From the category archives:

Mobile Web

Web’s Generation Gap and Internet Stats

by Bill Cullifer on February 17, 2010

Report: Internet, broadband, and cell phone statistics

Internet users tend to skew young, with a sharp drop-off in online activity among 65 and older.

Overview of the Pwe Internet and American Life Project

In a national survey between November 30 and December 27, 2009, we find:

  • 74% of American adults (ages 18 and older) use the internet – a slight drop from our survey in April 2009, which did not include Spanish interviews. At that time we found that 79% of English-speaking adults use the internet.
  • 60% of American adults use broadband connections at home – a drop that is within the margin of error from 63% in April 2009.
  • 55% of American adults connect to the internet wirelessly, either through a WiFi or WiMax connection via their laptops or through their handheld device like a smart phone.  This figure did not change in a statistically significant way during 2009.

These data come from the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project. The most recent survey was conducted from November 30 to December 27, 2009, using landline and cell phones and including interviews in Spanish. Some 2,258 adults were interviewed and the overall sample has a margin of error of ± 2 percentage points.


Internet Users

Not all Pew Internet Project surveys include Spanish interviews, so these survey results are not completely comparable to all previous Project surveys. This latest survey finds that 74% of adults use the internet, a figure that has not markedly changed since early 2006, when we measured the online population at 73%. There is some variation from survey to survey. Here is the current profile of internet users:1

Internet Demographics: 74% of adults use the internet, a figure that has not markedly changed since early 2006, when we measured the online population at 73%.

These latest figures add to a long-term picture in Pew Internet Project data that there has been little significant growth in the overall internet user population since 2006.

Internet Users

Broadband Users

Again, this survey included Spanish interviews and that somewhat decreased the number of Americans reporting that they have broadband connections in their homes. Some 60% of adult Americans said they had home broadband connections in this survey and here is a portrait of the home broadband users:2

Broadband Demographics: Some 60% of adult Americans said they had home broadband connections

Broadband use at home has risen fairly consistently since the Pew Internet Project began to measure it in 2000, but growth rate has slowed somewhat in the general population.

Broadband use at home has risen fairly consistently since the Pew Internet Project began to measure it in 2000, but growth rate has slowed somewhat in the general population.

Wireless Users

Overall, 55% of Americans connect to the internet wirelessly at least on occasion. The Pew Internet Project measures wireless connectivity to the internet in several ways. First, it looks at those who connect via standard computer. Some 46% of adults now own laptop and, among them, 83% connect via WiFi and 28% connect via wireless broadband. In this survey, we also found that 83% of adults have cell phones or smartphones and, among them, 35% have accessed the internet via their phone. Here is the portrait of wireless users:

Wireless Demographics: Overall, 55% of Americans connect to the internet wirelessly at least on occasion.

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Droid Smart Phone vs. iPhone

by Bill Cullifer on November 24, 2009

The holiday season is upon us and its time to send in your wish list to Santa. The Droid Smart Phone is an ideal gift suggestion that’s bound to please the Web professional in all of us.

Droid Smart Phone Support Google

Droid is the first handset to sport the latest version of the Google (NasdaqGS:GOOG – News)-backed Android operating system, version 2.0. It costs $200 after a $100 rebate, with a two-year Verizon Wireless service contract. Besides Verizon stores, the phone will be sold at Best Buy (NYSE:BBY – News), Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT – News) and Costco (NasdaqGS:COST – News).

Avian Securities analyst Matthew Thornton estimates 800,000 Droid phones will be sold through Dec. 31. Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S – News)sold about 700,000 Palm (NasdaqGS:PALM – News) Pre handsets in the first three months of that smart phone’s release this summer, while Apple sold 1.1 million iPhones in its first three months, in 2007. “The Droid reviews have been overwhelmingly favorable,” Thornton said according to a news report in IBD last week.

Motorola (NYSE:MOT – News) needs a hit. Market tracker iSuppli says Motorola had a 5.4% share of the global market as of June 30, down from 22.5% three years ago.

“Droid is potentially a game changer for Motorola,” iSuppli analyst Tina Teng said in a statement.

Seven handset makers have licensed Android, including Samsung, LG Electronics, Sony Ericsson (NYSE:SNE – News) (NasdaqGS:ERIC – News) and HTC. Carriers providing service also include Sprint and T-Mobile.

