Saturday, August 29, 2009

The bright side of sitting in traffic: Crowdsourcing road congestion data

Leveraging the power of crowd sourcing. Great for emerging market which do not have formal sources of traffic info but the challenge currently is data penetration. Decent user opt-in critical to generate meaningful results

25/08/2009, effie, Google Mobile Blog

What if you could do a little something to improve the world during your daily drive to work?

Here are a few ideas: tell everybody in the city when you're stuck in slow-moving traffic; warn the drivers on the freeway behind you that they should consider an alternate route; tell the people still at home that they should spend another ten minutes reading the morning news before they leave for work; tell your city government that they might want to change the timing of that traffic light at the highway on-ramp. Of course, you can't just get on the phone and call everybody, and your one traffic report from your one spot on the road might not help much anyway. But if everybody on the road, all at once, could tell the world how fast their car is moving, and we could make it easy for anybody to check that information on their computer or cell phone, well — then we'd be getting somewhere.

If you use Google Maps for mobile with GPS enabled on your phone, that's exactly what you can do. When you choose to enable Google Maps with My Location, your phone sends anonymous bits of data back to Google describing how fast you're moving. When we combine your speed with the speed of other phones on the road, across thousands of phones moving around a city at any given time, we can get a pretty good picture of live traffic conditions. We continuously combine this data and send it back to you for free in the Google Maps traffic layers. It takes almost zero effort on your part — just turn on Google Maps for mobile before starting your car — and the more people that participate, the better the resulting traffic reports get for everybody.



This week we're expanding our traffic layer to cover all U.S. highways and arterials when data is available. We're able to do this thanks in no small part to the data contributed by our users. This is exactly the kind of technology that we love at Google because it's so easy for a single person to help out, but can be incredibly powerful when a lot of people use it together. Imagine if you knew the exact traffic speed on every road in the city — every intersection, backstreet and freeway on-ramp — and how that would affect the way you drive, help the environment and impact the way our government makes road planning decisions. This idea, which we geeks call "crowdsourcing," isn't new. Ever since GPS location started coming to mainstream devices, people have been thinking of ways to use it to figure out how fast the traffic is moving. But for us to really make it work, we had to solve problems of scale (because you can't get useful traffic results until you have a LOT of devices reporting their speeds) and privacy (because we don't want anybody to be able to analyze Google's traffic data to see the movement of a particular phone, even when that phone is completely anonymous).

We achieve scale by making Google Maps for mobile easy to install and use, and by making it easy for people to provide information about their own vehicle speed. There's no extra device to plug into your car and no extra software to buy. Google Maps is free and works with most cell phones, and the number of cell phones with GPS is rising every day. Some phones, such as the T-Mobile myTouch 3G and the Palm Pre, come with Google Maps and traffic crowdsourcing pre-installed (the iPhone Maps application, however, does not support traffic crowdsourcing). Google is fortunate to have a lot of people using our products, and that scale helps make our products better.

We understand that many people would be concerned about telling the world how fast their car was moving if they also had to tell the world where they were going, so we built privacy protections in from the start. We only use anonymous speed and location information to calculate traffic conditions, and only do so when you have chosen to enable location services on your phone. We use our scale to provide further privacy protection: When a lot of people are reporting data from the same area, we combine their data together to make it hard to tell one phone from another. Even though the vehicle carrying a phone is anonymous, we don't want anybody to be able to find out where that anonymous vehicle came from or where it went — so we find the start and end points of every trip and permanently delete that data so that even Google ceases to have access to it. We take the privacy concerns related to user location data seriously, and have worked hard to protect the privacy of users who share this data — but we still understand that not everybody will want to participate. If you'd like to stop your phone from sending anonymous location data back to Google, you can find opt-out instructions here.

