Archive for January, 2009

Jan 31 2009

Study: BlackBerry Storm Costs More to Build than iPhone

Published by under Technology

blackberry_storm_vs_iphone

The BlackBerry Storm 9530, RIM’s first touchscreen smartphone and an obvious nod to the iPhone 3G, carries a combined materials and manufacturing cost of about $203, according to iSuppli’s Teardown Analysis Service—$30 more than what it costs Apple to build each iPhone 3G.

The report said that the Storm’s total per-unit cost includes all parts and manufacturing, but excludes intellectual property (IP), royalties, licensing fees, software, shipping, logistics marketing, and other channel costs. The Storm’s exact $202.89 total consists of $186 for components and other materials, and $16.07 for manufacturing. The total is $27 more expensive than what it costs RIM to manufacture each BlackBerry Bold, for purposes of comparison, according to iSuppli.

That compares with Verizon Wireless’s up-front charge of $249.99 with a $50 rebate, bringing the total to $199.99—the same price that AT&T charges for the iPhone. The report notes that wireless carriers tend to subsidize cell phones, so determining profit margins is tough.- PC Magazine

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Jan 31 2009

The inter-what?

Published by under Technology

By Tim Weber
Business editor, BBC News website, in Davos

It is not that the internet is a particularly recent invention. It has even had its very own economic crisis. So why are companies still struggling to engage with it

Follow Tim in Davos on Twitter
Screen grab from Twitter

Of course, every company worth its salt has a website, not least those who have sent their executives to the World Economic Forum in Davos.

But the discussions here suggest that many companies are still struggling to move beyond having a colourful website towards really using the internet to their advantage.

And to make things worse, hardly any company knows how to cope with the rise of social media – the Facebooks, Twitters, blogs and YouTubes of the digital world.

Digital confidence

Getting the web right starts with the basics: spam, privacy and fraud.

“The internet is seen by many as an extremely dangerous place,” says Thomas Stewart of consulting firm Booz & Company.

Companies have to tackle the “killers of digital confidence”, he says, from issues such as network security to fraud prevention.

This is not just about having a secure website. It begins with basic issues such as being honest and upfront with your customers.

"Davos this year seems more like some kind of self-help group: “Chief Executives Anonymous”, trying metaphorically to talk each other down off snow-dusted window ledges"

Keep up to date with live text updates from Davos

Davos live text graphic

Networking website Facebook suffered a public relations disaster when it started to mine its users’ personal data to show them targeted adverts without warning them about it.

In the UK, telecoms firm BT had a similar meltdown over the use of the much-criticised advertising platform Phorm.

It is not the adverts that are objectionable, it is being transparent about it.

Google’s online e-mail service Gmail also shows targeted adverts, but warns customers at sign-up how it works.

Even Amazon has started to explain why it recommends certain products to its customers (“Recommended because you purchased…”).

It is not about legal compliance, say the analysts at Booz, it is about getting it right for the consumer.

Losing your business model

The problem is that many companies do not even get that far.

“Most people get the internet only because of a crisis, because they really have to,” says David Brain of PR giant Edelman, pointing at business leaders such as Michael Dell and Bill Gates of Microsoft.

Companies that do not get it keep making life difficult for their customers, for example, mobile or cable operators that confine customers to their own content offering.

"“The first thing that companies learn when they start using the internet is that they are not in control"

David Brain, Edelman

David Brain

“Many customers want that,” protests a cable executive, “they want their children to be in a safe environment.”

It is a fair point, but most customers have grown up, and all previous attempts to confine them to a walled garden have failed.

Another perfect case study is the media sector.

One of the debates here in Davos demonstrates vividly how helpless many old media companies feel when they realise that their audience is disappearing into the digital vastness of the internet.

Hardest hit, of course, are print media. A recent study in the United States by Pew Research suggests that last year more Americans turned to the internet for news than newspapers (with television still ruling the roost).

As old media struggle with new-fangled things like “search engine optimisation” to ensure they stand out in places like Yahoo and Google News, many media leaders appear to be reduced to criticising the editorial quality and credibility of blogs and other online news sources.

Meanwhile, in the real world, the shift goes even further. In China, for example, more people now get their news on mobile phones than newspapers (never mind the fixed-line internet) and making news look good on a very small screen is an art in itself.

