Gosh, my thumbs are tired. All that texting, typing and tweeting has given my digits an Olympic-size work out. With the past few weeks bringing…
Posts Tagged ‘social networking sites’
Facebook drives mobile net usage

A third of young people regularly access Facebook and Twitter via their mobile, a new report has found.
The study, published by mobile research firm CCS Insight, found that access to social networking sites was driving the take-up of mobile internet services.
Facebook is more popular than Bebo, MySpace and Twitter combined, it found.
Its study – into mobile usage among 16 to 35 year olds – also found that the service most youngsters wanted on their phones was the BBC iPlayer.
The suggestion that Facebook is more popular than Twitter chimes with a recently published Morgan Stanley report on internet and mobile usage.
Compiled by a 15-year-old intern, the report said that teenagers favoured Facebook over Twitter.
"Teenagers do not use Twitter. They realise that no-one is viewing their profile, so their tweets are pointless," Matthew Robson wrote in the report.
He echoes the words of CCS Insight analyst Paulo Pescatore.
"Forget music and video downloads, social networking is where it’s at and Facebook is king of the hill," he said.
Charging models
The 24-36 year-old age group are those most likely to buy content on their mobile phones, the report found.
The revelations will be good news to mobile operators, desperate to fill some of their revenue gaps with the money to be made on mobile internet usage.
One third of respondents said they would like to see the BBC’s iPlayer available on their mobile phones.
But people will expect charging models to be fair even when they are using bandwidth-hungry applications such as the iPlayer, said Mr Pescatore.
"The challenge operators face is balancing demand for these services with the bandwidth they consume. Networks are going to think carefully about how they charge for mobile internet access," he said.
There appears to be a gender divide when it comes to mobile internet usage with twice as many men as women accessing the web via their mobiles.
"It’s clear that the industry could a better job marketing to women. It needs more than pink paint to succeed," said Mr Pescatore.
In separate news, a report from research firm Juniper has revealed that the number of mobile application downloads will approach almost 20 billion per year by 2014.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Arianna Huffington: Bearing Witness 2.0: You Can’t Spin 10,000 Tweets and Camera Phone Uploads
When deadly riots broke out in China last week, the Chinese government sprang into message control mode. It choked off the Internet, blocked Twitter, and deleted updates and videos from social networking sites. At the same time, it invited foreign journalists to take a tour of the area. That’s right, it slammed the door in the face of new media — and offered traditional reporters a front row seat. The Chinese have clearly learned the lessons of Iran. The same can’t be said about the New York Times’ Roger Cohen who, writing about covering the Iran uprising, recently mounted an attack on search engines, news aggregation, and “miracles of technology” such as Twitter and real-time video delivered via camera phones — the very tools that allowed millions of people around the world to bear witness to what was happening in Iran. How bizarre is that?



