WebProNews

Tag: Google Play

  • Google Play Direct Billing Now Offered By More Mobile Carriers

    I remember the dark ages when I owned a normal Motorola Razr flip phone. I was tricked into downloading some ringtones once and the charges were reflected on the monthly phone bill. I was so relieved that I could directly charge my credit card on the Android Market so my phone bill would not contain any nasty surprises. Turns out that some people actually like the option of direct billing though.

    To that end, Google Play announced that more content than ever can now be charged via direct billing. You can now start downloading all kinds of content that won’t show up until you receive your phone bill. Then you’ll wish you could just pay immediately via credit card, especially if you have kids.

    Consumers in the U.S. now have the ability to charge the purchase of apps, music, movies and books via T-Mobile. Japanese consumers can now pay for movies, apps and games via DoCoMo, KDDI and Softbank. Sprint will be joining this list very soon with their Android devices.

    There are multiple mobile carriers in countries around the world who offer direct billing. If you wish to see your phone bill become inflated with app purchases, you can use the aforementioned T-Mobile and Sprint, as well as AT&T in the U.S. The UK offers similar services via T-Mobile and Vodafone. Check the Web site to see the full list of countries that offer direct billing services.

    I’m still going to stick with paying for apps via my credit card. Just know that the option to use direct billing is there and will probably expand as Google expands its business. Maybe this will help Google Play in its attempt to make money. It’s not doing so hot in comparison to Amazon or iTunes.

  • SiriusXM App For Android Updated With 5 Hour Replay

    SiriusXM App For Android Updated With 5 Hour Replay

    Sirius XM Radio announced today that a free update to their SiriusXM Android app has been released. The company claims the new app, which can now be downloaded in the Google Play app marketplace, will give subscribers to their service more control over how to listen to SiriusXM content.

    “This updated and enhanced SiriusXM Internet Radio App for Android, the top smartphone platform in the U.S., now gives current and future subscribers access to more programming, including more live sports play-by-play, and more control over when and where they listen to their favorite SiriusXM channels and programs,” said Jim Meyer, President of Operations and Sales at SiriusXM. “We are pleased to bring these new and exciting features to our subscribers, and we will continue to evolve our SiriusXM Internet Radio offerings this year by adding greater functionality on smartphones, mobile devices and online.”

    The biggest change in this update is “Start Now” which allows subscribers to select and listen to content previously broadcast on many channels, up to 5 hours in the past. “Tune Start” will now automatically start a song from its beginning when tuning in to a station, and the app now allows users to pause live radio, replay a song or segment, and skip forward. In addition, the app now includes a “Show Finder,” which is a programming guide that offers a complete list of programming up to a week ahead. Users can set reminder alerts for themselves using the “Show Finder.”

    SiriusXM claims the update, which includes a design overhaul for the app, is part of the rollout of what they are calling SiriusXM 2.0, a service they hope will span “hardware, software, audio, and data services.” It is interesting to see companies whose business models have become outdated adapt to changing technologies. With satellite radio all but defunct, SiriusXM will have to compete with online radio models such as Pandora and Spotify, and these features seem to be a step in the right direction. Even so, to stand a chance the company will have to keep Howard Stern happy.

    What do you think? Is SiriusXM on the right track to remain competitive? Should the company abandon its subscription model altogether? Leave a comment below and let me know.

  • Google Play Adds Australian Movies

    The Google Australia blog has announced that thousands of new Australian movies are now available for rental on Google Play and YouTube. Australia has fostered a rich cinematic history, producing films like Crocodile Dundee and Crocodile Dundee II. Also, some of the finest actors in recent history are Australian, including Cate Blanchett, Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe, Heath Ledger and the masterful Nick Cave. One of the first movie studios in the world existed on the Australian continent – the Limelight Department opened in Melbourne in 1897.

