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Showing posts with label Mobile phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mobile phone. Show all posts

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Google Latitude now lets you track your friends from its website

While Google’s Latitude location sharing service has been around for some time now, it’s only ever really made sense on mobile phones. A glaring omission was a proper web-based version to get an overview of where your friends are.
Today, Google has launched a reworked Latitude homepage that does just that. You can now see your friends (and yourself) on a map, manage friend requests and control privacy settings. The new page also makes the service’s excellent stats package (showing trips you’ve made, time spent at work and much more) more easily accessible. latsitefinal
Although there was previously an iGoogle widget that allowed you to see your friends’ current locations, Google’s Kenneth Leftin says “We’ve since learned that a desktop experience is important to you even if you’re already using Latitude on your phone”.
The new site certainly makes Latitude a more ‘complete’ experience, but the service’s low profile compared to social check-in services like Foursquare means it may not get much use. A shame because as we’ve argued previously, Latitude is one of the best ways to “stalk yourself“. Maybe many people simply don’t want to do that. On Android phones, Latitude can track you exact location in real time. Maybe that’s simply too “creepy” for some.
Posted on Oct 06th, 2010 by Martin Bryant
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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Facebook Places boosts Foursquare awareness and users

Image representing Foursquare Solutions as dep...Image via CrunchBase
Long-rumoured as a 'Foursquare-killer', Facebook Places, a geolocation tool for the already wildly successful social networking site, has reported spurred growth in the location market leader, Foursquare.
According to chief executive Dennis Crowley, since the launch of Places, Foursquare saw its "biggest day ever in terms of new signups."
Foursquare is currently the most successful location-based social tool in terms of user numbers and revenues. The service allows users to 'check in' to establishments - including bars and restaurants or local attractions - and reap rewards if offered by the particular business.
Mimicking one of Foursquare's key features, Facebook Places also allows users to check in upon arrival at their favourite hang-out spots. However, that's where the similarities seem to end for the two competing applications.
Both available as mobile handset applications, which make use of a phone's built-in GPS chip, Places does not currently have a rewards system in place with local businesses. With Foursquare, top visitors can become 'mayors' of select locations, where often the business in question will reward them with free or discount goods.
At present, the Big Blue F's new venture only functions as a tool to let other friends within a social network know where to find you, and this could prompt users to investigate Foursquare, which features more comprehensive technologies.
In addition, whereas Places has only infiltrated specific markets of the United States, as Facebook tries to configure how much capacity will be taken up by user information related to the service, Foursquare is available in locations worldwide.
However, as the Places feature matures, the webbing world could be faced with yet another David v Goliath battle, as the half-billion users of Facebook, or even its 150 million mobile users, dwarf the circa 3 million subscribers to the Foursquare service.
20 August 2010 | Author: J. Morton Search Copywriter
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Thursday, June 10, 2010

Google Voice to Integrate with Gmail as a VoIP Service

Image representing Gizmo5 as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase
Google tests a new feature that makes Gmail chat more useful: users are able to make and receive Google Voice calls from Gmail. A new phone icon opens a Gmail chat window with a dialpad, an option to find contacts, a credit balance and a call button.

Right now, if you want to call someone using Google Voice, you need a phone. You can either visit Google Phone's site on your computer, enter the phone number you want to call and wait until Google calls your phone and connects you for free or use Google Phone app on a mobile phone.
The new feature will allow users to make voice calls over the Internet and it's likely that it won't be limited to Gmail. In April, TechCrunch reported that Google "built a Google Voice desktop application to make and receive calls" and that the application is tested internally. Google used technology from Gizmo5, a VoIP service acquired by Google last year.
For now, Google Voice's integration with Gmail is not publicly available.
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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Who is SelfBank Mobile

Several mobile phones
Image via Wikipedia
SelfBank brings you the world's first mobile social commerce engine, making your phone your wallet and storefront. YOU! now control all your day to day spending and banking needs in the palm of your hand and as a business person, you can use it to accept payments.


The idea

Was to essentially build a banking and payment engine powered by your mobile phone or PDA for any and all your banking, shopping, and business transaction needs, Whether online or in a retail setting ultimately making SelfBank what it stands for your bank.

At SelfBank our mantra is your phone is your wallet

You now have unlimited access to new mobile phone banking technologies with SelfBank, which will open up unlimited entrepreneurial opportunities. It's a revolutionary approach to common banking and payment practices, now in the palm of your hand.

It's a new era, what we refer to as mobile intelligence (Mi) The SelfBank Mi Account is world's first mobile commerce banking platform that is truly personal and social.

