Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Schmidt: "Operators must be adequately remunerated"

"Operators must be adequately remunerated to enable them to provide quality services." Without directly saying that Google pay a penny, the company's CEO, Eric Schmidt, has left the door open to cooperation with telecom operators, making it clear that his priority is wireless and that governments should make sector provision more bandwidth that is "underutilized." In the morning, the chairman of Telefonica, Cesar Alierta, was optimistic about reaching an agreement with major content providers to help finance the investment in networks.

Schmidt has returned to Barcelona to give his last conference as head of Google in the Mobile World Congress. In April she replaced co-founder, Larry Page, and maybe that's why Schmidt has used the auditorium for the show to defend the power of technology as a tool for social, economic and political.

"The last decade has been amazing," he said, while he has denied that the technology is replacing human contact, "rather the opposite because we can do more things. All." In the center of power has put the smart phone. "Last year I said that in two years, sell more smartphones to PCs. I was wrong.

That happened in the last quarter of last year." And largely thanks to the advancement of Android, its open platform for mobile devices. At the start of the conference, a world map and a time bar showing the rate of activation of the phones that work with this operating system, 300,000 daily.

Phones, services, applications, networks and tag Internetconfiguran the new technology ecosystem, according to Schmidt, who added: "Developers think first of the mobile, then the computer, because that's where the action is being developed, for its power of computción and because it is mobile.

Who could imagine that what we did in 1983, the machines now makes these powerful computers? " Schmidt has said that "the advancement of smartphones will give opportunities to thousands of millions of people around the world that until now did not. And this, speaking to a professional audience," is what we should be more proud " .

On each occasion that Schmidt has described the benefits they bring to their small aircraft owners, has also dropped the tagline "excuse" because they know that privacy is the workhorse of the Internet. "Computers are here to make us happy. We help you not be alone, to recognize landmarks in the cities you visit, work, have fun, but whenever you want.

"Speed is another of the issues highlighted by Schmidt, who has taken time to make a nod to the European Union. "I like Europe because it aims to provide broad band of 20 mbps to their homes in 2020. With people that I like work." At Google, Schmidt concluded, "we get you where you want extreme speed."

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