9/13/2014

IBM STUDY: If You Don’t Have a SOCIAL CEO, You're Going to be Less Competitive

FORBES: 
Mark Fidelman, Contributor



The list of the world’s CEOs regularly includes celebrities, billionaires, big egos, risk takers, and failures. What it does not include are social media experts; but that’s about to change. When IBM (NYSE: IBM) conducted its study of 1709 CEOs around the world, they found only 16% of them participating in social media. But their analysis shows that the percentage will likely grow to 57% within 5 years.
Why? because CEOs are beginning to recognize that using email and the phone to get the message out isn’t sufficient anymore.
The big takeaway: That using social technologies to engage with customers, suppliers and employees will enable the organization to be more adaptive and agile.
“As CEOs ratchet up the level of openness within their organizations, they are developing collaborative environments where employees are encouraged to speak up, exercise personal initiative, connect with fellow collaborators, and innovate,” the IBM study concluded
Simply put, CEOs and their executives set the cultural tone for an organization. Through participation, they implicitly promote the use of social technologies.  That will make their organizations more competitive and better able to adapt to sudden market changes.
Other key findings of the study include:
  • The study reveals that CEOs are changing the nature of work by adding a powerful dose of openness, transparency and employee empowermentto the command-and-control ethos that has characterized the modern corporation for more than a century.
  • Companies that outperform their peers are 30 percent more likely to identify openness – often characterized by a greater use of social media as a key enabler of collaboration and innovation – as a key influence on their organization.
  • While social media is the least utilized of all customer interaction methods today, it stands to become the number two organizational engagement method within the next five years, a close second to face-to-face interactions.
  • More than half of CEOs (53 percent) are planning to use technology to facilitate greater partnering and collaboration with outside organizations, while 52 percent are shifting their attention to promoting great internal collaboration.
  • Championing collaborative innovation is not something CEOs are delegating to their HR leaders. According to the study findings, the business executives are interested in leading by example.
  • CEOs regard interpersonal skills of collaboration (75 percent), communication (67 percent), creativity (61 percent) and flexibility (61 percent) as key drivers of employee success to operate in a more complex, interconnected environment.
  • The trend toward greater collaboration extends beyond the corporation to external partnering relationships. Partnering is now at an all-time high. In 2008, slightly more than half of the CEOs IBM interviewed planned to partner extensively. Now, more than two-thirds intend to do so.
  • CEOs are most focused on gaining insights into their customers. Seventy-three percent of CEOs are making significant investments in their organizations’ ability to draw meaningful customer insights from available data.
I’ve often held IBM as the best example of a Social Business and a company to emulate rather than Apple. I believe this study and the analysis behind it, reinforces that view.
The IBM study shows that CEOs and the companies they manage must constantly evolve to stay competitive. Partners, suppliers, employees and customers want CEOs to communicate with them on a personal level to build trust and to help align them to the organization’s strategy. There is a lot at stake here. And if CEOs continue to hide in their Ivory Towers under the guise of some old command and control mentality, the next chapter in their career might be written somewhere else.
No one wants that!
FORBES: 
Mark Fidelman, Contributor



Mobility Changes the Shape of App Development

BY DION PICCO, PROGRESS SOFTWARE

There’s no denying that smartphones and tablets have changed the way we find and install the applications we use, and what we expect from them. Added to this is the increasing desire to use these devices for work purposes, driving a need for enterprise applications.

Image: Risager/Flickr

Previously we’ve only relied on our phones for calls, texts and maybe emails. But with the rapid adoption of smartphones, apps have taken over and developers are looking to provide a richest experience possible. This is also being driven by the fact that mobility provides a good entry point to cloud and software-as-a-service (SaaS)-delivered applications.

Mobility is still very nascent, but the space is evolving rapidly. This is having a tremendous impact on how we run our lives and our businesses. According to a recent study by InformationWeek, only a quarter (26 per cent) of business technology decision makers don’t have custom applications or have plans on developing them, and the vast majority are evaluating at least one mobile operating system for use within the business and/or for developing custom mobile applications.