We've already been able to provide useful traffic information with the help of our existing mobile users, but we hope that is just the start. As GPS-enabled phones and data plans get less expensive, more people will be able to participate. Crowdsourcing traffic gives us a way to harness bits of location data from our users and give it back to them in a form they can use to make impactful decisions that affect their free time, their pocketbooks and the environment. The more people use it, the better it will get. So next time you're sitting in morning traffic, turn on Google Maps for mobile and let someone else know they can hit the snooze button one more time. Tomorrow morning, they might do the same for you.


India Sets 3G Spectrum Price

Finally the 3G auction process moves along after innumerable delays ! Challenges however are :

* Availability of just 5x2 MHz per operator per circle without any clear road map for award of additional frequency or any availability of the same

* 4 slots of 5x2 MHz, beyond the single license already been given to the public sector incumbent, wont necessarily be available in all circles at the time of auction due to some portion of the spectrum being with Defence which has asked for commissioning of an alternate fiber based communications network to migrate to


* For bidders without an existing 2G license the terms remain unclear as last time round they were required to pay the amount for a 2G license without necessarily being awarded frequency for the same




India's carriers are, at last, preparing for the long-delayed auction of 3G and WiMax spectrum following a critical pricing decision by the Indian government, which has set the base prices for the country's 3G and WiMax spectrum.

The starting price for each slot of 3G spectrum is 35 billion Indian Rupees (US$716.4 million), lower than the INR40.4 billion ($827 million) price previously signaled by the government but higher than the original INR20.2 billion ($413.5 million) price suggested.

Five blocks of pan-India 3G spectrum are available, but one has already been allocated and divided up between state-owned carriers Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. (BSNL) and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd. (MTNL) , which have already launched their initial 3G services.

MTNL operates in the metro service areas, or "circles," of New Delhi and Mumbai, while BSNL operates in the other 20 circles. Both will pay for their spectrum once the auction is complete, with the price being equal to the highest bid at the end of the auction process.

That leaves four blocks for the auction, which is now set to take place before the end of November. Bids are expected from the likes of Bharti Airtel Ltd., Reliance Communications Ltd. , Vodafone Essar , IDEA Cellular Ltd. , Tata Teleservices Ltd. , Aircel Ltd. , Sistema Shyam TeleServices Ltd. , Unitech Wireless, and others.

The base price for each of the three available blocks of WiMax spectrum, which will be auctioned separately, has been set at INR17.5 billion ($358 million).

Local media reports, such as this one from the Economic Times, quote telecom minister A Raja as saying the government expects to raise INR250 billion ($5.11 billion) from the spectrum sales.

The 3G auction had been set to take place early this year, but was subject to repeated delays that have allowed BSNL and MTNL to steal a march on their privately owned rivals. (

Friday, August 28, 2009

Eric Giler demos wireless electricity

Brilliant ! Finally some technology evolution on the electronic power side which clearly has been the laggard in terms of innovation

Eric Gilner (MIT) wireless electricity demo @ http://www.ted.com/talks/eric_giler_demos_wireless_electricity.html

About this talk

Eric Giler wants to untangle our wired lives with cable-free electric power. Here, he covers what this sci-fi tech offers, and demos MIT's breakthrough version, WiTricity -- a near-to-market invention that may soon recharge your cell phone, car, pacemaker.

Friday, August 21, 2009

FLO TV Takes Steps To Measure Mobile TV Habits

A good step forward towards Mobile TV getting advertising traction. As mobile TV adoption has continued to rise, the demand for reliable and verifiable viewership data has grown throughout the entertainment, media and advertising industries.

, mocoNews.net
Aug 20, 2009


Qualcomm’s FLO TV has upped the ante for getting viewership results for its mobile broadcast TV service for the benefit of advertisers.

FLO TV, which is resold by AT&T and Verizon Wireless, said today that it has partnered with Portland, Ore.-based Rentrak, a media measurement and research company that will compile daily figures for the TV service. Previously, FLO said it was using an internal, time-intensive process. Now, with Rentrak, FLO will be able to report second-by-second usage stats by the next day—much like networks do today.