Android’s share of the market for handset operating systems will rise to 9% in 2013 from 2.4% in the second quarter, forecasts iSuppli. Research firm Gartner, however, projects Android’s share will hit 14.5% by 2012, moving into second place behind only Nokia (NYSE:NOK – News)-led Symbian, surpassing Apple and Research In Motion’s (NasdaqGS:RIMM – News) BlackBerry. Android is open and free to all handset makers, while Apple and RIM keep a close hold on their operating systems.

Tim McLaughlin, president and founder of Siteworx, a Web site and application developer for computer and mobile platforms, has yet a different outlook. He says the smart-phone market will become a two-horse race between the iPhone and Android phones, with Android winning. “In the long run, Android will prevail,” he said. “Droid represents the first real competitor to iPhone.” according to last weeks IBD.

There’s a comparison with the PC and Mac battle, he says. The Microsoft Windows/Intel platform was essentially open and accumulated 90% of the market. Apple kept a close hold on its Macintosh platform, which gave it a much smaller — albeit loyal — following.

“Unless Apple changes its business model, the Android will prevail,” McLaughlin said according to the IBD.

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Adobe Max 2009 Keynote Day 1

by Bill Cullifer on October 6, 2009

 
icon for podpress  Adobe Max 2009 Keynote Day 1: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

I’m in Los Angeles, CA today participating in Adobe MAX 2009. For today’s podcast, I’d like to share with you the first few minutes of the Keynote with Shantanu Narayen, Adobe CEO as well as few of the big announcements.

The theme is clearly mobile Web. Here’s a summary of today’s highlights with a few links:

A full transcript will follow in twenty for hours.

Today’s Web Professional Minute is sponsored by WebProTraining.org. WOW is pleased to announce the availabilty of the Creating Accessible Web Forms Course. Creating web forms that are accessible to people with disabilities requires understanding of the labeling features of HTML markup and how browsers interpret labeling markup for assistive technologies like screen readers. The online course is being taught by Dr. Gunderson University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign. The course also provides great value and is highly reccomended by Web professionals worldwide.

WOW members will receive a discounted rate of $150.00. Check out all of the details on the Web Pro Training website and register today!

Check out all of the great links on the Web Professional Minute Website.

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icon for podpress  Mobile Application Development Opportunities and Monetization: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Mobile Application Development Opportunities and Monetization: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Greetings WOW members and Web professionals everywhere!

I spent a full day trolling the O’Reilly Web 2.0 expo that took place in San Francisco CA. last week looking for a Web professional “golden nugget” or two to report back on.

As I walked the exhibit floor, I couldn’t help but think back of the early days of the Web when start-up companies named their companies after acronyms known only to them and never seemed to match their product offerings. Please note: I’m typically upbeat but candidly a number of the marketing pitches spilling out of the trade show booths last week didn’t seem to make any sense to me or add any real value. Oddly, one company that I stopped by to chat with asked me to define what Web professionals do each day, so it all seemed kind of strange.

In fairness, the conference and the exhibit hall seemed well attended with a buzz activity. Although I didn’t have the cycles to attend many of the sessions, I did meet some really intellegent people and I enjoyed meeting a number of top flight start-ups and Web professionals including Kurt Foeller from Foeller Communications and Duane Nickull, Senior Technical Evangelist for Adobe Systems. Duane has a numer of interesting videos posted on Adobe TV and I filmed Duane’s 3D animation presentation live from the Adobe booth and I’ll be podcasting about that later in the week.

I also had the pleasure of meeting an interviewing Caroline Dangson, Research Analyst at IDC. IDC is a prominent research firm based in Framingham, MA. Caroline specializes in Social Media and took the time to sit down with me for an interview. I like talking to research analyst because they usually pack a punch with in depth knowledge and analysis.

In this interview, I asked Caroline for a perspective on the Mobile Web. As I expected, Caroline offered an interesting perspective and a few things to consider regarding monetization.

Check out today’s three minute podcast on the Web Professional Minute website.

Today’s minute is sponsored by the Adobe Developer Connection and their ADC Write & Give Program. The ADC Write & Give Program acknowledges the writing efforts the ADC community authors by donating US$100 for each article that our authors get published on the Adobe Developer Connection (ADC). Launched in 2008, the ADC Write & Give Program has already donated over US $29,000 across several charitable organizations.