As a result of these factors, the majority of modern application development is taking a ‘mobile first’ approach. This is bringing a new interface paradigm –– driven by these smaller devices and touch screens.

The Power of Mobile

Mobile devices and the ubiquitous connectivity they enable, brings a whole new level of remote working for employees and a range of ‘self-service’ opportunities for customers and users. This includes activities like checking the status of an order, buying tickets or updating details — all of which traditionally needed a phone call or visit to a branch office — thereby saving operational costs, while boosting customer service.

Compared with desktops and laptops, smartphones are limited in terms of processing power and screen size, but are also packed with a lot more sensors such as touchscreens, GPS, accelerometers, cameras, Bluetooth and NFC — all of which can be leveraged by smart applications.

This can help offset some of the limitations of mobile by offering a range of smart interface possibilities as well as adding levels of context and capability that desktop applications can’t match.

Hybrid Apps: Write Once, Run Anywhere

From a developer perspective, this explosion of smart devices has created some incredibly complex challenges, mainly due to the number of different platforms and devices around. Not only do developers considering native mobile applications have to consider developing for iOS, Android, Blackberry and Windows Phone, they also have to consider the variety of different form factors of today’s smartphones and tablets. Furthermore, this has to extend to Q&A and testing as well as making sure the application meets the requirements for the various app stores that will be the delivery mechanism.

As a result, some developers have turned to developing web-based apps in HTML5. Because these usually run in the device’s browser, they do not have the same complexity challenges that native app development brings. But these apps also don’t offer the same local ‘app experience’ and can’t tap into the added features that these devices contain. Similarly, concerns around security and performance exist for web-based applications.

According to InformationWeek‘s research, the native versus browser debate is still raging, with each strategy garnering 74 per cent of respondents who plan to deploy custom applications in one form or the other.

While some apps are best suited as specifically native or browser based, in many cases, the answer lies in the hybrid app. A hybrid app is one that is developed on HTML5 and Javascript libraries, such as JQuery, but delivered in a “wrapper” that makes it look and feel like a native app. This gives developers the advantage of the browser-based “write once, and run anywhere” while allowing them to tap into the functionality, security and performance of a native app, as well as the delivery model, such as being downloaded from the app store. In this scenario Q&A and testing is simplified down to a single version. This approach not only simplifies development and maintenance, but also delivers consistency for users regardless of their platform of choice.

Mobile Apps: The Next Generation

Organizations want to modernize their existing applications, resulting in a much more mobile-first approach. This includes moving the back end from on-premise servers to a more cloud-based architecture (whether that’s public, private or hybrid) and updating the front end to be intuitive and mobile-capable.

This is augmented by a move away from old development practices and a shift towards a more process-centric approach, which lends itself to creating an externalised rule system, meaning logic is no longer hardwired into the application. This allows for greater collaboration between developers and other stakeholders such as business project managers and the creation of simplified, easy-to-navigate interfaces, within an intuitive drag-and-drop development environment, which binds to the existing back-end.

As a result, development cycles are shorter, user acceptance is faster and, ultimately, ramp-up is quicker — something vital in the mobile world where the demand for new apps is so great.

We expect this trend to develop into ever more process-centric and rules-centric application development, combined with API-based mashups across on-premises, cloud and mobile applications. This will bring higher levels of agility and support the rapid innovation needed by the world’s best companies.

The App is Dead – Long Live the App

Mobility is changing the shape of application development. Demand for cross platform support is growing, development cycles are shortening and users’ expectations are evolving.

Exploiting these devices to their full potential means empowering employees to use them to be more productive and enabling customers to be more self-reliant. Changing development techniques offer developers a real opportunity to take the lead in optimising business processes for mobility and stake out an app development strategy, while collaborating more closely with other stakeholders.

Whether it’s developing a native app, a browser-based one, or taking a hybrid approach, mobile apps are a unique species and it’s not possible to just attempt to transfer techniques that worked well for desktop application development. The key is to embrace these new methodologies and seek out best practice from partners and providers to find the right applications to empower users, both within and outside the business.