The two companies plan to have the partnership up and running later this year, but also provided a handful of stats to accompany today’s release: the average viewer spends 30 minutes watching FLO TV; prime time is unusually early between 1 and 2 p.m.; and the Michael Jackson Memorial on July 7 was the most-viewed event in FLO TV history. The average viewer stayed tuned for 49 minutes
.


Press Release

FLO TV and Rentrak Launch the First Comprehensive Audience Measurement and Reporting System for Multicast Mobile TV in the U.S.

Second-by-second Viewership Data Enables the Sale of Advertising Time on the FLO TV Service

SAN DIEGO & PORTLAND, Ore. - August 20, 2009 - FLO TV Incorporated, provider of the award-winning FLO TV™ live mobile TV service and a wholly owned subsidiary of Qualcomm Incorporated (Nasdaq: QCOM), and Rentrak Corporation (Nasdaq: RENT), a multi-screen media measurement and research company serving the entertainment industry, have aligned to launch the mobile television industry's first comprehensive viewership and advertising impression reporting using Rentrak's TV Essentials™ media measurement system. Through their collaboration, FLO TV and Rentrak will deliver reporting that will serve as the currency for advertising sales on FLO TV and provide deeper insights into FLO TV audience viewing patterns while not divulging any individual subscriber's personal information.

As mobile TV adoption has continued to rise, the demand for reliable and verifiable viewership data has grown throughout the entertainment, media and advertising industries. Through Rentrak's TV Essentials reporting system, FLO TV will provide ongoing reports to content providers and advertisers to assist them in their programming and media buying decisions for this emerging platform.

“This is a significant milestone for FLO TV and also for the mobile multicast TV category,” said Jonathan Barzilay, senior vice president of programming and advertising, FLO TV. “Mobile TV is quickly becoming a vital platform for consumers. With our new impression reporting from Rentrak, FLO TV can provide relevant viewership information to advertisers and content partners swiftly and reliably.”

“The mobile space is particularly opportunistic as a result of devices being connected to a unique viewer, enabling a highly targetable new advertising marketplace," said Ken Papagan, president and chief strategy officer, Rentrak. “We are very excited about our collaboration with FLO TV because it leverages the considerable development Rentrak has put into the TV Essentials system and expands the value of our service for conventional linear television to include the mobile platform.”

FLO TV and Rentrak are currently in the integration phase and are planning to share impression data with their programming partners later this year.

The FLO TV service is available through the top two U.S. wireless carriers, including AT&T as AT&T Mobile TV. To learn more about FLO TV, please visit www.flotv.com.

India Added 14.4 Mn Mobile Subs in July

Another blow out month !

­Cellular News, August 21, 2009

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India has reported that the number of telephone subscribers in India increased to 479.07 million at the end of July 2009 from a level of 464.82 million in June, thereby registering a growth rate of 3.06%. With this, the overall Tele-density in India reaches 41.08%

Wireless subscriber base increased from 427.28 Million in June 2009 to 441.66 Million at the end of July-09 at a monthly growth rate of 3.36%. Wireless Tele-density stands at 37.87.

Wireline subscriber base declined from 37.54 Million in June-2009 to 37.41 Million at the end of July-09. BSNL/MTNL, the PSU operators own 85.99% of the Market share. While major Private Wireline service providers have increased their subscriber base, BSNL/MTNL lost 0.17 Million subscribers in the month of July-09. Wireline teledensity is 3.21 .

Mobile Subscribers by Operator

Network Operator June July Change
Bharti Airtel 102,367,881 105,177,653 2,809,772
Reliance Communications 79,616,300 82,007,022 2,390,722
Vodafone Essar 76,449,587 78,680,291 2,230,704
BSNL 54,364,502 55,960,775 1,596,273
Idea 42,768,816 44,133,943 1,365,127
Tata Teleservices 37,111,668 39,371,072 2,259,404
Aircel 21,798,731 23,101,900 1,303,169
MTNL 4,605,852 4,641,917 36,065
Spice 4,320,062 4,382,881 62,819
Loop Telecom 2,305,640 2,350,537 44,897
MTS 1,189,103 1,467,031 277,928
HFCL Infotel 84,203 384,029 299,826


Twitter : Location, Location, Location

Twitter has announced that the service will soon get a new feature in its API: the capability to optionally put geo-location data into tweets.

