Sprint Drops Price of Family Locator Service
Thursday, October 30th, 2008Starting October 31, Sprint customers can sign up for the GPS-powered Family Locator service for $5 per line per month. The service previously cost $10 per month.
Starting October 31, Sprint customers can sign up for the GPS-powered Family Locator service for $5 per line per month. The service previously cost $10 per month.
AT&T if offering free access to its network of Wi-Fi hot spots to owners of the iPhone and certain BlackBerry devices. AT&T has more than 17,000 hot spots at Starbucks, Barnes & Noble, and thousands of other locations. iPhone ...
Today MasterCard offered a set of tools to its financial institution partners that allows them to offer customized mobile banking products. MasterCard Over-the-Air Provisioning Service lets credit card issuers perform over-the-air personalization of their cardholders' mobile devices. The service ...
“Given the traumatic news ricocheting around the financial markets, one would almost expect mobile handset markets to have nosedived”, says ABI Research Asia-Pacific vice-president Jake Saunders. “However 3Q-2008 still delivered 8.2% year-on-year growth.” 4Q-2008 will be a vital quarter for handset vendors and mobile operators. Expect to see aggressive marketing and promotional activities from operators and vendors alike as they strive to lure end-users to upgrade their handsets before the year’s end.

While mobile phones can be viewed in part as fashion accessories, they also impart other value propositions that are highly valued by end-users. Substantial improvements in key functional areas (e.g. memory, battery life, data speed, processor speed) are being noticed by end-users. Still, many are opting to remain on open contracts rather than upgrade their handsets and lock themselves into down payments for new phones and potentially expensive monthly commitments.
ABI Research has revised its expectations for 4Q-2008 down to 7.5% growth from 10.4%. Year-on-year annual growth is therefore likely to be between 10.5% and 11%, to close out the year at around 1.27 billion.
“There are winners and losers in 3Q-2008″, notes research director Kevin Burden. “Nokia stumbled slightly to see its market-share shrink to 37.7%. Motorola and LG were also net losers (total market-share: 8.1% and 7.4%) respectively. Winners include Samsung (16.6%), Apple (2.2%), and RIM (2.0%). Smartphones are truly capturing the imagination of the buying public which is benefitting vendors with highly desirable smartphones.”
Nokia may well claw back some of its lost market-share as it now has stronger products in the smartphone category. Nokia would have fared worse were it not for its strong line up in the mid-tier and low-tier handset segments, which is where LG and Motorola felt the impact. Despite some barraging in the media, SonyEricsson managed to keep market-share constant at 8.2%.
MasterCard today announced the launch of the MasterCard Over-the-Air Provisioning Service, enables issuers to perform over-the-air personalization of their cardholders’ mobile devices in an easy, one-step process. The service allows issuers to implement PayPass on mobile programs in a reduced timeframe with minimal development and implementation effort.

How the MasterCard Over-the-Air Provisioning Service Works
In order for accountholders to use their mobile phones to make purchases, they need to have a mobile phone equipped with Near Field Communications (NFC) capabilities and a mobile data subscription. First the PayPass application is securely transferred onto a secure area of the consumer’s mobile phone via the mobile network. Next the PayPass application is personalized with the consumers’ individual payment account details. The service will be made available to consumers through their issuing banks’ websites.