Its the most advanced cutting edge technology that makes your mobile phone your wallet and business tool, you can now attach every and all bank accounts, credit cards and business accounts to your phone and in 3 easy steps make money transfers, make payments, do your payroll, buy and sell goods, make purchases both online and at retail stores all with your mobile phone. It is social entrepreneurship empowered into a secure and neutral mobile commerce banking and payment platform. If you can imagine it! Your SelfBank Mi account can make it happen!


MI-Biz Account

At SelfBank we also provide businesses with custom mobile commerce shopping cart and retail POS gateway payment and transaction solutions. It's our goal at SelfBank to educate our members on how to turn their daily expenditures into monetized profits.

The Future of Technology








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Sunday, February 15, 2009

Who Tweets? A Twitter Census (PC World)

My social Network on Flickr, Facebook, Twitter...
Image by luc legay via Flickr
American Twitter users are predominately young, poor, blog-centric, social-network-happy urbanites who like to read the news on their mobile devices, according to the The Pew Internet and American Life Project. The PIAP released a report yesterday called "Twitter and Status Updating" that discusses who uses Twitter or similar services, and how that choice impacts their daily life. According to the paper, only 11 percent of online American adults are Tweeting, but their average age is much higher than other social network users and they have a preference for mobile technology. The Pew Center researchers arrived at their numbers by conducting phone interviews with 2,253 adult Americans (502 of which were on a cell phone) between November 19, 2008 and December 20, 2008.
An important note: Pew's (and my) references to "Twitter users" really means anyone who regularly updates her or his status through any number of services such as Twitter, Yammer, Facebook, MySpace, or even LinkedIn. Perhaps we should give them a more generic name like status updaters, but Twitter users or Tweeters sounds so much better, don't you think?
Portrait of a Tweeter
Surprisingly, and unlike many other social networks, the average Tweeter is 31. By comparison, MySpace has an average age of 27; Facebook is a little younger at 26; while LinkedIn is the social network of choice for those in their 40s. In the tweetosphere, 25- to 34-year-olds hold a slight majority over 19- to 24-year-olds by about 1 percent. With age comes money in our society, and that litle tidbit of truthiness is reflected among tweeters as well. According to PIAP, 17 percent of adult Internet users who make $30,000 or less also tweet, while only 10 percent of households making $75,000 or more broadcast their status into cyberspace. This is not particularly suprising as the memo points out, since the younger generation typically earns less money than older folks.
Tweeters are also more ethnically diverse and more likely to live in a city. Neither statistic is suprising as American youths are more ethnically diverse than older Americans. Twitter most likely appeals more to those in the urban jungle because city social lives are typically more active and less centralized than in rural areas.
Tweeters embrace social media
What I found most interesting from the PIAP memo was the fact that tweeters are using their status updates as one piece of a much larger social media landscape. In other words, Twitter is an add-on for other social media. This is not all that surprising, since Twitter welcomes third-party developers to create other uses for Twitter, such as broadcasting your tweets into your Facebook status, blog, or other web page. About 23 percent of social network users tweet, with only 4 percent of non-social networkers do the same.
Tweeters are also more likely to consume and read blogs than other Internet users. Fifty-seven percent of tweeters have read a blog, and 21 percent said yes when asked if they read a blog yesterday. By comparison, only 9 percent of non-tweeters said they read a blog yesterday and only 29 percent have ever read a blog. The statistic gets even wider when talking about blog creators: 29 percent of tweeters have created a blog, while only 11 percent of the Twitterless have ventured into the world of Wordpress and Moveable Type.
Other Tweeter facts
The PIAP memo also says that tweeters are big on wireless devices, including laptops, cell phones, smartphones, and PDAs. They are more likely to read the news online and typically they'll do it on a mobile device. Tweeting is a great way to share a news story or some other little tidbit you found on the internet. Services like TinyURL or Snurl also make it easier to Tweet your discoveries since they shorten long web addresses, allowing tweeters to maxmize their 140 character per message limit.
Tweeters may only make up a small percentage of online users at the moment, but I wonder if this is a trend that is likely to continue and expand. Recenlty, NPR's On The Media took a trip to Japan to study the Japanese love affair with mobile devices . The Japanese use their phone regularly for everything from boarding a plane to paying for simple purchases; most interestingly, however, the mobile device is the primary and sometimes only gateway onto the Internet for the average Japanese citizen. There are a variety of reasons for this including the way their digital culture developed and financial constraints, but I wonder if U.S. tweeters are simply ahead of the curve and one day, like the Japanese, Americans will give up their personal computers and get online primarily through their BlackBerrys and iPhones.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

What is it: beeTV?

Braun HF 1, Germany, 1959

Image via Wikipedia

beeTV is a revolutionary personalized content-discovery guide powered by a smart contextual matching engine. beeTV pushes to the viewer visual and entertaining suggestions assembled in a dynamic, channel-like format accessing the provider's available content. beeTV offers this real-time marketing platform to any provider on any device (TV, Mobile, PC).




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