A new report from the Pew Research Center found mobile Internet use to be on the rise. Among those surveyed, Africans Americans reported accessing the Internet with a mobile device at twice the national average.
– Mobile Internet use has “increased sharply,” according to a report from the Pew Research Centers Internet amp; American Life Project, based on data from an April 2009 survey. The survey additionally found that the growth rate at which African Americans are accessing the mobile Internet is twice the…
Posts Tagged ‘mobile’
African Americans Lead New Wave of Mobile Internet Users, Report Finds
Multiple Search Layers Come to Google Maps, Google Maps for Mobile
Google Maps adds a Web services option that will let users do multiple searches in a destination search. Users can plot gas station and restaurant locales along the way to a tourist site. Google Maps for mobile 3.2 meanwhile adds greater contextual layers, including Wikipedia, and traffic incidents to make mapping easier for mobile and wireless device users.
–
Google July 22 spruced up its Google Maps technologies, adding the ability to see
multiple searches in its core technology and multiple layers of information in
Google Maps for Mobile 3.2.
Multiple searches is an important feature because it enriches the search
functionality in Goo…
T-Mobile Adds Three Samsung Texting Mobile Phones to Lineup
With the Samsung Comeback, Gravity 2 and t349 texting- and messaging-focused phones, T-Mobile has expanded its summer lineup.
– T-Mobile has added three Samsung texting- and messaging-focused phones to its summer stash, the Comeback, the Gravity 2 and the t349.
The Comeback might be called an unconventional clamshell style, flipping open horizontally, instead of vertically, to offer a full qwerty keyboard.
On the outs…
Riverbed Virtualizes Steelhead Mobile Capabilities
Riverbed is rolling out Steelhead Mobile Controller-Virtual Edition, a software-based version of its WAN optimization appliance that makes it easier for SMBs to adopt the capability. It also helps larger enterprises that may have a small number of mobile workers. The pricing for the software also makes it more attractive to SMBs. Riverbed also is doubling the capacity of its Steelhead Mobile hardware appliance and offering Lotus Notes acceleration for mobile users on its Steelhead appliance.
– Riverbed Technology is looking to make enterprise-grade mobile WAN
optimization capabilities available to SMBs through the use of
virtualization and more attractive pricing.
Riverbed officials on July 20 are rolling out the virtualized version of its Steelhead Mobile appliance.
The software, cal…
Google: Desktop Ads Are Powering Mobile Search on iPhones, Android Smartphones
Google CEO Eric Schmidt claims online ads created for the desktop are powering mobile search ads and click-throughs. However, Google does not see mobile search eating up desktop ad share in the future. Also, YouTube is approaching profitability for the search engine. How? Pre-roll and home page branded ads.
– Lost in all the hullabaloo over YouTubes approach to profitability
following Googles second-quarter earnings call last week was that desktop ads
that Google tailored to the mobile search performance do better than ads
created specifically for mobile devices.
Thats what Google CEO Eric Schmidt to…
Symbian to develop mobile apps

Symbian, the operating system on nearly half the world’s smartphones, is to become involved in the development of mobile applications, or apps.
Symbian will be a one-stop location for app developers, standardising and testing software and then making it available to existing app storefronts.
Called Horizon, the approach follows the lead set by other operating system makers such as Microsoft and Apple.
The not-for-profit Symbian Foundation will launch the service in October.
The announcement of Horizon follows Apple’s statement on Tuesday that its App Store has seen 1.5 billion app downloads in a year, showing that a significant market exists for a centralised source of application software.
Handset manufacturers, mobile network operators and independent sites have opened their own application stores, but Horizon will aim to provide a centralised, smooth route to market to solidify Symbian’s place in an increasingly crowded operating system market.
Content catalogue
"We have a thriving application developer community right now, with a number of ways to develop them and we have a number of our partners producing stores to get those applications to consumers," said Shaun Puckrin, who heads the Horizon project.
"What this programme is doing is making the combination of developing your application and getting it into the store as easy and with as little hassle as possible," he told BBC News.
"And it’s a service to the stores, which is to say: ‘Hey, we’ve got this great catalogue of content that you should have in your store.’"

The centralisation of application development and distribution could present credible competition to Apple’s iPhone Dev Center and App Store, which until now has set the bar for application variety and sales.
The Symbian Foundation now hopes to raise the profile of the Symbian platform, making its capacity for applications as widely known as that of its competitors.
"What the iPhone has done is woken up the consumer to this kind of content and the ability for applications on phones," said Mr Puckrin. "We’ve always had a lot of innovation and great applications and services on Symbian; all we’re doing is providing an easier channel to get them to a keen consumer base."
