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Calling All Romantics

Birthdays and anniversaries are inherently times of reflection and celebration. Which is most likely why Mashable, a news site celebrating its 5th birthday this year, decided to take a quick jaunt down memory lane to show us just how far mobile technology has come over the last half-decade.

Suffice it to say that if the majority of human relationships were as successful as that of consumers and the wireless industry, the markets for chick-flicks and online dating may cease to exist-- because this romance is nothing short of a fairy tale.

The expansive and swift proliferation of mobile broadband. The shift from feature-based flip phones to smart mobile devices operated over user-friendly interfaces like the touchscreen. The real-time social capabilities offered through new media sites like Facebook and Twitter. The emergence of apps for, well, just about everything.

And thankfully, there is no end in sight for this climate of consumer-driven innovation. We appreciate Mashable for highlighting how wireless continues to serve as a true American success story, and, as always, we look forward to exploring new unchartered horizons in our mobile future.

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Tags: Applications, Broadband, Competition, Consumer Benefits, Mobile Applications, Mobile Broadband, Mobile Phone, Mobile Video, Smartphone, Social Networking, Wireless Innovation

Your Mobile Lifeline

Lost your home to flooding, a tornado or other disaster? If you have a smartphone and a wireless connection, help just got a lot easier.

This week, the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) unveiled an addition to its mobile site allowing disaster victims to apply for assistance directly from their smartphone. FEMA's rationale is clear: In a life-threatening emergency, seconds count. Residents are more likely to have a mobile phone on their person, or may have just enough time to grab one before heading to safety.

"More and more, I think we are reorienting our focus... to really developing tools that are useful to you in a mobile environment," FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate told Politico's Morning Tech.

(You can watch him run a demo of the new mobile site on multiple PDAs here.)

Fugate added that FEMA is exploring additional ways to deliver services via mobile and GPS technology. The agency already processes an average of about 40 percent of disaster applications online; this seems like a common-sense way to further streamline FEMA's operations.

Furthermore, FEMA's announcement is a timely reminder of the lifesaving capabilities of mobile communications. Five years ago next month, Hurricane Katrina slammed into Louisiana. The government's disjointed response in assisting the maintenance and repair of mobile communication links contributed significantly to the extended chaos.

Three years later, look at the improvement: During Hurricane Gustav, wireless technology provided real-time communication links vital to the rescue efforts. Among the examples, Tulane University kept more than 10,000 students aware of storm developments through Twitter. Mobile users accessed Gustav-related pages on social network sites such as Ning for real-time news alerts, on-site posts, and videos.

Looking to the future, mobile platforms are already linking voice, video, IM, and other data for first responders at federal, state and local levels. Just think how first responders could use mobile phones and GPS to organize a large-scale rescue operation with a location-based networking application (example: BrightKite), which would allow authorities to divide a region into smaller areas, directing volunteers in each one as necessary.

This would be particularly helpful in the aftermath of a serious earthquake. As reported last week in The Orange County Register, a new early-alert system in the O.C. could give residents up to 70 seconds warning of a major San Andreas earthquake. Through the use of mobile apps, that would be enough time to slow high-speed trains, shut down power plant generators and take other precautionary steps.

The augmented incorporation of mobile technologies into government-led relief efforts is already saving lives and resources. In the five years since the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, wireless has grown up as an industry, with the government recognizing the powerful organizational capabilities immediate access to mobile technology affords Americans stuck in disaster areas. FEMA's recent addition to its mobile site is one of many demonstrations that the government takes seriously the positive ramifications of amplifying its use of mobile devices, which are now inextricably linked with the day-to-day lives of Americans.

 

This article was orginially published on Huffington Post.

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Tags: Broadband, GPS, Mobile Future, Mobile Future Board, Jonathan Spalter, Mobile Phone, Public Safety, Smartphone, Text message, Wireless Devices, Wireless Innovation

Grabbing the Mobile Rings

Last winter's Vancouver Olympics had some great moments: Lindsay Vonn and Bode Miller picking up golds. Joannie Rochette's final. Ovechkin's hit on Jagr.

And according to a briefing this week from NBC, millions of you were watching this on the tiny screen.

Alan Wurtzel, president of research and media development of NBC Universal, told a conference on the mobile Internet that mobile viewership of the Olympics surged between the 2008 Beijing Games and Vancouver. During the Beijing summer games, NBC reported that 15 percent of viewers watched events through their mobile devices.

Just 18 months later in Vancouver, that number almost doubled to 27 percent. About 1.2 million mobile users used a Winter Olympics mobile app, also a large increase from 2008.

NBC's figures are in keeping with other evidence of the boom in mobile web usage. Nielsen estimates cited by Wurtzel peg the growth of mobile web users during the same period at nearly 50 percent (49 million users to 72 million).

So the mobile revolution accelerates. And to think: The London Olympics begin on July 27, 2012, or almost exactly two years from today.