With this move is Twitter shedding its SMS roots ? In a text message, users will only get the text, without the geodata. If Twitter sheds its SMS legacy, what might happen to the core of Twitter itself, the 140-character text limit, which itself is based on the limits of text messaging?

Twitter Blog, August 20, 2009

Twitter platform developers have been doing innovative work with location for some time despite having access to only a rudimentary level of API support. Most of the location-based projects we see are built using the simple, account-level location field folks can fill out as part of their profile. Since anything can be written in this field, it's interesting but not very dependable.

We're gearing up to launch a new feature which makes Twitter truly location-aware. A new API will allow developers to add latitude and longitude to any tweet. Folks will need to activate this new feature by choice because it will be off by default and the exact location data won't be stored for an extended period of time. However, if people do opt-in to sharing location on a tweet-by-tweet basis, compelling context will be added to each burst of information.

For example, with accurate, tweet-level location data you could switch from reading the tweets of accounts you follow to reading tweets from anyone in your neighborhood or city—whether you follow them or not. It's easy to imagine how this might be interesting at an event like a concert or even something more dramatic like an earthquake. There will likely be many use cases we haven't even thought of yet which is part of what makes this so exciting.

Developer Preview

We're going to release geolocation to platform developers before we add the feature to Twitter.com. Most of the mobile applications people use and love are built by Twitter platform developers. Developers will have access to this new geolocation feature early which means it will most likely be available on your app of choice before it's available on Twitter's web site. Later, we'll add it to our mobile web site and Twitter.com as well.

We're very excited about the potential of location metadata combined with Twitter. Our platform team has been on a roll lately. Geolocation lead @rsarver is particularly enthusiastic about location given his personal interest and involvement in events such as WhereCamp and his career history with location-aware services.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Palm preps commercial app store launch

No mention of operator billing a la Apple app store

GSMA, August 19, 2009

Palm announced yesterday that software developers will be able to start charging for applications downloads to its high-profile Pre smartphone with the company's launch of an e-commerce beta programme set to start in mid-September. Developers will receive 70 percent of any revenue generated from downloads (with Palm taking the remaining share), but can also choose to give apps away for free. Consumers will be able to pay for apps using Visa and MasterCard credit cards. Palm said it expects to launch the full developer programme in the US "this fall."

Palm's efforts in the app store space are an attempt to follow the success of Apple's original App Store, which helped boost iPhone sales. In June Palm launched its first handset (the Pre) that features its own store and runs its new operating system, webOS. Palm has said that Pre is the first of a line of phones to be based on webOS. Reports this week, however, suggest that availability of its next webOS handset, the so-called Eos (codename: Pixie), may be delayed until next year.

Blockbuster brings movies to Motorola phones


Movies seem to be the next flavour following music and apps. The Motorola arrangement follows the recent Samsung movie store announcement

GSMA, August 19, 2009

Movie rental retailer Blockbuster has signed a deal with Motorola to being "thousands" of titles to select models of the US vendor's devices. Motorola handset owners will be able to download movies direct from Blockbuster's OnDemand service. Specific details were not released, including when the service will be available or how much it will cost. The mobile play expands on Blockbuster's OnDemand movie downloading service offered through set-top boxes for TVs.

The move is the first time Blockbuster has entered the mobile space, and has been viewed by industry analysts as the company's attempt to halt sliding sales as revenue from its retail locations declines due to the popularity of online movie rental sites. Previous reports suggested the company was in talks with Microsoft to bring its content to handsets using the Windows Mobile platform. Competition in the mobile movie space is strong; earlier this year Samsung launched its own movie store in the UK and Germany, Apple's iTunes store offers movie rentals, whilst US operators AT&T and Verizon have also entered the mobile video space.

