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Monday, 6 January 2014

Mobile chat apps a craze in India; challenges persist even as user base surges



 
Rather than surfing the TV channels or the internet, 42-year-old Anupam Gupta, a financial services professional in Mumbai, turns to his mobile phone for the latest buzz on the stock markets. A member of two groups on WhatsApp, a mobile chatapplication,hegets updates on the Sensex, snippets of the latest research reports and can hobnob with traders and analysts all through his work day. What used to be a task reliant on the desktop or laptop has gone mobile, literally. With 60 people to chat with overwork, breaks and meals,Gupta, a 14-year industry veteran, now has the pulse of the markets all the time. Over the past couple of years, millions of mobile phone users across India have noticeably changed their methodofcommunication.

From being a country of person-to-person texts, the country and its booming population of smartphone users (industry estimates sales at around 30 million units for 2013, which are expected to jump to 50 to 60 million this year), are becoming besotted with chat applications such as WhatsApp, Wechat, Line, Dutch-born and India developed Nimbuzz and Hike. Even old faithful Black-Berry Messenger ( BBM), which has gone multi-platform and racked up some 80 million users globally, is hoping for another crack at the market. There could be as many as 100 million users on these apps in India, say analysts tracking the mobile industry.
 
"This [mobile chat app] is an easy, convenient and immediate way to stay connected with a like-minded group," says Gupta. While BBM previously allowed users on the same platform to keep in touch, those outside found themselves disconnected. It is this disparate group that apps such as WhatsApp and Wechat addressed. In two years since its launch,WhatsApp, the brain child of former Yahoo! employees Brian Acton and Jan Koum has racked up 300-million-plus users. Wechat, a product from Tencent Holdings, China, has 272 million and others such as Line claims to have 300 million. In this time, WhatsApp has been the target of an alleged billion-dollar takeover offer from Facebook; and from Snapchat, infamous for a series of sexting rows, for an even bigger $3-billion deal.

Executives at these firms are falling over themselves to tweak their applications for emerging markets and in WhatsApp's case, this meant they were unavailable to squeeze time out for an interview with ET Magazine. Neeraj Arora, an IIT Delhi alum,who moved from helming M&A at Google's local unit to business head at WhatsApp did not respond to requests for an interview. "As I'm sure you can imagine, the WhatsApp team's schedule is currently jam-packed," says Kate Lynch, a spokesperson."However, I can confirm that WhatsApp has 350 million monthly active users worldwide, with 30 million monthly active users in India."

As these applications have gone mainstream, their use has diversified. For example, 31-year-old Poonam Nikam, aMumbaibased marketing manager with Sony Music, relies on a tightly knit BBM group to keep up with the ever changing landscape of food and beverage outlets in Bandra, a tony Mumbai suburb. Spot reviews, menus, service and openings (and re-openings as often happens in Mumbai) are all discussed on her group. "This is the most convenient way of keeping in touch with the bustle in Bandra," she says. "We have all been on BBM for a while and it's a great way to get quick updates."

Thirty-six-year-old Priyatosh Kumar, a Mumbai-based senior manager with Xerox, is a member of at least five active WhatsApp groups and many more where he's a rare visitor. These groups span a wide variety of interests — one for tennis players in his swish apartment complex, another for current and former employees at Xerox, where he works, a third bunch of former mates from Bhubaneswar, the fourth is a collection of executives from assorted companies who exchange the latest news, trends and data on their industries and a collective of Hare Krishna devotees in his housing society.

Kumar says that the utility of these groups varies, depending on its members—his tennis groups use it as a group calendar, his Hare Krishna group exchanges more philosophical notes, while his work-related groups are a great way to stay connected to the market. "There are messages from one group or the other coming in all the time," he says. "This is the best way to stay connected with a heterogeneous group that is geographically dispersed."
 
As the number of social chat apps proliferates, users are beginning getmore discerning with their choices. For example, 25-yearold Gitika Sharma, an executive with a digital advertising agency in Delhi, says that she chose Wechat because she could quickly and simply send voice messages to her close groupof friends."Wechat groups an easy and more private way staying in touch with friends," she Not only canshe send brief voice messages, she can also use newer features such as stickers among this group to keep the chatter flowing long after they have reached home. "Voice messages save the cost of repeated calls [often long distance] and the bother of typing long messages," Sharma adds.

