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Tag: Mobile phones

  • Over Half of Mobile Phones Will Come From China Next Year

    The mobile industry, including the smartphone segment, has begun to in established markets begins. Device manufacturers are now focusing on emerging markets as the source for mobile growth in the coming years. Manufacturers such as Apple, BlackBerry, and Samsung have all unveiled low-cost smartphones meant to drive sales in places such as India, Brazil, and, most importantly, China.

    As manufacturers seek to break into the Chinese market, Chinese companies themselves are beginning to become a major force in the mobile industry. With a huge manufacturing infrastructure and government backing, brands such as Huwei, ZTE, and Lenovo are making huge gains in smartphone industry market share alone.

    Market research firm ABI Research today predicted the eventuality of this rise in Chinese tech brands is a global mobile industry dominated by those same brands. The firm’s new report predicts that over half of all mobile phones shipped in 2015 will come from Chinese brands.

    This compares to the estimated 38% of all mobile phone shipments that Chinese brands accounted for in 2013. As Chinese brands branch out from sales in China, ABI expects to see a rapid expansion of Chinese devices across the globe at the expense of leading manufacturers such as Samsung.

    “Chinese vendors already take up five of the top ten places in terms of worldwide market share, despite three of them only really shipping into China,” said Nick Spencer, senior practice director for mobile devices at ABI. “The Chinese vendors highlight the changing shape of the mobile handset market, as the Chinese manufacturing ecosystem, specifically reference designs, enable the next wave of smartphone growth in low cost emerging markets and amongst price conscious consumers everywhere.

    “South East Asia has already experienced this trend, but ABI Research expects to see the impact of these Chinese vendors increasing in all emerging markets and even advanced markets, especially on prepay.”

  • Family Wireless Plans Emerge in Competitive Market

    Family Wireless Plans Emerge in Competitive Market

    Verizon’s hold as the number one wireless carrier in the United States may be slipping. AT&T is making a solid run to go from the second biggest wireless carrier to the first. And they’re doing it by going after your family.

    AT&T is currently marketing a new plan to cut $40 off the bill of a family that carries at least four smartphones. The plan which already includes unlimited texts and calls was previously $200. It is currently being offered at $160. And, you don’t even have to sign a contract.

    David Christopher, chief marketing officer for AT&T knows the company needs to stay competitive in the always evolving world of mobile phones. “We feel we have the best network and the best value in the marketplace.”

    In 2012 T-Mobile, who has become one of AT&T’s biggest competitors, did away with long term contracts and shortened a customer’s wait time between phone upgrades. The changes paid off big time, as T-Mobile has seen an uptick of over 2 million customers in less than one year.

    The competitive marketplace is obviously great for the consumer, even if all the alluring options can make a person’s head spin. Sprint paid the $4 million spot fee and took advantage of the monster Super Bowl audience on Sunday. They advertised something called “Framily Plan” in a funny ad that showed possible consumers the different people that you could put on a Sprint “family” plan.

    So which plan is the right one for you? Several factors should be considered when choosing a wireless carrier. A few questions to ask yourself: how many people will be on my plan, how much will an upgrade cost, how long between upgrades, what are the total monthly costs, will my data and texts be unlimited, who can I put on my plan, can I cancel my plan at anytime?

    Image via Facebook

  • Apple, Samsung Set to Dominate Smartphone Sales

    Apple, Samsung Set to Dominate Smartphone Sales

    For over one year, industry numbers have been showing that the smartphone market is quickly becoming a two-company race. Apple and Samsung have been taking market share quarter-by-quarter at the expense of companies such as HTC, Motorola, and BlackBerry. Now that the high-end smartphone market is becoming saturated in Western nations, at least one analyst predicts that Apple and Samsung will continue to dominate the industry for a long time to come.

    “The balance of power looks set to remain with Apple and Samsung for the foreseeable future,” said Nick Spencer, senior practice director at analyst firm ABI Research. “The course of the smartphone market is looking increasingly set as it enters a more mature stage on the current innovation curve. This is bad news for the players vying for the third ecosystem position.”