With our thanks to Dion Picco:

Dion Picco is Manager, Product Management at Progress Software.

Digital to Account for One in Five Ad Dollars




Growth in digital 

to remain in double digits through 2015

Worldwide, digital ad spending passed the $100-billion mark for the first time last year, according to new eMarketer estimates, and will increase by a further 15.1% in 2013 to $118.4 billion.

That will put worldwide digital ad spending levels—including online and mobile advertising spending, other than messaging-based formats—at 21.7% of the total spent on ads in all media this year, and on track to account for more than one-quarter of all ad spending by 2016.


North America accounts for the greatest share of all digital ad spending, at 39% as of the end of 2012. As emerging markets in Asia-Pacific and Latin America up spending, however, North America and second-place Western Europe will lose share slightly throughout the forecast period. By 2016, 36.7% of spending will come from North America, and 23.7% from Western Europe. By the same year, Asia-Pacific will contribute 29.8% of all digital ad spend in the world.

The fastest growth in spending will come from the emerging markets of Indonesia, India and Mexico—though that growth is coming from a relatively small base of spending.


As a percent of total ad spending, Western Europe’s digital spending is slightly ahead of North America’s, at 24.9% this year vs. 24.6%. Asia-Pacific is not far behind, though in the world’s lagging region, the Middle East and Africa, just 7% of all ad dollars go to digital media. eMarketer expects this percentage to nearly double by 2016, but the region will still be far behind the near-30% of ad spending devoted to digital in Western Europe and North America.

North America and Western Europe also boast the highest regional levels of digital ad spending per internet user, at $168 and $112 this year, respectively.

eMarketer forms its estimates of digital ad spending around the world based on the analysis of various elements related to the ad spending market, including macro-level economic conditions, historical trends of the advertising market, estimates from other research firms, and consumer internet usage trends.


Article Link : eMARKETER

12/13/2012

Does your small business really need a mobile App to stay competitive?

With more than 750,000 Apps in the iOS App Store 
and 
700,000 available in Google Play, 
it can seem at times that 
absolutely everyone has an App—except you.


As a small-business owner, choosing whether to join the app-development club can be a difficult decision. You may feel like you have to build an app and go mobile to stay competitive, but youve probably heard that apps are expensive and time-consuming to develop. More and more users are dumping desktops and laptops for tablets and cell phones, so it makes sense to optimize the online experience for them. But is it really worth the effort? Cant they just use their smartphones to access the website you already have?

Its a tricky problem with no single cut-and-dried solution, but increasingly even the smallest businesses are saying yes to the mobile question. Ill take you through the challengesand the potential payoffsin a moment.

For those who do go forward with a mobile strategy, two approaches are commonplace:
You can build a mobile-optimized website, or develop a full-blown, stand-alone app.


Is a mobile website better for your business?

Building a mobile-friendly website isnt complex, so typically you can commission one fairly cheap. In todays world, most Web developers can build a mobile-optimized version of your site without much trouble, presuming that you already use a modern, CSS-based design. If your site was built on older protocols, well, you have bigger challenges than whether to develop an app. (And you can expect to pay more for a mobile website in that scenario, accordingly.)

Some Web hosts even offer free or low-cost mobile websites if you're maintaining a full-blown website with the host. GoDaddy, for example, utilizes an automatic website-conversion tool from DudaMobile to transform the websites it hosts into basic mobile sites when they're visited on a tablet or smartphone, free of charge. Alternatively, if your website runs on the popular WordPress platform, several plug-ins, such as WPTouch, can likewise create a mobile version of your existing website. Automatically generated mobile websites sometimes run into conversion problems, however, and rarely look as polished as a developer-honed creation.

Another thing to consider: Mobile websites work universally, while apps do not. One phone's Internet browser opens a Web page as reliably as another's, but an Android app simply won't work on an iPhone or a BlackBerry. You'll need to create separate apps for each specific platform, or pick and choose your platform support.


