads-up displays in car
windshields are perhaps the most well-known consumer AR products, but the
technology is used in many industries including healthcare, public
safety, gas and oil, tourism and marketing.
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B
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Bar code (or barcode)
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A bar code (often seen as a single word, barcode)
is the small image of lines (bars) and spaces that is affixed to retail store
items, identification cards, and postal mail to identify a particular product
number, person, or location. The code uses a sequence of vertical bars and
spaces to represent numbers and other symbols. A bar code symbol typically
consists of five parts: a quiet zone, a start character, data characters
(including an optional check character), a stop character, and another quiet
zone.
A barcode reader is used to read
the code. The reader uses a laser beam that is sensitive to the reflections
from the line and space thickness and variation. The reader translates the
reflected light into digital data that is transferred to a computer for
immediate action or storage. Bar codes and readers are most often seen in
supermarkets and retail stores, but a large number of different uses have
been found for them.
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Barcode
reader (POS scanner, bar code reader, price scanner)
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A barcode reader, also called a price scanner or
point-of-sale ( POS ) scanner, is a hand-held or stationary input device used
to capture and read information contained in a bar code . A barcode reader
consists of a scanner , a decoder (either built-in or external), and a cable
used to connect the reader with a computer. Because a barcode reader merely
captures and translates the barcode into numbers and/or letters, the data
must be sent to a computer so that a software application can make sense of
the data. Barcode scanners can be connected to a computer through a serial
port , keyboard port , or an interface device called a wedge . A barcode
reader works by directing a beam of light across the bar code and measuring
the amount of light that is reflected back. (The dark bars on a barcode
reflect less light than the white spaces between them.) The scanner converts
the light energy into electrical energy, which is then converted into data by
the decoder and forwarded to a computer.
There are five basic kinds of
barcode readers -- pen wands, slot scanners, Charge-Couple Device ( CCD )
scanners, image scanners, and laser scanners.
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C
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Cellular telephone (mobile telephone)
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Cellular telephone, sometimes called mobile telephone,
is a type of short-wave analog or digital telecommunication in which a
subscriber has a wireless connection from a mobile phone to a relatively
nearby transmitter. The transmitter's span of coverage is called a cell. As
the cellular telephone user moves from one cell or area of coverage to
another, the telephone is effectively passed on to the local cell
transmitter.
The first cellular
telephone for commercial use was approved by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) in 1983. The phone, a Motorola
DynaTAC 8000X, weighed 2 pounds, offered just a half-hour of talk time
for every recharging and sold for $3,995.
DynaTAC,
by the way, was a merged acronym for Dynamic Adaptive Total Area Coverage.
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D
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E
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F
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Facebook
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Facebook is a popular free social networking website
that allows registered users to create profiles, upload photos and video,
send messages and keep in touch with friends, family and colleagues. The
site, which is available in 37 different languages, includes public features
such as:
Marketplace - allows members to
post, read and respond to classified ads.
Groups - allows members who have
common interests to find each other and interact.
Events - allows members to
publicize an event, invite guests and track who plans to attend.
Pages - allows members to create
and promote a public page built around a specific topic.
Presence technology - allows
members to see which contacts are online and chat.
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G
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Geolocation
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Geolocation is the wireless detection of the physical
location of a remote device. As a noun, geolocation refers to the
physical location itself; as a verb, the term refers to the process of
detecting that location.
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Global Positioning System (GPS)
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The GPS (Global Positioning System) is a "constellation" of
approximately 30 well-spaced satellites that orbit the Earth and make it
possible for people with ground receivers to pinpoint their geographic
location. The location accuracy is anywhere from 100 to 10 meters for most
equipment. Accuracy can be pinpointed to within one (1) meter with special
military-approved equipment. GPS equipment is widely used in science and has
now become sufficiently low-cost so that almost anyone can own a GPS
receiver.
