Friday, July 31, 2009
FCC Investigates Google Voice Blocking
Price War Breaking Out in Prepaid Wireless
Apple, AT&T Ban Google Voice, Put Restrictions On Google Latitude
Labels: consumer VoIP, mobile
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Skype in Patent Dispute
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Watch for Fireworks in Prepaid Wireless Later This Year
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Verizon Offers Free Nationwide Wi-Fi to its Wired Broadband Customers
Brands are Media, These Days
Labels: social media
Verizon Wireless Unveils Cross-Network, Cross-Device, Cross-OS App Store
Sprint Buys Virgin Mobile
Labels: mobile
Monday, July 27, 2009
Broadband Stimulus: Let the Bellyaching Begin!
Labels: broadband
Satellite Gains 3.5%, Cable Flat, says Centris
Where Did AT&T Prepaid Accounts Go?
Labels: mobile
AT&T, Verizon: Business Segment Suffers Worse than Consumer
Friday, July 24, 2009
50% to 60% of New Prepaid Wireless Users Will Never Go Back to Post-Paid
Mobile Streaming Video Grows 58% Last Quarter
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Internet Rivals TV as Top Leisure Pursuit
The Internet now rivals TV as a favorite leisure activity, say researchers at Frank Magid Associates (click image for larger view). And computer or game consoles are not far behind.
Broadband Adoption is Not Just about Availability
Labels: broadband
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Questions about Zer01, Buzzirk
Labels: mobile
Ad Market Recovery in 2010?
Perhaps we all are anticipating too much "normalcy" from the current recession and recovery. But PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) expects a 2010 recovery.
PwC says worldwide advertising spending will reach $421 billion 2009.
The bad news is that figure is down 12.1% from 2008, which saw $479 billion in spending.
Fortunately, PwC expects the online and mobile (which it treats as one category) and video game ad spaces to rebound in 2010 with five-year compound annual growth rates of 7.7% and 13.8%, respectively.
PwC expects all global media markets to see a rise in spending by 2012. Recovery will not be evenly spread around the world, however. Total ad spending in North America compounded annually will decrease by 1.6% from 2009 to 2013.
Online, mobile and video game advertising will see 6.4% and 13% compound annual growth rates, respectively, over the five-year period.
Online and mobile advertising spending, down in 2009, will rebound in 2010. North America will see overall advertising spending rise in 2011.
Ninety-four percent of North American advertising spending will come from the United States.
Labels: marketing
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
No Inflection Point for Interactive Media, Yet
Nothing is going to replace search advertising as the top interactive category, just as nothing appears able to dislodge display advertising, between now and 2014 or so.
U.S. Internet Growth 3% to 2013
Mobile Marketing Second Only to Web Among Top Ad Agency Execs
Though mobile marketing spending lags far behind combined Web advertising, mobile marketing has become quite interesting to many advertising excutives recently.
Labels: marketing
Search Still Will Lead 2014 Interactive Marketing Channels
Search will remain the single largest interactive marketing channel in 2014, and online display will keep its second-place status among marketers.
Labels: marketing
What Are New Satellite Phone Operators Up To?
Monday, July 20, 2009
Danger for Service Providers If Confidence Doesn't Climb
Labels: marketing
Apple iPhone, BlackBerry are Most-Profitable Mobile Devices
Labels: mobile
5% of U.S. Universities, Colleges Have Deployed Unified Communications Campus-Wide
24% of U.S. Mobile Users Possibly Are No Longer Voice Centric
Will Skype and Google Voice Dominate Mobile VoIP?
Labels: consumer VoIP, mobile
Saturday, July 18, 2009
40% U.S. Mobile Broadband Adoption
To the extent that U.S. consumers are not using mobile broadband, availability is not the problem.
Enterprise C Suites Now are "Digital"
Friday, July 17, 2009
U.S. Will Leap Over Europe in Mobile Advertising Within 2 Years
Alex Moukas, CEO of Velti, the top European mobile ad company, said he fully expects the U.S. to leap ahead of Europe in mobile advertising within two years. That would be a switch, as U.S. practitioners have lagged their European counterparts up to this point.
Labels: marketing
Verizon Wireless to Voluntarily Limit Exclusive Handset Deals
Online is the Only Growing Ad Business
Labels: marketing
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Does National Broadband Policy Make a Difference?
How important are national broadband policies in explaining broadband adoption rates?
Labels: broadband
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Big Brand Marketing: What's Up, What's Down?
Labels: marketing
60% of Marketers Shifting Spending to Social, Mobile, Online
Monday, July 13, 2009
Social Networking Ad Spend up 13 Percent in 2010
Nokia, AT&T to Unveil Phone for Social Networking
AT&T plans to sell the Nokia Surge, a handset optimized for social networking and messaging, starting July 19, 2009. AT&T will sell the Surge for $79.99 with a two-year service agreement and after a mail-in rebate. Without the contract, the phone will sell for $130.