Boldly going forward

That said, the argument for building an app is compelling. Mainly it relates to the way todays phones are designed. An app gives you much more presence on the phone than a bookmark on that phones browser does. Rather than forcing the user to launch the browser and find your URL, an app is always there, front and center on the mobile desktop. Your business is constantly in mind, whether the person is using the app or not. The goal, of course, is that eventually that user will hit your icon (even if by accident). That kind of thing just doesnt happen with mobile websites. A ComScore study recently confirmed that 82 percent of mobile media minutes are spent with apps instead of with the browser.

The other key advantage of mobile apps: Your mobile-friendly website cant really do anything extra that your regular website cant also do. Mobile sites are generally streamlined versions of the site you already have; the functionality is the same. But apps can be designed to do anything. Want to turn your businesss products into a video game or push notifications to customers? Build an app, not a mobile website.

Sarah Hudson of invention-development company Little Idea puts it simply, saying, As for whether or not SMBs should develop their own apps, we think they should, but only if there's a true use for the appsomething that goes beyond the information you can find on their website. If it's purely informational, it might be better to focus on a mobile website instead.

Of course, many companies hedge their bets and do both, if budgets allow. One common strategy is to use analytics tools to measure how many users are accessing the website via mobile OSs: When a critical mass of Apple or Android users begins arriving, start working on an app for that OS.



Does an app really make sense?

Although claiming that apps are great for everyone isnt prudent, more and more small businesses are deciding that apps make sense. Their reasons are varied and compelling. They want to be able to reach customers 24/7, instead of just when customers are at a computer or in the store. They want to keep up with the competition, or they want to tap into new sales channels. Or perhaps they want to streamline the way an internal process worksremember, not every app has to be customer-facing. (More on that topic later.)

Before you spend the time and resources to build an app, however, consider what value a dedicated app can bring to your business. If your app doesnt tap into the extra benefits the format provides to deliver a particularly unique or helpful experience to your customers, you might be better off devoting your resources to a top-notch mobile website, whichas I outlined abovewould be both universal and (likely) cheaper.

That said, while theres no doubt that you can find horror stories in the app-building world, no one we spoke to said they regretted building a mobile app, even if they didnt quite get the results they wanted.


Anybody can build an app

This may sound like a cliché, but any business can build an app. It doesnt matter how visible you are to consumers. All you need is a thoughtful approach toward adding some value for your customers.

For example, you wouldnt expect a small vitamin manufacturer to have much reason to create a mobile app, butNordic Naturals did. Project manager Cecile LaRiviere says Nordics app lets you find stores that sell its products, order vitamins online, anda crucial addition that helps it remain top of mind"set reminders to prompt users to take their vitamins and to reorder pills. Plus, the app is stuffed with literature about the value of omega-3s, helping to enhance the awareness of and interest in its primary product line. On top of that, app users get notifications about new product launches.

What does it cost to build an app?

Sooner or later, discussions of mobile apps come down to money. You'll find no easy shortcut to this one. Among the businesses we interviewed, development costs varied dramatically, ranging from virtually nothing (with some businesspeople learning how to code by reading off-the shelf reference books and building the app in their spare time) to hundreds of thousands of dollars. It all depends on how ambitious and complex your app is, and how you go about building it. Apps tend to cost more to develop than mobile websites, however.

Little Idea, mentioned previously, spent $4000 to create its app, using an independent developer. (The first person we talked to, who was on point in every way, says Hudson.) Work took two months to complete.

Or consider the app developed by MyMovingReviews, a website that rates and reviews moving companies. The companys My Move app, which helps consumers plan and execute a move, took $24,000 and five months of hard work, says manager Martin Panayotov. The company used an eastern European software outfit to build an iOS-only app, which the company initially sold for $2 a pop. Now the app is free, and last year My Move was ported to Android, a much cheaper prospect since the legwork had already been done. Still, for My Move, its an iOS world: The iPhone app greatly outperforms the Android one, no matter that Apple holds about 20 percent of the smartphone market, says Panayotov.

At the far end of the spectrum youll find Brightleaf, which spent an estimated $300,000 to build a mobile app and a back-end system for its customers (attorneys) to use when drafting forms and documents for their clients. Its a complex system, but Brightleaf offers it to customers for free. We give the mobile stuff away & but we make our money when lawyers want to use the full, paid version of Brightleaf to modify, customize, and publish their own forms, says Luke OBrien, the companys VP of strategy.