Facebook Search Improved for Everyone

Could this signal the shift in search away from Google, and with it, control over the web's best monetization mechanism?

In the recent past the focus has been increasingly on Social Search or evolving search to understand the world as events occur and people's reactions to them, as well as crowdsourcing results from the burgeoning social web.


Facebook has now staked its claim on this market with the announcement that its real-time search engine would be available to all its users, in a direct challenge to Twitter's own search engine. Status updates, photos, links, videos and notes shared by friends in the last 30 days are searchable, as well updates from people who have chosen to make their content available to everyone. In contrast to Twitter, search results also contain rich content, from videos to music to thumbnails of shared links.

Facebook last week announced acquisition of social feed aggregator FriendFeed for $50 Mn, picking up a ready-made real-time search product, as part of the deal.

Social search is natural territory for Facebook, which, with a market-leading 250 Mn users, is unrivalled for the amount of data it can collect about people, their interests and social graphs. It now just needs to encourage its users to modify their behaviour and supplement the private nature of friends' networks on the site with a greater willingess to share more publicly, in order to expose this information to dataminers.

How much value advertisers will see in the social web of opinions, thoughts and interests is yet to be seen. But with Microsoft - an investor in Facebook - already delivering Bing results from the static internet mashed with Facebook's own real-time results, the pressure is now on Google to respond with its own move into social and real-time search.


Facebook Blog

Last month, we began testing new versions of Search with a small group of people on Facebook. Based on the success of those tests, we're rolling out a new version of Search to everyone on the site beginning today.

You now will be able to search the last 30 days of your News Feed for status updates, photos, links, videos and notes being shared by your friends and the Facebook Pages of which you're a fan. If people have chosen to make their content available to everyone, you also will be able to search for their status updates, links and notes, regardless of whether or not you are friends. Search results will continue to include people's profiles as well as relevant Facebook Pages, groups and applications.

To search for a particular term, just enter your query in the search box in the upper-right corner of any page. Once you're taken to the search results, use the filters on the left-hand side of the page to view only posts by friends or posts by everyone. If you're searching for a specific person, Page, group or application, you also can filter by those results.

By being able to search more types of content that are being shared on the site, you can easily find out your friends' evening plans and recently frequented restaurants by searching for "dinner," discover which of your friends are following Michael Schumacher's comeback during the "Formula 1" season by searching for the race series, or query "economy" to see if people or your favorite news sources feel that the recession is turning around. You also can search for a company or product to learn what people are saying about that brand.

Earlier today, I used Facebook Search to get the latest about our recent acquisition of FriendFeed, an innovative service for sharing online. When I enter "FriendFeed" in the "Search" field in the upper-right hand corner of any page on Facebook, I get the most recent status updates, reactions and news from my friends who work in technology and people who have chosen to make their content available to everyone. I also can find the official FriendFeed Page on Facebook and user groups related to FriendFeed.



Remember that you can always control what content you're sharing in other people's search results by editing your privacy settings here.

We hope that these improvements to Search will help you connect with and find information about the people and things you care about more easily. We're rolling these changes out over the course of the next few days, so you may not see the new results just yet.

Location-based couponing get started in Italy

Useful LBS application which I personally feel holds tremendous potential and more so in emerging markets like India. Integrating this with YP and Classifieds could make this more powerful.

Ludovic Privat, GPS Business News
Thursday July 23, 2009

Location-based couponing get started in Italy
Italian LBS provider modomodo has teamed up with online discount website Cittàshop.it to provide Italian customers an easy way to find discounted items and services in locations around them with a few clicks on their mobile phones.

