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Apr18Comments Off
Many reports are now flooding across the information super highway that Apple have announced that a brand new white i phone 4 will be released this month.Up to now, Apple have implemented the old attitude towards colour as car manufacturer Henry Ford who famously said of his Model T Ford “You can have any colour you like, as long as it’s Black.”. Most people aren’t too bothered about what colour their iPhone is but there are a whole host of people out there who think it is one of the most important things about the phone also. These people have been calling out for a lovely new white iPhone for a long time now and to be honest, many of us had thought that the guys at Apple had just given up after a long time trying.
Rumours of problems, such as the paint peeling off in high heat, have been absolutely rife so it came as a pleasant surprise when Paul Schiller, CEO of Apple revealed on his Twitter page last month that the with phone is on the way this spring and that “it’s a beauty!”. Since then though, we have had no more news – until now…
Bloomberg, the America news corporation, have announced that the iPhone 4, in glistening white, will be in the shops in the USA by the end of this month, sold by networks AT&T and Verizon. This means that it should be available in the UK this summer at the latest. Let’s hope that these stories are true and that there will be no more manufacturing problems from Apple.
One of the downsides of this is that it possibly means we will not be seeing the iPhone 5 for a while yet. The rumours are that it will be announced by September which will be a disappointment to those who were hoping that Apple would continue their habit of releasing phones every summer.
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Jun2No Comments
There have been rumours circulating that smartphone and tablet computer manufacturer, Samsung, could release the third incarnation of their popular Galaxy S device as early as the first half of 2012…The speculation was sparked by comments made by Eldar Murtazin, who believes that Samsung will not be resting on their laurels, and could be planning to roll out the next-generation Galaxy S III as soon as the end of 2011.
Although this seems unlikely, many industry analysts agree that Samsung will probably be increasing their production cycles in order to combat the effects of the impending release of Apple’s latest iPhone. Although Mr Murtazin has not always been right concerning every single one of his smartphone industry related forecasts, he has become renowned for pinpointing crucial events. His achievements include successfully predicting Nokia’s departure from the Symbian operating system, towards Microsoft and their Windows 7 Phone concept.
Some critics have refuted the prediction, highlighting the fact that the Samsung Galaxy S II is still not available in all markets globally, and the prospect of the Samsung Galaxy S III’s release being so close behind could serve to drastically dampen sales of the second model.
The confusion was not helped by Samsung’s President of Mobile Communications, J.K. Shin, who declined to clear up the matter in a recent interview with Dow Jones. Despite this, Mr Shin did inform Samsung fans of the company’s future business plans, which include aspirations to improve their hold on the Android tablet market. It is not thought that Samsung’s plans for Android tablet domination will harm their smartphone sales, with a whopping 60 million unit sales expected from this year alone.
The rumours have also instigated ideas for possible improvements for the samsung galaxy s, which have included longer battery-life or possible display enhancements.
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Mar30No Comments
With the sales of smartphones now exceeding the sales of traditional mobile handsets, the dynamics of how businesses are contacting customers to inform them of their products is changing. As a society, the Brits are now more mobile-conscious than ever. For many, mobiles have not only become their first reference point for contacting friends and family, but also the first place they go to find out news and information. As such this reliance on the mobile phone has created a new niche market for businesses to contact potential customers; mobile advertising.Mobile marketing is a quickly growing market; in 2008 spending on mobile advertising reached £28.6 million, a year later spending had increased to £46 million and such is the exponential rate of growth in the market that by 2015, experts are confidently predicting that mobile advertising spending will reach a staggering £419 million.
The reason for this rapid rate of growth for this fledgling industry is due to the way people are communicating and receiving communications from third parties. Until recently, people used to call each other via a home phone line and watch adverts on television, see them in newspapers and magazines.
The mobile revolution has altered this markedly. Nowadays, for many people their phone is their first port of call for all forms of communication, for retrieving information and for using the Internet, and this has left broad scope for advertising opportunity.
What makes mobile advertising so special, however, is the flexibility afforded by the system. Mobile marketing is not simply a blanket exposure to people in the hope that they may be interested. Instead, mobile campaigns use the power of the Internet to ensure that their campaigns are carefully targeted; meaning that people only receive the offers and information that is most likely to be of benefit to them. So, for example, if you have been looking for ways to get cheaper phone bills, you are likely to receive mobile advertisements from companies that offer precisely these (or similar).
Better still, mobile advertising is entirely scalable and can be an affordable solution for any size of company, from a local business seeking extra customers in the local area, to massive multi-national corporations seeking global markets for their products; mobile marketing is applicable to any size and any market.
For example, if you have a brand new application for an Apple product, you can target your mobile marketing to iPhone advertising to ensure that the people receiving your offer are those most likely to want it.
It is this innovative method of targeting potential customers, with no need for blanket coverage, mailings to people with no interest in your products or expensive TV and radio advertisements, which makes mobile advertising the fastest growing form of advertising at present.
Mobile technology has facilitated businesses being able to far better target the right customer and cut down massively on spending on advertising that is non-productive. Instead of blanket market saturation, the strategy for many businesses is for cost-effective key market penetration.
The greatest strengths of mobile advertising are its flexibility and relevance for the customer. For a business, it offers the most efficient and cost-effective way to contact customers and to ensure that adverts are being seen. For the customer, it offers them the products they are most likely to want and need and find useful to their own set of circumstances. It is a harmonious recipe and one which should produce a far more relevant and useful advertising service on any standard handset.

