
Social
This is where you will find all the pages tagged Social.
Data Shows Great Interest in Mobile Music and Social Networking Services on Cell Phones
Oxy Systems, Inc., a leading developer of mobile music and social networking services, today reported new consumer and subscriber data demonstrating a great desire among teens and young adults for mobile music and social networking services on their mobile handsets.Oxy Systems' new phling!® mobile music and social networking service is currently being offered as a free pilot service to all subscribers of Swisscom Mobile, Switzerland's largest mobile carrier. Subscriber usage and feedback from the first 30 days of this service offering reveals that the initial subscriber base collectively has hundreds of thousands of songs in their personal music collections stored on their PCs. The largest number of songs owned by a single user is approximately 18,000.
Blackberry causing family problems
God help me if I get this bad/irresponsible.
As hand-held email devices proliferate, they are having an unexpected impact on family dynamics: Parents and their children are swapping roles. Like a bunch of teenagers, some parents are routinely lying to their kids, sneaking around the house to covertly check their emails and disobeying house rules established to minimize compulsive typing. The refusal of parents to follow a few simple rules is pushing some children to the brink. They are fearful that parents will be distracted by emails while driving, concerned about Mom and Dad's shortening attention spans and exasperated by their parents' obsession with their gadgets. Bob Ledbetter III, a third-grader in Rome, Ga., says he tries to tell his father to put the BlackBerry down, but can't even get his attention. "Sometimes I think he's deaf," says the 9-year-old.
The phone of the future
And yet speculation about the future of phones persists, and no wonder. The telephone has changed beyond recognition since its invention in 1876, and is now both the most personal, most social and most rapidly evolving technological device. So to imagine the phone of the future is also to imagine the future of consumer technology, and its personal and social impact. What mobile phones will look like in a year or two is easy to guess: they will be slimmer and probably will let you watch television on the move. But what about ten or 15 years from now?Mobile phones have already changed social practices among their users, and seem likely to do so even more in future. The ability to superimpose images and sound upon reality means that future phones will “create layers on our world”, says Pierre de Vries of the Annenberg Centre for Communication at the University of Southern California. Users will always be connected, he says, but in concentric circles of conversations and interactions that range from people right next to them to those far away.
“When I try to make predictions, I don't look at what I see in the technical realm, I look at what I see in the social realm,” says Mr Norman. He has recently been investigating how children interact with each other and with technology. “They are never alone with their own thoughts,” he says. Instead, they listen to music while texting and talking with friends next to them. “We are learning that we never have to be away from people,” says Mr Norman.
