Events
WIMA 2011 -WIMA 5th Global NFC Applications Products & Services Congress
WIMA 5th Global NFC Applications Products & Services Congress will take place from 19 to 21 April 2011 at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.
19-21 APRIL 2011 – Grimaldi Forum – Monaco
WIMA is the largest international Conference & Exhibition exclusively dedicated to NFC technology, bringing together industry leaders, start-up companies, application developers, service providers, standards organisations, government bodies and research & educational institutions to its annual event in Monaco.
Featuring an exhibition and demonstration floor packed with the largest, most innovative NFC applications, products and services, parallel Business & Technical conference tracks and hands on workshops where excellent networking is guaranteed.
Why Attend?
WIMA is the largest international Conference & Exhibition exclusively dedicated to NFC technology, bringing together industry leaders, start-up companies, application developers, service providers, standards organisations, government bodies and research & educational institutions to its annual event in Monaco.
Featuring an exhibition and demonstration floor packed with the latest, most innovative NFC applications, products and services, parallel Business & Technical conference tracks, and hands on workshops where excellent networking is guaranteed.

Northern Europe: Danemark, Finland, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Eastern Europe: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Western Europe: Austria, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Southern Europe: Italy, Greece, Portugual, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain, Rest of the World: Iran, Israel, Marocco, Russia, South Africa, Turkey
WIMA delegates are represented by a 50 / 50 NFC Forum, non NFC Forum attendance guaranteeing optimal networking for both members and non-members incorporating both established players and newcomers interested in discovering the business opportunities for a bouquet of services using NFC.

Who will attend?
- Large Enterprises
- SME’s
- Start-Up’s
- Industry Associations / Standards Organisations
- Government Bodies
- Research & Educational Institutions
- Analysts
- Media
Industry Sectors
- Solution Developers: Payment –Ticketing – Loyalty – Access Control – Healthcare – Multimedia – Internet – Multiple Applications
- Product Manufacturers: Mobile Handsets – Consumer Electronics – Smart Card / RFID manufacturer -Terminals and other devices
- Component Manufacturers: Semiconductors- Protocol Stacks / Middleware – Operating Systems
- Service Providers: Mobile Operator – Transport Operator – Banking/Financial Services – Retailer – TSM –Tourism – Security
- Test / Measurement / Qualification: Test Equipment Vendor – Test Lab
- System Integrators
- R&D
- Automotive
- Consultant

WIMA 2010 : Distribution / General Activity Sectors
Key Figures of WIMA 2010:
- more than 500 registered participants (from 37 countries)
- 50 sponsors and exhibitors
- 70 international industry speakers
- over 50 journalists covering the event
Why Monaco?
NFC technology was first introduced to the Principality of Monaco during WIMA 2007. Since then, several NFC projects have been carried out by WIMA with the collaboration of our partners.
The ‘NFC Parcours Princesse Grace Monaco’ an NFC application for tourism was launched during WIMA 2008, in the presence of H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco. A second application featuring audio, video and textual information using NFC was presented during the NFC Forum members meeting in December 2008 at the “Nouveau Musée National de Monaco”.
During WIMA 2009 a third project allowed a vehicle user to access and exit the Grimaldi Forum car park by holding a Nokia 6212 NFC device close to a Thales parking terminal to open the barrier of the parking.
With the continued support of our partners, WIMA confirms its position and commitment to furthering the outreach of NFC technology within the Principality of Monaco.
Monaco offers international visibility in an attractive and prestigious environment with a state of the art conference centre (the Grimaldi Forum), excellent international airport access (Nice Cote d’Azur), negotiated hotel rates (ranging from approx. 60 euros to 185 euros per room per night) and is easily accessible by road and rail
More details at www.wima-nfc.com
Cloud Mobility Conference and Exhibition in Amsterdam, September 14 and 15, 2010
Informa Telecoms and Media is proud to announce a brand new, industry changing event for September 2010, and the firstconference of its kind dedicated purely to the Mobile Cloud
Use of the mobile cloud is set to increase from 42.8 million consumers in 2008 to almost a billion by 2014, jumping from 1.1%to 19% of all mobile phone subscribers*. The emergence of the mobile cloud has huge ramifications for the entire mobile ecosystem, changing the way that developers build apps and how OEMs, ISPs and Operators define app selection and distribution.
The scale of growth of the mobile cloud will force competitors to not only open dialogue but also work together, once again changing the nature of the fluid communications industry.
Our brand new launch event, Cloud Mobility will provide you with the forum in which to learn from and meet with the early pioneers of this new era. Through a series of interactive discussions, break-out, in-depth workshops, best practice tutorials and fantastic networking opportunities, Cloud Mobility will help you determine how to effectively monetise new revenue streams and best educate your consumer with respect to these enormous changes.
- How can you best get your business ready for a move into the Mobile Cloud?
- How is the Mobile Cloud set to change the industry?
- What are the costs of moving into the Mobile Cloud and what sort of revenue can you expect?
- How can you best educate your customers about the Mobile Cloud?
- What devices will be the most suitable for the Mobile Cloud?
- In what why must developers change to create for the Mobile Cloud?
- Will the Mobile Cloud help solve interoperability?
- What must you do from a legal perspective before moving to the Mobile Cloud?
- What should you take into the Mobile Cloud and what should be left behind?
Google Unveils Web TV Project
In a joint effort to bring Web and channel surfing together, Google Inc, Intel Corp, Logitech International and Sony Corp unveiled new plans for a “smart” TV on Thursday.
Google wants to turn televisions into giant monitors to allow people sitting in their living rooms watching their favorite show to be able to click a button and surf the Web. The plan hopes to make more money selling ads.
Although the company began selling ads for television programs three years ago, revenue has paled in comparison to what it rakes in with computer run ads — $24 billion last year, mostly from Internet ads.