If your mobile ambitions are a bit more basic, several DIY app-building services are available, such as JamPotsTheAppBuilder. These services take much of the hassle out of app development by letting business owners create apps through a variety of what-you-see-is-what-you-get templates, and the results can be surprisingly slick. Cost varies depending on the service; most charge one-time creation fees, and many impose monthly maintenance fees. Youll also be on the hook for the developer-registration fees for whatever platforms your app resides on. Google charges a one-time $25 fee, whereas Apple and Microsoft require a yearly $99 developer subscription.

Such services arent cheap, but theyre often less expensive than hiring a dedicated developer. Just pay attention to the recurring monthly fees and determine whether it might make more fiscal sense to pay the up-front premium for a developer, to avoid being bled by repeat charges over the long haul. If you have a truly unique app in mind, you'll almost certainly have to hire a professional.


Whats the payoff?

Small-business owners have never been much for analyzing return on investment, and the world of mobile apps is no different. It should come as no surprise that unless youre selling goods or trying to make money by selling the app directly, measuring ROI is difficult.

Competition is fierce in the app arena, and the businesses we spoke to reminded us that success is determined by how you market and promote your app. You cant rely on being featured by Apple (though its awfully nice if you are). You must constantly promote your app on your website, on social accounts, and probably through advertising, too.

MyMovingReviews is one of the few companies we talked to that said it could quantify the apps value. Panayotov estimates that the companys app paid for itself within a year. He gushes about its success: Creating the mobile app was one of the best decisions we made. Because of the exposure, we were able to increase brand awareness and help our website get more popular over time. Having a mobile-app link on the homepage immediately makes you trusted in the visitors eye.

Another company, MyCorporation, which offers business incorporation and startup services, says it used internal resources to build an app, which has since garnered just 500 downloads. But those downloads, says social media manager Heather Taylor, have generated $50,000 in extra business. Was it worth the effort? Most definitely, she says. It doesnt always take millions of downloads to make significant money.

Apps dont always work out

Of course, an app isnt a sure thing. One small business we spoke to, Bella Reina Spa, had trouble from the start. CEO Nancy Reagan says, It was a very tedious process deciding who could build it. She finally hired a small company to do the work for $299 plus monthly upkeep charges of $29. We had tons of downloads and people used it for information, but in the end it was not as powerful as a mobile website. Eventually the app was scrapped.

I can't stress this enough: Doing your homework before building an app is crucial. Even the best-laid plans often go awry, as the saying goes, but it is important to pin down what you expect from your appor whether you even need onebefore committing your SMB's resources. Can you justify the extra expense of an app, or could a mobile website accomplish the same goals?

Internal-facing apps

As a final note, remember that you dont have to share your app with the general public for it to be useful. The ROI of internal apps can be even harder to calculate, but their value can be immense if they save you time and headache. Generally such apps are more popular with larger businessesor at least those with larger clients.

One example is Bell Nursery, which supplies plants to 150-plus Home Depot garden centers and is responsible for 1700 people stocking those plants at each store. Bell Nursery developed a mobile app to let employees track inventory at each store without having to physically go inside, saving countless hours of employee time.

And although SWAT teams and fire crews arent really a small business, developer VeriPic created a mobile app that lets such groups access secure photos of public buildings and intersections during emergency calls, showing them where gas valves and exits are located so that they don't have to consult old-school maps.

The takeaway: 
Apps dont have to bring in revenue to be indispensable. 

A small mom-and-pop garage, say, 
might not see much return on a customer-facing app, 
but it could find an inventory-management app 
to be worth its weight in gold.