A full transcript will be availble in twenty four hours.

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Greetings WOW Members and Web Professionals everywhere!

Mobile Web is red hot and getting hotter every day. For today’s podcast, I?’m featuring Riku Salminen, Senior Technical Consultant at Nokia. Riku presented last week at Adobe Max 2008 Milan regarding programming with Adobe Flash Lite for the Nokia mobile phone. I sat down with Riku for a summary of his session and the benefits for Web professionals.

Check it out on today’s WOW Technology Minute website.

Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is brought to you by Web Directions North taking place in Denver Colorado February 2-5, 2009 Web Directions North is one of the world’s leading conferences for web professionals, bringing together the leading experts from around the nation and around the world to educate, entertain and inspire our attendees.

WOW will be participating in a session entitled Educating the Next Generation of Web Professionals For more information about the conference visit the Web Directions North website.

Transcript of Adobe Max Milan 2008-Interview with Riku Salminen, Nokia

BILL CULLIFER: Bill Cullifer here with the World Organization of Webmasters (WOW) and the WOW Technology Minute here at Max Milan at the Web Pro Community Challenge booth, in the community lounge I have the pleasure to be interviewing Riku Salminen with Nokia. He?’s the senior technical consultant from Nokia here presenting on the topic of designing with Flash Lite for Nokia phones?

RIKU SALMINEN: Yeah, actually we call it Flash Lite Programming.

BILL: Programming, OK, excellent. Can you summarize that session for us Riku, and also can you provide me with a better understanding of how web professionals can benefit?

RIKU: Yeah, sure. So, basically the whole session was about how to develop applications for mobile phones, for Nokia devices with web designer skills. So that?’s the message that I?’m kind of giving as an evangelist you would say, on web technologies for Nokia. So what we want to tell people, and especially web designers, is that you don?’t have to know Symbian C++. You don?’t need to be a hard-nosed coder so to speak, but if you know how to create a web page, if you know how to make Flash, you can create real applications for Nokia devices.

So all of the latest S60 and serious [indecipherable] devices for Nokia they support one version of Flash Lite or another, starting from Flash Lite 1.1 going all the way up to the latest releases where we have Flash Lite 3.0. And now that, for the fifth edition which I have the device here it?’s the all new touch screen device, you can also develop, this is actually an application I made with web run-time for my son so that I can go and get him. So with one button it reads the GPS. With another button it sends the GPS as a landmark attached to an MMS message to me so I can go and get my son. So the platform services in the fifth edition of S60 allow the web developers to use…well obviously you don?’t have to be a web developer but you can use those from S60 run time widgets and Flash Lite and services included are sensors, GPS landmarks, VIM which is visual information management, where you have calendar contacts and a media gallery. And there is also an application manager which means that you can launch different applications. And more to come, there is messaging, so you can send and receive text messages, emails and multimedia messages from Flash Lite or web runtime widgets.

Basically web runtime widgets are a HTML, JavaScript, CSS, basic web technologies using AJAX or just basically being a standalone web page without the browser UI. It?’s all packaged in a nice little zipped package and you put an item in there as well and then it installs in your phone just like any application.

BILL: Excellent, and so I’m watching this podcast, I’m a designer and I’m listening, net it out for me. How am I going to benefit? Am I going to improve the functionality of my customers?’ websites through these applications?

RIKU: Well I think the most, the biggest thing is the time to market. So if you develop in Java or Symbian C++ what it means is you need to test, you need to go through different cycles of software development. With Flash Lite and with S60 web runtime your UI is developed right under your eyes with normal IDEs that you have. Flash professional, you can have DreamWeaver, there?’s Aptana studio which is a free version. You don?’t have to have an SDK to build your application and install it somewhere and emulate you can use your web browser to test that the UI is functioning. Instead of developing a software for two months you can launch it in two weeks.

BILL: Excellent, well thank you for your time today Riku. Today?’s WOW Technology Minute is sponsored by Web Directions North. Web Directions North is taking place in Denver, Colorado February 2009 and is one of the world?’s leading conferences for web professionals bringing together the leading experts from around the nation and around the world to educate, entertain, and inspire. WOW will be participating at Web Directions North with a special session entitled “Educating the Next Generation of Web Professionals.” Check out all the details and the great links on the WOW technology minute.com website.

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