Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: Apple, Asia, Facebook, iPhone, ITunes Store, Japan, Mobile phone, Softbank
There are no official statistics available as how well the iPhone sells after Apple started offering it in the Japanese market
. Now Softbank Mobile, one of Asia’s biggest tech companies and the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in Japan, thinks sales need a boost and decided to give away
the hardware basically for free. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/26/iphone-not-selling-well-in-japan-now-available-for-free 2/26)
How much overlap is there between your Facebook “friends” and the real contacts in your mobile phone’s address book? If those two world’s align and you have an iPhone, you might want to check out a nifty utility called Photo Phonebook (iTunes link
). It finds the matches between the people in your iPhone’s contact list and your Facebook friends and downloads their Facebook profile photos. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/26/import-facebook-photos-into-your-iphone-contact-list-with-photo-phonebook 2/26)
Available in two tasty flavors, free (”AIM Free”) and paid (”AIM Paid”), AIM 2.0 for iPhone now provides SMS notifications, has location-aware services, and supports multiple accounts (among other updates). It appears as though all of the application updates have been included in both the free and paid versions, with the major (and obvious) difference being the inclusion of ads in the buddy list of the AIM Free app. (http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2009/02/26/im-wars-aim-for-iphone-grows-up-gets-paid-version 2/26)
Google has made its Android Market app store off-limits to those who bought an unlocked version of its G1 handsets as the company moves to prevent them from accessing copy-protected applications. Anyone who pays $25 to join the Android developer program can buy the unlocked hardware, which typically costs $400. Macworld/IDG News Service (2/25)
Thanks to the spike in mobile internet use and the push toward mobile TV services, U.S. mobile advertising search, SMS and display revenues will grow to $3.1 billion in 2013, up from a nascent $160 million in 2008, according to The Kelsey Group, a division of BIA Advisory Services. That represents a compound annual growth rate of 81.2%. (Cynopsis 2/26)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: Apple, iPhone, Microsoft, Mobile phone, Nokia, Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, Sony, Steve Jobs
Despite being on a six-month, health-related leave of absence, Apple CEO Steve Jobs remains intensely involved in the company’s strategic decisions, Apple board members told investors Wednesday at their annual meeting. The company also said that Jobs would return to work, as planned, in June.
ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (2/25) , The Wall Street Journal (2/26) , The New York Times (2/25)
Steve Jobs
Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said Wednesday that the company was “very actively” looking at entering the laptop-computer business, the first time he has officially commented on the phone maker’s long-rumored ambitions. “We don’t have to look even for five years from now to see that what we know as a mobile phone and what we know as a PC are in many ways converging,” Kallasvuo said. Reuters (2/25)
Sony Electronics announced a deal with RealD to develop 3D digital cinema systems that combine a single Sony 4K projector and its new 3D dual lens adapter with RealD’s 3D technology. (Cynopsis 2/26)
After a year of trying to work out their differences without success, Microsoft has announced that it is suing GPS maker TomTom for patent infringement. The case, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington and with the International Trade Commission, involves “innovations in car navigation technology and other computing functionality,” according to Microsoft’s Horacio Gutierrez. PC Magazine (2/25) , Computerworld/IDG News Service (2/25)
Celeno Communications, an Israeli company with backing from Cisco, said it was field-testing in-home Wi-Fi networks that can deliver multiple HDTV streams to a home. The system, expected to be ready for market this summer, would allow viewers to stream video from personal computers to TVs and other electronics devices. Telephony Online (2/25)
Panasonic, Philips, Sony and other Blu-ray disc patent holders are developing a streamlined licensing program for Blu-ray disc, CDs and DVDs. The resulting single license is expected to be offered by midyear. CNET (2/25) , TWICE (2/25)
Panasonic has introduced 10 home-cinema systems that give customers the chance to choose from wireless, Blu-ray or regular DVD platforms. The units also have been developed with energy- and space-efficiency in mind: They use about 20% less electricity than the 2008 models and have been built with fewer parts to allow for more compact designs. Pocket-lint.co.uk (2/25)
Filed under: BROADCAST/CABLE | Tags: Arts, Boston Globe, Chace Crawford, CNN, Fox News Channel, Lou Dobbs, MSNBC, Television
Comcast will serve up on its video-on-demand platform in March an exclusive music video package featuring the rock band U2 and its new album, “No Line on the Horizon.” The company, which has more than 1,000 HD offerings via VOD, already has premiered one song off the new album. The Boston Globe (2/24) , NewsOXY.com (2/24)
The CW has announced a handful of renewals for Fall 2009 – five dramas and one reality show. Among the early pickups for next season are Gossip Girl and One Tree Hill; frosh series 90210; a ninth season of Smallville; a fifth season of Supernatural; in addition to cycles 13 and 14 of America’s Next Top Model. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Spotted: Ed Westwick and Chace Crawford last night in the meatpacking district looking as good as I thought they would.
