GetMeThere: Pay As You Go Mobile GPS Launches in UK |
20 September 05 |
A joint venture between Toyota GB and IS Solutions, the TARA (Traffic Avoidance and Routing Application) Mobile SatNav is aimed at mobile and smart phone users in the UK. Customers won't have to buy expensive hardware or annual licences to use the Satellite Navigation system as the TARA Mobile SatNav works with any compatible mobile phone and a GPS receiver. Instead, punters pay on a per-journey tariff, with TARA Mobile SatNav charging £1.50 ($2.70, €2.22) to the mobile phone bill for each destination, with users allowed to update their route to check traffic conditions, take an alternative route or to re-calculate the journey if they have the orienteering skills of an alcoholic amnesiac
All route calculation and traffic avoidance is processed remotely, with the data automatically downloaded onto the mobile via GPRS.
TARA mobile SatNav is available as a free download from GetMeThere.co.uk and is compatible with a long list of mobiles including popular Nokia models such as 3650, 3660, 6260, 6600, 6670, and 7610, T-Mobile's MDA II and Compact and O2's XDA II range. |
Wednesday, September 21, 2005
GetMeThere: Pay As You Go Mobile GPS Launches in UK free client
Thursday, September 15, 2005
TomTom on first major IPO in The Netherlands since 2000
http://www.herbertsmith.com/News/06June2005.htm
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
Wallet Phones Still Not Catching On
By Keith Regan
www.EcommerceTimes.com
Part of the ECT News Network
09/13/05 1:18 PM PT
In addition to overcoming consumer concerns, carriers will have to find
the right technology to appeal to vendors, retailers, banks and credit
card companies. Some options allow for multiple credit card numbers to
be stored on a single phone, while others use a pre-paid system more
like a debit card.
More than 2 billion people around the world own or use mobile phones.
And increasingly, people are using their mobile phones for multimedia --
not just for communication, but also for entertainment, news, and
information services. Click here to find out more about Nokia's
developments with Mobile TV!
A year after Asian mobile carriers first launched them widely, consumers
are still not rushing to adopt systems that enable mobile phones to be
used as electronic payment devices.
NTT DoCoMo (NYSE: DCM) Latest News about NTT DoCoMo launched a wallet
phone service in its native Japan last year and more carriers have
announced plans to follow suits in key Asian markets. Meanwhile,
MasterCard and Motorola (NYSE: MOT) Latest News about Motorola have been
working quietly on new technologies for nearly a year now that will help
make the cell phone a payment device as well as a personal
identification tool. Visa International also has linked with mobile
carriers on two pilot programs in Asia.
But analysts acknowledge that despite high hopes for the service, it may
still be several years before the technology finds its way into the
mainstream.
A recent survey by research firm In-Stat found little interest or demand
among consumers for cell phone services such as electronic wallets.
"Some of those opinions will shift with time," said In-Stat analyst Neil
Strother. "Enthusiasm could build for services that do not poll well
today. But it will be up to manufacturers and carriers to help move
end-users to more favorable views."
Moving Westward
Often, mobile services get their first adoption in Asian marketplaces
where more advanced mobile infrastructure Discover a better way to
manage the business of IT with IBM Tivoli solutions. is in place. That's
happened with mobile gaming and mobile television and appears to be
happening with using cell phones as a payment device.
NTT DoCoMo recently reported that some 3 million cell phone users and
20,000 retailers and other vendors are signed up for its Mobile Wallet
offering.
While early tests show consumers spending an average of US$30 or more on
each cell-phone charge, many analysts believe the best chance for mobile
payments to gain traction is with so-called micro-payments, with users
buying content such as song downloads, ring tones, games or video clips.
A recent study by Juniper Research argued that the mobile commerce will
be a $40 billion industry by 2009, much of that made up of millions of
micropayments. In Europe, for instance, where such payments are expected
to take hold before they reach the U.S., the average cell phone users
will conduct nearly 30 transactions per year on a mobile handset, but
with an average transaction value of just $3, according to Juniper.
Security a Concern
Analysts believe resistance may be highest in the U.S., where concerns
about security Security, strength, a lower TCO: find out about all the
advantages of IBM Middleware on Linux. and identity theft are at the
forefront.
Telecom analyst Jeff Kagan said U.S. consumers will warm slowly to using
cell phones in new ways, with new blended phones such as the iTunes
smartphone being built by Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Latest News about Apple
and Motorola helping to push consumers in that direction.
"But it's still early," Kagan told The E-Commerce Times. "The number of
users actively seeking out those advanced services are still very small."
In addition to overcoming consumer concerns, carriers will have to find
the right technology to appeal to vendors, retailers, banks and credit
card companies. Some options allow for multiple credit card numbers to
be stored on a single phone, while others use a pre-paid system more
like a debit card.
"The mobile phone will be ubiquitous and carriers will offer a range of
services to take advantage of that fact and generate revenue," Kagan
said. "But consumers will have the final say about what works and what
doesn't."
Wednesday, September 07, 2005
SMS worth $50 billion 2010]
> SMS worth $50 billion 2010
> From:
>
> Date:
> Tue, 06 Sep 2005 13:57:11 -0700
> To:
>
> To:
>
>
> SMS boom to continue
> Tony Halett
> silicon.com
> September 06, 2005, 14:55 BST
>
> Talkback
> Tell us your opinion
> 'The cheapest, easiest form of peer-to-peer mobile communication ever
> known' will be worth $50bn a year by 2010, according to Portio Research
>
>
>
>
> SMS messaging will grow in popularity so that the market is worth $50bn
> (£27m) globally by 2010, according to new research.
>
> A report by Portio Research claims: "No other non-verbal form of
> communication in the world is used by so many individuals and is
> experiencing such a rapid expansion of its user base."
>
> However, the report's authors see growth in the mobile messaging market
> more broadly — they forecast rosy futures on the move for email, instant
> messaging (especially in the US ), push-to-talk and even MMS, SMS' more
> feature-rich big brother, which should see similar revenues "by 2010
> from considerably less traffic".
>
> The year 2010 will see some 2.38 trillion text messages sent, leading
> Portio to dub the medium "the cheapest, easiest form of peer-to-peer
> mobile communication ever known".
>
> In separate news, Vodafone has announced large text, video messaging and
> data bundles aimed at business customers.
>
> The mobile networks giant said its own research shows a 30 percent
> increase in the use of text messaging by business customers over the
> past 12 months.
>
> The new bundles will be available across shared accounts within Vodafone
> Perfect Fit for Business tariffs.
>
>
> Microsoft lines up BlackBerry challenge Vodafone and MSN IM:
> a taste of things to come
> Will IM be the focus of convergence? What does the future of
> communications hold?
> Users 'want advanced mobile services' Taking the SMS gamble