Orange brings NFC mobile services to this year’s French Open tennis tournament

The creeping ubiquity of Near Field Communication (NFC) comes a little closer today with its deployment at this fortnight’s French Open tennis tournament at Roland-Garros.

Mobile operator Orange will be demonstrating NFC technology on its stand in the Allée Suzanne Lenglen and at other sites within the stadium. Mobile users will be able to pay for shopping, to store their loyalty cards and even to use public transport.

Visitors to the tournament will also be able to test the payment system at the restaurant Les Jardins de Roland-Garros as well as download the Orange Roland-Garros application.

All of which will be tested next Thursday by your correspondent when he attends the semi-finals of the tournament… as a guest of Orange.

I’ll do my best to be as non-partisan as I can but, as I’m sure you all know, there’s no such thing as a free invitation to a marque tennis tournament.

Orange brings NFC mobile services to this year's French Open tennis tournament

The creeping ubiquity of Near Field Communication (NFC) comes a little closer today with its deployment at this fortnight’s French Open tennis tournament at Roland-Garros.

Mobile operator Orange will be demonstrating NFC technology on its stand in the Allée Suzanne Lenglen and at other sites within the stadium. Mobile users will be able to pay for shopping, to store their loyalty cards and even to use public transport.

Visitors to the tournament will also be able to test the payment system at the restaurant Les Jardins de Roland-Garros as well as download the Orange Roland-Garros application.

All of which will be tested next Thursday by your correspondent when he attends the semi-finals of the tournament… as a guest of Orange.

I’ll do my best to be as non-partisan as I can but, as I’m sure you all know, there’s no such thing as a free invitation to a marque tennis tournament.

Ethiopia is the best country in the world… and a new $100 million fund agrees

In Ethiopia they say that the grandparents speak Italian, the parents speak Russian and the kids speak English, based on the world ‘powers’ that have influenced this country for three generations.

Earlier this week on Wednesday saw the 76th anniversary of the country’s annexation by Mussolini’s Italy… on the same day that the World Economic Forum on Africa opened in the country’s capital, Addis Ababa. It seems a propitious week to explore how things have changed for Africa’s second-most populous country. Continue reading

The Orange EUFA EURO 2012 app spells the end of the football tournament wall chart

Orange and UEFA have launched the only Official UEFA mobile app for this summer’s Euros across eight platforms and in 11 languages.

The app is free and includes geolocation and augmented reality features. Fans will also be able to share content from the app on Facebook and Twitter as well as view premium video hightlights.

Morevoer, for those lucky enough to attend the tournament, visitors to Poland and Ukraine can use the app for information about the cities they’re visiting, information about the stadiums and all-important travel information.

This is all very well, and I can report that the app can do just about anything, but somewhere deep inside me something stirs.

Yes, it’s the memory of the scruffy print wall chart Sellotaped to the fridge looks as it has been consigned to the past, rather like England’s 1966 World Cup tournament.

Tempus fugit, tempus fugit

Spending too much time in front of a screen?… go to a Cat Cafe in Tokyo

It’s February, the weather is sh*t, the media bombards us with stories about certain days being the most depressing of the year and mobiles, laptops, iPads, cinemas and TVs drag us into their screens of otherworldliness.

The evenings are long, there are no spontaneous outdoor activities and if it wasn’t for sex we’d all go bonkers. At some stage we crack, leave our devices at home and head for the hills for a good walk or fly to a beach to wean us from these awful habits that ruin our eyes and bathe us in blue screen. Continue reading