Fox News and MSNBC are seeing big audience gains, while CNN is shedding a large share of its audience. CNN shows hosted by Anderson Cooper and Lou Dobbs are losing viewers; MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow is bringing in 134% more viewers than the time period had last year. (Iwantmedia 2/25, http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2009/02/fox-news-and-ms.html 2/24)
“Army Wives,” Lifetime’s most successful series, has been picked up for a fourth season on the female-friendly network even before the third season has premiered. Lifetime ordered 18 new episodes for Season 4, which will debut sometime in 2010. Broadcasting & Cable (2/24)
Summer reality competition series So You Think You Can Dance is scheduled to open its fifth season on FOX with a two-night, four-hour premiere May 21 and May 27 at 8p. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Turner Networks, the big cable programmer that last year made headlines when it scheduled its upfront presentation for ad executives in the midst of the broadcast sessions, and drew comparisons between its lineup and that of NBC, is at it again: The company, with powerhouse networks TNT and TBS, will stage this year’s upfront event on May 20, the same day as CBS. Variety (2/24)
The CW approved a drama pilot order for The Beautiful Life, a drama from executive producer Ashton Kutcher. Featuring an ensemble cast, the drama follows a group of young models living together in New York City. (Cynopsis 2/25)
An updated version of Melrose Place also received a pilot order from The CW. CBS Paramount Network Television will produce the drama about a group of twentysomethings living in the upscale Melrose neighborhood of Los Angeles. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Andy Richter is joining Conan O’Brien as NBC’s The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien begins June 1. Richter will be show’s announcer and also be involved in live and pre-taped comedy sketches. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Nickelodeon has the No. 1 ad-sales organization in television, according to results of the 25th annual “Myers Survey of Advertising Executives on National TV Value and Sales Organization Performance.” The Nickelodeon Kids and Family Group bested more than 35 other national TV sales groups from cable and broadcast to win the competition for the first time. Multichannel News (2/24)
Cable provider RCN added 12,000 customers in the fourth quarter of last year and generated revenue of $188 million, a 12% increase. News of the company’s better-than-expected quarterly results sent its stock 14.7% higher in Tuesday trading. The Wall Street Journal/Dow Jones Newswires (2/24) , CED Magazine (2/2009) , OneTRAK (2/24)
The latest data from Nielsen show that 15 ad-supported cable networks increased their prime-time ratings — nine of them by double digits — from Jan. 26 to Feb. 22. USA Network was the top network with 3.41 million viewers in prime time during that period, a 13% increase, and made a strong showing in all the key demos. Mediaweek (2/24)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Beverly Hills 90210, CBS, CBS Interactive, Melrose Place, Myspace, News Corporation, TV.com, Yahoo
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
In its first big movie during the reign of new boss Carol Bartz, Yahoo unveiled a trio of new advertising targeting products that incorporate some of the innovations Google has brought to the online ad marketplace. Given the slow, painful decline of Yahoo’s revenues in general and the display ad industry as a whole, a lot is riding on the advances – which seek to merge the arenas of search and display as a single solution. The new products include Search Retargeting, giving advertisers the ability to place display ads based on a users’ search activities; Enhanced Retargeting, delivering dynamically generated display ads across the Yahoo network based on user activity on an advertiser’s site; and Enhanced Targeting capabilities for search advertising, including ad scheduling and demographic targeting within search. (Cynopsis 2/25)
’80s electro new wave band Depeche Mode broke new ground with an increasingly flexible Apple, convincing iTunes to offer a TV-style “Season Pass” option for the band’s upcoming “Sounds of the Universe Album.” Fans can pay $19 to receive additional content over the next few weeks including remixes, exclusive videos and the pre-released single “Wrong,” leading up to the release of the full album on April 21. The model could help companies like EMI Music, Depeche Mode‘s label, earn extra revenue from the platform while quenching the thirst of die hard fans for extra content. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson, the co-founders of MySpace, could soon be following Peter Chernin out of News Corp. Their contracts expire in October and both men have privately said there is a chance they will leave. The two are among the best-paid employees at News Corp. (Iwantmedia 2/25, http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e3d55488-02b9-11de-b58b-000077b07658.html 2/24)
(Below) Where does this leave Hulu, the company which is trying to build new online video ground internationally as well?
