Entertainment
Posted on 17 June 2010. Tags: app review, BlackBerry, iPod Touch, Music, Rdio
**As published at digiday:DAILY**
Publisher: Rdio Price: $9.99 for unlimited web and mobile, $4.99 for unlimited web
Platform: iOS and BlackBerry
Advertising: None
Functionality: B+
Fun Factor: B
Overall: B+
Music has turned out to be a rather tough proposition on mobile. While apps like Pandora have soared in both popularity and revenue-generation capabilities, other apps like RealNetworks’ Rhapsody have garnered less favorable reviews and market penetration.
Still, there are a growing number of free and subscription-based streaming services to choose from, which makes the “music on mobile” market all the more compelling to participate in. Case in point: The Rdio app. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Entertainment, Music, Social, Tech
Posted on 16 June 2010. Tags: Android, Apple, BlackBerry, Google, iOS, Nokia, Symbian
**As published at RCR Wireless News**
Nokia Corp. continues to buckle under the increasing might and will of its competitors in the smartphone space.
In a note to investors , the company downgraded the financial outlook for its devices and services division for the second (current) quarter and full year of 2010. The company said “multiple factors are negatively impacting Nokia’s business to a greater extent than previously expected.” While that may be true, it would be difficult to conclude that most of these “factors” have come as a surprise to the world’s largest manufacturer of cellphones. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Devices, Entertainment, Gaming, Music, Social, Tech
Posted on 15 June 2010. Tags: Places, Twitter, Twitter Places
**As published at RCR Wireless News**
Twitter Inc. just did the inevitable. Twice.
First it launched a geolocation-based service called Places. Then a few hours later, the entire service crashed and stayed down into the late hours of Monday night out on the West Coast.
The fourth day of matches at the World Cup was still hours away when the infamous fail whale appeared, so it would be hard to blame the world’s most unifying event for Twitter’s downtime. It’s also worth noting that Apple Inc. could take some of the blame since the impending onslaught of iPhone 4 pre-orders was due to begin any minute (or hour) when the site’s servers overloaded. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Entertainment, Social, Tech
Posted on 07 June 2010. Tags: Apple, FaceTime, iOS, iPad, iPhone, iPhone 4, Steve Jobs, WWDC
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
SAN FRANCISCO – Although millions of fanboys and industry watchers have already seen what turned out to be the new iPhone 4 today, Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs still had a few surprises up his sleeve to share during his keynote at the company’s annual developer gathering.
If there is any less excitement or anticipation for Apple’s game-changing mobile device, that sure wasn’t apparent this morning. Lines began forming around the building at 6 a.m. this morning and when the gates to the main hall were finally raised for Jobs’ keynote there was a mad dash for seats (press included). The whole experience felt very rock concert in typical Apple fashion. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Devices, Entertainment, Gaming, Music, Social, Tech, Video+TV
Posted on 14 May 2010. Tags: Apple, Clearwire Corp., Comcast, Echostar Corp., FLO TV, Google, iPad, Motorola Inc., Nexus One, remote, search, Sling Media, The Cable Show, Time Warner Cable Inc., TV, Xfinity Remote
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
LOS ANGELES – After spending the last three days up close and personal with the cable industry at its big annual affair, I’m disappointed to report that mobile was hard to find. The wireless innovations and news I’d hoped to see were simply not there.
I’m not sure lobbying will do the trick, but the entire mobile industry should do everything it can to bring wireless out from the distant horizon it sits in now and into clear view for most business in this space who don’t yet see the light. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Devices, Entertainment, Marketing, Policy, Tech, Video+TV
Posted on 14 May 2010. Tags: Apple, Ari Emanuel, Cablevision Systems Corp., Evan Williams, FCC, Google, iPad, Julius Genachowski, Matthew Blank, Showtime Networks Inc., Thomas Rutledge, TiVo, Tom Rogers, Twitter, William Morris Endeavor Entertainment
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
LOS ANGELES – Kicking off the final day of the cable industry’s big soiree, Federal Communications Commission Chair Julius Genachowski tried to dampen obvious concerns in the room over his latest regulatory plans. After duly applauding the cable industry for the massive investment it put into building broadband infrastructure, even going so far as to call it a “great American success story,” he pointed out how badly the country is lagging on rate of innovative change.
