Archive for the 'mobile/cell phones' Category

Nielsen Reports TV, Internet and Mobile Usage

The Nielsen Company released the first comparable U.S. figures showing video and TV usage across the ‘three screens’ – Television, Internet and Mobile devices. Nielsen’s findings show that screen time of the average American continues to increase with TV users watching more TV than ever before (127 hrs, 15 min per month), while also spending 9% more time using the Internet (26 hrs, 26 min per month) from last year. At the same time, a small but growing number of Internet and mobile phone users are watching video online (2 hrs, 19 min per month), as well as using their cell phones to watch video (3 hrs, 15 min per month).

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Social Network MocoSpace Reports 3 Million Users

The largest mobile phone social network, MocoSpace, has passed the three million mark in registered users. The milestone follows a May report by browser company Opera ranking MocoSpace as the third most trafficked mobile site in the U.S. after MySpace and Google. The rapid growth of MocoSpace is being fueled by word of mouth mostly from younger consumers that prefer the ubiquity of mobile phones and the easy meet-and-greet social experience the site offers. Member can create and browse profiles as well as send messages, upload and share photos, and more. MocoSpace’s success demonstrates the value that users place on real-time mobile communication and photo sharing. The average MocoSpace member comes to the site more than once a day and the site now generates over 1.5 billion pageviews per month.

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Using Cell Phones in the Classroom (Constructively)

Amid concerns that cellphones in class distract from the educational experience, this brief article offers a checklist of ways cellphones can assist learning in the classroom, with links to the new technologies that make such assistance possible.

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Migrants in a Digital Land

Today we are migrants to a digital land, but it is our children who are growing up as digital natives. The rules of doing business and governing society as it evolves are challenging, with many misguided laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and social fallacies such as the concept of identity. Delivering the keynote address at the Gartner mobile and wireless summit in London, Nick Jones, research vice-president at Gartner, spoke of how difficult it was to predict how new technologies would be used. Today, prepaid mobile credits are emerging as a new form of currency in many countries, and the most popular way to dump a boyfriend among today’s teenagers is by a text message. “It’s a $450 billion industry, and politicians and lawyers are interested,” he said.

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Free Web Reference Questions Answered by Cellphone

ChaCha is a free cellphone service that lets you ask any question answerable via a web search, using almost any cellphone, by simply making a voice call. Just dial (800) 224-2242 and state your question. In a few minutes, you’ll get an answer via text message from one of 10,000 hired “guides”—students, stay-at-home parents, retirees, and others—who look up the questions on the Web and reply. They get paid 20 cents per answer. (Perhaps libraries should have thought of this?)

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Older Adults Shifting to Mobile Phones from Landlines

The number of people without traditional landline phones is increasing, as a growing number of U.S. adults use only mobile phones, a market research firm said Friday. In a survey conducted in the fourth quarter of last year, Harris Interactive found that about one in seven adults only uses a cell phone, up from roughly one in 10 in 2006. The percentage of adults with landline phones has dropped slightly to 79% from 81%.

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MySpace Expands Text Message Alerts to Five New Carriers

Following up on the official launch of MySpace Mobile two weeks ago, the top social network has just announced the expansion of its text message alert program to five new carriers through a partnership with mBlox. CUstomers of Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile USA, Alltel Wireless, US Cellular, and Virgin Mobile USA can now receive notifications of new messages, friend requests, profile comments, and other MySpace activities via SMS message. Previously, major carriers supporting the service included AT&T, Sprint, and Helio. Overall, MySpace and mBlox claim that more than 90% of the social network’s users can now access the service.

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iPhone Owners Big Users Of Mobile Web

M:Metrics says 85% of iPhone owners searched the Web for news and information using their phones in January. “The iPhone has certainly delivered on its hype,” Mark Donovan, senior analyst for M:Metrics, said while releasing the figures. “Beyond a doubt, this device is compelling consumers to interact with the mobile Web, delivering off-the-charts usage from everything to text messaging to mobile video.”

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Presenter, Inc. Launch Pilot Run to Provide Journal Abstracts Over Mobile Phone in China

Presenter, Inc. a pioneer in Internet and mobile computing technologies for business communication, recently launched a pilot run of journal abstracts over mobile phone. Run in two cities in China, the pilot covers about 150 doctors who will receive journal abstracts in text and images through MMS messaging.

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Thumbs Race as Japan’s Best Sellers Go Cellular

Until recently, cellphone novels — composed on phone keypads by young women wielding dexterous thumbs and read by fans on their tiny screens — had been dismissed in Japan as a subgenre unworthy of the country that gave the world its first novel, “The Tale of Genji,” a millennium ago. Then last month, the year-end best-seller tally showed that cellphone novels, republished in book form, have not only infiltrated the mainstream but have come to dominate it.

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When Our Phones Do the Social Networking

One of the more interesting mobile media trends we may see more of this year is mobile social networking. Simply put, that means the ability for one person to connect with another via a mobile phone or other device while on the go. Think of your cell phone saying “hello” to another cell phone within a certain geographic proximity, based on identified shared interests on publicly available profiles.

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Mobile-Only Going Mainstream

Traditional landline telephone service may not be a tradition much longer. With mobile phones more popular, a growing number of US consumers are deciding to do away with their wired phones altogether.