New economy
John Delaney, a research director for analysts IDC, sees the move as part of a natural progression the technology community has seen before.
"Handsets are starting to turn into general purpose devices rather than special purpose devices," he told BBC News.
"In many ways it’s analogous to what happened to the PC industry. The hardware has become increasingly generic and the value of the device is in the software. The reverse has been true for most of the mobile phone’s history and that’s likely to change."
As the market focus shifts from hardware functionality to software availability, the new economy of application sales and brand loyalty is still to be worked out.
"What isn’t clear yet is how much people will be willing to pay for those applications and the extent to which being a source of those applications gives you a grip on the customer."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Offers New Features to Counter iPhone, Pre
Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5, the newest version of its operating system for mobile devices, includes improved touch capabilities and several screens specifically designed to answer similar features available on Apple’s iPhone, the Palm Pre and other smartphones. In addition, Microsoft plans on rolling out Windows Marketplace for Mobile, which will allow developers to submit applications for use in the Windows Mobile ecosystem.
– Microsoft’s
Windows Mobile 6.5, its upcoming operating system for mobile devices, includes
a number of new features seemingly tailor-made to counter similar offerings
from Apple’s iPhone, the Palm Pre and other attention-grabbing smartphones.
The new features include improved touch capabilities…
Experts Bullish on Google Voice Mobile App for BlackBerry, Android Smartphones
Google Voice rolls out a mobile and wireless application that lets users make calls from devices such as the BlackBerry Storm and the T-Mobile G1 phone based on Android. Experts say the move may be more than a convenience, but a way for Google to insert itself between consumers and wireless carriers such as Verizon and AT T. GigaOm’s Om Malik and IDC’s Rebecca Swensen weigh in.
–
Google Voice, which lets users route calls to their home,
office and mobile phones via a single phone number, is in the
process of rolling out to select invitees in the United States. But the Google Voice
programmers aren’t resting on their laurels during the roll out.
Google Voice…
Miniature ‘mobile phones’ used to track pieces of rubbish
By Jonathan Fildes
Science and technology reporter, BBC News
The ebb and flow of thousands of pieces of household rubbish are to be tracked using sophisticated mobile tags.
It is hoped that making people confront the final journey of their waste will make them reduce what they throw away.
Initially, 3,000 pieces of rubbish, donated by volunteers, will be tagged in New York, Seattle and London.
"Trash is almost an invisible system today," Assaf Biderman, one of the project leaders at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told BBC News.
"You throw something into the garbage and a lot of us forget about it. It gets buried, it gets burned, it gets shipped overseas."
The Trash Track aims to make that process – termed the "removal chain" – more transparent.
Friends of the Earth’s Senior Waste Campaigner Michael Warhurst said the project could be a "useful tool" for highlighting the impact of rubbish.
"[Waste] doesn’t simply disappear when we throw it away, and all too often it ends up causing damage when it could be recycled instead.
"People must have much better information on – and control over – where their rubbish and recycling ends up."
Global waste
In order to monitor how the pieces of rubbish move around the cities and beyond, the MIT team has developed a small mobile sensor that can be attached to individual pieces of waste.
"It’s like a miniature cell phone with limited functionality," said Carlo Ratti, another member of the project.
Each tag – encased in a protective resin – continuously broadcasts its location to a central server. The results can then be collected and plotted on a map in real time.

"It’s like putting tracers in your blood and seeing where it moves around your body," said Mr Biderman.
Because cell phone technology is cheap and – importantly – ubiquitous, the system should be able to track rubbish around the globe.
This could be important when tracking computers and electronic waste, which is often disposed of incorrectly, according to Mr Ratti.
"Some of them are shipped to Africa to pollute," he said.
The team aims to tag different types of waste from computers and cell phones to bags of garden waste.
The group is currently looking for volunteers to donate their trash.
The results of the US studies will be shown at two exhibitions in Seattle and New York during September.
‘Zero waste’
The team stresses that it has tried to limit the impact of its study and of the technology, and limit the amount of extra waste it contributes to the "removal chain".
"We are adhering to the highest standards in terms of environmental impact," said Mr Biderman.
"The impact this could have on waste management and removal… could be significant, so these kinds of experiments could be much more useful than harmful for the environment."
The MIT team has previously revealed the movements of people around cities, such as Rome and Copenhagen, by analysing mobile phone signals.
They used a similar method to show how crowds moved around Washington during the inauguration of US President Barack Obama.
The tags used to track the rubbish are a departure from these more passive studies of city movements.