    Today Google launched added Movies on Google Play as well as a Movies page on YouTube Australia, featuring thousands of films from Hollywood and regional Australian studios. Australian outfits including Roadshow Films, Icon Film Distribution, Madman Entertainment, Hopscotch and Transmission Films are offering content, as well as big Hollywood names, like Disney, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, NBCUniversal, Village Roadshow Pictures and Lionsgate.

    Movies can be viewed online on both the Google Play and YouTube platforms – as for mobile users, films can be rented via the Google Play app for Android, and likewise downloaded for offline viewing inside of the rental period. New releases are $5.99 at standard definition, $6.99 for HD, and older titles are $3.99 and $4.99 respectively. Said rental parameters are 30 days to begin watching a title, and 48 hours to finish it, once started.

    In related news, it has been recently speculated that Google “Play” might be the name of the search giant’s upcoming Android tablet device, as the company has been seen buying up several play-related domain names.

  • Twitter For iPhone and Android Updated and Improved

    Twitter has updated its mobile apps for both iPhone and Android. The updated app can now be downloaded at the Apple App Store or at Google Play. The announcement came from Twitter Product Manager Sung Hu Kim in a post at the Twitter blog. Kim states the apps now feature improved discover, search, and notifications.

    The “Discover” tab in the app now allows users to see “Activity” on Twitter. “Activity,” Kim wrote is, “a stream of updates that shows which Tweets are favorited or retweeted by the people you follow and which accounts those people follow or add to lists.” From Kim’s blog post:

    Activity appears below the redesigned stories in Discover. Now you can tap any story once to see Tweets about a particular trend or news article. You can then read the entire story or join the conversation by replying, retweeting or favoriting related Tweets.

    The search function will now correct spelling and suggest terms related to a search. It will also autocomplete the names of people you follow when you begin typing them into the search box.

    Notifications got what is arguably the biggest change. Notifications for interactions are now push notifications. This means user’s won’t have to wait for their app to refresh to receive notifications for their retweets, follows, or direct messages. Users can now choose to have notifications happen instantly.

    Some interesting incremental changes for mobile apps. What do you think? Do you use the Twitter app or some other app, such as Seesmic? Leave a comment and let us know.

  • Galaxy Nexus On Sale: Free Google Wallet

    Galaxy Nexus On Sale: Free Google Wallet

    Good news for Android fans, the new Samsung Nexus phone (HSPA+) is on sale at Google Play and they’re selling it for a low price plus throwing in the Google Wallet app free. The latest version of Nexus features Ice Cream Sandwich, a 4.56″ HD AMOLED display, and is totally unlocked. That means you can sign up with what ever carrier you want.

    That’s right for about $400 you can have an unlocked device free of any contracts or obligations. If you look at what carriers charge for these kinds of devices without signing a two-year contract you’ll see this is a hell of a deal. The free Google Wallet is a nice upgrade too, but if you don’t plan on buying the Nexus, Sprint can get you the free Google Wallet app too.

    The LG Viper 4GLTE and the LG Optimus Elite will also give you the Wallet when you choose these devices on a two-year sprint contract.

    Stylist Lilliana Vazquez gives a powerful testimonial for the Google Wallet:

  • Google Drive Cloud Storage Officially Launched

    The rumors and sightings of the past week have been proven true. Google has just announced the launch of its new cloud storage service, Google Drive. Users can now request a 5 GB Drive over on the Drive website. Google will email users “when your Google Drive is ready.” In a blog post on the Official Google Blog, Sundar Pichai, Senior Vice President for Chrome and Apps, outlined the features of Google’s latest product.

    First off, drive can be installed on a Mac or PC and there is already has a Drive app for Android phones in Google Play. Pichai states that the Google team is “working hard” on an iPhone version, but there is not yet an app in Apple’s App Store.

