. Medical and Hospital News .




INTERNET SPACE
Smartphones helping close digital divide of Internet use
by Staff Writers
Washington (UPI) Jun 10, 2013


Teens with cracked smartphone screens forgo repair for status
Kansas City, Mo. (UPI) Jun 10, 2013 - Some U.S teens and young adults with broken smartphone screens say they're in no hurry to get them fixed, considering them instead hard-won, cool battle scars.

The spider webs of a cracked screen have become status symbols like torn T-shirts and ripped blue jeans and something of a fashion statement, they admit.

"If you were the only person with a cracked screen, you would probably run out to get it fixed. But everybody else's is cracked, so why not leave it?" 18-year-old Kaitlyn Wilson, of Liberty, Mo., told The Kansas City Star.

"Then Sharpie it, and make a design out of it on Pinterest."

Cracked phone screens as art?

"Color it in," Wilson said. "I've had friends that tried to crack their screen on purpose so they could Sharpie it."

One academic said a cracked screen shows the smartphone owner has been around and provides "street cred," especially for middle-class children.

"Only if you're fairly comfortable can you regard the cases of deterioration or damage to your cellphone as a sign of status," Mark Bauerlein, an English professor at Emory University, told the newspaper. "If you're poor, then it's just damaged."

Ryan Arter, owner of cellphone repair business in Olathe, Kan., said he knows about the cracked screen trend firsthand, courtesy of his son.

"My son cracked his screen and he said: 'Dad, look at how cool this is. I'm going to leave it this way,'" Arter said.

"And he has a father who owns a business fixing these phones."

One-third of Americans own tablets: survey
Washington (AFP) June 10, 2013 - More than one-third of Americans use a tablet computer, with the highest percentage of users in the 35-44 age group, a survey showed Monday.

Tablet adoption has doubled over the past year, according to the Pew Internet Life survey of adults in April and May,

Unlike smartphones, most popular with younger adults ages 18-34, the highest rates of tablet ownership was found among adults in their late 30s and early 40s.

Some 49 percent of those in the 35-44 own a tablet computer, more than any other age group. Among those 65 or older, the figure was just 18 percent.

The survey found half of adults with at least a college degree owned a tablet, significantly more than those at any other education level. And 56 percent of adults living in households making at least $75,000 per year said they have a tablet computer, compared with 20 percent of those making less than $30,000 per year.

Research firm IDC said in a recent report that tablet sales globally are expected to grow 58.7 percent in 2013 to 229.3 million units.

This would bring tablet shipments above those of portable PCs this year. And IDC said it expects tablet shipments to outpace the entire PC market by 2015.

While a digital divide of Internet use persists among racial and ethnic groups, smartphones are helping bridge the divide, the U.S. Census Bureau reports.

The report released Monday, "Computer and Internet Use in the United States: 2011," shows a sizable percentage of Internet users now make their online connections both inside and outside the home and from multiple devices.

"Going online is no longer a simple yes or no proposition," sociologist and report author Thom File said in a bureau release. "Different groups of people are accessing the Internet in very different ways, and these statistics give us a better understanding of how and where those connections are taking place."

While a gap of 27.1 percentage points exists between groups with the highest and lowest reported rates of home Internet use -- Asians at 78.3 percent and Hispanics at 51.2 percent -- the gap narrows to 17.5 percentage points when smartphone use is factored into overall rates of Internet use, the report found.

In 2011, 27.0 percent of Americans -- considered "high connectivity" users -- connected to the Internet from multiple locations and multiple devices, while 15.9 percent had had no computer or Internet access at all.

The remaining 57.1 percent of Americans were located somewhere between these two extremes, the report said.

Smartphone life shakes up website world
San Francisco (AFP) June 9, 2013 - Internet giants from Google and Facebook to Yahoo and Zynga are scrambling to adapt to an online world where people reach for smartphones or tablets instead of traditional computers.

Social games pioneer Zynga, which rose to stardom making titles played at Facebook's website, is cutting nearly a fifth of its staff as part of a move to focus on titles for mobile gadgets.

After taking over as chief executive at Yahoo last year, former Google executive Marissa Mayer laid out a turn-around strategy that made a priority of tailoring offerings to smartphones and tablets.

The dismal performance of Facebook's freshly-launched stock last year was blamed in large part on fears that it lacked tools to cash in on members who are increasingly accessing the social network from mobile devices.

Google has proved prescient by creating and giving away an Android mobile operating system that showcases its software and services on smartphones and tablets.

Even the Mountain View, California-based technology titan's seemingly offbeat "big bets" on Internet-linked Glass eyewear and Web-connected self-driving cars are seen by some analysts as shrewd moves to remain anchored in lifestyles.

"The head-mounted display makes the mobile user much more valuable because you can serve ads as they are walking and make them location-based," independent Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle said of Glass.