    ABI this week released a stark graph showing just how far ahead Samsung and Apple are. Though the image is not well labeled, it shows the number of mobile devices each manufacturer offers in a variety of price ranges. The pink portions show how many more of the highest-end smartphones Samsung and Apple offer over the competition. The height of Samsung’s offerings shows that it offers over double the number of mobile devices as any other manufacturer. This mirrors the Korean company’s recent shipment numbers, which show it far outpacing other manufacturers.

    ABI Graph

    “ABI Research’s Device Portal analysis showed that Samsung is dominating the sales channel at nearly every price point, with only Apple challenging Samsung at the high end of the market,” said Spencer. “This leaves little room for the other vendors to compete, especially the other Android vendors and those using uncompetitive operating system ecosystems. Despite some carrier’s efforts to create a more balanced smartphone device vendor industry with their use of subsidy, ultimately they are obliged to fulfill consumer demand and at the moment that means Samsung/Android and Apple.”

  • Mobile Shipments Are Still Growing, Says Analyst

    Mobile Shipments Are Still Growing, Says Analyst

    Earlier this week, analyst firm TrendForce estimated that smartphone shipments for the second quarter of 2013 were up 6.6% year-over-year. Today another analyst firm has chimed in with similar numbers and a stark look at how Samsung is beginning to dominate the market.

    IDC’s numbers show that 432.1 million total mobile phones were shipped during the second quarter of 2013, a 6% increase over the 407.7 million units shipped during the second quarter of 2012. Much of the markets growth was shown to come from smaller manufacturers, who are making inroads into emerging smartphone markets such as China, India, and Brazil.

    “The smartphone market is still a rising tide that’s lifting many ships,” said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst at IDC. “Though Samsung and Apple are the dominant players, the market is as fragmented as ever. There is ample opportunity for smartphone vendors with differentiated offerings.”

    Samsung, which released its new flagship Android smartphone the Galaxy S4 this quarter, now accounts for over 26%of the total mobile phone market and over 30% of the smartphone market. The Korean manufacturer shipped 72.4 million smartphone units during the quarter, a 43.9% increase over the second quarter of 2012.

    Apple, which had no new product launches during the past quarter, saw only a 20% increase in its shipments over the second quarter of 2012. The company’s share of the smartphone market dropped to 13.1% from 16.6% one year ago.

    LG was one of the big winners during the past quarter, shipping 11.3 million smartphones – a 108% increase from the 5.8 million it shipped during the second quarter 2012.

    Chinese manufacturers Lenovo and ZTE also saw huge shipment increases and market share gains. Lenovo in particular shipped 11.3 million smartphone units, a 130% increase from the second quarter of 2012.

    “Market opportunities exist at all levels, including the high end,” said Ramon Llamas, research manager at IDC. “While Samsung and Apple accounted for significant share of the overall market, they were not the only vendors active in the high end of the market, and recent device introductions and upcoming launches signal more vendors targeting this space. Comparisons will certainly be made to the flagship Galaxy and iPhone models, but clearly the competition refuses to be shut out altogether.”

  • Finns Chuck Phones for the Mobile Phone Throwing World Championships

    Do you hate your mobile phone? Donate it to a Finn.

    Savonlinna, Finland has been hosting the Mobile Phone Throwing World Championships for over a decade, and this year’s competition was held over the weekend. The competition pits competitors against each other in a bid to throw cell phones as far as possible, and in creative ways. Despite the worldwide reach of the competition, the event itself is rather informal. It appears to often involve costumes and champagne.

    According to the ITN News broadcast seen below, contestants compete in three different categories: original, freestyle, and junior. The original event sees contestants simply try and chuck a mobile phone as far as possible. The freestyle event judges contestants on the aesthetics and creativity of their throw. The junior event is for contestants under 12 years of age.

    The winner of this year’s original throw category was a local Finn named Ere Karjalainen, who threw a mobile phone 101.46 meters. This falls just short of the world record held by a Belgian named Chris Hughff, which is 102.68 meters. The runner up was a South African named Jeremy Gallop, who threw a phone 94.97 meters.

    If you are interested in getting involved with phone throwing, or just need an excuse to tour Finland, sign-ups for the 2013 Mobile Phone Throwing World Championships are already underway.