Compared to advanced users such as Sharma, a group of some two dozen senior citizens have formed a BBM group in Bangalore to keep in touch for temple visits and to plan festival celebrations. "We all have BlackBerries and since access is restricted by a PIN [he had his teenage grandson log him in], there's no fear of having to fob off unwanted members," says CV Krishna, a 70-something regular on this group. Sheepishly, the retired college professor confesses to an almost teenage fascination with his 'berry'; the device is the first thing he checks when he wakes up at 6 amwhen he wakes up—and replies to messages — and also the last before he calls it a day."We've even learnt to use emoticons," he laughs. Despite the disadvantage of age, the group has benefited often from bonding together on temple visits.

According to Rahul Razdan, head of Tencent's India operations, the need to be constantly connected is a key driver for the soaring popularity of these apps. "We see the habit of being always connected as a key reason for the popularity of Wechat," he says. The conversations between friends, colleagues and business partners is constantly evolving — from just text messages, to pictures, voice notes, stickers and more. India has the biggest potential for growth for Wechat," he says. Wechat has been on a high-voltage marketing campaign over the past year, with Bollywood stars Parineeti Chopra and Varun Dhawan adding some heft to this push.

It isn't only the newcomers that are hogging the limelight. BBM, the app that perhaps first started the mobile phone group, also wants another crack at this market. When it was first launched BBM became a cost-effective answer to text messages, but this evolved over time as BBM added newfeatures and a more diverse set of people — beyond private sector executives getting one from employers — began to use them. "Convenience, the ability to share multimedia, create groups, share screens, voice and video chats have made BBM a much more compelling communication platform," says BlackBerry's Varghese Thomas, director, corporate communications, India and Saarc. The struggling Canadian phonemaker launched BBM on Android and IOS earlier in 2013 and says today it has some 80 million users globally. India numbers were unavailable.

The going may not be as smooth as Thomas and others think. Already, market watchdog Sebi is keeping a beady eye out on the use of these apps to trade sensitive market news. The Union home ministry has also raised a flag over concerns that these apps are being used to plan and conduct terrorist attacks in the country. In India Inc too, official BlackBerries (or other phones) are closely watched; at least half a dozen people this writer spoke to bemoaned the fact that they were barred from using their official handsets for anything besides work. Hackers regularly take pot shots at these apps, looking to break into private conversations (and periodically succeeding), even as nervous users hope their chats stay private.

Managing these fears, and yet keeping users flocking to their apps will perhaps be the biggest challenge for these companies yet.

New system may spell end of accounts passwords


TORONTO: Researchers have developed a new system that logs your everyday activities and asks questions about them, offering a simpler way of logging in to your accounts than memorising passwords.
The system called 'narrative authentication' was developed by Carson Brown and colleagues at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.
It uses software running in the background on a computer or smartphone to log your activities. The system can, for instance, note how long you spent playing a video game, which one it was and the time you stopped.
It also logs videos you posted to social networking sites and any check-ins you made on them, 'New Scientist' reported.
Users can also add their own events to the narrative, such as when they passed their driving test.
After being set up, the system will generate questions based on its records - making logging in a little like playing a text-based adventure game, Brown said.

CES 2014: LG unveils 105-inch 21:9 cinema style TV with eye watering price tag


CES 2014: LG unveils 105-inch 21:9 cinema style TV with eye watering price tag
We're sure we're not the only ones who want a home cinema, and thanks to the LG 105UC9 that dream can now become a reality - sort of.
At 105 inches the 105UC9 is going to be pushing the dimensions of most living rooms, but its 21:9 aspect ratio and Ultra HD 5120 x 2160 resolution means that movies will look damn fine.
Obviously standard TV shows are not shot in 21:9, so you'll be losing a lot of screen real estate when watching your 16:9 and 5:9 programmes - hardly seems worth the outlay if half the screen is going to be off most of the time.