    Google Drive has been built with Google Docs in mind, and Docs is built-in to Drive. Google Docs files can be stored on a user’s Drive. Users can even use Drive to collaborate on documents in real-time, a feature reminiscent of the now-defunct Google Wave. It’s not surprising that Google has designed drive to work seamlessly with other google services. In addition to new functionality coming to other Google products, Google has built Drive as an open platform, encouraging third-party developers to design solutions around the service. From the blog post:

    Drive is built to work seamlessly with your overall Google experience. You can attach photos from Drive to posts in Google+, and soon you’ll be able to attach stuff from Drive directly to emails in Gmail. Drive is also an open platform, so we’re working with many third-party developers so you can do things like send faxes, edit videos and create website mockups directly from Drive. To install these apps, visit the Chrome Web Store—and look out for even more useful apps in the future.

    In a Googley twist to cloud storage, users will be able to search all of their files. Google is using new image recognition technology to associate search terms with images, making it easier to sift through large collections of photos.

    The basic Google Drive package is free and comes with 5 GB of storage space. If you need more space, rental prices have also been announced:

    • 25 GB for $2.49 per month
    • 100 GB for $4.99 per month
    • 1 TB for $49.99 per month

    As a bonus, if you upgrade your Google Drive to one of these paid accounts, your Gmail account will also receive a storage boost to 25 GB.

    Have a look at the launch video Google has prepared and leave a comment with your thoughts below.

  • Galaxy Nexus Available For Purchase on Google Play

    The Google+ page for Android announced today that users can purchase a Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphone straight from Google. The phone is now available in the Google Play store for $399, but is only available in the U.S. The model sold in the Play store is an unlocked and contract-free GSM phone with HSPA+ data capabilities, meaning it will work with either T-Mobile’s or AT&T’s networks. It has 16 GB of internal storage. The phone is also available for a subsidized purchase through Verizon and Sprint on Google’s Galaxy Nexus website.

    My guess is that the next generation of Android smartphones is pressuring Google and Samsung to push as much Galaxy Nexus stock out the door as possible. The HTC One X and the Motorola Droid Razr are already challenging the “Google experience” of the Galaxy Nexus with powerful processors and interesting features. Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich, is beginning to propagate throughout the high-end Android landscape.

    I’ll admit that I’m tempted to buy one of these unlocked Galaxy Nexus phones, and I may have already done so by the time you read this. If only T-Mobile and HTC would get their act together and release the HTC One X, I would consider skipping the Galaxy Nexus. My Nexus One is over 2 years old at this point, and it’s on its last legs. What do you think? Is the Galaxy Nexus worth having at this price? Should I wait for HTC’s new super-phone to launch for T-Mobile in the U.S.? Let me know in the comments section below.

  • Chrome for Android Getting An Update, New Features

    Google has released an update for the beta version of the Chrome for Android browser. The update adds several new, highly requested features. It also adds support for an additional 31 languages, and is now available in all the same countries as Google Play.

    With the new version, announced today on the Google Mobile Blog, Chrome for Android users can put bookmarks on their home screens (a la Safari for iOS), choose apps to handle Chrome links, and request the desktop version of a website, rather than the mobile version. This last feature seems the most useful. Though a mobile website is usually much preferable to a desktop version when browsing from a smartphone, it’s sometimes necessary to view the desktop version. While many mobile websites offer you the option to switch, just as many don’t. Having a feature built right into the browser allowing you to switch between the two is bound to be a welcome addition.

    Chrome for Android is available in Google Play, and remains, of course, a free download. It is only compatible with phones running Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, so if you’re using a phone with an older version, you’re still out of luck. There is no word on whether Google intends to make the browser compatible with older versions of Android at some point in the future, but it seems unlikely. Also, Chrome for Android is technically still in beta. But of course, Google’s “beta” is most people’s “release candidate,” so Chrome for Android is pretty much ready for public consumption.

    Do you have the new version of Chrome for Android? Which of the new features is your favorite? Let us know in the comments.

  • Google Play Adds More Seller Countries

    Android app developers, like iOS developers, come from all over the world. They work tirelessly and bank their hopes and dreams on one app that may or may not become a hit. They finish up the app and enter the publishing phase to find out that their country and its currency is not supported by Google Play. Don’t give up though, Google is adding more countries all the time.