    Take a brief look at ITN’s report on this year’s championships, then see what the competition is really about with the event’s own preview video:

  • Nokia Q1 2012 Financials Reveal a $1.7 Billion Loss

    Nokia reports a loss of $1.7 billion for the first quarter of 2012. Sales at the same time last year reached $13.6 billion, but only achieved $9.7 billion this quarter. Experts don’t expect much of a recovery in the second quarter either. Nokia has struggled with restructuring in several business areas including devices and services, and location and commerce. They have also been dealing with the logistical nightmare of moving their manufacturing facilities to Asia.

    Here’s a segment from their 2012 Q1 Interim report accounting for some of their sales loss since last year:

    On a sequential basis, the decline in our Mobile Phones volumes in the first quarter 2012 was primarily driven by lower seasonal demand for our feature phones and aggressive price competition, especially in entry-level feature phones, partially offset by sales of recently introduced products which represented a higher proportion of our portfolio. The sequential decline was also due to distributors and operators purchasing fewer of our feature phones during the first quarter 2012 as they reduced their inventories of our feature phones compared to increasing their inventories in the fourth quarter 2011.

    In addition, we faced increased competition from more affordable smartphones and competitors with broader portfolios of feature phones with more smartphone-like experiences, such as full touch devices. The sequential decline in our Mobile Phones volumes in the first quarter 2012 was most pronounced in India and Europe, primarily due to the factors mentioned above.

    Here’s what Nokia has listed as their highlights for “smart devices” broken down by month in Q1 2012:

    * In January, Nokia and T-Mobile commenced sales of the Nokia Lumia 710, the first Lumia product for the United States.

    * In January, Nokia announced the Nokia Lumia 900 with AT&T in the United States. The Lumia 900 is the first of Nokia’s Windows Phone-based range to feature high-speed LTE connectivity. The device, which has a 4.3-inch AMOLED ClearBlack Display, went on sale in April.

    * In February, at the 2012 Mobile World Congress, Nokia announced that it is bringing the Nokia Lumia 900 to other markets outside the United States in a DC-HSPA variant, for high speed data connection (42Mbits download) in countries where LTE is not available. The device is expected to begin shipping during the second quarter.

    * In February, Nokia announced the Nokia Lumia 610, the company’s fourth and most affordable Lumia smartphone, designed as the perfect introduction to Windows Phone for a younger audience. The device is expected to ship during the second quarter 2012.

    * In February, Nokia announced Nokia Reading, providing a single, integrated reading hub experience. Nokia Reading makes it easier and faster to enjoy news, books, and audio books including an extensive catalogue of local language reading material and the ability to access content offline.- In March, Nokia and China Telecom announced the Nokia 800C, the first CDMA Windows Phone in China and Nokia’s first Lumia phone for the world’s largest smartphone market. The device went on sale in early April.

    * In February, Nokia announced the Nokia 808 PureView, the first smartphone to feature Nokia PureView imaging technologies, bringing together high resolution sensors, exclusive Carl Zeiss optics and Nokia- developed algorithms, which will support new high-end imaging experiences for future Nokia products. The Nokia 808 PureView features a large, high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor and new pixel oversampling technology. The device is expected to ship during the second quarter 2012.

    Here’s what Nokia had listed as “mobile phone” highlights for Q1 2012 from the report broken down by month:

    * In February, Nokia announced the Nokia Asha 302, the first Series 40-based phone to support Mail for Exchange. The Asha 302 went on sale during the first quarter.

    * In February, Nokia announced the Nokia Asha 202, which combines a traditional keypad with a touch screen and features Nokia’s dual SIM Easy Swap technology. The Asha 202 is expected to ship during the second quarter 2012.

    * In February, Nokia announced the Asha 203, a single SIM phone which combines a traditional keypad with a touch screen. The Asha 203 is expected to ship during the second quarter 2012.

    * Nokia announced an evolution of Nokia Life Tools, now known as Nokia Life, which provides life-enhancing information across the range of Nokia Series 30 and Series 40 products. Since its 2009 launch in India, the SMS- based service has expanded to China, Indonesia and Nigeria. To date, more than 50 million people have experienced its benefits.

