Mobility and Big Data: Why They Need Each Other to Thrive

January 9, 2013

Mobile devices and apps will generate seven exabytes of data by 2015, a number that will continue to double and perhaps triple each year. Not only are huge volumes of data/content being communicated through mobile networks, but there has been unexpected growth in related communications and transactions, such as:

  • Salesforce.com getting 60 percent of its “transaction volume” from mobile devices
  • Pandora delivering 60 percent of its music minutes to mobile devices
  • Facebook getting 30 percent of its traffic from mobile
  • Twitter getting 55 percent of tweets from mobile

This dramatic growth, coupled with low-cost, large-scale data architectures, is making it possible for “Big Data” to capture, analyze, and act in real-time to maximize the impact for business. But I would argue that big data and mobile are also intertwined, and the total societal impact of one depends on the other.

The unique benefits of mobile—ubiquity, immediacy, and relevance—are magnified by big data. To fully leverage these attributes, mobile solutions need to be location-aware (ubiquitous), real-time (immediate), and context-aware (relevant). Seventy percent of mobile apps are abandoned within the first two months after being downloaded, due in large part to the fact that they are not enterprise-class, not connected to the data and analytics that make them engaging, and therefore not leveraging the attributes of mobile. Big data is becoming a critical element in meeting these demanding expectations from the user.

Together, mobile and big data provide an opportunity to not only offer users convenience and utility, but to actually drive behavior change. A health insurance company, for example, might deploy a consumer-facing app that mashes up claims data with public health data and personal fitness/wellness data from other consumer apps. This creates the opportunity for powerful analytics to help guide the consumer to make better health decisions based on a real-time view of their current condition and available options.

Sustaining behavior change is critical to virtually every industry, whether it’s getting a patient to follow their prescribed therapy (only 70 percent do so in the U.S.), encouraging an employee to save more for retirement (there is only a 3.6 percent savings rate in the U.S.), or getting an energy customer to make more efficient decisions (the average U.S. household wastes 25 percent of its energy). This is where mobile and big data can play a significant role. By marrying context, personalization, and knowledge of potential actions/offers using mobile and big data/analytics, the impact of retail, healthcare solutions and beyond could be improved drastically.

Where big data is accelerating the sustaining of behavior change, it is also accelerating the convergence of people and objects. There are now nearly 10 billion things connected and only about half of them will be mobile phones. Yet up until now, the hundreds of millions of connected objects—truck fleets, environmental sensors, smart meters, etc.—were considered part of the closed “Machine-to-Machine” or M2M world. This is changing. Fueled by the integration of technologies such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, QR Codes, and NFC into mobile devices, we are lowering the barrier for people to interact with objects, and opening up a new category of innovations we call P2M, or “People to Machines.”

Very soon, we will not talk about mobility or big data but just real-time, personalized interactions that drive business impact, anywhere, anytime, on any screen. Now that’s powerful.

via Mobility and Big Data: Why They Need Each Other to Thrive | Xconomy.


VIDEO Glasses-Free 3D Display

May 28, 2012

Head-Coupled Perspective on Mobile Devices. We track the head of the user with the front facing camera in order to create a glasses-free monocular 3D display. Such spatially-aware mobile display enables to improve the possibilities of interaction. It does not use the accelerometers and relies only on the front camera.” — DocteurCube


IBM’s next 5 in 5

December 22, 2011

IBM Next 5 in 5: 2011 (by IBMLabs)

IBM unveils its sixth annual “Next 5 in 5” — a list of innovations with the potential to change the way people work, live and play over the next five years. The Next 5 in 5 is based on market and societal trends expected to transform our lives, as well as emerging technologies from IBM’s Labs around the world that can make these innovations possible.

In this installment: you will be able to power your home with the energy you create yourself; you will never need a password again; mind reading is no longer science fiction; the digital divide will cease to exist; and junk mail will become priority mail.


Retail ideas for 2012

December 19, 2011

A few pieces of retail info that came out of a recent dinner:

  • A fundamental shift has been taking place in retail – power is shifting from the retailer to the consumer through the use of technology. However, retailers are working hard to maintain, and even grow, market share. Customer satisfaction is a main focal point. Now, there are multiple touch points to reach the consumer (through personalized promotions, mobile websites and social sites like Facebook).
  • Although e-commerce is posting huge comps (YOY) versus their brick and mortar counterparts, mobile devices are not driving the sales. Size of screen and limitations on mobile content are some of the primary challenges. When shopping for a fashionable dress from Elie Tahari, or the latest in technology on a site like Amazon.com, the typical cell phone screen just doesn’t cut it. Not surprising, in a “statistically insignificant” but real poll taken of my students (who are Gen Z “trendsetters”) only 8.3% actually use their smartphones to shop.
  • Social is becoming a powerful player in the retail space. According to a global survey by IBM, up to 84% of consumers rely on their social networks when researching new products. When buying online, shoppers coming from a social network convert at 2x the rate of other non-social network channels.

