->

->
Gartner recently wrote about the 10 mobile technologies to watch in 2010-2011. These mobile technologies were selected because they will evolve in ways that affect corporate strategies, significant numbers of customers or employees will adopt or expect them, or they will address particular mobile challenges that organizations will face through 2011
The 10 mobile technologies to watch in 2010 and 2011 include:
1) Bluetooth (3 and 4)
2) The Mobile Web
3) Mobile Widgets
4) Platform-Independent Mobile AD Tools
5) App Stores
6) Enhanced Location Awareness
7) Cellular Broadband
8 ) Touchscreens
9) Machine 2 Machine (M2M)
10) Device-Independent Security
Source : Network Asia (Read the full article )

->
In terms of mobile market evolution, Latin America has always been the younger brother of far more mature markets such as Europe, US and South East Asia. For many years the region showed low levels of adoption and ARPU. It was not until 2007 and 2008 that there was a rapid growth of mobile adoption and some countries of the region, such as Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Venezuela, but also most of the Caribbean started to show levels of penetration similar to those of Western Europe and South East Asia. By the first trimester of 2009, Argentina and Venezuela had exceeded 100% percent of mobile penetration, while Chile and Colombia had reach over 90%. But it is not until the end of 2009 and beginnings of 2010 that will see the two largest economies, Mexico and Brazil, reach a penetration level over 80 and 90 percent respectively.
For the last years, the strategy used by operators in the region was to promote mobile communications to every corner of the continent, from all major cities to the most recoded places in south Patagonia, Atacama Desert, to the Amazon jungle, and the Caribbean seas. This strategy, based on aggressive price competition was extremely successful. Operators achieved its objective of mass adoption of mobile phones. However now that penetration is reaching saturation, operators will have to find a new way to keep growing. In some countries, operators will continue pursuing for new clients, and number portability is a new tool that governments are promoting to keep the market competitive. Mexico, Brazil, Colombia and Ecuador will be the first countries to face this new competitive scenario. But, this is not enough in order to keep growing.
In this new scenario, mobile operators are migrating the core of its strategy towards increasing clients spending, particularly in value added services. While there is an idea that mobile voice communications will start replacing fix communications, most operators in the region keep promoting the advantages of using mobile voice communications, especially among users of the same company. In some cases, such as Movistar Argentina, Tigo Colombia or Claro Brazil, the company offers a reduced price per minute for the communications among lines of the same company. On a more aggressive strategy, companies such as Telcel in Mexico, Oi in Brazil or Tigo Colombia offer pre and post paid plans with an amount of free minutes (local or long distance) for any number of the of the same operator. This strategy can be compared with some operators in North America and Western Europe that have unlimited free minutes for calls to lines of the same operator.
In most countries, national regulations set limits to the prices operators can charge the users for interconnection calls. In this sense, operators see more and more interest in increasing data revenues but only at this stage of development two basic conditions to promote data usage are given: the Latin American mobile user is mature enough to take advantage of the mobile data services and mobile content; and secondly, there is a technology capacity and a handset market that support mobile data.
Not every user behaves the same way. Latin America is a mixture of cultures, it can not be expected that the entire region will be interested in the same VAS, however, it is possible to identify some trends that are aligned with international trends.
On one hand we have VAS that are used in everyday life by all kind of users, on the other hand we have VAS that target business users and are originated to increase productivity and support the core business of different industries.
The latest introduction in the mobile VAS market in Latin America is mobile broadband. Operators all over the region are deploying 3.5G networks to boast the adoption of mobile broadband, and along with it, the usage of mobile content, particularly music and games.
What can we expect from Latin America for the years to come? Is young Latin America growing? Certainly, Latin American mobile market has moved into a new stage of its life, it has easily left the childhood years in the past to become a teenager with a great future to come. The region is eager join its older brothers’ in grown up life, however it is up to itself to find its path, other regions experiences can only work as a guide.
By Andrés Sciarrotta, Consultant, Frost & Sullivan Latin America

More than 300,000 people in Bangladesh, one of Asia’s poorest but fastest-growing economies, have rushed to sign up to learn English over their cellphones, threatening to swamp the service even before its official launch Thursday.
The project, which costs users less than the price of a cup of tea for each three-minute lesson, is being run by the BBC World Service Trust, the international charity arm of the broadcaster. Part of a British government initiative to help develop English skills in Bangladesh, it marks the first time that cellphones have been used as an educational tool on this scale.
Since cellphone services began in Bangladesh just over a decade ago, more than 50 million Bangladeshis have acquired phone connections, including many in remote rural areas. That far outnumbers the 4 million who have Internet access.
English is increasingly seen as a key to economic mobility, especially as ever larger numbers of Bangladeshis go abroad to find work unavailable to them at home. An estimated 6.2 million Bangladeshis work overseas, and their nearly $10 billion in annual remittances represent the country’s second-largest source of foreign exchange.

IBM, long synonymous with the personal computer, hopes to become equally influential in the world of mobile computing.
The company plans to announce Wednesday a $100 million investment pool to develop new services for mobile phones. The company provided few specifics about its research goals but said it broadly hopes to improve mobile payment methods, security, privacy, and user interface and, chiefly, to enhance the ability of corporations to used mobile devices to interact with customers and employees.
Source: Bits Blog

| M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Aug | ||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | |||









List of VAS Companies
- India
List of Mobile SNS
- India
List of Short Codes
- India
- Mobile Statistics
-------------------------

Author :
Sidhartha Bezbora
10+ years of experience in Mobile VAS
& Internet,Mobile Entertainment,
Mobile/Web Social Networking,
Mobile Music, Gaming and Apps,
Messaging, Mobile Search experience.
Major Market Experience :
Dubai, UAE, Middle East, India,New Delhi, Guwahati, APAC,Africa, US
Areas of expertise includes
- SMS/WAP/IVR/Web Services/Content,
- Mobile Music ( Indian-Bollywood,Regional Music,Arabic,English)
- Mobile Games & Applications/Ad Supported Games,
- Mobile Graphics/Wallpapers
- Streaming Videos/Video Clips,
- Mobile Search,
- Mobile Instant Messaging,
- Web/Mobile Social Networking,
- Mobile Marketing/Advertising
Areas of Specialization:
- New Product/Services Development on Web/Mobile
- Product Management,
- Marketing, Sales & Business Development
- Content Building & Deployment
- Content Aggregation
- Web/Graphics/Content Design
- Social Media Marketing (Blogging, Social Networking, RSS, eMail Campaigns, SMS/Mobile Campaigns)
- Internet/Mobile Marketing ( SEO)
- Micro Blogging