    * Nokia Browser, Nokia’s cloud-accelerated browser for Series 40 devices, continued to grow rapidly with support for 38 devices in 87 languages and more than 200 countries. During the first quarter, we released a significant upgrade to the product improving speed and access to web apps. Nokia Browser is the first of its kind to support web apps, and since the release of the SDK in 2011, developer support has continued to grow.

    Conclusion:

    Hopefully things will turn around for Nokia by the end of 2012. It sounds like the extreme cost of restructuring and relocating their manufacturing to Asia has really eaten into profits, but this is something that will eventually reach completion. A more serious threat appears to be coming from increased product competition and a dwindling demand for Nokia’s products. We’ll keep an eye on Nokia as 2012 unfolds.

  • You May Suffer From Nomophobia

    Nomophobia or “no mobile phone phobia” is the fear of losing or being separated from your beloved electronic appendage and for 66% of people surveyed a common ailment and serious issue. According to a study conducted by SecureEnvoy, a security-authentication company, ladies are first with the disorder and tend to worry about their mobile phones more than gentlemen, but fear not, Nomophobia is an equal opportunity obsession. “What this study does highlight is the extent that people now rely on their mobile phones,” adds Andy Kemshall, SecurEnvoy CTO and co founder. Here are a few questions to ask yourself to see if you have any of the symptoms.

    If you dropped your phone in the sink or toilet would you fish it out with your bare hands and wait for it to dry or turn the dripping device on immediately to see if it still worked? If you found that it didn’t work, would you have absolutely no problem going out and immediately buying a replacement phone at full retail price without hesitation? If you found yourself nodding in agreement or felt unusually queasy and uncomfortable while reading this story then your name may be Kelly Reeves (this actually happened to her) or you may suffer from Nomophobia and should read further.

    If you feel anxious when you don’t have your phone with you then you are definitely not alone. Two-thirds of people asked that question last year agree with you. Do you find it perfectly normal to have your phone on the table and check it regularly during meetings, dinners and dates? Do you check your phone at least once every 10 minutes? The average person checks their phone about 34 times a day.

    While most of this information may seem fairly normal, Nomophobia becomes pathological when the fear of losing your mobile phone interferes with a person being able to function normally. If your phone becomes a preoccupation or causes anxiety attacks, the treatment recommended is to consult with a physician or psychologist, who will likely approach it like treating obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Our phone is our life, so it shouldn’t amaze Nomophobiacs that when asked which item people would save first from a burning house, the top pick was mobile phone.

  • North Korea Would Punish Cellphone Users As War Criminals

    Genocides, obliterations of cities, murder of prisoners, egregious violation of international humanitarian law. These are crimes that will likely get a person tried as a war criminal.

    But using a cellphone? Um. Sure… at least, that’s the case in North Korea these days.

    According to The Telegraph, the Worker’s Party in North Korea, in their crazy-pants logic, have declared that anyone found using a mobile phone during the 100-day mourning period of Dear Leader, Kim Jong-il, will be tried as “war criminals” and punished in accordance to those trespasses. North Koreans will also earn the “war criminal” label if they’re caught trying to cross the border to China in order to flee the abject starvation ubiquitous in North Korea. Repeat offenders, the Telegraph reported, “can expect to be executed.”

    Nothing, as far as this intrepid reporter could discern, was said about the dictate on the Worker’s Party’s official Twitter account, @uriminzok, but then again, would you expect them to plaster that all over the open media? I don’t read Korean well enough (read: not at all) to understand exactly what the tweets say and I’m skeptical of Google’s translation services to accurately deliver cogent statements (that, or the tweets from the government’s account really are that looney).

    Clouded the river and dropped the dog, even if it does not blur the great ocean #DPRK @uriminzok #NorthKorea(image) 3 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    “Reform and open” cried all the morals of the condemned only to repeat the train of predecessors #NorthKorea @uriminzok #DPRK(image) 2 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    1/2 DPRK confrontation light gotten this far in the bone marrow increased by a madman now become #DPRK @uriminzok #NorthKorea(image) 1 day ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    The only thing I can parse from these tweets (which were taken from the official account that translates the tweets from the Worker’s Party’s account) is that the DPRK may have the same speech writer as Newt Gingrich.