With appreciation for this article to:

Christopher Null
PC World (US)

LINK:
IDG Magazines Norge AS

DAVID MALAM GRAZ, AUSTRIA: 
APP Software development and all types of software solutions.
Please leave your contact details or quesions here....comments or email
THANK YOU!!
David 

3/02/2012

GET YOUR OWN APP!! ..... Mobile marketing is the best way to engage your customers and clients


Mobile phones and mobile devices are a great way to engage customers through mobile marketing
Directly reach your target through cell phones & mobile devices
The possibilities of mobile marketing are endless
You own a business and are looking for the best technology to spread the word about what you have to offer. Mobile marketing is the best way to engage with your customers and potential customers. In fact, there are nearly double the number of mobile subscriptions and mobile-enabled devices than there are number of people in the world.
Mobile marketing has a much more relevant reach (as each mobile phone or mobile device is usually connected with one user) and the potential reach for mobile phones is three times greater than the potential reach of Internet users. In fact, in many countries, mobile devices are the top means of communication and marketing.
It’s one of the best ways to tell your present and future customers about your business and how you can help them with their needs. Thousands of businesses are now using mobile media to promote their services, products, events and everything in between. It serves as a platform to communicate, in real time, to your target market and loyal customers.
Doctor and dentists offices are using mobile marketing to send text messages to remind their patients of upcoming appointments. Businesses keep clients up to date with the latest sales and new inventory. Companies manage prize contests, sweepstakes, and giveaways. Customer service, complaints, and surveys are handled by SMS and MMS messages. Social media such as Facebook and Twitter can be seamlessly infused with a mobile marketing strategy and developing a mobile website will enhance the customer/client experience. The opportunities of adding mobile marketing to your business’s marketing strategy are endless.
Every business can benefit from mobile media marketing, however, the types of businesses that currently utilize this venue for marketing are real estate professionals, restaurants and bars, spas and resorts, golf clubs, churches, auto repair shops, ski resorts, retail stores, jewelers, politicians, celebrities, schools, car dealerships, youth groups, financial professionals, concert venues, coaches, consultants, medical professionals, casinos, public relations firms, night clubs, authors and publishers, entrepreneurs and small business owners, travel agencies, community groups, and on and on. There is, literally, no end to the types of businesses that can benefit immensely from mobile media marketing. With most of the world owning cell phones, text messages to promote your business is a technological wonder.
Mobile media marketing uses what is called a short code. Simply put, a short code is a key code that each company uses, such as 4144, 81567 or 90210. This unique code is matched with an individual key. It’s extremely powerful in marketing. To find a company’s short code, go to their website and you’re bound to find their short, or key, code. You can use this code to receive updates, promotions, discounts, and other useful information about the business on a regular basis.
There are several types of tools that can be used via short codes for mobile media marketing. A few of those are: Mobile VIP Club, Text to Vote, Instant Promotions, Real Time Alerts, Appointment Reminders, Consumer Trend Reports, Text to Win, Viral Branding, and even digital business cards. New tools are popping up almost daily, so business’s are sure to find an application that will fit their, and their customer’s, needs.
Traditional marketing, i.e. advertising, just doesn’t seem to work the best in this digital age. Still, word-of-mouth is still the premier form of advertising. Mailed advertising gets tossed in the trash, and some advertising emails, if not specifically requested, tend to be deleted. In a world of smart phones, most people would even rather text than actually talk on their phones.
With these new short codes, potential customers are more likely to opt-in for your business’s text alerts. They want to receive your updates. More service providers are allowing these short code advertisements because more and more of their customers are choosing to receive them. When it was first beginning, only major service providers allowed for opt-ins.
Not only are customers more likely to go out of their way to ask for your updates, other types of marketing can take hours, days or weeks to set up. With text updates, it takes only a few minutes to set up and seconds to send to customers. Mobile marketing is, literally, the wave of the future.
Text messaging has dominated the digital age and text message marketing is beginning to be the preferred media, above email, telephone, mail, and face-to-face marketing. It enables business’s to reach out faster and more efficiently to both current, and potential customers.
Add direct mobile marketing to your marketing campaign for a more relevant reach before your marketing strategy becomes obsolete.