More to come.


Connected kids

November 23, 2011

At C24 we work a lot within education. We spotted this excert below that we thought really highlighted how connected todays kids are. It is

I pulled some data from a presentation from the K5 Learning Blog. Kids today are amazingly connected, but less involved in the physical world:

  1. More US kids aged 2-5 can play a computer game than ride a bike.
  2. 19% of kids aged 2-5 know how to play a smartphone app; 9% know how to tie their shoelaces.
  3. More kids aged 2-5 can open a browser than swim unaided.
  4. Kids aged 0-8 spend an average of 1 hour 44 minutes watching TV or video daily, 29 minutes reading, 29 minutes listening to music, 25 minutes playing computer or video games, and 5 minutes using new mobile devices.
  5. Kids aged 8-18 spend 7 hours 38 minutes using entertainment media daily: more than 53 hours per week. That’s an hour more than 2004 (6 hours 30 minutes). Because they multitask [non-rivalrous media] they pack 10 hours 45 minutes into those 7 hours and 38 minutes.
  6. 65% of kids aged 0-8 watch TV at least once per day. That’s 37% of kids aged 0-1, 73% of kids aged 2-4, and 72% of kids aged 5-8.
  7. Kids under 2 spend twice as much time watching TV and videos than being read to (1 hour 54 minutes versus 53 minutes per day).
  8. For kids aged 8-18, live TV consumption declined by 25 minutes from 2004 to 2009, but total TV consumption went up thanks to the Internet, cell phones, and iPods. 59% (2 hours 39 minutes) consisted of watching live TV, and 41% (1 hour 50 minutes) consisted of time-shifted TV, DVDs, online, or mobile.
  9. 53% of kids aged 2-4 have used a computer, 90% of kids aged 5-8 have.
  10. 25% of kids are going online daily by age 3, 50% by age 5.
  11. Cell ownership among kids 8-18 rose from 39% in 2004 to 65% in 2009.
  12. 7-12th graders spend an average 1 hour 35 minutes per day sending and receiving texts.
  13. 51% of kids aged 0-8 have played a console game, 81% of kids aged 5-8. 17% of kids aged 5-8 play console games at least once a day, 36% play then at least once per week.
  14. 27% of kids aged 2-5 screen time is used with new digital devices.
  15. 29% of parents have downloaded apps for their kids aged 2-5 to use.
  16. iPod ownership for kids aged 8-18 rose from 18% in 2004 to 76% in 2009.
  17. 23% of kids aged 0-8 watch educational TV shows, 8% use educational programs on the computer, 7% play education games on new mobile devices.

via stoweboyd:


The growth of mobile payment infographic. NFC, Google Wallet and the rest……

July 12, 2011

We have mentioned several times the fact that mobile phones will be playing an ever-increasing importance when it comes to the way that we pay for goods and services. The infographic below highlights what appears to be 4 of the main contenders and the type of technologies they are using.

All we can say is that the market is going to be significant, with equipment sales hitting $75 billion by 2013 with in 1 in 5 phones using NFC and by 2015 the value of goods transacted will be around $670 billion.

For those of you in retail and software development this is certainly a gravy train that you need to be riding.

Thanks to: thenextweb: How mobile phones are becoming the new credit card [Infographic]


Infographic from Microsoft, how big is mobile?

April 4, 2011

Image representing Microsoft as depicted in Cr...

Image via CrunchBase

To prove a point that mobile is truly massive Microsoft have released this infographic that shows the true scale of what has happened in the last few years:

  • 4 billion phones in use
  • 2014 internet mobile phone access to be bigger than desktops
  • 86% of people are watching TV on the phone (who says the screen is to small?)

And yet there are still massive opportunities.

Thanks to Digital Buzz for the info.

2011-mobile-statistics-stats-facts-infographic-large


Another great set of ideas on tagging from psfk

January 20, 2011

We are presently looking at a number of similar ideas with client using QR codes, however the concept is the same. We must same this is great work………


Has Everyone Gone Barking Mobile?

January 17, 2011

App Store

Image by Cristiano Betta via Flickr

The answer is yes. Is this a new topic? Well no and yes.