The application developed by modomodo let consumers select the nearest coupons based on the GPS position of the phone. The user can browse coupons by categories and distance and display a map of the location. Coupons are redeemed in the shops when displayed on the phone screen.

Cittàshop has been operating on the web since 1999 (the company was publishing a paper magazine since 1994) and offer coupons in 39 cities across Italy. “Cittashop.it provides real and guaranteed discounts, with more than 3,000 promotions usable in thousands of shops all over Italy,” underlines Piergiorgio Segre, Cittashop’s CEO.

“The number of Italian people that buy, through their mobile, contents for their own mobile is dramatically increasing, about 13 million people last year, according to a research recently done by the Mobile Content & Internet Osservatorio of Politecnico of Milan", commented Fabio Maglioni, CEO at modomodo. "Actually Italy is leader in terms of use of mobile phones and sale of mobile contents” .

Based in Milan, Italy, modomodo was established in 2008 and received a first round of funding in December 2008.

Location-based couponing get started in Italy

Dell joins stampede to launch smartphone

With this announcement all major PC makers including HP, Acer, Lenovo, Toshiba, Asus, Apple, and Sony have now entered the handset business

By Richard Waters in San Francisco, 17 2009

Dell disclosed on Monday that it was preparing to enter the smartphone business, adding to the escalating competition as mobile handset and computer makers converge on one of the only parts of the personal technology market still showing strong growth and profits.

Confirmation of Dell’s long-rumoured intentions in the mobile market came as China Mobile showed off a model of a Dell smartphone running Google’s Android operating system.

Dell described the handset as a “proof-of-concept prototype” and said that the company was working with the Chinese mobile operator on launch plans. Dell did not disclose further details or timing.

Founder Michael Dell once ruled out the prospect that his company, now the world’s second-largest PC maker, would ever enter the mobile handset business, arguing that profit margins were too slim and that Nokia, with 40 per cent of the business, represented too tough a competitor.

Since then, however, the success of Apple’s touchscreen iPhone has provoked a stampede by other makers of personal technology and forced Dell to rethink.

“With the iPhone, Apple brought a lot of new people to the brand, and captured some of the highest margins in the industry,” said Rob Enderle, a US tech industry analyst. With sales of PCs and traditional mobile handsets falling in the first half of this year, that has made smartphones one of the few bright spots.

Dell’s attempt to break into smartphones also reflects a defensive move to protect its PC business, since it could be vulnerable if it does not sell a full range of personal computing devices, according to analysts. The US company has already launched netbooks – low-priced, small-scale PCs that have become another hot area of personal technology.

“If you don’t have an offering in a particular area, you invite a flanking move by your rivals,” said Roger Kay, a PC industry analyst.

Besides China Mobile, Dell has already forged alliances with AT&T in the US and Vodafone and TeliaSonera in Europe to sell netbooks. Putting a smartphone alongside these devices would add to the range of gadgets it sells through mobile operators.

However, Dell abandoned a similar move into consumer technology when it scrapped its digital music player after failing to find a market.

Here are some live photos of the Dell Mini 3i:

Dell Mini 3i China Mobile

Dell Mini 3i China Mobile 3 4

Dell Mini 3i China Mobile 2

Dell Mini 3i China Mobile 3

The smartphone’s features seem to be identical with the rumored ones, including a 3.5 inch capacitive touchscreen display with 640 x 360 pixels, Bluetooth, 3MP camera, MicroSD card support, and 2G connectivity (no 3G). There’s no Wi-Fi, but there might be GPS in there somewhere.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Apps Update, June 2009

Flurry analytics recently reported their July Smartphone Industry Pulse which provides analytics from 200 apps, across 25m consumers globally and includes 4 different Mobile platforms (Apple, Android, Blackberry, & Java). Since all platforms are not included, the data is indicative only but revealing nonetheless.

While the survey is likely biased towards the US & Apple, the results indicate that Apple is increasing their strangle hold on the Apps market with increasing app share, developer share and most importantly, consumer share


The data in this report is computed from a sample size of 200 applications, 25 million consumers and four platforms: Apple (iPhone and iPod Touch), Blackberry, JavaME and Google Android.