    Google announced today that four more countries and their respective currencies are now supported on the Google Play network. Developers from the Czech Republic, Israel, Poland and Mexico can now sell apps and in-app products on Google Play. The major benefit from this is that developers from these countries can use their local bank accounts for payments.

    If you were based in Israel or Mexico, chances are you were selling your apps and making money through a Google AdSense merchant account. If this applies to you, you need to migrate your apps to a new Google Play account in your local currency. If you don’t know how to do this, Google does and they know who you are. The company will send you an email about the migration process.

    If you’re a developer in one of these countries, you will need to set up a Google Play developer account. They’re super easy to set up and allow you complete control over your apps. From here, you can price them in “any available buyer currencies, publish, and then receive payouts and financial data in your local currency.”

    If you’re an Android developer in an already established country, you need to pay attention as well. The addition of these new countries means there’s the potential for more revenue. Hit up your developer console and price your apps in accordance with these new currencies.

    Before you do that though, you might want to localize your app for these new countries. Good thing Google recently updated its Google Translate tools to work with Android apps for easy localization.

  • New App Turns Your Lemon into a Supercar

    New App Turns Your Lemon into a Supercar

    If your tired of engine rattles and other wierd car noises, you could end up spending thousands on repairs. And in the end you are still left with the old crappy car you started with.

    Or you can trade that old clunker for a brand new Lamborgini… in sound, anyway.

    The XLR8 is an app for android or iPhone that uses your phone’s accelerometer and your car stereo to simulate the engine sounds of an exotic supercar. You plug your phone into your car stereo audio jack and place it in a relatively flat position (on the passengers seat or dashboard).

    The lifelike engine sounds of a V8 muscle car, NASCAR, Ford GT40, Ferrari, or Lamborghini can all be blasted through your speakers as you accelerate, take corners, or idle at a stoplight. Accelerate fast and do a burn-out, take a fast corner and drift, all without ruining your tires.

    If your really want to get really technical, you can adjust the gear ratio and shift points. Really sound like you’re tearing-up a half million dollar supercar.

    Lambo Sound

    The app uses Hi-Def recordings of real supercars. It’s designed to be used in your car while driving, but it can also be used in manual mode without the accelerometer. Great for sitting in your bathtub and pretending you are a racecar.

    The app was just released on April 6th, it already has 34 reviews on iTunes and an average customer review of 5 stars. Buy it on iTunes or Google Play.

    The app comes fre with a V8 engine, upgrade to other engines for various price points, or buy them all for $4.99.

    Note: This would make an awesome gag gift for a teenager asking for a new car.

  • Instagram’s Rise to $1 Billion [Infographic]

    Visually has created an infographic telling the story of the first 17 months of Instagram and the steps on its path to being bought by Facebook for a ridiculous $1 billion. Instagram, in case you don’t know, is a popular mobile photo-sharing app for iPhone and Android smartphones. It has made some huge strides just in the last few months, allowing more people than ever to post their mundane photos edited with mind-blowing old-timey filters.

    Some of the highlights of Instagram’s near-instant rise to fame include the app’s release for Apple’s App Store in Novermber 2010, moving the company to Twitter’s old San Francisco offices in that same month, boasting 5 million members in June 2011, the release of version 2.0 of the app (which included live filters), and the app’s release in the Google Play app market for Android devices just last week.

    What do you think? Are you worried that Facebook’s $1 billion makes Instagram a sell-out? Let me know in the comments below after you re-live the magic of Instagram, using Instagram’s and its (few) employees’ own photos:

    by visually. Browse more infographics.

  • New Android Tumblr App Now Available on Google Play

    The new Tumblr app for Android has officially launched. The announcement was made in a blog post yesterday on the Tumblr staff blog, re-blogged from one of their mobile engineers.

    According to the post, the app sports a totally new interface. New features include:

    • More responsive, faster-loading dashboard and blogs
    • Better photo browsing and animated gif support when you tap an image
    • Notifications for multiple blogs live in one place
    • Tumblr Radar!