  • Should Your Mobile Phone Activity Affect Your Credit Score?

    The Boston Globe ran a story a few days ago about a company called Cignifi who has developed a way to calculate a person’s credit report in the absence of any previous credit history.

    The claim is counter-intuitive to how we understand the assessment of credit risk in the developed world because Cignifi’s plan has very little to do with how much debt – if any – you’ve accrued in your lifetime. Instead, it creates a credit report based on a completely separate metric: your mobile phone activity.

    Here’s the gist: if a potential consumer or patron has no credit score due to no history of debt, it’s hard for a business to assess the potential risk involved in doing business with this person. A way to side-step that obstacle would be to enlist the services of Cignifi, which will calculate the credit risk of anyone with a mobile phone based on that user’s mobile phone behavior (this premise being functional only in the 21st Century assumption that everybody has cellphones these days). The way a person uses their mobile phone, Cignifi claims by way of their website, “is highly predictive of an individual consumer’s lifestyle and risk.”

    Despite how such a calculation could seriously affect the quality of someone’s living standards, Cignifi’s website doesn’t provide much background on their science:

    Cignifi patent-pending analytics technology turns billions of raw mobile phone calls, messages, and payments into unique insight. Our multi-dimensional models deliver scores based on hundreds of distinct variables.

    Capturing changes in subscriber mobile behavior, Cignifi dynamically updates scores. Unlike traditional credit scores, Cignifi Scores quickly adapt to customers’ evolving lifestyles, risks, and needs.

    I can somewhat understand the lack of transparency given their patent-pending technology but at the same time it’s important to know how your behavior affects your credit score. If I pay off my credit cards every month, I maintain a good score; if I blow off my bills for months at a time, my score suffers. In the end, I’m aware of the consequences of my actions. It’s Operant Conditioning 101. The article from the Globe casts a little more light on Cignifi’s number-crunching ways:

    Cignifi has developed sophisticated modeling software that can look at usage data from consumers’ mobile phones and make predictions about who that person is and how they live. There’s no single data point —like making lots of short calls between 2 and 5 a.m. every morning —that suggests that someone is a bad credit risk. But Hakim says, “The way you use your phone is a proxy for your lifestyle. It’s not random. So we’re looking at things like the length of calls, the time of day, and the location you make them from. Also things like whether you top up [a pre-paid SIM card] regularly. We want to see how stable the patterns are. When you look at that, you can create these behavioral clusters that give you information about users’ appetite for new [financial] products, and their ability to repay a debt.”

    That sounds like the typical diplomacy you’d expect from a group proposing an action that could potentially affect the quality of your life: carefully tailored to assuage any of the knee-jerk fears of people filling out applications for apartments or car loans while validating the insidious maxim “If you’re not doing anything wrong then you have nothing to worry about.” Until Cignifi is able and willing to share a little bit more about how they assess a person’s credit risk based on mobile phone usage, any anxiety on behalf of the consumer is justified.

    Conversely, I can understand not wanting to draw the ire of the Verizons and AT&Ts of the world. There’s nothing quite like a company stating, “Hey, you use your phone too much in too many of the wrong ways, so your credit score is going down,” to cause people to consider using their cellphones less (if that’s even possible now). And the last thing wireless providers want is somebody out there giving their customers frightful reasons to not use their cellphones as much. Less cellphone use = less money spent = very unhappy wireless providers.

    The service that Cignifi is offering could open up possibilities not previously available to consumers with no credit history. That would be a good thing. Then again, evaluating someone’s “credit” based on what they do (or don’t do) with their cellphones could be a hard step forward into a future of endless debt. I mean, how do exactly fix a bad “credit score” if it’s based on your mobile phone habits? Get a LAN line? Tie a string between two tin cans and wait a year before applying for that student loan again?

    So it’s quiz time, readers: the Globe reports that Cignifi doesn’t have any plans at this time to deploy the technology in the U.S. but that doesn’t mean it’s not coming. In what is likely the inevitable arrival of mobile phone usage-based credit ranks, what do you think about this new debt calculus? Thumbs up or thumbs down? Interested and optimistic or ill-advised and opportunistic? Share your thoughts with us in the comment section below.