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GPS (Global Positioning
System) messaging
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GPS (Global Positioning System) messaging is a wireless messaging system
for location-specific rather than recipient-specific messages. Somewhat like
electronic sticky notes, the messages are sent and received by people with
GPS locators in their wireless devices; messages are linked to the location
of the sender and accessed by any equipped mobile user entering that
location. GPS messaging is sometimes called mid-air messaging, because that's
where the messages seem to be located. Hewlett-Packard has a prototype GPS
messaging system running in its lab in Bristol, England.
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H
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Handheld device
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Hashtag
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A hashtag is a tag used to
categorize posts on Twitter (tweets) according to topics. To add a hashtag to
a tweet, you just preface the relevant term with the hash symbol (#). That
will allow people who follow that topic to find your tweet and perhaps follow
you as well.
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I
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Information Technology (IT)
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Information technology (IT) is the use of any computers,
storage, networking and other physical devices, infrastructure and processes
to create, process, store, secure and exchange all forms of electronic data.
Information technology (IT) is a term that
encompasses all forms of technology used to create, store, exchange and
utilize information in its various forms including business data,
conversations, still images, motion pictures and multimedia presentations .
Information technology (IT) is the technology involving
the development, maintenance, and use of computer systems, software, and
networks for the processing and distribution of data.
Information
Technology (IT) is the use of hardware,
software, services, and supporting infrastructure to manage and deliver
information using voice, data, and video.
To learn more about the
definition of Information Technology (IT) :
http://www.superprofesseur.com/295.html
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In-game mobile marketing
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In-game mobile marketing: In-game mobile marketing refers to mobile
ads that appear within mobile games.In-game ads can appear as banner pop-ups,
full-page image ads or even video ads that appear between loading screens
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J
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K
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L
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Location-based mobile
marketing
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Location-based mobile marketingare ads
that appear on mobile devices based upon a user’s location relative to a
specific area or business. For example, some advertisers may only want their
mobile ads to appear when users are within a 1-mile radius of their business.
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Location-based service (LBS)
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A location-based service (LBS) is a
software application for a IP-capable mobile device that requires knowledge
about where the mobile device is located. Location-based services can be
query-based and provide the end user with useful information such as
"Where is the nearest ATM?" or they can be push-based and deliver
coupons or other marketing information to customers who are in a specific
geographical area.
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M
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Meta tag
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A meta tag is a tag (that is, a
coding statement) in the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) that describes some
aspect of the contents of a Web page. The information that you provide in a meta
tag is used by search engines to index a page so that someone searching for
the kind of information the page contains will be able to find it. The meta
tag is placed near the top of the HTML in a Web page as part of the heading.
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Microblogging
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Microblogging is a web service that allows the subscriber
to broadcast short messages to other subscribers of the service. Microposts
can be made public on a Web site and/or distributed to a private group of
subscribers. Subscribers can read microblog posts online or request that
updates be delivered in real time to their desktop as an instant message or
sent to a mobile device as an SMS text message.
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Mobile marketing
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Mobile marketing encompasses all those activities which
connect advertisers to consumers through mobile devices and networks. Mobile
devices include phones, PDAs, media devices, portable gaming consoles, tablet
computers—and, of course, those devices which function as all of the above.
Some mobile devices may only be open to a few advertising channels (for example,
a basic cell phone can receive text messages); while other devices support
many additional possibilities, including mobile Internet access, video
messaging, and the ability to actively initiate and interact with advertising
(for example, by scanning a QR code).
Mobile marketing consists of ads that appear on mobile
smartphones, tablets, or other mobile devices. Mobile marketing ad formats,
customization, and styles can vary, as many social media platforms, websites,
and mobile apps offer their own unique and tailored mobile ad option
Along with Internet marketing, mobile marketing
is part of the newest groups of marketing activities. Companies have been experimenting with the certain ways to reach
consumers through their phones, especially with the rise of Apple’s iphone.