The rise of social media

Potentially most disruptive of all, though, is the rise of social media.

“The first thing that companies learn when they start using the internet is that they are not in control. They find it really difficult to abandon their control mindset,” says Mr Brain, who compares the experience to “crowdsurfing”.

But what are social media At one Davos session, 10 prominent exponents of social media – from former Facebook and Linked-in executive Matt Cohler to Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales and Techcrunch editor Mike Arrington – came up with 10 different definitions.

The most popular definition proved to be “human interaction in a virtual world”.

Hiding behind that description is a teeming jungle of social networks that allows people instant communication with hundreds or thousands of “followers”, “friends” or plain old readers.

How not to use social media

How does it affect companies Once your unhappy customer would have told 10 friends. Now he can tell 500 and, if you are unlucky, his complaint will be the first thing that potential new customers see when they search for your product on Google.

There are other pitfalls. In one recent example, an account manager with a well-known PR company visited the headquarters of FedEx in Memphis.

On the way to the company, the hapless executive told his friends on Twitter that he would rather die than live in Memphis. The trouble is, FedEx people care deeply about their hometown and took offense.

Online arguments ensued and a less-than-140-character message soured the relationship with one of the PR firm’s most important clients.

Ironically, the PR had come to Memphis to teach the FedEx communications team about using social media.

Under the radar

The FedEx people were actually trying to do the right thing. They tried to understand social media.

Most companies, though, have not got a clue. The boss of a company that makes it its business to know about technology admitted that 500 people in his company had signed up to Yammer – a social network designed to collaborate on work issues – before he had even heard that this service existed.

Using such networks can provide a huge productivity boost – or alienate your team if you get it wrong.

Others misunderstand social media and try to take control of them. For example, they run sanitised and boring corporate blogs, from which critical customer comments are purged.

Unsurprisingly, an Edelman study found that corporate blogs have the lowest credibility of all content on the internet.

Failing to engage with social media, all participants in the session agreed, could potentially lead to the destruction of a company’s brand.

But used the right way, companies can turn customers into partners, through instant feedback that allows constant product development.

Even better, done the right way (and with the right product or service), you can gently persuade happy customers to commend you using social media.

That is advertising that no money can buy


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Jan 31 2009

Gates predicts four year downturn

Published by under Technology

Melinda and Bill Gates

Microsoft founder Bill Gates has told the BBC that it could take as much as four years for economies in trouble to return to positive growth.

He said the upturn would be driven by innovations in science and technology.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum, where he is promoting his charitable foundation, he said the world’s poor could not wait for economic recovery.

He said it was up to philanthropists like himself to urge governments, firms and individuals to keep on giving.

Bill Gates,the world’s richest philanthropist, saidthe Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has lost one fifth of its value in the current crisis.

Despite his prediction that it could be as much as four years before many economies see growth again, he insisted the fundamentals of the global economic system were sound.

Capitalism, he said, had led to incredible opportunity and innovation, and when in five to 10 years, a new upward trend is established, he believed advances in medicine, genetics and software would drive new growth


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Jan 31 2009

Firms back data protection pledge

Published by under Technology

USB drive, PA

Firms are being encouraged to back a pledge to safeguard the data they hold about citizens and customers.

Drafted by the Information Commissioner, the Personal Information Promise tries to improve respect for the data companies have gathered.

Firms and organisations who use data that people surrender do not always take enough care with it, said Richard Thomas, Information Commissioner.

“Protecting people’s personal details should not be left to chance,” he said.

“Organisations are waking up to the fact that privacy is now so significant that lapses risk reputations and bottom lines.”

Safe store

2008 saw a series of data breaches and losses that left the personal details of millions of people at risk from ID thieves.

By signing up to the promise firms say they will go beyond the strictures laid down by law which govern what they can do with the personal data they hold on their customers or clients.

Data protection laws say organisations should hold the minimum possible amount of data about people and ensure that what they do hold is accurate and up to date.

“They have to make sure that safeguarding the personal information of the customers and staff is embedded in their organisational culture,” said Mr Thomas in a statement.

Those backing the promise will be exhorted to consider privacy risks when they start work on new information systems that draw on databases of personal data.

