Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Mobile Apps Revenue to Triple in 2011

World-wide, revenue from mobile apps is expected to triple this year to $15.1 billion, including paid downloads and advertising revenue generated by free apps, according to research firm Gartner Inc.

Besides the potential of making money directly from such creations, more and better apps can help devices powered by Google's Android operating system continue to gain ground on Apple's iPhones and iPads. It's all about the ecosystem, says Nokia CEO Stephen Elops.

U.S. Mobile Payment Will Grow Quickly, Some Think

Although mobile payments first became popular in Asia and Europe, analysts agree that the United States is going to catch up quickly. In its November 2010 report, the Aite Group forecasts that U.S. mobile bill payments will reach US$214 billion in gross dollar volume in 2015, up from US$16 billion in 2010.

Starbucks Mobile Payment System: One Unfortunate Security Issue

The Starbucks mobile payment application has a security issue that could allow another person to "steal" the stored value on the linked Starbucks card.

Kelley Langford, vice president of sales and marketing at System Innovators, says the process takes about 90 seconds. One might argue the chances of such theft occurring are rather remote, and almost non-existent if a user keeps their iPhone in sight, in a pocket or a purse.

Online Video Seems to be Cannibalizing DVD, Not Growing the Market

Consumer spending on at-home movie and TV content, exclusive of multichannel TV services, seems to have peaked about 2004, according to IHS Screen Digest (figures are in billions, not millions)

DVD sales and rentals historically have driven the market, with all forms of on-demand delivery remaining a smallish part of the business.

So far, it appears that online delivery, pay per view and video on demand are just cannibalizing the DVD market.

U.S. consumers spent $385 million buying and renting movies using the Internet in 2010 --up 38% from the year before -- surpassing for the first time the amount paid for online television shows.

According to research from IHS Screen Digest, the market for Internet television episode rentals and purchases last year was $366 million. In 2009, spending on online movies and TV was $280 million and $295 million, respectively.

Total revenue from DVD, Blu-ray and digital sales and rentals of movies and television shows in the U.S. declined three percent to $18.8 billion in 2010, according to new data from industry trade organization Digital Entertainment Group.

HP to Introduce New Tablet

Nokia's Blunt Message

What Google Learned About Search in 2010

Mobile Payments Trial Shows More Transactions, Higher Purchase Value

A mobile payments trial including more than 1,500 customers of both mobile network operator Telefonica and La Caixa bank, using Samsung S5230 NFC phones loaded with la Caixa Visa cards, with 500 participating merchants, has found that customers used the Visa cards stored on their NFC phones to carry out 30 percent more transactions, with a 23 percent increase in the average purchase value, than they had with their traditional plastic cards.

PayPal Will Drive eBay's Business

EBay appears to believe its PayPal online-payment unit will be the firm’s biggest revenue generator in the relatively near future. For that reason, PayPal will move into the mobile payments business in a bigger way. It appears a mobile version of BillMeLater, now primarily used for online payments, will be a foundation of the effort.

Xipwire Wants Sending Money to Be as Simple as Sending a Text Message

Xipwire believes that sending money should be as easy as sending a text message, and counts a roster of clients heavy on social causes that want to encourage people to send donations by text message. Founded in 2009, Xipwire enables businesses and organizations to offer their customers a convenient cash alternative without the need to pay high credit card fees.

Android Market and Honeycomb

Most purchases, half of transactions to be mobile by 2015, Google says

"Two thirds of all purchases and half of transactions will occur on mobile devices by 2015," Google executives say. Consumer coupons will also transition from their current rate of 80 percent push to 80 percent opt-in four years from now, said David Shapiro, Google's director of small business marketing.

Consumers will also digest 80 percent of all visual content through digital by 2015, he added. Shapiro said 1.9 billion people globally were active on the Internet by the end of last year, while 5 billion people were mobile subscribers and more than 800 exabytes of digital information were created. Google predicted that 5 billion people will be active on the Web by 2020, while 10 billion people will be mobile subscribers, and 53 zettabytes of digital information will have been created.

“Mobile will be bigger than desktop in five years,” Shapiro added. “Mobile searches grew five times in the last two years."

Smartphone Sales Grew 72 Percent in 2010

Worldwide mobile device sales to end users totaled 1.6 billion units in 2010, a 31.8 percent increase from 2009, according to Gartner. Smartphone sales to end users were up 72.1 percent from 2009 and accounted for 19 percent of total mobile communications device sales in 2010.

"Strong smartphone sales in the fourth quarter of 2010 pushed Apple and Research In Motion (RIM) up in our 2010 worldwide ranking of mobile device manufacturers to the No. 5 and No. 4 positions, respectively, displacing Sony Ericsson and Motorola,' said Carolina Milanesi, research vice president at Gartner. "Nokia and LG saw their market share erode in 2010 as they came under increasing pressure to refine their smartphone strategies."

Wi-Fi Will Never Be a Replacement for Mobile Networks

One occasionally will still hear communications industry observers bemoaning or hoping for a future where Wi-Fi is both ubiquitous, affordable and interoperable, so users will not need to buy mobile services. One hears that a lot less than 10 years ago, but the sentiment still is expressed now and then.

The idea of seamless connectivity between Wi-Fi networks on the move is not even a possibility, panelists recently said at NetEvents. In large part, that is because the superficial similarities between mobile broadband networks and local Wi-Fi networks masks the fundamental difference. Mobile networks, though often used by stationary users, are intentionally designed to support session hand-off over wide areas.

Wi-Fi networks are simply wireless tails to a fixed connection. The two types of networks appear similar on the surface. They are completely different at the logical level.

MasterCard Creates Payments API

The new MasterCard "Payments API," which suggests MasterCard sees creation of a developer ecosystem as crucial for its future payments efforts, will allow developers to create web and mobile applications that include the processing of credit card transactions around the world on the MasterCard network.

Developers can use the service to find their users deals and discounts. The Offers API also provides the ability to construct a more detailed search for an offer. For example, you can filter offers by category or display offers near a certain location or point on the map.

U.S. Consumers Still Buy "Good Enough" Internet Access, Not "Best"

Optical fiber always is pitched as the “best” or “permanent” solution for fixed network internet access, and if the economics of a specific...