Some ways to marketing a product or service through a mobile phone include
SMS marketing, in-game marketing, banner marketing on different web pages and
location based marketing.
Mobile marketing is promotional activity designed for delivery
to cell phones, smart phones and other handheld devices, usually as a
component of a multi-channel campaign.
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Mobile search
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Mobile search is the practice of querying a search engine
from an Internet-connected handheld device, such as a smart phone.
The types of information that
users search for on mobile devices is typically different from computer-based
searches. Users are much more likely to be conducting local searches for
information specific to the area they're connecting from. Other mobile searches
are generally seeking quick results, such as sports scores, rather than
extensive content about a given subject.
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Mobile Instant Messaging
(mobile IM)
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Mobile Instant Messaging (Mobile IM) promises to extend desktop
instant messaging to wireless devices. The current generation of mobile IM
technology is not very sophisticated, due mostly to interoperability issues.
But this should change soon. Ericsson, Nokia, Motorola and other companies
are the prime movers behind the Wireless Village group and its parent, the Open
Mobile Alliance, which are working to establish a set of specifications for
interoperability of mobile Instant Messaging services.
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Multimedia Messaging
Service (MMS)
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One of the most recent
developments in wireless messaging is known as multimedia messaging service (MMS). MMS
is an advanced version of SMS that allows users to enhance their messages by
incorporating sound, images, and other rich content, transforming it into a
personalized audio and visual message. With MMS, it
is not only possible to send your multimedia messages from one phone to
another, but also from phone to email, and vice versa. This feature
dramatically increases the possibilities of mobile communication, both for
private and corporate use. Multimedia Messaging Service has already become a
hit in Japan, where J-Phone’s popular sha-mail service claims more than six
million subscribers to its picture messaging service.
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O
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Organic
search results
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Organic search results are
the listings on a search engine results page (SERP)
that appear because of factors such as relevance to the search term and valid
search engine optimization (SEO)
efforts rather than because of search engine marketing (SEM) or trickery.
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P
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Q
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R
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S
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Search engine
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On the Internet, a search engine is a coordinated set of
programs that includes:
A spider (also called a "crawler"
or a "bot") that goes to every page or representative pages on
every Web site that wants to be searchable and reads it, using hypertext
links on each page to discover and read a site's other pages
A program that creates a huge index
(sometimes called a "catalog") from the pages that have been read
A program that receives your
search request, compares it to the entries in the index, and returns results
to you.
An
alternative to using a search engine is to explore a structured directory of
topics. Yahoo, which also lets you use its search engine, is the most
widely-used directory on the Web. A number of Web portal sites offer both the search
engine and directory approaches to finding information.
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Search engine optimization
(SEO)
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Search engine optimization (SEO) is an area of website development
that seeks to improve the way content is ranked by search engines in organic
search results. Various approaches are taken to achieve that goal,
including making sure the website architecture makes it easy for visitors to
find content and that pages are mobile-friendly and load quickly
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Social customer relationship
management (Social CRM)
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Social customer relationship management (Social CRM) is customer relationship
management fostered by communication with customers through social networking
sites, such as Twitter and Facebook.
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Satellite
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In general, a satellite
is anything that orbits something else, as, for example, the moon orbits the
earth. In a communications context, a satellite is a specialized wireless receiver/transmitter
that is launched by a rocket and placed in orbit around the earth. There are
hundreds of satellites currently in operation. They are used for such diverse
purposes as weather forecasting, television broadcast, amateur radio communications, Internet
communications, and the Global Positioning System, (GPS).
The
first artificial satellite, launched by Russia (then known as the Soviet
Union) in the late 1950s, was about the size of a basketball. It did nothing
but transmit a simple Morse code signal over and over. In contrast, modern
satellites can receive and re-transmit thousands of signals simultaneously,
from simple digital data to the most complex television programming.