Whether or not those in the audience shared his sentiment, Genachowski said his core goal is to drive faster connections and reap the rewards that will flow from greater broadband deployments and innovation. He believes broadband capacity, penetration and the nation’s access to the Internet as a whole will be one of, if not the, largest driving factor in job growth and social change for the country at large. Continue Reading
Posted in Entertainment
Posted on 13 May 2010. Tags: Apple, Brian Roberts, CBS Corp., Comcast Corp., DreamWorks Studios, FCC, iTunes, Les Moonves, Michael Powell, Stacey Snider, The Cable Show
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
LOS ANGELES – Media moguls from cable operators, networks and studios met on stage Wednesday morning with a former Federal Communications Commission chairman and a venture capitalist to hold court on the rapidly changing business models facing the industry and how alternative screens are playing a role in that.
“Every single piece of technology that’s come into being has been a friend to content,” said Les Moonves, president and CEO of CBS Corp. It’s hard to imagine him saying that even just a few short years ago, but he shows every indication of being on board now. Continue Reading
Posted in Devices, Entertainment, Marketing, Policy, Tech, Video+TV
Posted on 12 May 2010. Tags: Android, Apple, Brian Roberts, Comcast Corp., General Electric, Google, iPhone, NBC, NBC Universal, The Cable Show
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
LOS ANGELES – To hear Comcast Corp.’s chairman and CEO Brian Roberts tell it, the cable industry is on a collision course with destiny. The seemingly neatly divided world of entertainment that Roberts first jumped into as the son of Comcast’s founder Ralph Roberts is no more.
If all goes his way, the family-run business will pass all regulatory hurdles and close its $30-billion dollar deal to snatch up the controlling interest in General Electric’s NBC Universal by the end of the year. Surely few, if any in the audience here for Roberts’ keynote could have dreamed two decades ago of a cable operator becoming so powerful and flush enough with cash that it could take control of a content juggernaut like NBC. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Devices, Entertainment, Marketing, Policy, Tech, Video+TV
Posted on 11 May 2010. Tags: app review, Cyberia
**As published in didigay:DAILY**
Publisher: Cyberia, LLC Price: Free Platform: iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad
Advertising: None (other than its own)
Functionality: A
Fun Factor: A-
Overall: A
It’s rare to find an app that’s purposefully limited in scope and yet still manages to provide thought-provoking content. During interviews and conferences, I’ve often heard executives say that mobile apps aren’t always worth the effort and resources they take to create — but I point to cyberia media’s app as the perfect counter argument. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Entertainment, Marketing, Tech, Video+TV
Posted on 07 May 2010. Tags: BET, Black Entertainment Television, Brandon Lucas, ICTM, Institute for Communications Technology and Management, Jennifer Byrne, Lucy Hood, smartphone, The Nielsen Co., University of Southern California, USC ICTM, Verizon
**As published in RCR Wireless News**
SANTA MONICA, CALIF. – Few, if any, technologies have taken off as quickly as smartphones have in the United States and it’s changing the American lifestyle in the process. At the end of 2008, the U.S. market had a smartphone penetration rate of 15%; it’s currently at 24% and The Nielsen Co. is predicting we’ll see a 49% adoption rate by the end of 2011.
Lucy Hood, a former Fox Mobile executive and now executive director at University of Southern California’s Institute for Communications, Technology and Management, said that while the devices and connection speeds have changed, usage patterns have not been disrupted. As a whole, smartphones are primarily used to communicate first, seek information second and entertain as a tertiary function, she said.
In the latest study conducted by the USC think tank, it found that mobile video consumption is still woefully underused. Even more discouraging than the level of use, according to Hood, is the reason why mobile TV and video has failed to live up to the hype: it’s still a poor experience for most users. Continue Reading
Posted in Apps, Devices, Entertainment, Policy, Tech, Video+TV