Google Android: Maintaining Market Share

When Flurry released its March 2009 Pulse, we declared iPhone the undisputed winner, leading by a wide margin over Google Android in all key categories: number of developers, applications and consumers. Since then, the number of developers, applications and consumers in Flurry's network has grown by more than three times. Revisiting market share, we find that Android has maintained its percentage share over this rapid period of growth. While the iPhone still dominates the application market, Google Android has managed to prevent Apple from widening the gap. With 1) reports that roughly 20 more Android handsets will ship during 2009, 2) continued application saturation in the App Store making it harder for developers to compete for consumer downloads and 3) the relative ease required to develop for Android versus iPhone, Google appears well positioned to chip away at iPhone's dominant position.

Flurry Analytics - Developer by Platform

Flurry Analytics - Applications by Platform

Flurry Analytics - Consumers by Platform

For Blackberry and JavaME, however, our sample shows that Apple continues to cannibalize those platforms.

App User Retention: Android Users More Loyal than iPhone Users

Comparing a group of applications available on both iPhone and Android, we found that Android consumers use their applications longer. To measure this, we tracked the percent of users who still use an application after downloading it over different periods of time. Across all time periods, Android users continue to use their applications longer. For the longest period of time measured, 90 days, the proportion of Android to iPhone usage was approximately 50% greater. Please see the specific figures in the graph below.

Flurry Analytics - iPhone vs Android Retention

One reason we believe retention rates vary is that Android offers far fewer applications compared to iPhone. With applications coming out on iPhone at a faster rate, iPhone users move onto other apps more quickly. For Android users, they make more use of what's available, with less temptation to move to the next application. Other factors that could also play a role:

  • The Android base tends to be "older," have less time and interest to try new applications. Once they find an application they like, they stick with it.
  • The Android base is more tolerant, tend to be more tech savvy and find ways to appreciate what they have, even if their applications aren't perfect.

Regardless of the underlying drivers it's clear that at the current volume of available Android apps, usage is stickier.

App Usage Frequency: Android Usage Heavier than iPhone Usage

Further studying our set of applications with both iPhone and Android versions, Android consumers used their applications significantly more frequently than their iPhone counterparts. 37% of iPhone consumers who downloaded applications used those applications fewer than 5 times per month ("superlight users") with Android having only 11% in the superlight usage category. Toward the other end of the spectrum, 35% percent of Android users can be defined as "heavy users," using applications more than 50 times per month, compared to only 15% on the iPhone.

Flurry Analytics - iPhone vs Android Usage Frequency

We believe differences in frequency of use are driven by the same underlying factors affecting length of use; namely, fewer available applications for Android and different behaviors exhibited by an older, more tech savvy user base. Overall this creates opportunities for Android application developers who are seeing saturation in the iPhone App store. Finally, a lot will hinge on the Android Market becoming a better shopping experience as well as the need for better design of upcoming Android OEM handsets than the existing HTC G1.

Ode to Dad


Naresh K. Manaktala (Dad)
24.10.1942 - 08.08.2009

With dad having passed away last few weeks have probably been one of the roughest patches I have been through in my life. Didn't in the slightest expect it to be so hard but I guess its going to be a big void in my life I wasn't really prepared for and I am not sure any of us in the family were and here's a few words for you dad...

"I didn't think I would need to pen this down at this stage in my life and its very hard for me to do this so I'll be very brief in this tribute....

Dad without bias was probably one of the most genuine & righteous (and you don't get too many of those now days), strong willed, fiercely independent and compassionate people I have known.

Very strong intellectually and always keen to learn, explore and travel and a major foodie to top it all.

For me and Kamaldeep (my brother), he was one of our best friends, a philosopher and a guide, the person we always turned to when in doubt, whenever we wanted advice on the right way forward and for that big decision.

