
Mobile
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CHART OF THE DAY: Apple Is Pulling In 40% Of All Mobile Industry Revenue, And 75% Of All Mobile Profits
Apple's iMessage is killing off the overpriced text message, at least for a narrow group of iPhone owners. Graphic designer Neven Mrgan posted this chart showing how his text messaging use changed after Apple released iOS 5 with iMessage.
CHART OF THE DAY: Apple Kills The Overpriced Text Message
Do you find yourself constantly checking your smart phone even though you are on vacation? Historically, the holidays are times when we disconnect from work and spend quality time with our family and friends. However, with the growth of mobile technology, we are hyper-connected, so staying on top of what’s happening at work is easier than ever.
#E2sday: Mobile Lurking Through the Holidays | The Future of Work
Mobile Apps in the Enterprise Are the Future - Zendesk
CHART OF THE DAY: Half Of iPhone App Revenue Is From In-App Payments
Apple was initially reluctant to let free apps have in-app payments. It's a good thing it relented, it's obviously working out for developers and Apple.CHART OF THE DAY: Windows Phone 7 Getting As Much Attention As iPad From Publishers In 2011
Here's an encouraging report for Microsoft .CHART OF THE DAY: Apps Don't Matter For 70% Of Cellphone Users
CHART OF THE DAY: The Ugly Outlook For Nokia's New CEO
CHART OF THE DAY: Apple's App Store Dominated By Pay Apps, Google's By Free Apps
Mobile Apps
- Téléphones mobiles récupérés pour être recyclés en Californie REUTERS/Mike Blake -
Jacques Attali: la fin du téléphone mobile | Slate
CHART OF THE DAY: Here's What People Are Actually Doing With The
Most Americans still don't use the mobile Internet, but it's growing rapidly, according to new research from Pew .CHART OF THE DAY: For Mobile TV, Screen Size Does Matter
World Cup viewing data from mobile TV company MobiTV backs up the obvious: The bigger the screen on a mobile advice, the better a TV-watching experience it'll be.CHART OF THE DAY: Here's How Apple's iPhone Totally Humiliated The Mobile Industry
When Steve Jobs announced the iPhone in January, 2007, the collective (private) response from the mobile industry was, "Oh, crap." Rightfully so.Mobile OS