The TVs are expected to go on sale beginning in the fall in Best Buy stores. The televisions will only be available in the US this year, and will gradually expand into other countries. Pricing won’t be announced until later in the year.
The attempt to bring Internet into living rooms has frustrated nearly every major company in the technologies industry for years. If Google and its partners can market the idea of the new “Google TV” correctly, it will make for huge successes into the $70 billion TV advertising market.
“I think this is going to be the biggest improvement to television since color,” Intel CEO Paul Otellini told The Associated Press.
Google’s main focus was to integrate an Internet-style search box into sets which could then look for video and other info on television as well as the Web. Sony will build devices to launch this fall while Intel will provide its small Atom processors to run the devices.
During a demonstration of the new technology at a Google conference for 5,000 software programmers, things didn’t go quite as Google had planned.
So many people in the audience were using the conference’s wireless access network that Google had repeated issues trying to show off how its technology supposedly toggles seamlessly between the Web and television. Google finally pleaded with attendees to disconnect their smartphones from the network during the showing.
Once it had enough bandwidth, Google was able to conduct a series of Internet searches in a drop-down box that appears at the top of TV programs. The search results showed content related to the TV program being watched.
For example, a person watching a telecast of a sporting event can shrink the program into a small “picture-in-picture” box while looking up statistics or other material about the current game on TV. Viewers can also make search requests by speaking into a remote that runs on Google’s Android operating system.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt described the potential of the Internet TV as mind-boggling, although he acknowledged it might be difficult for some consumers to understand at first. That’s one reason he said Google decided to team up with Best Buy, which offers a “Geek Squad” to deal with complex technology.
“You have to actually see (the Internet TV) to get excited about it,” Schmidt said at the news conference.
Other companies have had little success trying to turn televisions into Internet portals over the past ten years. But Google and its partners believe they have developed a system that will make Internet TV more simplified and very appealing.
Consumers who have already spent hundreds and thousands of dollars on flat-panel TVs will be able to purchase a set-top box made by Logitech or a Blu-ray player from Sony that will plug into the TV to send and receive data. Both devices will contain the same software and microprocessor as the new TV sets.
Sony will make the TV sets that will stand out from other flat-panel sets on the market, as it will be the first to use microprocessors from Intel. The Atom chip will be the brains of the operation. Google will provide the software, including Android and the Chrome Web browser. Logitech is also supplying a special remote control and wireless keyboard.
Best Buy will have exclusive rights to sell the devices and DISH Network TV will integrate its service into Google TV.
Based on the track record of past attempts to bring Internet to television, the new effort is hardly a sure thing. Although executives said previous attempts failed because they dumbed down the Web for television, were closed to participation by others, and made people choose between using the Web or television.
“It’s much harder to marry a 50-year-old technology and a brand new technology than those of us in the brand new technology industry thought,” Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt acknowledged to the audience of developers.