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Tags: Applications, Mobile Broadband, Mobile TV, Smartphone, Wireless Innovation

Follow that car

No, we’re not condoning a high-speed chase, we’re talking Twitter. Ford Motor Company would like you to meet AJ, a 2011 Ford Fiesta that can tweet on its own. Ford already announced its plan to run smartphone apps on its Sync-based cars by the end of this year and claims the technology behind AJ is a logical extension of its commitment to incorporate wireless in a greater capacity in its vehicles.

This past May, a team from Ford drove AJ from Ann Arbor, Michigan all the way to California, with the car tweeting independently throughout the trip. The messages included real-time traffic updates and weather information gathered through an app deemed the “Auto”matic Blog, which “tap[s] into all the available data on the car, including telemetry information, like location, speed, acceleration and braking,” and, “glean[s] information from the windshield wipers, steering input, GPS data and correlate[s] it with live information culled from the Web,” according to the New York Times.

For more on AJ, as well as some information surrounding how Ford will integrate smartphone apps into its vehicles in the near future, check out the full NYT article here.

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Tags: Applications, Smartphone, Wireless Innovation

Global Wireless Subscriptions Surpass 5 Billion

The wireless industry reached an impressive benchmark last Thursday, with the number of wireless service subscriptions surpassing 5 billion globally. After taking into account individuals with multiple subscriptions, the number, which is up from 720 million in 2000, suggests just under 5 billion of the world’s 6.9 billion people are connected wirelessly. Furthermore, Ericcson, the company who first released the estimates, predicts at the current rate of 2 million additional subscriptions per day, we will see 50 billion connected devices by 2020. The popular and expeditious transition to the mobile Internet shows the demand for wireless devices is here to stay, with consumers realizing more than ever the benefits of mobile connectivity.

To read more about Ericcson's findings, click here.

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Tags: Mobile Broadband, Mobile Phone, Wireless Broadband, Wireless Innovation

Mobile Momentum: The Proof is in the Numbers

Consumer confidence remains low in today’s tough economy, but the Pew Internet and American Life Project’s new Mobile Access in 2010 report  illustrates a contrarian streak among U.S. consumers when it comes to the mobile marketplace. Across ages and demographics, Americans are showing a remarkable bullishness when it comes to the value and innovation they see in their wireless purchases. In fact, usage of connected devices and applications continues to grow at an unabated and staggering pace.

Over the past year, the number of Americans connecting wirelessly to the Internet is up 8 percentage points, with six out of 10 Americans now using their smartphone or laptop to access the Internet. In fact, more Americans now use their mobile device to connect to the Internet (38%) than play a game on their device (34%). And, it’s not just young millennials gravitating to the nexus of wireless and the Internet. Their parents—folks in the 30 to 49 year old age bracket—are now leading the growth.

African Americans and Latinos also continue to lead in mobile connectivity. Two-thirds of both communities are wireless Internet users. And, African Americans and Latinos continue to outpace whites when it comes to cell phone ownership (87% versus 80%).

These insights illuminate the wireless debate at a pivotal moment, coming on the heels of President Obama’s Executive Order announcing his Administration’s intention to increase the amount of spectrum available to meet consumers’ fast-growing mobile needs. Pew’s methodical documentation of a steep adoption and usage growth trajectory—cutting broadly across the U.S. population—powerfully illustrates the profound importance of these spectrum allocation efforts and the equally essential need to safeguard policies that encourage the billions of dollars in investment needed to get this spectrum into use across the country. This process can take six to 10 years to complete, from the announcement of auctions to the deployment of actual networks, so we need to get started now.

Unfortunately as temperatures rise in Washington (both literally and metaphorically), it seems no debate is safe from the partisan pull of election-year politics. Even U.S. wireless policy, which has enjoyed bipartisan support for a light-tough regulatory framework through both Republican and Democratic administrations, is getting dragged into the pro-regulation and heated rhetorical fray.

It’s hard to justify given the frenetic pace of competition across the mobile landscape. Verizon and Google recently have gone public with their ambitions to challenge the AT&T/Apple iPad alliance. HP, Dell and others also are in hot pursuit. Cox is becoming the first U.S. cable company to directly offer wireless services. Regional players like Leap Wireless and MetroPCS are thriving. And, the Palm Pre was recently offered to consumers for the jaw-dropping price of a single cent. Consumer choices of service providers, plans, devices and applications abound.

All of this, of course, only further fuels the leaps and bounds we’re now seeing in mobile Internet adoption and usage. The arrival of dispassionate, data-driven reports like this Pew contribution are essential to constructive policy conversation that benefit consumers and innovators alike.

The data also clearly illustrates just how deeply mobile connectivity is working its way into our lives, and just how enthusiastically consumers are responding to the profound innovation it is making possible.

As the Federal Communications Commission takes a closer look at wireless, it’s important that it consider how consumers are actually embracing mobile connectivity in their diverse lives. And, it is imperative that the FCC acknowledge that all of this progress we celebrate now has taken place in—and been made possible in no small part by—the current light-touch regulatory framework.