CONTACT:
DAVID MALAM
email: david.malam@app-creation.com

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2/24/2012

How to delete your Google browsing history in three simple steps . . . before it's too late to hide your secrets

click  to view article

By Julian Gavaghan

Last updated at 8:33 PM on 23rd February 2012

There is just a week to go until Google controversially changes its privacy policy to allow it to gather, store and use personal information about its users.
But there is one way to stymie the web giant's attempts to build a permanent profile of you that could include personal information including age, gender, locality and even sexuality.
From March 1, you won't be able to opt out of the new policy, which has been criticised by privacy campaigners who have filed a complaint to U.S. regulators. 
But before that date you can delete your browsing history and, which will limit the extent to which Google records your every move - including your embarrasing secrets. Here's how:
1. Go to the Google homepage and sign into your account. Use the dropdown menu under your name in the upper right-hand corner to access your settings. Click on 'account settings', like below.
Google

2. Next, find the section called 'Services' and you'll see a link to 'View, enable, or disable web history', shown in the red box below. Click on it.
Google

3. Finally, you can remove all of your search details by clicking on 'Remove Web History', shown in the red box below. Once you have done this your history will remain  disabled until you turn it back on.
Google

Although disabling web history will not prevent Google from gathering and storing this information and using it for internal purposes, but it mean the Web giant will anonymise the data in 18 months.
It will also prevent it from certain kinds of uses, including sending you customized search results.
If you don't sign in, Google will track your searches via the computer's IP address. The only way to clear your personal history is by signing in.
While it is not known exactly how Google would use your combined information, the policy has been widely criticised. 
The Center for Digital Democracy has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission. 

Facing anger: Google co-founder Larry Page is being accused of allow the service to invade the privacy of users

It has asked the FTC to sue Google to stop the policy change and to fine the company. 
If successful, the the FTC can impose fines up to $16,000 per day for each violation.
Privacy problems are particularly pertinent to those who share a Google account with other members of their family.
For example if one person searches for pictures of scantily clad women, the next family member to use the internet may find themselves being recommended a bikini contest on YouTube.
Cecilia Kang, of the Washington Post, described collation of vast tracts of information as a ‘massive cauldron of data.’
‘Privacy advocates say Google's changes betray users who are not accustomed to having their information shared across different Web sites.’ she said.
‘A user of Gmail, for instance, may send messages about a private meeting with a colleague and may not want the location of that meeting to be thrown into Google's massive cauldron of data or used for Google's maps application.’ 
Technology site Gizmodo said that the change was the end of Google’s ‘don’t be evil motto.
The site’s Mat Honan wrote: ‘It means that things you could do in relative anonymity today, will be explicitly associated with your name, your face, your phone number.
'If you use Google's services, you have to agree to this new privacy policy. It is an explicit reversal of its previous policies.’
Larry Dignan, meanwhile, writing on www.ZDnet.com described the new policy as ‘Big Brother-ish’.



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2/02/2012

There's no excuse not to get fit with this Wireless Workout Monitor + APP

Mail Online....By Sarah Graham


The Scosche myTrek Wireless Pulse Monitor wristband
The Scosche myTrek Wireless Pulse Monitor wristband
It's January, you want to kick-start your fitness plan with a little help from your smart phone - but which app do you choose when there are literally hundreds available?
The latest on the market is the Scosche myTrek Wireless Pulse Monitor for iPhone and iPod Touch.
The feature that sets this one apart from the rest is the way it monitors your pulse and sends real-time data via wireless to its app on your iPhone and iPod Touch and produces an accurate report of your work out.
Pretty clever once you've taken the time to set it up.
The pack consists of a plastic monitor attached to a black velcro strap, and a USB cable. To get things going you first need to charge the monitor which, after two hours, will give you full power for five hours. 
You need to make sure your Bluetooth is switched on and once you detect the myTrek device, select it. This will prompt you to then download the free app from iTunes. 
Once you've downloaded the app you're ready to go.
You can strap the monitor onto any part of your forearm. About an inch wide, the monitor has 2 LEDs (which show power, charging, and pairing) and 3 buttons control music from your library. 
It even has a function where a voice guides you through your workout, whether that be running or cycling. Like satnav, you can choose whether this voice is male or female. 
You can record as many workouts as you like, and each one can be based on a selection of factors including calories burned, distance, speed and time. In recording each workout you can look back and track your progress. As with many of the fitness apps currently on the market, you can also share your hard work by posting the results of the workout on Facebook and Twitter. 
Once you've got to grips with all the settings and have customised the workout you want, this app becomes much easier - and fun - to use. 
Its size means it's not too bulky on your arm and you don't look out of place at the gym or in the park.
At £129.95 it may seem like an expensive gadget but if you're serious about your workouts - and you're determined to shift those extra post-Christmas pounds - it's worth the money. 