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Short Message Service (SMS)
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Short Message Service (SMS), commonly referred to as
"text messaging," is a service for sending short messages of up to
160 characters (224 characters if using a 5-bit mode) to mobile devices,
including cellular phones, smartphones and PDAs.
SMS, short for short messaging service, is the dominant form of wireless
messaging. SMS messaging is available on most 2G networks and all 3G
networks. With SMS, subscribers can send short text messages (usually no more
than 160 characters) that are immediately delivered to and from wireless
handsets. SMS messaging is particularly popular in Europe and Asia.
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Smartphone
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A smartphone is a cellular telephone with an integrated
computer and other features not originally associated with telephones, such
as an operating system, Web browsing and the ability to run software
applications.
The first smartphone was IBM's
Simon, which was presented as a concept device (rather than a consumer
device) at the 1992 COMDEX computer industry trade show.
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Social Media Marketing
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Social media marketing refers to the process of gaining traffic or
attention through social media sites.
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Social networking
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Social networking is the practice of expanding the number of
one's business and/or social contacts by making connections through
individuals.
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T
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Texting (text messaging
or wireless messaging)
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Texting (sometimes called
"text messaging" or "wireless messaging")is sending short
text messages between cell phones, pagers
or other handheld devices. Messages are sent through SMS (short message service). Users can
also send text messages from a computer to a handheld device. Web texting, as it's called, is made
possible by Web sites called SMS
gateways.
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Tweet
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A tweet is a post on Twitter. The
act of writing a tweet is called tweeting
or twittering. Tweets can be
up to 140 characters long, including spaces, and can include URLs and
hashtags.The 140-character limit comes from the 160-character limit required
by the short message service (SMS). (Twitter reserved the other 20 characters
for usernames.)
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Twitter
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Twitter is a free social networking microblogging
service that allows registered members to broadcast short posts called tweets. Twitter
members can broadcast tweets and follow other users' tweets by using multiple
platforms and devices. Tweets and replies to tweets can be sent by cell phone
text message, desktop client or by posting at the Twitter.com website.
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2D
barcode (two-dimensional barcode)
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A 2D (two-dimensional) barcode is a graphical image that stores
information both horizontally -- as one-dimensional bar codes do -- and
vertically. As a result of that construction, 2D codes can store up to 7,089
characters, significantly greater storage than is possible with the
20-character capacity of a unidimensional barcode.
2D barcodes are also known as
quick response codes because they enable fast data access. 2D barcodes are
often used in conjunction with smart phones. The user simply photographs a 2D
barcode with the camera on a phone equipped with a barcode reader. The reader
interprets the encoded URL, which directs the browser to the relevant
information on a Web site. This capability has made 2D barcodes useful for
mobile marketing. Some 2D barcode systems also deliver information in a
message for users without Web access.
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U
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V
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W
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Wireless
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Wireless is a term used to
describe telecommunications in which electromagnetic waves (rather than some
form of wire) carry the signal over part or all of the communication path.
Some monitoring devices, such as intrusion alarms, employ acoustic waves at
frequencies above the range of human hearing; these are also sometimes
classified as wireless.
The
first wireless transmitters went on the air in the early 20th century using
radiotelegraphy (Morse code). Later, as modulation made
it possible to transmit voices and music via wireless, the medium came to be
called "radio." With the advent of television, fax, data
communication, and the effective use of a larger portion of the spectrum, the
term "wireless" has been resurrected.
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Wireless email
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Wireless email is the ability to send and receive email
over wireless devices. As 2.5G and 3G networks give users “always on” access
to their email (similar to Blackberry devices today), we expect wireless
email to become increasingly popular.
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Wireless Messaging
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Wireless messaging is the transmission of text or data from one
device to another, via a wireless network.
There are four main forms of wireless
messaging : Short
Messaging Service (SMS), Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS), Mobile Instant
Messaging (mobile IM) and Wireless email.
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X
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Y
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Z
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