"With self-driving cars, the dashboard is a huge tablet; if the car is driving and someone is bored, you can serve up whatever you want."

Companies that staked claims with websites visited by people using desktop or laptop computers risk obsolescence if they don't adapt to Internet users switching to apps on smartphones or tablets.

Industry data shows that people are moving "aggressively" to apps and away from traditional websites, according to Gartner analyst Van Baker.

"It is important to cater to that mobile user," Baker told AFP. "That is the driving force in the market right now; the one device a person carries everywhere -- the smartphone."

Not only are the devices preferred by Internet users changing, so is their behavior.

Gartner research shows that people using smartphones access the Internet an average of 20 times a day with sessions lasting about a minute, compared with four times daily for about 35 minutes a pop on traditional computers.

"It is a big challenge, because the behavior associated with a smartphone is dramatically different from a notebook computer," Baker said.

"Your experience needs to be two clicks deep and be done in a minute," he continued. "If it takes any longer, they are gone."

Smartphones in particular have small screens, raising the risk of people being annoyed by advertising.

Mobile devices also allow location, calendar information and other contextual data to be woven into services to win people over with desirable information at just the right moments and places.

"The opportunity to be relevant or helpful is much greater because of the contextual information," said Forrester analyst Charles Golvin.

"If you interrupt me and adopt the old get-in-your-face approach of many marketers, you are much more likely to sour any potential relationship."

Internet companies don't have the luxury of focusing on either mobile devices or traditional computers; they must tailor offerings for both, according to analysts.

"Mobile first is correct, but it is not mobile only," Golvin said.

"You need to enable your customers to reach you where and when they choose to and on the device that happens to be in their hand at that moment."

Established Internet companies tend to be well-positioned to adapt to engaging people on mobile devices.

"The fundamentals of delivering your experience digitally are still there at the core whether it is going to a PC or a browser or to a mobile device," Golvin said, referring to established operations such as Facebook and Yahoo.

"It is less of a disruption than it is a transition."

However, the ability to bypass running websites makes it easier for startups to blaze into the market with mobile apps.

Zynga faces the added challenge of being in a hits-drive business in a world where loyalty to apps is fleeting.

Most of the people who download a mobile app at launch abandon it within three months, according to Gartner.

"The life of 'Draw Something' or 'Farmville' can be even more compressed in the mobile world," Golvin said, referring to Zynga titles.

"A game is a hit, people engage and then the next hit comes along and takes up their time."

.


Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

Get Our Free Newsletters
Space - Defense - Environment - Energy - Solar - Nuclear

...





INTERNET SPACE
Apple jumps into streaming with iTunes Radio
San Francisco (AFP) June 10, 2013
Apple on Monday unveiled its hotly anticipated iTunes Radio Service as it announced a dramatic overhaul of the touch-screen interface for its popular smartphones and tablets. The free Internet radio service features over 200 stations "and an incredible catalog of music from the iTunes Store," Apple said in a statement as it opened its annual developers conference in San Francisco. The ad ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
Sandbags and raw nerves as flood peak hits Germany

More radioactive leaks reported at Fukushima plant

Japan disaster cash spent on counting turtles: report

Agreement over Statue of Liberty security screening

INTERNET SPACE
Lockheed Martin Completes Functional Testing of First GPS III Satellite Bus Electronic Systems

Google to buy Israeli GPS app Waze for $1 bln: reports

Glitch puts off Indian navigation satellite launch by a fortnight

Orbcomm And Cartrack Deliver Telematics Solution For African Market

INTERNET SPACE
Geneticist speculates humans could have big eyes, foreheads in future

How similar are the gestures of apes and human infants? More than you might suspect

Discovery of oldest primate skeleton helps chart early evolution of humans, apes

Turning point for early human diets occurred 3.5 million years ago

INTERNET SPACE
Philippines to destroy 5 tonnes of ivory tusks

British butterfly desperate for warm weather this summer

Fears for African rhinos in China forest

U.S. proposes dropping federal protection for gray wolves

INTERNET SPACE
WHO simplifies pandemic alert system after criticism

Only 14 China H7N9 patients left in hospital: govt

Quack shot: Duck genome takes aim at bird flu

Mosquitoes reared in cooler temps more susceptible to viruses

INTERNET SPACE
In fashion, China gets its own first lady effect

China Nobel winner's relative gets 11 years in jail

Chinese website bans searches for 'yellow duck'

Obama urged to press China to free 16 prisoners

INTERNET SPACE
Global cybercrime ring targeted by Microsoft and FBI

Report: Belgian army sold helicopters to firm linked to trafficking

US feds 'kidnapped' suspected druglord: Guinea-Bissau

US ships look to net big contraband catches in Pacific

INTERNET SPACE
Japan economy heats up in first quarter

World Bank cuts China's economic growth forecast

Walker's World: Europe's blame game

Outside View: Sub-par U.S. jobs growth expected




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement