YouTube testing video ad viewing options

SAN FRANCISCO–YouTube began testing Monday an option allowing users to choose between watching lengthy ads before uninterrupted videos or having brief ads mixed with viewing experiences.

The experiment comes as Google continues to work on ways to make money from globally popular video-sharing website YouTube, which it bought three years ago in a $1.65-billion stock deal.

“Today, we started running a small test that will give users more control over how they watch advertising on YouTube,” product manager Phil Farhi said in a message posted on the California firm’s official business blog.

“We are constantly testing a wide range of options to find the right advertising format for the right content on YouTube, and we think giving users a say in the process helps our efforts.”

The ad test is being conducted on a small percentage of videos, according to Farhi. YouTube rival Hulu has been dabbling with a similar advertising format.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/infotech/view/20090616-210735/YouTube-testing-video-ad-viewing-options

Samsung, Nokia heat up smartphone contest

LONDON/SEOUL–The world’s two largest cellphone makers, Nokia and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, unveiled new phones on Monday, offering features comparable to iPhone and Pre, but at lower prices.

In the last two weeks Apple Inc’s launch of an updated version of iPhone and Palm Inc’s Pre model have heated up competition in the sweet-spot of an otherwise shrinking industry.

“What is clear is that we are heading to one of the most competitive fourth-quarters we have had,” said Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi.

The holiday fuelled fourth quarter is usually the strongest sales season for handsets and vendors launch their top models in time to reach the sales peak in October-December quarter.

The cellphone market volume is expected to fall about 10 percent this year as recession dampens consumer demand, but the market for so-called smartphones is expected to rise 10 percent to 20 percent, boosted by new and attractive models from many of the top vendors.

“Consumer demand for more capable devices seems to be accelerating despite the general economic doom and gloom,” said Ben Wood, a research director at CCS Insight. “Samsung and Nokia are playing smart by offering these sorts of products at punchy price points.”

Samsung revamped in one go its smartphones portfolio, unveiling four new models to its Omnia range — the Omnia II, the OmniaLITE and two OmniaPRO models, all using Microsoft Corp’s Windows Mobile software.

Samsung also launched a new mass-market “Jet” model on Monday, which differs from some 150 phones Samsung launches per year with its full touch screen, a next-generation display and improved processor to deliver fast mobile Internet access.

The company said it will reach new, untapped markets of consumers who want smartphone functionality at a “reasonable price.” It did not reveal the price of the phone, but analysts said it was comparable to most mid-range models.

Top cellphone maker Nokia launched three new handsets on Monday, including a new touch-screen model, the 5530 Xpressmusic, which would sell for 199 euros ($280) before subsidies and taxes, starting next quarter.

“Nokia is trying to address the very competitive mid-range space given the prices of the Pre and the new iPhone,” said Gartner’s Milanesi.

“Nokia can also benefit from a lower contract tariff than these two devices have, which will make the products more competitive, but certainly not offering a comparable user experience.”

RAYS OF LIGHT

The cellphone industry saw its worst-ever quarter in January-to-March, with the market shrinking 14 percent from a year ago and Nokia reporting its first-ever quarterly pretax loss.

Several companies and analysts have said the worst could well be over for the industry because the fall was partly caused by retailers selling stockpiles of older phones, but only a few have seen any improvement in demand.

The head of sales and marketing at Samsung’s mobile unit said he was hopeful phone sales would fall 8 percent to 9 percent this year across the industry, slightly less than the company’s official expectation of a 10 percent drop, as the global economy begins to recover.

“In the second half … I do not see any special surge in demand. However, there is a small sign of recovery of the general economy. Hopefully, the mobile industry also will recover some,” Lee Donjoo told Reuters in an interview.

“Currently, we’re focusing on around 10 percent lower. I’m expecting a little less, eventually — minus 9, minus 8, hopefully.”

http://technology.inquirer.net/infotech/infotech/view/20090616-210761/Samsung-Nokia-heat-up-smartphone-contest

Acrobat.com no longer free

US–Software company Adobe Systems Inc. said on Monday it had moved Acrobat.com out of public beta testing and would charge subscribers to use the online version of its popular PDF reader software Acrobat.

The maker of Photoshop, Flash and Acrobat software said it would charge subscribers for two new services that add capacity and capabilities for intensive business use.

Adobe will charge $14.99 per month for the basic service, which allows Web meetings for up to five participants and online conversion of 10 uploaded documents to PDF per month.

For the premium plus service, which has meeting capacity for up to 20 people and unlimited online creation of PDF files, Adobe will charge $39 per month.

Five million people have signed up to use Acrobat.com since it was launched in June 2008, Adobe said.

http://technology.inquirer.net/infotech/infotech/view/20090616-210800/Acrobatcom-no-longer-free

AMID GLOBAL DOWNTURN Industry group still sees mobile usage growth

SEOUL–Telecom industry group the GSM Association expects the mobile industry to see continued growth in usage, despite the recession, and to provide stimulus for the global economy.

Robert Conway, CEO of the association that represents 750 mobile operators worldwide, also forecast explosive growth in social networking over mobile Internet, fueled by the increasing use of smartphones with PC-like functionality.

“You can expect there is going to be some contraction in overall revenue within the mobile industry” during the recession, Conway told reporters on the sidelines of the association’s board meeting in Seoul.

But the industry has shown resilience, especially in emerging markets, he said. “We see the usage will continue to go up.”

“The cumulative effect of many countries optimizing the expansion of broadband … will have a multiplier effect on a global basis,” Conway said, discussing the telecom industry’s role in helping to revive the world economy.

He focused on the potential of smartphones and netbooks with mobile connections, noting that smartphones had led to an “explosion of mobile social networking use”.

“We are seeing the tip of an iceberg of usage of social networking via mobile.”

But with the rise of smart phones, mobile operators were facing challenges in providing access to applications and services between operating systems, he said.

While new rivals emerging in mobile services such as Apple’s highly popular AppStore, Conway said the industry’s goal was coming up with a global platform that would allow users to access services regardless of operating system or device.

Conway said he also expected the as yet slow migration toward Long Term Evolution (LTE), which is set to become a dominant standard for high-speed, next-generation mobile broadband, to accelerate.

Leading operators such as NTT DoCoMo, China Mobile and Verizon would move to LTE “as quickly as the status of technology allows”, he said.

“With LTE, deployments will begin to pick up at an additional speed in 2011 and beyond.”

http://technology.inquirer.net/infotech/infotech/view/20090616-210803/Industry-group-still-sees-mobile-usage-growth