Ultimately, the team hopes that the technology can be miniaturised and made cheap enough that the tags could one day be attached to everything.
"Think about a future where thanks to smart tags we will not have waste anymore," said Mr Ratti. "Everything will be traceable."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Mobile App Downloads Nearing 20 Billion Annually, Study Shows
Juniper Research expects mobile application downloads to approach 20 billion per year, the firm announced on July 14. On the same day, Apple gave word that its App Store had passed 1.5 billion downloads in its first year.
– On the same day that Apple announced that its App Store had passed 1.5 billion downloads, Juniper Research is reporting that it expects mobile application downloads to approach nearly 20 billion per year by 2014.
“The increasing deployment of app stores targeted at mass market handsets, allied …
Mobile App Downloads Nearing 20 Billion Annually, Study Shows
Juniper Research expects mobile application downloads to approach 20 billion per year, the firm announced on July 14. On the same day, Apple gave word that its App Store had passed 1.5 billion downloads in its first year.
– On the same day that Apple announced its App Store had passed 1.5 billion downloads, Juniper Research is reporting that it expects mobile application downloads to approach nearly 20 billion per year by 2014.
“The increasing deployment of app stores targeted at mass market handsets, allied to en…
Mobile broadband holes logged

There are still significant notspots when it comes to 3G mobile coverage in the UK, regulator Ofcom has revealed.
It has pledged to investigate why some places, particularly in rural areas, are still failing to get any coverage.
It also said it will investigate mobile broadband speeds, which vary tremendously in different areas and at different times of day.
Between February 2008 and February 2009 there were two million new connections to mobile broadband, said Ofcom.
3G (or Third Generation) services allow people to connect to the web via a wireless network, either using a phone, a dongle or datacard which can be plugged into a PC or a laptop.
In the UK such services are offered by operators such as Vodafone, Orange, O2, T-Mobile and 3.
But there are questions about how reliable these services are and whether they can provide the speeds needed by consumers.
More spectrum
Research from broadband communications firm Epitiro recently found that the average download speed achieved with mobile broadband was just under 1Mbps (megabit per second).
"if mobile networks are going to become one of the key routes to the internet for million of users, they’re going to need to build more six-lane highways to replace those B-roads where the traffic keeps getting stuck."
Rory Cellan-Jones
BBC technology correspondent
At 0300 this average rose to 1.8Mbps, illustrating that contention issues – how many people use the service at any given time – plays a big role in limiting speed.
On average mobile broadband users were only getting a quarter of advertised speeds, found Epitiro’s study.
Increasingly consumers are dropping their fixed line phones in favour of mobile. While mobile calls increased by 11 billion minutes during 2008, the number of minutes on fixed lines fell by 8 billion.
Consumers are getting increasingly data-hungry. In 2003, just 1% of revenue per mobile connection came from data but by 2008 that rose to 6%, according to Ofcom.
The Digital Britain report pledged to free up more 3G spectrum, which should improve coverage.
Consumer Focus, an organisation dedicated to campaigning for a fair deal for consumers, welcomed Ofcom’s review of the mobile market.
"Some consumers find themselves excluded from mobile communications due to gaps in 3G coverage or the market’s failure to make new technology accessible to all," said Audrey Gallacher, telecoms expert at Consumer Focus.
She felt that Ofcom could do more to make it easier for consumers to sign up to mobile broadband.
"Accessing the best deal in a market where mobile operators offer a bewildering array of over 200,000 different tariffs is a real challenge," she said.
"With mobiles now treated as an essential service rather than a luxury, there is more pressure than ever before on mobile companies to give consumers a fair deal and make mobile services accessible to all," she added.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
June 29, 2007: iPhone, You Phone, We All Wanna iPhone
2007: Apple puts the iPhone on sale. It sells … fast.
Everybody knew it was coming. But nobody, not even Apple, predicted how the iPhone would change the way we look at phones forever.
First announced Jan. 9, 2007, by Steve Jobs, the iPhone is considered one of Apple’s worst-kept secrets, but still the most anticipated gadget [...]
ASBIS presents complete mobile solutions
ASBIS, the leading supplier of computer components to the EMEA emerging markets, presents a complete line of products and services for all PC mobile integrators. “Creating an exceptional relationship with integrators and local OEMs is the top priority for our company”, – says Sergey Kostevich, President and CEO at Asbis Enterprises. – “We constantly follow the trends of the global market in order to offer our customers the latest technologies. Today we offer complete mobile solutions to all system integrators and OEMs from all countries where we have offices”.