  • Nielsen Study: Teen Mobile Data Usage Up Over 250%

    Nielsen has released the results of a study into mobile phone usage by various age groups. While the study shows a rise in data usage across the board, the greatest increase was in the 13-17 age group. In the third quarter of 2010, teens in this group used an average of 90 MB of data per month. In this year’s third quarter they used a whopping 320 MB of data, a rise of 256%. While the increase was most dramatic among teens, every age group showed an increase. The next greatest increase was 147% in the 18-24 age bracket. Only one group – the 45-54 age bracket – showed an increase of less than 100%.

    Data usage across age groups

    The use of text messaging is highest among teens – particularly female teens – as well. Teens sent an average of 3,417 SMS/MMS messages per month in the third quarter of this year, with girls sending an average of nearly 200 more messages than boys.

    Messaging across age groups

    Interestingly, voice usage is actually down among teens, who say they find messaging faster, easier, and more fun that voice calling. The study shows they used an average of just over 100 fewer minutes this year than in the same period last year.

    These results are part of Nielsen’s broader State of the Media: The Mobile Media Report Q3 2011 (PDF). Another part of the study focused on smartphone ownership and app usage across various age groups. They found that the majority of people in the 18-24 (53%) and 24-34 (64%) age groups owned smartphones. Meanwhile 40% of the 13-17 age group owned smartphones, a number which surely contributed to the dramatic increase in data usage in the same age bracket. The study also found and that 62% of smartphone owners had downloaded apps within the past 30 days.

  • Guys Beware: Cell Phones Could Damage Your Sperm

    On the list of cancer-causing boogeymen, cellphones are pretty high on the list. For years, people have been saying that they cause cancer – and for years almost as many people have been saying that the cancer/cellphone link is total bull.

    It’s a heavily debated proposition within the scientific community, and it seems like we get a new report every couple of weeks telling us to watch out or telling us to have no fear. Really, the cellphone/cancer debate is a crapshoot anyways. Even if you had definitive proof the cellphones raise the likelihood of cancer, would you stop using yours? I know I probably couldn’t live without it.

    A new study about cellphone radiation isn’t talking about cancer, but about sperm.

    An Italian report published in the Journal of Andrology has found a link between the radio-frequency electromagnetic radiation (Rf-EMR) produced by mobile phones and both decreased sperm count and decreased sperm quality.

    The study focused on groups of both humans and rats. In one experiment, rats were placed in glass cages with cellphones attached to the bottom. The rats were then exposed to the RF-EMR for 6 hours a day for four month. When they tested the rats’ sperm, they found a 25% drop in the amount of live sperm. They also found that the sperm was sticking together, which makes it harder to do its job when it gets to the egg.

    As far as the humans go, the researchers found that RF-EMR decreased sperm count and mobility, and viability. From the study:

    Altogether the results of these studies show that RF-EMR decreases sperm count and motility, and increases the oxidative stress. In human beings, two different experimental approaches have been followed, one has explored the effects of RF-EMR directly on spermatozoa and the other has evaluated the sperm parameters in men using or not mobile phones. The results show that human spermatozoa exposed to RF-EMR have decreased motility, morphometric abnormalities, and increased oxidative stress, whereas men using mobile phones have decreased sperm concentration, motility (particularly the rapid progressive one), normal morphology, and viability. These abnormalities seem to be directly related with the length of mobile phone use.

    One prevailing theory is that men who keep their cellphones in their pockets increase their risk of damaged sperm.

    Of course, like most scientific studies, more research is demanded –

    Nevertheless, more studies are necessary to provide stronger evidences that cellular phone use disturb sperm and testicular function since the existing literature has several limitations. These include dishomogeneity in terms of RF wavelength used, depth of penetration, and length of radiation exposure.

    The researchers aren’t quite sure which types of cellphones and cell service are doing the most harm.

    Of course, studies like this aren’t conclusive, but this isn’t the first time cellphones have been linked to sperm problems. A Cleveland Clinic study found similar results a couple years ago. As a precaution, it might not hurt to see how your cellphone feels in your back pocket, fellas.

  • Does Everybody Own a Mobile Phone?