No 4K or 3D? No problem

The 105UC9 uses LG's Tru-Ultra HD Engine which can upscale your non-4K media into something which resembles the next-gen resolution, plus the Cinema 3D feature allows you to fine tune the dimensional effect to suit your eyes - and it can even convert your boring 2D shows into fancy 3D offerings.
LG has overhauled its smart TV operating system and the 105UC9 runs the firm's new webOS platform, which makes it easier for you to find the content you want with services such as Netflix, CinemaNow, Hulu Plus and Facebook all included.
In terms of the LG 105UC9 release date it's still undecided, but that probably isn't a bad thing as you'll need to get saving to meet the $69,999 (£43,000, AU$78,000) asking price.

DreamWorks partners with Fuhu to launch tablet for children



  
DreamWorks Animation first captivated children in movie theaters. Then it branched into TV, piping cartoons based on hits like " Madagascar" and " How to Train Your Dragon" into homes through outlets like Nickelodeon and Netflix. 

Now DreamWorks has partnered with a technology company, Fuhu, on an even more immediate way to reach itty-bitty eyeballs, a highly coveted audience: a tablet computer for children that the studio will be able to program much like a cable channel. "We could push out a new character moment every day of the year," said Jim Mainard, head of digital strategy and new business development for DreamWorks.

DreamWorks and Fuhu, which makes the popular Nabi line of children's tablets, plan to introduce the product, called the DreamTab, at the International Consumer Electronics Show, which starts Tuesday in Las Vegas.

The tablets will be sold with a range of DreamWorks-branded accessories, including headphones, protective bumpers and carrying cases. An 8-inch version of the DreamTab will arrive in stores in the spring. Pricing is still being determined but it will be less than $300, a Fuhu spokesman said. A 12-inch version is also planned. 

The partnership is a convergence of two business trends. With children as young as 2 or 3 now routinely using their parents' iPads or smartphones - if the toddlers don't have their own - technology companies are racing to introduce gadgets made for smaller and smaller hands. Fuhu itself sold more than 2 million Nabis in 2013, and its tablets, which are primarily designed for children 6 to 11, now collectively deliver more than 20 million video streams a week.

Entertainment companies have been surprised at how speedily children have taken to tablets, sometimes forgoing TV sets altogether. As a result, DreamWorks, Disney and their competitors are searching for ways to make it easier for users to find their characters on portable devices.

Fuhu's strategic goal with the DreamTab is differentiation - coming up with a way to persuade parents to buy its product over a competing one. DreamWorks is hoping to find a new way into the home, deepening its reputation as an innovative content creator and funneling more viewers to its programs and movies and selling more merchandise. 

"By teaming with DreamWorks to create a device that will have original content - original content that is automatically and frequently updated - we are not following consumers, we are getting ahead of them," said Jim Mitchell, Fuhu's chief executive. 

There are all sorts of branded tablets, of course. Fuhu in October introduced a special-edition Disney Nabi and Nickelodeon Nabi. But neither of those offered original and exclusive programming like the DreamTab will. Unlike some other tablets, the DreamTab will not lock children into a DreamWorks-only world. The studio's video content and games are the most prominent, but users can also stream shows from Nickelodeon, Disney and Cartoon Network.

Nancy Bernstein, a movie producer who is in charge of creating what she calls "character moments" for the DreamTab, insists that the effort is not simply an advertising opportunity for the studio. Turn on the tablet, for instance, and penguins from the "Madagascar" franchise might greet you with a silly dance. Depending on how parents have set the timing controls, "Shrek" characters might appear in a skit to announce that it is time to power down. 

"All of this animation was custom-created," Bernstein said in a demonstration at DreamWorks' headquarters here.
 
Some parents might disagree with her definition of advertising. Will dancing penguins make DreamTab users more interested in seeing "The Penguins of Madagascar" when it arrives in theaters next year? The studio, led by Jeffrey Katzenberg, would be naive not to hope the answer is yes.

The DreamTab will also have technology that allows it to communicate wirelessly with DreamWorks-made toys. For instance, a "How to Train Your Dragon" action figure might be used to unlock games and educational experiences on the tablet. (The studio's "How to Train Your Dragon 2" arrives in June.)