The proof is in the numbers. As the mercury rises in the nation’s capital, it’s important that cooler heads prevail when it comes to the flexibility and dynamism that have truly connected the nation to the opportunities and innovation made possible by the mobile Internet.

This article was orginially published on Huffington Post.

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Tags: Apple, Applications, AT&T, Competition, Consumer Benefits, Economy, Wireless Investment, FCC, Hispanics, Huffington Post, Mobile Applications, Mobile Future, Mobile Future Board, Jonathan Spalter, Pew Research Center, Smartphone, Spectrum, Verizon, White House, President Obama, Wireless Innovation

Pew Center releases report on Mobile Access in 2010

The Pew Internet and American Life Project today released a comprehensive and compelling report on Mobile Access in 2010, highlighting American adults' increased adoption and usage of wireless technologies over the past year. Such data is the greatest exemplifier of the consumer-driven nature of the mobile marketplace, as more and more users realize the benefits wireless technologies afford their day-to-day lives. So naturally, we highly encourage you to take a look!

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Tags: Competition, Mobile Phone, Pew Research Center, Wireless Innovation

Smartphones Meet Smart Prices

When AT&T and Apple debuted the original 2G iPhone on July 1, 2007, the most expensive 8GB model cost a whopping $599. Just three short years later, the most sophisticated 32GB iPhone 4 is available for $299, while consumers can snag the 8GB 3GS model for $99. There’s no denying that increasingly sophisticated operating systems combined with significant price decreases equals a consumer-friendly marketplace, and Americans have responded to these positive trends with insatiable demand.

But perhaps what is most exciting is that the price of today’s most basic iPhone is not the floor as far as smartphones are concerned. In fact, manufacturers are rolling out smart devices for as low as $70—a far cry from the $599 number that seemed justifiable in the industry such a short time ago.

For example, last week Qualcomm focused a sizable portion of its Uplinq annual developer conference on Brew MP software designed to proliferate mass-market smartphones. Qualcomm anticipates the technology will have massive implications in both domestic and international markets, driving the cost of multiple smartphones well below $100 when models running on Brew MP software are released either later this year or by early 2011.

These models will join other newcomers—like Nokia’s Nuron and E73 Model, which are available through T-Mobile and cost around $70 each—in a new family of smartphones that reach broader demographics and bring these devices’ life-changing capabilities to an increased number of consumers. For more information, check out “The Race to the $70 Smartphone” in Forbes.

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Tags: Apple, Applications, AT&T, Competition, Consumer Benefits, Mobile Phone, Smartphone, T-Mobile, Wireless Innovation

FCC Issues Notice of Inquiry to Regulate Broadband

In today's monthly meeting, the FCC issued a Notice of Inquiry to begin the process of considering possible legal frameworks for regulating broadband Internet services. Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter responded to the FCC’s decision, noting the detrimental effects increased regulatory uncertainty will have on the industry’s marketplace.

“The astounding opportunities in the U.S. for Internet connectivity and services have depended significantly on the vision of innovators and the discerning choices of consumers. But today, with increasing regulatory uncertainty in the communications sector, the future of this success story hangs in the balance.

“Today’s wireless and broadband markets require significant capital investment to anticipate and meet growing consumer demand. Unfortunately, today’s FCC action puts future growth and investment at risk and creates unnecessary turmoil in one of the key drivers of the U.S. economy.

“We are disappointed with the Commission’s decision to pursue a path that could deter rather than incent broadband deployment. We urge the Commission to work in partnership with all stakeholders including Congress, entrepreneurs and innovators, and, of course, consumers in shaping a sustainable solution that will restore economic confidence in the communications sector and stimulate ingenuity, investment and American jobs.”

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Tags: Broadband, Competition, FCC, Mobile Future, Mobile Future Board, Jonathan Spalter, Wireless Innovation

Wireless Ready-to-Wear Not Far Behind

It’s beginning to seem like no feat is too large for the wonderful world of wireless. So in the future, don’t be surprised when the latest wireless advancement isn’t merely something you can text or tweet, but something you can… wear?

Sure enough, developers have introduced prototypes for a new ‘smart’ clothing, which use wireless biosensors to measure a wearer’s physiological conditions throughout the day. The information is sent to the user’s smartphone or PDA that maps the findings in an emotional database, and in turn responds with a pre-determined message depending on the wearer’s emotional state.

The inspirational sayings can come in the form of text messages scrolling across the garment’s sleeve, via video streaming across the corresponding handheld device, or as sound clips spoken by loved ones that come from speakers embedded in the clothing.

The technology is still in its nascent stages, but the potential positive ramifications it could have across varying industries—including its medicinal uses—are already being explored.

So while it may be a while before Mobile Future shows at Bryant Park, we’re certainly not surprised that wireless may soon be wearable (and no… we’re not talking something like this).

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Tags: Applications, Mobile Healthcare, Smartphone, Telemedicine, Text message, Wireless Innovation

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