    Tumblr is a popular micro-blogging platform. It is similar to Twitter, but with more room for multimedia and longer posts. Tumblr has recently begun to integrate its service into other platforms, such as Facebook.

    The Tumblr apps for iPhone and Android smartphones allow users to post to their Tumblr blogs from their phones and include photos, video, quotes, chats, links, and text. The Android version includes a “create a post” widget. The apps also allow users to follow other blogs, view and reply to messages, and manage multiple Tumblr blogs.

    Take a look at some of the screenshots included on Google Play:

    The Tumblr app for AndroidThe Tumblr app for Android
    The Tumblr app for AndroidThe Tumblr app for Android

  • Infographic Compares App Store Figures

    Infographic Compares App Store Figures

    Key Comparisons:

    • iTunes is by far the most profitable platform in terms of apps sold.
    • Google Play has nearly as many apps, but over 79% of them have been downloaded less than a hundred times. only 4.6% have been downloaded over 1,000 times
    • Apple’s App Store grew 44%, Google Play grew 127%
    • Blackberry Developers make 40% more profit than Android developers
    • Number of apps: Google Play – 400,000, Apple Store – 500,000, Blackberry – 70,000
    • Android offers more free apps than anyone
  • Google Books Discontinuing Reseller Program

    Google Books has been part of the core experience of what Google offers to consumers looking for media through their services. It was recently thrown together with music, movies and apps into the Google Play store. One of the lesser known ways to acquire eBooks through Google was through a reseller program. That program will remain a lesser known option as its being discontinued.

    The announcement was made on the Google Books blog today that the company is Google+Book+Search%29″>discontinuing its reseller program. They claim that it had “not gained the traction we hoped it would” and will be phasing it out by the end of January next year.

    That may be one reason, but it also sounds like the move to Google Play may have played a factor into the decision as well. Google Play seems to be Google’s bid at centralizing all of their services into one place to better compete with Apple’s iTunes marketplace. Providing eBooks from one location, instead of many, would help to decrease confusion over eBook sources.

    There were 16 reseller partners within the Google Books program and Google says that they will be “working closely” with them “as they transition in the coming months.” Regular booksellers will remain unaffected and they will still be highlighted when users search for a book. They will also still have access to Google’s affiliate program and free Books API.

    While Google does not share what the “results-to-date” are for the reseller program, the company says that they have not met the needs of “many readers or booksellers.” Google will also being ending their role as an eBooks wholesaler, but will still be “committed as ever to making the eBooks experience from Google the best it can be for readers around the world.”

    Did you use the reseller program? If so, how does this news affect you? Let us know in the comments.

  • Google Gets Paramount Movies On YouTube, Google Play

    Google is partnering with Paramount Pictures to add Paramount movie rentals to YouTube and Google Play. A Googler laid out the following highlights in an email to WebProNews:

    • Nearly 500 titles available for rent including new blockbusters like Captain America, Hugo, and The Adventures of Tin Tin together with classics like Coming to America and the Godfather
    • These Paramount Titles will be available to users in the US and Canada on Google Play and YouTube (www.youtube.com/movies)
    • In 2011 we focused on signing deals with the indie and major studios and scaling our rental service globally:

      – We now have movies from 5 of the 6 major studios (Paramount, Sony Pictures, Universal, Walt Disney Studios and Warner Brothers) and over ten indie studios: Lionsgate Films, Magnolia, Starz, Weinstein, etc.)

      – In the last 10 months we’ve launched rentals in Canada, the United Kingdom, Japan and (last week) France

    • Rentals will be priced at $3.99 for new releases; most older movies are $2.99. Almost all titles will be available for 48 hours once you begin watching. New releases HD version will be $4.99. Older releases HD version will be $3.99.

    Malik Ducard, Director of Content Partnerships for YouTube, says, “Paramount Pictures is one of the biggest movies studios on the planet. We’re thrilled to bring nearly 500 of their films to movie fans in the US and Canada on YouTube and Google Play.”