Hollywood is finally beginning to turn its attention toward international online video audiences, but don’t expect the full-length floodgates to open just yet. Fox International Channels launched its first TV portal abroad in Italy, dubbed FlopTV, featuring a mixture of HD short-form Italian sitcoms and UGC, per Variety. Meanwhile CBS Interactive announced the availability of clips internationally on TV.com from CBS from shows such as Beverly Hills 90210, Melrose Place, Star Trek, MacGyver and Love Boat, in addition to clips from 60 Minutes and 48 Hours. The clips will also appear to international users on CBS.com and CBSNews.com. (Cynopsis 2/25)
News Corp.’s Slingshot Labs is unveiling its first startup, DailyFill, a site offering nuggets of celebrity gossip. Stories are typically a few paragraphs and offer links to longer versions. Readers don’t want “really long articles,” says co-creator Josh Berman. “They want a quick summary.” (Iwantmedia 2/25, http://tech.yahoo.com/news/afp/20090224/tc_afp/itinternetfilmmediadailyfill 2/24)
Is Twitter — the microblogging service that famously has no revenue — a threat to Google? The notion is generating heated chatter across the Web. Very quietly, one of Twitter’s most powerful applications has become its ability to allow people to conduct real-time searches. (Iwantmedia 2/25, http://www.mercurynews.com/opinion/ci_11776452?nclick_check=1 2/24)
What happens when you make paid search ads both relevant and visual? Searchme
, the search engine startup which presents results as a stack of full-page previews that you can flip through, is hoping to find out with the beta launch of AdView. Its first foray into advertising, AdView is SearchMe’s version of AdWords, except that instead of selling of paid text links it will be interspersing into its results clickable previews of entire Webpages, videos, or other visual advertising. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/24/paid-search-just-got-visual-searchme-launches-adview-beta-free-ads-for-first-500-signups 2/24)
MSNBC.com introduced an innovative new video portal to offer additional content complimentary to President Obama’s address to Congress last night. The interface allows users to search the transcript of the speech and pull corresponding video segments from the address for posting to third-party sites. The tool can be used to peruse more than 20 indexed Obama speeches and press conferences. (Cynopsis 2/25)
America may lag behind Asia and Europe in affordable broadband and connection speeds but the U.S. is #1 in a new measure dubbed the Connectivity Scorecard, as determined by a new methodology created by Leonard Waverman, Prof. of Economics at the London Business School with funding from Nokia Siemens Networks. Dividing a nation into the three “pillars” of consumers, businesses and government, the study ranks countries on a total of 30 indicators that affect productivity including broadband, mobile and fixed line infrastructure that contribute to a nation’s social and economic development. The U.S. scored the highest rank because connectivity in business use is very advanced, according to Prof. Waverman. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Connectivity Scorecard 2009 – Top 10 Nations
Rank Country Final Score
1 United States 7.71
2 Sweden 7.47
3 Denmark 7.18
4 Netherlands 6.75
5 Norway 6.51
6 United Kingdom 6.44
7 Canada 6.15
8 Australia 6.14
9 Singapore 5.99
10 Japan 5.87
Source: London Business School, Nokia Siemens Networks
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: Android, AT&T, Google, InformationWeek, Microsoft, Microsoft Windows, Orange County Register, Steve Ballmer
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said Tuesday that he expected Google to move its Android wireless software onto laptop PCs and that he saw Google as a potential rival to the Windows desktop operating system. Speaking to financial analysts, Ballmer said that rather than make its own handsets, Microsoft would focus on stretching its mobile software over more devices for both basic smartphones and high-end handsets. CNET (2/24) , InformationWeek (2/24)
AT&T has added a feature that detects when users are nearing their monthly mobile data allotment and shuts off their online access when they reach that limit. Designed primarily as a parental-control device, the application will run postpaid customers $4.99 per line and includes a content filter. The Orange County Register (Calif.) (2/24)
Filed under: GAMING | Tags: Apple, Handhelds, iPhone, IpodTouch, Ludia, Smartphones, Video game, Where's Waldo?
Ludia Inc. signed a deal with Entertainment Rights to create a line of video games based on the Where’s Waldo? Franchise. Look for Waldo on consoles, PC/Mac, iPhone and iPod touch later this year. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: Blu-ray Disc, Broadcom, Chumby, John Cusack, Scripps Networks Interactive, Television, VUDU, War Inc.
Vudu says it will begin offering owners of its Internet Movie Player the chance to download on-demand movies to own — not just rent — and watch them in the device’s HDX format at 1080p resolution. Most of the titles will be independents, including the critically acclaimed “Man on Wire” and John Cusack‘s “War, Inc.” Dealerscope (2/25) , CED Magazine (2/2009)
Broadcom announced the integration of Chumby content into TV sets, Blu-ray players and set-tops powered by Broadcom’s latest “system-on-a-chip” solution. When completed more than 1,000 widgets on the cuddly little $200 Wi-Fi powered device will be accessible on broadband-connected televisions including apps from Pandora, the New York Times and Scripps Networks. (Cynopsis 2/25)
Panasonic has introduced six new versions of its popular Viera LCD TVs. The updated models feature 800 lines of moving-picture resolution for minimal blurring, 50,000:1 dynamic contrast and an IPS Alpha panel for clearer pictures. Pocket-lint.co.uk (2/24)
Anthony Gallo Acoustics, as part of its Reference Series, has debuted two spherical speakers: the Strada and the Strada Center. The units can be mounted in a variety of ways and feature Anthony Gallo’s S2 Technology for low-frequency extension and a new CDT 3 tweeter. ElectronicHouse.com (2/24)






![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=f7a17bd5-7be0-4440-b18b-eac1c789e6da)

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=447decf0-02af-450f-96ad-dc61b95ffd18)





![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=f167805d-20fd-4b4c-be41-f0df99583717)




![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=bb428530-62f0-4e70-b6a0-1e73e598c8b9)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=d5b96fde-60e4-4807-856b-c2d5c877ec55)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=8888e277-86b5-493a-8900-5497c0fff8ec)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=59a5b023-3acd-4df0-b3ff-815c2de9e488)