They must also put in place safeguards to ensure data is securely stored and does not fall into the hands of ID thieves.

“It would be really good to see signatories agree to having spot checks made by the ICO,” said Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group. “That’s what happens other European countries, where their data protection watchdogs have real teeth.

“Given recent government data leaks, it would give us all a lot more confidence if the ICO could walk in and check that our personal information is being kept safely,” he said.

On the day the promise was launched 20 organisations pledged to back it. Those signing up included BT, Vodafone, Royal Mail, British Gas, Experian, Equifax, AstraZeneca and T-Mobile


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Jan 31 2009

Wonder call

Published by under Technology

Soul legend Stevie Wonder is calling on technology companies to make their gadgets more accessible to blind people.

The star, who became blind as a premature baby, says he uses every piece of technology he can in order to help him in everyday life – including a Blackberry and a talking iPod.

Some new devices such as touchscreens pose a particular challenge to blind people as they do not offer the tactile feel of devices with buttons.

"You have a growing number of people, aging people that will need things to be more accessible as well as the hundreds of thousands of blind people"
Stevie Wonder

In an interview for the BBC’s technology programme Click, the star said it was only fair and right in those circumstances that manufacturers make it possible for adaptors to be purchased. In the case of a touchscreen phone – that could be a tactile unit to sit on top of it.

‘Keep it real’

He said: “Being more accessible is always a plus and I think really, for various companies that are working with this technology and making it exciting and accessible for people who can see, it would take very little to make it accessible to everyone. So I encourage all the manufacturers to do that.

“When you can … make it accessible and make it possible, you should just include that in the overall picture.

“You have a growing number of people, aging people that will need things to be more accessible as well as the hundreds of thousands of blind people in the world – so just let’s keep it real.”

His call is being supported by the National Federation of the Blind in the US.

It says that a little more thought during the design process can make a huge difference for anyone with a disability.

For instance, most microwave ovens have flat control panels, but replacing them with slightly raised buttons would enable a blind person to navigate their way around because there are points of reference.

Restoring sight

Wonder said access to technology was far better than 20 years ago.

“I think just as having access to information, being able to read books, electronic brail, and digital information that are accessible has made things far easier for a blind person.

He recalled the early days of the Kurzweil reading machine which at the time was the size of two large suitcases. Now such devices are no bigger than a camera.

Wonder said that despite some amazing stories of technological advances enabling people to recover their sight, he did not believe they would benefit him – although he had seen a doctor who had carried out some testing.

He believed he lost his sight as premature baby when he had insufficient oxygen in an incubator.

Despite this, in more than 40 years as a singer-songwriter, he has racked up over 30 Top Ten hits, 22 solo Grammy Awards, nine US number ones, a lifetime achievement award, and sold 100 million albums.

He can play the piano., drums, congas, bongos, bass guitar, organ, harmonica, melodica and synthesizer


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Jan 31 2009

Amazon profits from festive sales

Published by under Technology

Amazon.com website

Profit at online retailer Amazon rose 9% in the final three months of last year, as the company enjoyed a robust holiday shopping season.

It said net profit totalled $225m in the fourth quarter, up from $207m a year ago.

Unlike many retailers, Amazon has not yet been hit hard by the cutback in spending by many consumers.

Amazon said it would continue to offer low prices and free shipping deals to lure budget-conscious shoppers.

Revenue increased 18% to $6.7bn, beating analysts estimates and Amazon it expected sales to rise in the first three months of 2009.

AMAZON 2008 UK BESTSELLERS

  • Mamma Mia! (DVD)
  • The Tales of Beedle the Bard by JK Rowling (Books)
  • The Dark Knight (DVD)
  • Nintendo Wii Console (Video games)
  • Mario Kart with Wii Wheel (Video games)

Source: Amazon

“It looks like they took a lot of market share and made substantial gains,” said Jeffrey Lindsay of Sanford C Bernstein.

“The good thing is that Amazon hasn’t had to discount to the extent that people feared to achieve this.”

Chief executive Jeff Bezos said Kindle, the electronic-reading device it introduced in 2007 to encourage book, magazine and newspaper downloads, had boosted sales.

Once a bookseller, Amazon now sells products in more than three dozen categories ranging from hairdryers to jewellery.

In the UK, it launched a music download site last year.

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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