    This is a huge deal for Google as it tries to make a bigger impact on the movie rental scene. The competition in this space is getting more interesting by the day. Content selection is obviously one of the main factors that consumers take into consideration, and original content is ultimately going to be the determining factor for many, when it comes to using a service like YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, etc. That’s why they’re all going the original content route. There just may be room for all to co-exist into the future. Don’t forget, Redbox has a streaming offering in the works.

    Image from “Coming To America”

  • Amazon Appstore Generates Far More Revenue Than Than Google Play

    Amazon’s Android Appstore generates far more revenue than Google Play, and nearly as much as the iOS App Store. A recent study found that apps that rely on in-app purchases for revenue make the most money from the iOS versions of their apps, followed by Android versions purchased in the Amazon Appstore. Google Play (which recently replaced the Android App Market) came in a distant third.

    The study, recently conducted by Flurry, compared “a basket of top-ranked apps” that are available in all three markets. The apps all rely on in-app purchases for their revenue. The apps average a combined 11 million daily active users (DAU). Beginning in mid-January, Flurry measured the revenue generated by each app for 45 days.

    According to the data, the apps generated nearly as much revenue from the Amazon Appstore as they did from the iOS App Store. Apps from Amazon generated 89% of the revenue generated by iOS apps. Apps from Google Play, however, fell far behind, generated only 23% of the revenue gained from the iOS App Store. Check out the chart below:

    iOS App Store vs. Amazon Appstore vs. Google Play

    Data like this could bode ill not for both Google and for the increasingly fragmented Android operating system. While Android fragmentation is not quite the problem that many pro-iOS apologists argue, it remains an issue. Though Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet is an Android device, Amazon has taken steps to make the tablet their own, including encouraging customers to get their apps from the Amazon Appstore rather than from Google Play. If other manufacturers o learn from Amazon’s success and create their own app markets, it could contribute to the fragmentation of the Android platform and potentially lead to

  • Google Preparing Its Own Tablet Store To Compete With iPad

    Google is preparing to launch an online store to sell its forthcoming Google-branded tablet directly, according to recent reports. The online store would mimic the direct sales method employed by Apple and Amazon to sell their iPad and Kindle Fire tablets, respectively.

    The Wall Street Journal cites “people familiar with the matter” who say that the goal of the online store will be to boost sales of Android-based tablets. While Android-based smartphones have stood up well against Apple’s iPhone – even passing Apple in market share – Android tablets have not fared nearly as well against the iPad.

    Google reportedly has their own Google-branded tablet in the works. In December Eric Schmidt told an Italian newspaper that Google was working on a tablet that would rival the iPad. Late last month sources said that a Google-branded tablet priced and sized to compete with Amazon’s Kindle Fire would be going into production in April. Meanwhile, there are rumors that Google is already working on Android 5.0 Jelly Bean, which is reportedly targeted for a mid-year release.

    There is little information on when we can expect to see Google’s online tablet store, but it’s a safe bet it will go live around the same time as Google’s tablet launches. The store will not, however, be only for Google’s tablet. Other Android tablets will almost certainly be in the store as well.

    Even with their own tablet and a store devoted entirely to Android tablets, Google is likely to face an uphill battle. While Android tablets have generally done fairly well, they have never been more than a (very) distant second place behind Apple’s iPad. What’s more, with Amazon’s Kindle Fire continuing to do well and with Windows 8 tablets coming later this year, the competition in the tablet market (or the non-iPad part of it, anyway) is only going to intensify.

    What do you think? Can an online store and a Google-branded tablet help Google mount a serious challenge to Apple and the iPad? Let us know in the comments.

  • Google Play and YouTube Rent Movies to the French

    YouTube (and Google France) announced today on the YouTube blog that starting today it is making movies available for rent to French Google Play users. Partners in the new offering include independent French studios Cinéma(s) à la Demande, EuropaCorp, M6 Video / SND, Under The Milky Way, UniversCiné and Wild Side, and also major companies Disney Europe, NBC Universal and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment France.