    Does Everybody Own a Mobile Phone?

    If home computing ever does truly die, the culprit is an obvious choice. The mobile phone. While I’m one to believe that home computing hasn’t so much died, it’s just that most homes that want computers, be it Mac or PC, have them, and so, when it’s time to purchase that next gadget, the mobile device industry gets the attention, and the revenue.

    Face it, it’s cheaper to upgrade a mobile phone than it is a home computer or a laptop.

    That being said, the mobile phone industry is absolutely booming with what appears to be recession-proof growth. According to the latest study from Pew Internet, just about everybody in the United States has a mobile phone. While that may sound like hyperbole, it’s actually much closer to the truth than you might first realize.

    The report reveals that 83 percent of American adults own a mobile phone. With such a proliferation, one wonders why companies like Time-Warner and AT&T even bother with home service when it comes to phones. You can never have too much access to voice-over communication, apparently.

    While the 83 percent is a staggering amount, there are other details of note.

    Pew Internet also distinguished between simple mobile phones and the growing-in-popularity smartphone. While it wasn’t clearly stated, the apparent difference between a simple cellular phone and a smartphone is the data plan. If your phone requires a data plan, it’s probably a smartphone, at least in the eyes of survey takers. In regards to smartphone ownership, 35 percent of American adults own either an iPhone, Android or a Blackberry (with a data plan subscription, of course).

    I’ll leave the fact that 83 percent plus 35 percent is more than 100 percent, meaning, it’s pretty clear some of that 83 percent had to be factored into the smartphone ownership result.

    Moving on, when it comes to mobile phone activities, sending text messages is king. 73 percent of mobile phone owners send text messages and take pictures, an activity included in the text message percentages.

    Other interesting findings include:

  • 40 percent of mobile phone owners have used them in emergencies
  • 42 percent use their mobile phone when they’re bored
  • 13 percent of owners use their mobile phone to avoid interaction with people
  • The survey also breaks down the difference in use between smartphone users and plain old mobile phone users, which they presented in a chart:

    Phone Usage

    It’s obvious that has users switch to more robust, powerful devices, they tend to do more with them. It’s not a stretch to think an iPhone 4 owner would get more use out of their device than a Motorola–or is that Google now?–Razr would.

    The question I have is, how long before these numbers switch? How long will it take for smartphone owners to outnumber their mobile phone owning counterparts? Let us know what you think.

  • Charging Your Devices With Sound?

    Charging Your Devices With Sound?

    Hey, you guys wanna get blinded with some science?

    South Korean engineers have found a novel way to charge your mobile phone – noise.

    Basically what Dr. Sang-Woo Kim and his team has found is a way to convert sound waves into electricity. Their research at Sungkyunkwan University’s institute of nanotechnology could be the first step in being able to keep your phone charged simply by talking into it.

    Or imagine being able to power your tablets or laptops with ambient noise? No outlet necessary, just sit down in a noisy cafe or busy airport and you’re golden.

    Dr. Kim, as quoted in the Telegraph:

    The sound that always exists in our everyday life and environments has been overlooked as a source. This motivated us to realize power generation by turning sound energy from speech, music or noise into electrical power.

    Sound power can be used for various novel applications including cellular phones that can be charged during conversations and sound-insulating walls near highways that generate electricity from the sound of passing vehicles.

    The process for turning sound into electricity works like this:

    The technology uses tiny strands of zinc oxide sandwiched between two electrodes. A sound absorbing pad on top vibrates when sound waves hit it, causing the tiny zinc oxide wires to compress and release. This movement generates an electrical current that can then be used to charge a battery.

    Dr. Kim has developed a prototype that was able to convert 100 decibels of sound into 50 millivolts of electricity – not exactly enough to charge your iPhone. They hope to be able to improve upon the prototype in order to produce more electricity at lower sound levels.

    “Honey, why are you yelling at me?”

    “I’M SORRY, MY PHONE IS ABOUT TO DIE, I NEED TO CHARGE IT.”

    But in all seriousness, this technology is already usable in “self powered sensors” and “body implantable tiny devices” according to Kim. With its continued improvement, the iPhone 12 may not even need to ship with a power cord.