Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Apple Plans Cheaper iPhones

Frictiion Between Content Owners, Apple, Again

Apple Gears Up Challenge to Kindle

Are Mobile Payments Services Covered by Durbin Amendment to Dodd-Frank?

According to the Federal Register, the official publication for federal government rules, regulations and laws (Vol. 75 of the Federal Register, p. 81729, Dec. 28, 2010, the Durbin amendment to the Dodd-Frank banking bill appears to cover mobile payment devices with the same rules that apply to debit cards.

[P]roposed comment 2(f)–1 clarifies that the requirements of this part generally apply to any card, or other payment code or device, even if it is not issued in card form. That is, the rule applies even if a physical card is not issued or if the device is issued with a form factor other than a standard-sized card. For example, an account number or code that could be used to access underlying funds in an account would be considered a debit card under the rule . . . . Similarly, the term ‘‘debit card’’ would include a device with a chip or other embedded mechanism that links the device to funds held in an account, such as a mobile phone or sticker containing a contactless chip that enables the cardholder to debit an account.

If so, that would mean all the big numbers you see for mobile payments activity will boil down to about 12 cents per transaction for a mobile payment service. That's a clear dose of reality suggesting why other value likely will have to be found to make mobile payments a workable business proposition.

Dealing with Mobile Data

U.S. Broadband Speeds Grew 34% in 2010

The speed of residential broadband connections in the United States increased by 34 percent during 2010, according to In-Stat.

The average download speed for the broadband subscribers in the survey was 9.54 Mbps, up from 7.12 Mbps just twelve months earlier. In comparison to the rapidly rising amounts of bandwidth available to broadband subscribers, between end of year 2009 and end of year 2010, the average price for broadband service increased by just four percent.

Some 38 percent of the survey respondents also had a mobile wireless broadband connection.

The average downstream speed across all access technologies increased by 71 percent over the course of the past two years.

GetJar Gets Investment Round

Apple Launches Subscriptions at App Store

Apple now supports content subscriptions for all publishers of content-based apps on the App Store, including magazines, newspapers, video and music.

Publishers set the price and length of subscription (weekly, monthly, bi-monthly, quarterly, bi-yearly or yearly). Then with one-click, customers pick the length of subscription and are automatically charged based on their chosen length of commitment (weekly, monthly, etc.). Customers can review and manage all of their subscriptions from their personal account page, including canceling the automatic renewal of a subscription. Apple processes all payments, keeping the same 30 percent share that it does today for other In-App Purchases.

“Our philosophy is simple—when Apple brings a new subscriber to the app, Apple earns a 30 percent share; when the publisher brings an existing or new subscriber to the app, the publisher keeps 100 percent and Apple earns nothing,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO.

Deutsche Telekom Might Buy a Bank or Payment Prcoessor?

Deutsche Telekom, Europe’s largest phone company, may “have financial relationships and perhaps own a financial entity” to support its mobile payments and banking efforts, Chief Technology Officer Ed Kozel said. Kozol did not elaborate, but becoming an "issuing bank" or a "payments processor" are the logical possibilities.

Mobile Payments "Arguably the Next Major Change"

Mobile payments could account for $1.13 trillion worth of purchases globally by about 2014, according to IE Market Research.

"There is a game-changing opportunity here for the operators to effectively displace credit cards and banks," said Dan Hays, partner at global management consulting firm PRTM.

"Mobile payments are arguably the next major change in the mobile industry," said Hays.

EMEA Leads Mobile Banking Activity

Europe Middle East and Africa represents 42 percent of active mobile banking users followed by Asia Pacific at 38 percent.

Yankee Group projects that Asia Pacific will have 54 percent of the active mobile banking base by 2014. North America lags at 16 percent and will continue to lag.

Deutsche Telekom to Introduce Mobile Payments in 2011

Deutsche Telekom plans to launch its "Mobile Wallet" service for mobile payments, tickets and bonus programs in Germany and Poland in 2011, with further launches in the United States, The Netherlands and the Czech Republic in 2012.

"'The area of payment systems is a major driver of growth for Deutsche Telekom," says Thomas Kiessling, Chief Product and Innovation Officer of Deutsche Telekom.

After the acquisition of the Internet payment service company Firstgate with its "Click and Buy" brand in 2010, Deutsche Telekom will successively introduce a whole portfolio of innovative and competitive payment solutions for customers and retailers starting in 2011. Applications include paying over the Internet as well as remote and proximity mobile payment.

Androidify: Personalize your Android Robot

It's just for fun. Get the app here:  http://androidify.com/.

Tablets,Tablets, Tablets

Projections of tablets sales now routinely number in the hundreds of millions of units a year. Corning, the maker of Gorilla Glass, predicts 180 million tablets will be sold globally in 2014.

Projections of laptop sales for 2014 for that year might be 220 million globally. The issue is how much substitution might occur. 


Business Insider thinks tablet sales could reach 285 million in 2014, while e-reader sales add another 64 million units.

%20%28Business%20Insider%20Intelligence%29

Monday, February 14, 2011

iPhones as Plentiful as iPods?

How Electricity Charging Might Change

It now is easy to argue that U.S. electricity pricing might have to evolve in ways similar to the change in retail pricing of communication...