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Google Reported in Deal with Japan Carrier

Japan’s top mobile phone carrier will join with Internet search engine Google to provide Internet search and e-mail services on the company’s handsets, news reports recently. Starting as early as the spring, users will be able to access Google search, e-mail, scheduling and photo-saving features through NTT DoCoMo’s i-Mode Internet network, Japan’s main business daily The Nikkei said, without identifying its sources. The paper said the two firms plan to integrate the search feature with handset software, enabling the development of new services.

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Information Innovation

by John Regazzi

Information Innovation is occurring all around us and changing the way we understand and interact with our world. Innovations in information are changing the ways we use and exchange information in economic terms as well as affecting our personal and professional knowledge space. The College of Information and Computer Science at Long Island University is focused on the confluence of Technology, People, and Information. We are seeing broad and significant shifts in each of these spaces.

Some key shifts:

Technology
. Information technology is moving on two axes very quickly: from the pc to the net, and from the desk to the hand. Recently Elevation Partners invested $325 million, of nearly 20% of their portfolio, in Palm Inc, which has been lagging the market for some time. The key rationale for this bet is the increasing accelerated innovation taking place in transforming mobile phones to computers. What underlines much of this changing environment, is the increasing development of modular web-based software services available to a host of computing devices particularly cell phones and related PDA devices. These modules are being developed by such companies as Google, Yahoo, and Apple while Microsoft and others struggle with the releases on new operating systems and other software upgrades for the pc.


People
. Another interesting shift occurred in early June 2006. The number of Google searches in the United States for “social computing” exceed the number of requests for “knowledge management”, and the same thing occurred globally by December of last year. Matthew Brown, of Forrester, noted in a recent report on the Information Workspace: “When knowledge management (KM) practices, tools, and architectures burst onto the scene in the mid-1990s, they looked a lot like the old economy businesses that built them, hierarchical and workflow-driven. Now, social computing tools and communities are flattening those architectures and extending the reach of KM well beyond the walls of the conventional enterprise to touch customers and business partners.” People are relying less and less on the process driven, data modeled systems of KM, and are innovating on how to manage their expertise, knowledge, and problem solving across the enterprise in differ and new ways.

Information. Search is being challenged in ways no one expected even several years ago. In a New York Times article Udi Manber, Google’s head of search quality notes “ Expectations are higher now. When search first started, if you searched and found something it was a miracle. Now if you don’t get exactly what you want in the first three results, something is wrong.” The bar will be raised even higher, as search engine companies become not only more precise, but also able to provide exact meaning and trends from the structured and unstructured data being searched. This will move the field from information retrieval to knowledge discovery, as search companies move users from items they find relevant to knowledge insights and discovery that they have not before considered.

The Information Innovation Exchange will look at these shifts and others like them occurring through information innovations. We hope that it will allow you to think about these changes, call others to our attention, and comment on their impact on you, your organizations, your businesses, and your professional life. Each issue will have an opening essay followed by items of interest that touch some form of information innovation. We hope this blog will be as useful to you as it is to our College faculty and students.

Unbound Medicine to Deliver Medical Information to the New iPhone

Knowledge management solutions provider Unbound Medicine has announced that it will deliver medical content to the new iPhone from Apple, Inc. Physicians and nurses can now use the iPhone to quickly consult a wealth of continually updated information on diseases, drugs, and tests and to keep up with medical journals.

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Men Use More Mobile Minutes… for Now

US women are catching up with men in mobile phone usage, according to a poll commissioned by AT&T and conducted by International Communications Research in May 2007. After six years of AT&T surveys indicating men used significantly more minutes than women on average, this year men spoke an average of only five minutes more per month on their mobile phones than women.

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Curious Gadget Fans Smash, Dissect iPhones

It took Apple Inc. more than six months to build the iPhone but curious gadget fanatics needed only minutes to tear one apart. Within hours of the first iPhones going on sale on Friday, enthusiasts scrambled to be the first to discover what makes the devices tick, posting photos and videos of disassembled phones on the Internet. The information is more than just academic. Apple keeps a tight grip on information about parts suppliers so “tear downs” of its products are closely watched by investors keen to figure out how to place their bets.

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Mobile Video Viewer Demographics

Eight million US people ages 12 and older watched video on their mobile phones in the first quarter of 2007, according to Nielsen. Videos created with the phones’ camcorders were not counted. Nearly half of mobile video viewers during that quarter were ages 35 and older, and 54% were male. As of May 31, 55% of primary users of video-enabled mobile phones lived in households with total annual incomes of $75,000 or more. At least 7% of 18-to-34-year-olds watched mobile videos in the first quarter of 2007, and at least a quarter used their mobile phones to connect to the Intenet. A total of 33 million people in the US used the mobile Web. Nielsen also examined viewing preferences of TV audiences by wireless phone brand, revealing that Verizon households tuned in to the May 23 American Idol finale at a higher rate than those who subscribed to Sprint or AT&T.

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When the Only Phone is Mobile

Landlines aren’t dead… yet.
Over half of US adults who only use a mobile phone are younger than 30, according to a Harris Interactive study conducted between October and December 2006. In fact, a third of 18-to-29-year-olds use only a mobile phone or the Internet for their calls.

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Don’t Blame Me: It’s the Phone’s Fault!

Many internet and cell phone users find devices and applications too complicated or hardly worth the trouble. A new Pew Internet & American Life report discusses why some adult Americans have relatively distant relationships to modern information technology and offers some ideas to address the problem.

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