    As the site launches, hundreds of movies — including full-length features from Google/YouTube’s studio partners — will be available for French viewers, with more to come in the following months. Available films range from recent blockbusters like Titin and Twilight Chapitre 4 to artsier stuff li Le Bal Des Actrices and La Grotte Des Rêves Perdus. Films will be available for streaming and download to androids and tablets, both in standard and in high definition.

    I don’t know if pricing is really as competitive as Google claims, but the cost of renting a standard def new release will start at €3.99, and library titles will start at €2.99. Users can get high definition versions for a euro more.

    Viewers will have 30 days to start watching the movies they rent, and once they’ve started the film, they’ll have 48 hours to finish.

  • Google Adds Google Play to its Homepage

    Google Adds Google Play to its Homepage

    Besides the doodles, changes to the Google homepage are rare. So, when Google makes changes to one of the most visited pages on the web, it’s a big deal. And when Google makes a change to its homepage that links directly to Google’s version of iTunes, it raises some questions.

    Google added a link to its new Google play store to the top navigation bar on its homepage this week. The Google Play store is the new service from Google that combined the Android Marketplace, Google Music, and the Google eBookstore. Movies also recently became available on Google Play, at least in some countries, and there is evidence the service might sell audiobooks and magazines soon too.

    There is also a link to Google Play underneath the search bar with the slogan “the entertainment you love, anywhere you go.” The Google Play store is meant to bring Google’s various marketplaces under one re-branded heading, where it can be consistent across both mobile and other platforms.

    Adding a link to Google Play on its homescreen means Google means to push the service heavily. If you have an Android phone, the Android Marketplace on it has probably already been converted to the Google Play app. Moving aggressively into iTunes’ territory, Google has stepped away from its advertising model in this instance. Will this further step into the online retail space be good for Google, or is it changing itself too much? Let me know your thoughts in the comments section below.

  • Google Play May Begin Offering Movies

    Customers in the new Google Play market may be able to purchase movies in the not-so-distant future, according to recent reports. While Google Play currently offers a variety of options for purchasing and renting content – including movie rentals – Google Play users do not currently have the ability to buy movies.

    Citing “multiple film industry sources,” CNet is reporting that Google has been meeting with studio execs in an attempt to work out deals that would allow Google Play to sell movies, as well as rent them. There are no details on the specifics of such a plan yet, and Google is being predictably tight-lipped on the issue, but it makes sense. Google Play is designed to be a one-stop-shop for content, much like the iTunes Store, and the lack of movie sales is a glaring omission in its offerings.

    Google Play came into being just a couple weeks ago when Google announced that they were combining the Android Market, Google Music, and the Google eBookstore into one service. Google’s apps and services were quickly rebranded to reflect the change. While users can rent movies from Google Play, they cannot yet purchase them, a shortcoming Google is apparently in the process of trying to fix. Meanwhile, there have also been rumors that Google was working to bring magazines and audiobooks to Google Play as well, though when such additions might be made is not clear.

    What do you think? Would you like to see movies for sale on Google Play? Let us know in the comments.

  • Apps May Overtake The Web In Internet Traffic

    Apps May Overtake The Web In Internet Traffic

    When Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, they began a major shift in the mobile phone market that former competitors like BlackBerry are still struggling to deal with. When they introduced the App Store in 2008, they began a trend that would ultimately change how we access the internet itself.

    Now that “there’s an app for that,” smartphone and tablet users can accomplish nearly everything they need or want to do on the internet without ever opening a browser and navigating the web in the traditional sense. Search, social networking, email, watching video, checking the weather, following the news, reading blogs, and virtually everything else we do on the internet can be done from within an app that streamlines and simplifies the experience and, usually, performs much better than the same service in a mobile browser. Apps have become a major path to the internet for many. In fact, according to a recent study from Pew Internet, apps have surpassed both mobile and desktop browsers in terms of time spent accessing the internet. What’s more, the dominance of apps is only going to grow in the next few years as the use of smartphones and tablets increases around the world.

