March 19, 2009 8:46 PM
- Text
Media's Future: Go Mobile, Young Person!
(MoneyWatch)
Whenever I can tear myself away from my grisly daily duty of witnessing the end of media as we knew it, one image of our common future presents itself with exquisite clarity -- and that is, of course, that we're all going mobile.
Doh!
Of course, only in America could we even be having this conversation. In Europe, Japan, India, China, and most of the underdeveloped world, mobile devices have long been the digital tool of choice.
Here, we have had to first go through the desktop and laptop phases of the cycle, discovering the joys of email, web surfing, search, social bookmarking, blogging, social networking, twittering, and cloud computing -- more or less in that order -- while sitting on our derrieres, before we could reach that next moment in our cognitive development to grasp the obvious.
Some relevant facts to consider:
Whenever I can tear myself away from my grisly daily duty of witnessing the end of media as we knew it, one image of our common future presents itself with exquisite clarity -- and that is, of course, that we're all going mobile.
Doh!
Of course, only in America could we even be having this conversation. In Europe, Japan, India, China, and most of the underdeveloped world, mobile devices have long been the digital tool of choice.
Here, we have had to first go through the desktop and laptop phases of the cycle, discovering the joys of email, web surfing, search, social bookmarking, blogging, social networking, twittering, and cloud computing -- more or less in that order -- while sitting on our derrieres, before we could reach that next moment in our cognitive development to grasp the obvious.
Some relevant facts to consider:
- ComScore reports that the number of people in the U.S. who used their mobile devices to view news and information on the Internet more than doubled from January 2008 to January 2009, to 63.2 million Americans. Probably more importantly, the number of news addicts (those accessing daily) rose to 22.4 million in the first month of this year -- and that is certainly a significant media market, by any standard.
- Thanks to geo-coding and other technologies embedded in "smart phones," advertisers can now track user behaviors and locations in ways that enable highly targeted ads just at the moment users most need them-- such as advertising the location of nearby restaurants at lunchtime.
- Then, there is the fascinating phenomenon of the "cell-phone-only household," where land lines no longer roam. Did you realize these compose roughly one in six U.S. households now? For that 18-29-year-old demographic, (you know, the group everyone in media lusts after), the figure of households where land lines no longer are relevant is above 40%!
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Insurers respond cautiously to contraceptive plan
- Judge: Legally, breastfeeding not related to pregnancy
- Budget deficit drops to $27 billion in January
- Why the Powerball Jackpot is part of my investment strategy
- Is the new VW Beetle diesel worth the money?
- Consumer sentiment highlights risks to recovery
- Valentine blues? 10 best cities to be single
- December trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion
- Alcatel-Lucent returns to profit in 2011
- 6 things never to say in a performance review
- $26B mortgage deal: Who gets the money?
- Friendly's CEO steps down
- Quarterly loss hits $3.3B at Postal Service
- Greeks rail against cuts as EU demands more
- 6 things you should never share on Facebook
- Make moves now to increase financial aid
- Valentine's Day: 9 places to save
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- HBO defends TV series after 2 horse deaths
- Republic Bancorp founder Bernard Trager dies at 83
- APNewsBreak: Susan Powell case called 'murder'
- Greek premier: Default would lead to "chaos"
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
on CBS News






