April 18, 2012

Smartphone is the next wallets of the world

A Samsung phone, a Blackberry phone and an Apple iPhone 4. With smart phones or digital tablet as "portfolio" will be common within a decade, largely replaces cash and credit cards, according to a Pew Research survey released Tuesday.

With smart phones or digital tablet as "portfolio" will be common within a decade, largely replaces cash and credit cards, according to a Pew Research survey released Tuesday.

Sixty-five percent of the "interest groups and critics of technology" which responded to an opt-in survey by the Pew Research Center and Elon University imagining Internet Center agreed that it would be a handheld gadgets how to integrate salary in 2020.

"The date of 2020 can be a bit optimistic, but I'm sure that this is happening," was Google chief economist Hal Varian quoted in a response to the survey.

"What's in your wallet right now? ID, money and personal belongings," he continued. "This will easily fit on your mobile device and inevitable."

Google launched last year a "portfolio" of services that provide more advanced Android phones are used to "click and pay" for purchases in stores.

Many of those surveyed 1.021 people said that safety and comfort should be one of the factors that lead people to change the use of smart phones and tablets as well, in fact, credit card or cash.

Some of those who were optimistic about the future portfolio of smartphones expect the trend will be slowed by the fear of privacy, lack of infrastructure and resistance to credit card companies and other entities covered by the system today.

"The driver here is almost 100 percent if the industry decides that credit cards can make more money by changes in technology," the survey quoted Microsoft principal researcher Jonathan Grudin as saying.

Almost none of the respondents expect to cash or credit card to be eliminated, according to Pew.

"Because of concerns about technique, strength, current suppliers and nature in general, slow social change, it's a pretty consistent feeling among experts that mobile payments are on a spectrum, with a number of other economic opportunities," study co-author Aaron Smith, Pew Research.

"In fact, some expect that these services will be as fast as possible widespread in developing countries because of its lack of a banking sector owners and ingrained habits of consumption." Nokia Lumia 900 to more sales

Nokia attempts to challenge the dominance of Apple's iPhone and Google Android has failed to convince the telecom operators in Europe, depriving it of powerful allies in their struggle to regain top spot in the mobile market.

Four major telecom operators in Europe, where phones have been sold since before Christmas, told Reuters that the new Nokia smartphones Nokia Lumia 900 was not good enough to compete with Apple iPhone or Samsung phones Galaxy.

Nokia is now facing a fight for the important U.S. market, which has been the domain of age is reduced to 1 percent of the smartphone market. AT & T does not sell Nokia Lumia 900 for two weeks and it says at the beginning of the demand has been strong.

Skeptics say that among the operators and neon soft phones are expensive so it is an innovative product, citing a lack of marketing budget to go beyond phones and photos of the problems caused by the failure of the battery and software for the first models.

Nokia's big bet a year ago to put the Microsoft Windows Phone software in its smartphones are far from certain to pay, say dealers.

"No one comes into the store and ask for a Windows phone," says a manager who is responsible for mobile devices in the European operator who has sold 800 and 710 in December Lumia.

Nokia tries to catch up on previous smartphones failed and damaged their image in the top of the market.

"Nokia has given themselves a double challenge: to regain its credibility in terms of intelligent hardware and manage the operating system Microsoft Windows, which is in the market," said the executive.

He said that Microsoft software has worked very well with computers and can "do many fun things," but I knew to get customers. "If Nokia Lumia 900 with the same hardware comes with Android there and not Windows, it would be much easier to sell," he said.

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