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Ready for this, Apple? Samsung confirms successor to its 20-million-selling Galaxy S2 will be on sale early in 2012

Ready for this, Apple? 

  • Handset will launch at 'special event' similar to Apple's iPhone launches
  • Galaxy S3 will be on sale in first half of 2012
  • Handset will showcase Samsung's most hi-tech components
  • Phone could be one of iPhone 5's major rivals
By Rob Waugh
Last updated at 3:30 PM on 1st February 2012



Samsung's Galaxy S2 Android touchscreen has sold 10 million units: Its successor is liable to be a showcase for Samsung's most hi-tech components
Samsung's Galaxy S2 Android touchscreen has sold 10 million units: Its successor is liable to be a showcase for Samsung's most hi-tech components
Samsung has officially confirmed the existence of the Galaxy S3 - the hi-tech follow-up to one of the most iconic Android smartphones.
The phone will be unveiled at a special event early this year - and will be on sale shortly afterwards.
The 'special event' approach is akin to Apple's glitzy iPhone launch events - and a new idea for Samsung. 
If Apple launches iPhone 5 this summer, as expected, the S3 is liable to be among its most heavyweight competitors in the second half of this year. 
'The successor to the Galaxy S2 smartphone will be unveiled at a Samsung-hosted event in the first half of the year, close to commercial availability of the product,' said the Korean electronics giant in a statement.
Technical specifications of the device haven't been released.
Samsung's Galaxy series are traditionally used to showcase the most hi-tech components manufactured in Samsung's factories - and have been ahead of the components in Apple's iPhone.
Samsung recently launched the Galaxy S Advance - a cheaper model of the hit handset with slightly less cutting-edge components. It's available now
Samsung recently launched the Galaxy S Advance - a cheaper model of the hit handset with slightly less cutting-edge components. It's available now

GALAXY S2 SPEC

The Galaxy S2 came out last August and was hailed as the ultimate geek's phone. It was fast and had a great camera.

  • 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus screen at 800 x 480-pixel resolution
  • 1.2GHz Dual Core Application Processor with 16GB built-in memory
  • Android 2.3 Gingerbread operating system
  • 8 megapixel camera
  • Billed as the world's thinnest smartphone at 8.49mm

GALAXY S3 SPECULATION

The Galaxy S3's spec has not been officially announced, but according to reports, here's what it might include...

  • 4.6-inch Super AMOLED Plus screen at 720 x 1,280-pixel resolution
  • 1.8GHz chip with 2GB RAM and 32GB of storage for quick multi-tasking and games
  • Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
  • Camera-quality 12-megapixel photos
  • Similar to the Galaxy Nexus
The Galaxy S2 was one of the first handsets with a laptop-esque dual core processor, and offered an eight megapixel camera months before Apple's iPhone 4S.
Samsung still makes several components that are used in Apple's iPhones.

Samsung's Galaxy S2 sold 20 million units at last count.
One in 10 of the whole Korean population owns an S2, and the phone  is still a cult favourite on tech sites. 




The S2 helped propel Samsung's smartphone sales past Apple's in the third quarter of 2011.  
'Samsung’s Galaxy lineup has been one of the most sought after smartphone lines worldwide,' says Boy Genius Report.
'The Galaxy S II became the company’s fastest selling smartphone ever, selling three million units in just 55 days.'
'Moreover, Samsung sold more than 30 million Galaxy S and Galaxy S II smartphones worldwide as of October.'
'There is no question that consumers are interested in the Galaxy.'


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