A truly good human being and we will struggle to get the respect he had earned.

However, I guess at the end of the day the laws of natural justice selectively apply....

One complaint though dad - Its not fair that you didn't spend enough time with your grand children though we know you really wanted to....

Take care dad, we will terribly miss you and often look up to you for advice, strength and the right way....we know you will always be watching over us...."

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Google and Apple prepare for Chinese battle

The smartphone battle intensifies with new hardware players like Lenovo, variants of existing software platforms like OMS and in new geographies like the fast growing Chinese market

GSMA Mobile, August 6, 2009

Google and Apple are set to go head-to-head in the fast-growing Chinese smartphone space having struck landmark deals with China's two largest mobile operators. The Financial Times reports today that China Mobile's long-awaited 'OPhone' - a device made by Lenovo Mobile based on Google's Android platform - could launch as early as next week, according to sources close to Lenovo Mobile. Reports earlier this week suggest China Mobile - the world's largest mobile operator by subscribers - is also close to launching a customised version of HTC's Magic Android smartphone. The latter device will trade under the Dopod brand used by Taiwan's HTC in China. It is designed for China Mobile's TD-SCDMA network and will use OMS (Open Mobile System), the operator's own Android-based mobile platform. Meanwhile, number-two operator China Unicom is heavily rumoured to have sealed a deal to bring Apple's iPhone 3G to China, and is expected to offer the device when it launches its country-wide 3G services in September or October.

According to the Financial Times, smartphone penetration in China is running at 10 percent of all handsets sold, but the devices are expected to generate higher revenues as subscribers access features such as music and games downloads made possible by the rollout of 3G in China this year. China Mobile is expected to offer a subsidy of up to CNY2,000 (US$293) on the OPhone, almost half the price of the device, to its prepaid and contract customers, say industry sources. According to earlier reports, China Unicom is expected to start selling the iPhone at the end of September at a price point of around CNY3,000 (US$440) as part of a three-year exclusive deal.

Monday, August 03, 2009

INQ Mobile Launches Two New Phones With Twitter, Media Syncing

INQ seems to have carved out an interesting SN niche for itself. Its first phones were very successful in driving usage. It would be interesting to see the premium users are willing to pay for tight app device integration.

mocoNews.net, Aug 3, 2009

The first phone that Hutchison Whampoa-owned INQ mobile built was known for its tight integration with Facebook, and drove 65 percent of users to use the social network regularly—a figure more in line with the iPhone, but much higher than phones in that price range.

Nine months after launching the phone, the company is unveiling two new handsets that will work with Twitter and will sync with songs stored in iTunes or Windows Media Player. The INQ Chat, which has a Qwerty keyboard, and the smaller INQ Mini, will launch in Q4.

While some players are increasingly moving away from applications and argue that eventually everything will be accessed through a phone’s browser, INQ Mobile is dead-set against the idea. It builds the applications and even the hardware to make for the best experience. INQ’s Co-Founder Jeff Taylor said they worked with Facebook for 12 months to get it right, and the same with Twitter to the point where if Twitter goes down, the user will see the fail whale image on the phone. “We think both are really important, but what’s interesting is we see apps taking care of the heavy lifting.”

In addition to Twitter and new media-syncing capabilities, The phones also integrate with features that previous phones also had, including access to instant messaging clients, Skype and a browser.

Taylor declined to say which carriers will sell the handsets, but that they’ll likely be sold in their current markets, including The Republic of Ireland, UK, Sweden, Austria, Italy, Hong Kong and Australia. They are also looking to launch in the U.S. market for the first time and have opened an office in San Francisco to help with those efforts.

Taylor said part of the beauty of the phone is that they will be very inexpensive, even for the prepaid market. So far, smartphones have been successful at the high-end, but he said cheaper phones will be key as they go out to the mass market. “We are doing a great job at the high end, but the mass market customer is not ready to pay the fees.”