Weekly links

This is the last weekly links for the year, so the USiT team would like to wish you all a merry Christmas and a happy new year! Hopefully your 2010 will be as successful and eventful as we expect ours to be!

Market for mobile internet will be huge

Richard MacManus of ReadWriteWeb provides a great summary of a report released by Morgan Stanley that says the mobile internet market will be twice the size of desktop internet…

Perhaps the most remarkable statement in the report is that the Mobile Internet market will be “at least 2x size of Desktop Internet,” which Morgan Stanley bases on analysis comparing Internet users with mobile subscribers.

The report starts out by saying that Apple’s iPhone/iTouch/iTunes ecosystem “may prove to be the fastest ramping and most disruptive technology product / service launch the world has ever seen.” It goes on to state that “a handful of incumbents (like Apple, Google, Amazon.com and Skype) appear especially well positioned for mobile changes.”

This is a very interesting for the UX and media communities, since it means there will be many opportunities for mobile work in the future.
(forwarded by Sophie)

Digital magazine prototype

Bonnier have released a video showing off their concept for how digital magazines might look and work…

The concept aims to capture the essence of magazine reading, which people have been enjoying for decades: an engaging and unique reading experience in which high-quality writing and stunning imagery build up immersive stories.

If this is what magazines will be like in the future, it’s very exciting! The production and polish of the video itself is fascinating too; makes for a very convincing and understandable deliverable/marketing tool.
(forwarded by Angus)

You don’t have the power

Seth Godin talks about getting past the old school thinking that you can control users/customers

You don’t have the power. Maybe if every person who has ever published a book or is ever considering publishing a book got together and made a pact, then they’d have enough power to fight the market. But solo? Exhort all you want, it’s not going to do anything but make you hoarse.

Movie execs thought they had the power to fight TV. Record execs thought they had the power to fight iTunes. Magazine execs thought they had the power to fight the web. Newspaper execs thought they had the power to fight Craigslist.

This is why we must understand what our audience wants and work with that, instead of fabricating an “opportunity” in our own minds and trying—or should that be hoping?—to get people to come and use it.
(forwarded by Pat)

Twitter and the media (2009 wrap-up)

Ross Dawson picks his top blog posts for the year on the topic of Twitter and the media

  1. Twitter on ABC TV – the impact on politics, media and socializing
  2. How Twitter impacts media and journalism: Five Fundamental Factors
  3. Event review: Twitter’s Impact on Media & Journalism
  4. Twitter and the ever-faster moving news landscape
  5. Who will provide the credibility ratings for the journalists of the planet?
  6. Twitter’s impact on the news and media cycle

Some really great commentary on ‘new media’ meets ‘old media’.
(forwarded by Pat)

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