The companies will try to woo parents by including educational elements. In addition to original animation, DreamWorks will supply what it calls "educational artistic experiences"; some of the studio's top animators will appear in videos to teach users how to draw characters like Po the panda or Toothless the dragon. To allow children to draw on the screens, each DreamTab will come with the same stylus technology that DreamWorks artists use to make movies.

"We want to transform the way kids play, learn and grow through technology," said Mitchell of Fuhu, which is based in El Segundo, Calif.

The DreamTab's technology is quite hefty. The devices will enable children to send instant messages and emails to their parents' smartphones, for instance. Mitchell emphasized that his company had gone to "incredible lengths" to make the DreamTab compliant with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, a federal law that restricts the ways companies collect information on children younger than 13.

The DreamTab is not a toy. Switched into parent mode, it provides roughly the same computing power as an iPad, the companies said.

"If you give a kid less, they will spot it immediately as less, and they won't like it," said Mainard of DreamWorks. "We wanted to give more."

Your guide to the perfect online dating profile


Finding oneself with no one to kiss when the clock strikes midnight on New Year's Eve often leads people to add finding a partner to their list of New Year's resolutions. With the Bank Holiday revelries done with, 1 million people in the UK were expected to log onto a dating website on Thursday in an attempt to find love.

Now, a guide to the ideal online dating profile has been designed to help on the busiest day of the year for the United Kingdom's dating industry.

A study of more than 4,000 online daters has revealed the attributes that dating site users are most attracted to, with different results for men and women.

Findings include how profiles with full-body photos will see a person receive three times more messages, while women who take photos inside get 60% more messages, while men get 10% more if their pictures show them outside. The style of the photo is important too, as men posting selfies will suffer by receiving 8% fewer messages. But women will get 4% more.

While a pet might be precious to its owner, posing with animals reduces a user's popularity by half. Having best friends is not seen as attractive either, as posing with them can reduce popularity by 42%.

Research by Zoosk also shows that when men were honest about being divorcees or separated they saw a 52% boost in messages, with profiles including the words "son" or "daughter" giving a 7% boost.

However, when women used the same words to speak about their children, their popularity was damaged by the same percentage it helped men.

The study also showed that less is more, as profiles with 100 to 200 word descriptions of the person received 10% more messages when compared to long-winded posts.

In fact, it seems quality is more important than quantity, with mentions of reading and exercise garnering 21% more messages for men and women, while being musical achieved a 15% spike.

HP cutting 5,000 more jobs


HP cutting 5,000 more jobs
A not so happy new year is in store for employees of HP as the firm has revealed that it needs to eliminate an additional 15% of its workforce before October 2014.
In its 10k filing with the SEC (US Securities and Exchange Commission), the company put it down to continued market and business pressures. The latest round of cuts comes only a few weeks after the company announced it would be cutting 1100 jobs in the UK as part of a 'restructuring' plan.
Ian Tonks, Unite national officer, said: "For the last five years HP has been addicted to a culture of job cuts in the UK to such an extent that its highly skilled workforce has little faith in the way the company is being managed and will be going forward."

Redundancy = Reinvention?

HP is attempting to remake itself as a cloud service provider while still relying on revenue from PCs and servers, which are two sectors in which its interests are under pressure.
HP has seen a decline in both notebook PC and desktop PC sales. Revenue from notebooks declined 7.8 per cent while desktop revenue fell 2.9 per cent in 2013. Its consumer business has struggled due to price pressure from budget PC suppliers and the BYOD (Bring Your Own Desktop) trend in businesses and companies.
CEO Meg Whitman, who took over the company in 2011, has repeatedly mentioned that HP is in a long-term turnaround since announcing the restructure in 2012. With its multiple forays into various markets, including phablets and mobile, though, HP seems to be grasping for portfolio profitability.
In a research note based on the company's fourth quarter results, Sanford Bernstein Senior Analyst Toni Sacconaghi said that HP continued to "struggle with improving its margins and share together, despite substantial cost cuts — particularly in its enterprise business." Cutting jobs could lose the company technical expertise it would be hard fought to regain.