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Monday, July 11, 2011

Dead phone boxes are now ready for saving lives

Mark Bridge writes:

BT telephone boxThe public telephone box is disappearing as mobile phone coverage improves. In 2002, there were 92,000 BT phone boxes in the UK. Today, there are a total of 51,500 payphones… including 11,000 traditional red boxes. In order to preserve the appearance of rural life - if not the landline connection - BT has been asking parish councils across the UK if they’d like to adopt their local kiosk. Just £1 lets a community keep its red BT phone box (with the fixed-line payphone taken out)… and 1,500 have been adopted so far.

One of the latest innovations for these disused kiosks involves fitting them with defibrillator equipment, thanks to BT’s partnership with the Community Heartbeat Trust. BT is paying for the machines to be fitted in five kiosks across the country. Defibrillation equipment is fitted inside the kiosk in a secure vandal-resistant steel cabinet; the combination lock for the cabinet is available from the emergency services by calling 999.

Using the defibrillator machine requires no training because it provides step-by-step spoken instructions. It even analyses the casualty to determine if they are suffering from cardiac arrest. When necessary, it can deliver a powerful electric shock to restore a normal heartbeat to the sufferer.

Martin Fagan, national secretary of the Community Heartbeat Trust, said “We are immensely grateful to BT for their help in this novel use of a familiar icon, phone boxes are ideal locations for emergency medical equipment because they’re often in the centre of a village. With something as serious as a cardiac arrest, time is of the essence, and unfortunately the emergency services can’t always reach country villages in the recommended five minutes. We hope that many more people will adopt their kiosk and enlist our help to save lives in rural communities.”

Currently 100,000 calls are made each day from public payphones, although the number of calls made from payphones is falling by 25% annually. Almost two-thirds (64%) of UK phone boxes are unprofitable.

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Opinion Articles

Heroes of Emerging Markets: the podcast

Heroes of Emerging Markets is an interactive, intimate panel discussion that looks at the opportunities of doing mobile business in emerging markets.  The event took place on 28th February 2012 during Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

We’ve recorded the entire event and have turned it into a podcast. You can listen on our desktop web site here, by downloading the MP3 audio file or by finding TheFonecast.com on iTunes.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 12th March 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

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Author: The Fonecast
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Hacking a smartphone by using differential power analysis

Mark Bridge writes:

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Last week at The Fonecast: 5th March 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

Mobile World Congress is over for another year. Also gone is the mobile industry’s sudden obsession with public transport and student protests in Barcelona. But away from the local news, what’s been going on?

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Windows 8 – 2012’s Biggest Mobile Milestone

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