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We’re loving this new mobile web app Sun. A weather app for fans of Clear and Uniqlo Wake Up.
Bump’s new method to share photos from a mobile app to a computer is really clever.
Using simple technology (the phone’s accelerometer matched against the time the spacebar was pressed), they’re able to pull off a magical effect as the photo instantly appears on computer’s screen.
They’ve made photo sharing not only an intuitive process, but also into a really cool parlor trick.
Very cool.
GigaOM: The year in mobile apps: Where we’ve been, where we’re going
Smartphone and tablet purchases have been on the rise for several years, but 2011 was a turning point: This was the first year that these mobile devices outsold desktop and laptop PCs. The effect — and perhaps some of the cause of this — is a love affair with mobile apps, leading to more apps sold than ever and more time spent with them than ever. We mobile consumers demonstrated this very clearly both in the U.S. and abroad: Apple this month hit 18 billion downloads total on its iOS App Store, and Google’s Android Market likewise hit 10 billion.
iPads and iPhones accounted for over 92 percent of online retail sales not originating from a desktop device occurring in December, according to the study. That’s up from 88 percent the last time RichRelevance in April, and it easily beat out Android and other competing mobile platforms. Shoppers on Apple devices were also willing to spend more, with an average order value of $123 vs. Android’s $101, and $87 from those shopping from traditional desktop operating systems. RichRelevance used data from 3.4 billion online shopping sessions between April and December at U.S. retailers ranging from specialty stores to major e-commerce sites. Mobile shopping is still a relative drop in the bucket compared to its desktop companion, with just 3.74 percent of total online retail dollars spent in the U.S., but that number is growing. Thanks in large part to the success of Apple devices, mobile web shopping has doubled in eight months, and RichRelevance CEO David Selinger says the trend will only accelerate. Key to being a part of that growth for retailers, Selinger suggests, is “ensuring a seamless experience across the interplay of device, context and consumer behavior.” Mobile devices seem to be most used for shopping at times when users don’t necessarily have immediate access to other types of computing hardware. For example, RichRelevance found that during Thanksgiving, 24 percent of shoppers visiting retail websites were on mobile devices, the highest share between November and December. On weekends traffic spikes, too, up to 17 percent from an average of 14 percent during the period measured.
Top Trends of 2011: Content Shifting by @JonMwords http://rww.to/sKNomX via @RWW
NEW YORK — Holiday shopping has given new meaning to the term “click and order.” In addition to a rise in the number of consumers and the average amount spent per buyer — beginning as early as Thanksgiving — overall increases in online spending were fueled by other factors such as a surge in mobile and tablet commerce transactions, luxury brands that typically don’t discount, tiered sale offerings that offer deeper discounts the more you spend and an upsurge in the use of social media platforms. For Cyber Monday specifically, industry experts projected record numbers, hopeful that retail activity for the day would surpass last year’s $1 billion in sales, the biggest day of online sales in e-commerce history — until Nov. 28, that is. The single day shattered records in the digital sphere, becoming the most aggressive day in online shopping ever. Spending totaled $1.25 billion — a 21.7 percent rise from last year, according to a report released by comScore last Tuesday. Transactions on digital mediums were expected to leap by 15 percent — and reports indicate that numbers surpassed industry estimates by nearly 50 percent. The day saw 10 million consumers shopping online, each of whom spent an average of $125. This is the second time online shopping has reached the $1 billion mark in a single day (the first was Cyber Monday in 2010). But the explosion in online sales didn’t come only on Cyber Monday. Black Friday raked in $816 million in online shopping, a 25.9 percent increase from the previous year, and Thanksgiving Day saw $479 million, an 17.7 percent increase from 2010. Consumers are also shopping on the go more than ever — while eating, commuting or at school (so much for listening to teachers). In a report released by comScore Monday, 38 percent of smartphone owners have used a mobile device to make a purchase at least once. For the month of September specifically, clothing and accessories were the second-most popular category for smartphone device transactions (behind digital goods), with 37 percent of mobile users purchasing these items directly from retailers. As for location, 56 percent of mobile shopping occurred while users were at home, 42 percent while out of home in places such as restaurants and school, 42 percent while at work and 37 percent during traveling or commuting. Read More http://www.wwd.com/retail-news/direct-internet-catalogue/mobile-tablets-lead-holiday-charge-5416559?module=today
Adobe on Wednesday said it will no longer push its Flash software format for use in the browser programs that come with smartphones and tablet computers. Instead, Adobe will increase its support for HTML5, a collection of technologies backed by Apple and others such as Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp.
Survey Reveals Growing Digital Media Use Among Affluents
Internet use is already essentially universal among the affluent, with 98% going online. The surprising finding from the 2011 Ipsos Mendelsohn Affluent survey is that in the past year alone, affluent internet use rose about 20%, to more than 30 hours in a typical week. Ownership of devices that serve as on-ramps to the connected world rose significantly among the affluent as well: ownership of smartphones rose by a third, ownership of e-readers nearly tripled, and ownership of tablets more than quadrupled.
The Ipsos Mendelsohn Affluent Survey defines Affluents as adults aged 18+ living in households with at least $100,000 in annual household income, our study reflects 58.5 million Affluents. Although they are fewer than one-in-four Americans by number, they disproportionately account for most of the income, most of the net worth, and, in many categories, most of the consumer spending in the U.S.