    The study, conducted by surveying 1,021 “technology stakeholders and critics” between August 28th and October 31st, 2011, asked questions about how they expected users to access the internet in 2020. Respondents were presented with two statements and encouraged to state whether they agreed, then write a more in-depth response detailing their predictions for the future of the internet and their reasoning. Here are the two statements presented to respondents:

    In 2020, the World Wide Web is stronger than ever in users’ lives. The open Web continues to thrive and grow as a vibrant place where most people do most of their work, play, communication, and content creation. Apps accessed through iPads, Kindles, Nooks, smartphones, Droid devices, and their progeny—the online tools GigaOM referred to as “the anti-Internet”—will be useful as specialized options for a finite number of information and entertainment functions. There will be a widespread belief that, compared to apps, the Web is more important and useful and is the dominant factor in people’s lives.

    Fifty-nine percent of respondents agreed with this statement, while 35% agreed with a statement presenting the opposite view:

    In 2020, most people will prefer to use specific applications (apps) accessible by Internet connection to accomplish most online work, play, communication, and content creation. The ease of use and perceived security and quality-assurance characteristics of apps will be seen as superior when compared with the open Web. Most industry innovation and activity will be devoted to apps development and updates, and use of apps will occupy the majority of technology users’ time. There will be a widespread belief that the World Wide Web is less important and useful than in the past and apps are the dominant factor in people’s lives.

    The report points out that the goal of this survey was “not to derive a clear-cut statistical outcome,” but rather to prompt detailed discussions of the future of the web. The survey was opt-in, and the sample was “diverse but non-random.” Written responses to the study were varied. Some argued for the web’s enduring importance.

    The World Wide Web may evolve significantly, but the core design of open and scalable will make it the compelling solution.
    -Robert Cannon, senior counsel for Internet law for the FCC.

    The browser—or its future equivalent—will continue to have key advantages over apps. They are connected to the entire Net, they offer full interoperability, and they give the user more power than the developer or publisher. Yes, publishers have dreamed that apps would return to them the control of content, experience, business model, and pricing that the Net took from them, but they are merely deluding themselves. The value is not in their control of content but in the ability to become platforms for users to do what they want to do.
    -Jeff Jarvis, blogger and professor at the City University of New York.

    Others argued that the app model would dominate, though some felt that this was not a good thing.

    Ease of use always wins.
    -Fred Hapgood, author and technology consultant.

    The Web is already moving toward a delivery platform for AJAX/Javascript/Flash ‘apps’ masquerading as websites. Certainly, the world is moving away from open protocols where anyone can play to proprietary, more easily monetizable services.
    -Brian Trammell, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

    I wish it weren’t true, but the history of enclosure, centralization, and consolidation makes me very pessimistic about the open Web winning over the closed apps.
    -Seth Finkelstein, EFF Pioneer Award winner.

    Still others, however, said that the apps vs. web dichotomy was incorrect and unhelpful:

    Both will continue to grow in ways that are impossible for most to imagine…. Apps are generally better for narrowly defined repetitive tasks, especially where your needs can be narrowed by your location, time, etc. The Web will remain better for asynchronous exploring and continue its gateway role.
    -Tony Smith, Open Source Developers Club

    The internet is a vast, ever-changing thing. It has often defied attempts to predict what it would look like in the future. What is certain is that app-based platforms like smartphones and tablets are penetrating farther and farther into the market, to the point that non-smartphones are likely to become the minority in the not-so-distant future. That suggests that whatever the future of the web may be, apps will continue to play a major role in how we access it, for better or for worse.

    How do you spend most of your time on the internet? Smartphone/tablet apps, mobile browsers, or desktop browsers? Do you think apps could ever supplant the traditional web in importance? Let us know in the comments.