The phone will use an advanced Web browser with Flash support to view sites in full HTML or watch YouTube videos. Additionally, AT&T will supply the phone with their popular network features, including AT&T Navigator for GPS navigation, AT&T Music for Napster music support, and AT&T Video Share for one-way video conference-like calling.
Nokia is not positioning this phone against their high-end Nseries or Eseries smart phone devices, but more as a mid-range smart phone, which many of us would argue is the sweet spot for users who are big on social networking but unable or unwilling to spend much more for a smart phone.
The Symbian S60-based smart phone features a full QWERTY keyboard, a browser with Flash and supports IM, text or e-mail, sending multimedia messages, AT&T Video Share and updating and connecting to popular social networks.
The Surge also features a 2.0 megapixel, GPS capability, AT&T mobile music and AT&T video share. Through the pre-installed JuiceCaster users can share videos and pictures from the Surge to sites including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr.
The "Nokia Surge hits the sweet spot between a quick messaging phone and a smartphone because of its low-price and strong feature set," says Michael Woodward,AT&T VP.
The Surge also features a microSDHC expansion slot and Bluetooth with stereo audio support.
France Telecom Gets Aggressive About Content
Will Google Voice, Google Wave be Business UC Contender?
Wireless: Fixing What Isn't Broken?
Labels: mobile
O2 Offers 600 Free Tweets
Saturday, July 11, 2009
U.S. Online Advertising Grows One Percent a Year
Labels: marketing
Friday, July 10, 2009
16,000 More Cell Sites Needed for Ubiquitous Mobile Broadband
Mobile Broadband: New Business Models Needed?
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Sprint Drops Bombshell
Sprint has decided to outsource all of its network operations to Ericsson as part of a seven-year deal that indicates Sprint no longer considers network operations a core function, or something that allows it to create customer-facing value.
Labels: business model, mobile
Apple iPhone Proves Disruptive
Apple and Nokia are on radically different trajectories, at least where it comes to smart phone market share, say analysts at Generator Research. The firm believes Nokia will tumble from about 40 percent share today to just 20 percent in 2013.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Will New Unlimited Plans Tap New Market for Bill "Predictability"?
Shift to Online, Mobile, Social Marketing Will Slam Traditional Media
If You Had to Cut a Communications or Entertianment Service, Which Would it Be?
It appears most users would reduce spending elsewhere to hang on to their broadband connection, while most would consider cutting back on a mobile broadband connection, if forced to make a cut in the monthly service budget, a recent survey by Strategy Analytics suggests.
Labels: marketing
71% of Marketing Budgets Have Been Cut
Labels: marketing
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Sprint Sells 99-Cent Netbook
Children Do Not Like Being on the Same Social Networks as Their Parents
Apparently, children do not especially like belonging to the same social networks as their parents. Or so it would seem, based on 2009 Facebook demographics.
Monday, July 6, 2009
Execs Don't See Network Driving Value
Labels: marketing
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Prepaid Wireless Site Visits: Who is Up? Who is Down?
If changes in traffic to mobile prepaid sites are a reflection of the amount of consumer interest, MetroPCS, Boost Mobile and Leap Wireless are getting more interest, while Virgin Mobile and Tracfone, historically the leaders, are getting slightly less interest, according to a traffic analysis by Compete.com.
How Much Data Do People Really Use?
At least some people do worry about usage caps, whether for fixed broadband or mobile. Some data from iPass concerning Wi-Fi usage might help shed some light on the matter (click on the image for a bigger view of the chart).
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Broadband Definitions for ARRA Proposals Set at 768 kbps Downstream and 200 kbps Upstream
"Broadband," for purposes of applying for grants or loans under NTIA or RUS broadband stimulus programs, in 768 kbps in the downstream, and 200 kbps in the upstream. As with every other specific rule, this is a minimum, not a maximum.
Labels: broadband
First Broadband Stimulus Applications Can be Submitted July 14
The first "broadband stimulus" proposals to either the NTIA or RUS will be accepted starting July 14 and applications will be accepted until August 14.
Labels: broadband
Lower European Mobile Prices Start Today
New price curbs on the cost of using a mobile phone while outside a home state in the European Union took effect today.
An earlier price cap of EUR0.46 per minute for an outgoing voice call has also fallen to EUR0.43, while the cap on voice calls received abroad has fallen from EUR0.22 to EUR0.19.
The caps will further fall to EUR0.39 for calls made and EUR0.15 for calls received while roaming from 1 July 2010, and to EUR0.35 and EUR0.11 from 1 July 2011.