Nowadays when you mention mobile, most people will immediately equate this to mobile phones.

Believe it or not mobile phones could be found in cars as long as 50 years ago and handheld phones could be used in 1979 when the first publicly accessible cellular network existed. But the technology really took off as we know it today about 25 years ago when Mobile phones the size of a brick appeared, and they became commonly used in cars (without hands free) shortly afterwards and so started the era of universal mobile telephony.

This of course pre-dated email and of course the internet or at least as we know it today. So for a long time we have enjoyed the ability to make a phone call while on the move (mobile) which personally saved me a lot of time looking for a phone box which hadn’t been vandalised.

PDA’s even pre-date mobiles, they were used by mobile workers (those who were out and about to you and me) who needed to (or just could) capture data while they were out and about which could then be uploaded at the end of the day onto the server for whatever processing was required. So in a sense haven’t we have been mobile for getting on for 30 + years? So what’s changed and why is it even important what mobile is or isn’t?

The reason it matters is this–

If you are a software vendor and you are not mobile ’enabled’ for all but a few specialist applications, you will be DEAD. Business applications have been sliding towards thin client web enabled mode for years, i.e. you don’t need a client machine to run these applications just a thin client device. Personal applications (and dare I say it MS Office) are going the same way so don’t be dumb, be mobile in everything you do.

The ‘Net’, inter or intra has in effect given everybody the ability to be mobile and continues to define what mobile is; and if enough people think it’s a good idea (and we are way beyond that) then that’s what will happen.

There are massive philosophical issues here. Why talk when all you have to do is txt? Personally I am not sure about that but that’s me. Why go in the office where you can interact with your team when all you have to be is, online. Anyway, back to the point. So what does mobile actually mean because there are many types of ‘mobileness’? Telephony, the most ubiquitous was not even the first way of mobile working, as discussed earlier?

Well try this; The opportunity to interact or operate socially and/or professionally without being location dependent.

If this is a fair description then this has to be applied to applications to see if they pass the acid test. BUT, is even this a true definition? Any idiot can move around with their laptop in any location and as long as there is wireless, are they therefore not living in truly mobile world?

Well in a sense they aren’t because at the end of the day their ‘client’ (i.e. their laptop) is only superficially mobile (i.e. you can carry it); most of the installed software is stuck in one place on their laptop which needs to be with them. I would suggest being truly mobile, a person must use an application that can operate on the ‘thinnest’ client whilst interacting with the cloud in the ‘skinniest’ way to qualify as the gold standard of mobile working … and we all know its better for the planet.

The demise of the desktop is probably a ‘given’; that device which allowed everybody to exist in their own little IT ‘bubble’. and it will be replaced by a mobile IT world where everything is in the ‘cloud’, everything is on demand and everything is mobile. This means of course, applications need to run on whole ’raft’ of mobile devices, phones just happen to be the most common. But, if you are not bothered about talking, just txting, maybe you don’t need one of them either.

So my point is, for the foreseeable future and for most applications, the test of their longevity will be their ‘mobileness’ a new word you heard here, first.

Chris Finch


QR codes and there usage

November 12, 2010

A giant QR Code linking to a website, to be re...

Image via Wikipedia

I have just read a fantastic article on masable.com that is looking at the value of QR codes and there usage. They highlight a couple of examples which have really made us think. C24 are always looking to add true value to the solutions we offer our clients, not just looking to increase billing, but help our clients drive their business forward.

The ideas of printing QR codes on bills and offering a % reduction on the order is just the start, as a specialist application delivery and hosting company we could really start to look at the delivery of information in many ways. Some first ideas could be to:

  • print codes on desktops for compliance
  • setup personal databases so that people could store all their personal details linked from the code(obviously protected)
  • put the codes into hotel rooms that link directly to local activities and points of interest
  • QR codes linked to Facebook and social media
  • If product is not available in one store, print a code to buy online or reserve at the nearest stocked store
  • Sending a code to event attendees requesting feedback and giving them further information about what they have seen

Once we got into this the opportunities to engage closely with clients/potential clients could be enormous. These examples illustrate the power of a new opportunity created by QR codes that we call context-sensitive marketing, or CSM, we can start to help clients drive business by connecting with their customers when they are most likely be interested in product.

The million dollar question is are customers ready?

Well the technology is now available, wi-fi is everywhere, smart phones are now the norm and cloud based information is gaining momentum. Putting all three together enables the adoption of QR codes and the readers. If we couple this with the latest news from Facebook etc this area seems on the verge of something really interesting and potentially massive.

Watch this space as we are really looking at this.


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