DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7787

IC Insights Estimates New Record Cellphone Shipment in 2011 – 1.5 Billion Units And Annual Growth of 9%

0

According to IC Insights, about 1.5 billion cellphones will be shipped in 2011. This will be 9% annual growth rate of the 2010 number which was 1.4 billion.  They also noted that this will be a record number for the industry. As shown in the figure, the number has consistently gone up year over year except in 2009 where it could be attributed to post-recession. By 2014, the number will be 1.79 billion which will represent 26% of the total figure in 2010.


What are the drivers?

IC Insights explains that the surging shipments of smartphones, and their associated high IC content, are forecast to have a huge impact on the IC market through the forecast period.

 

Smartphones accounted for about 25% of total cellphone shipments in 1Q11 compared to 16% in the same quarter a year earlier.  In 2011, total smartphone shipments are forecast to grow 60% to 440 million units, after increasing 56% to 275 million in 2010! Almost half of all cellphone handsets shipped in 2014 (47%) are expected to be some type of smartphone, up from 19% in 2010.

 

It is easy to understand why mobile based business is a new model  because very soon, most businesses will move to the mobile ecosystem.

G-Cameroon Is Tomorrow @Douala

0

From Google Africa.

 

Like Google, Nigerians showed excitement about the vast array of opportunities that the Internet provides, and are eager to participate more fully in the global technological revolution. Google continues on the path to building local capacity to improve the web. Next stop? Cameroon! On June 15-16th, G-Cameroon lands in Douala. We look forward to share our passion with Cameroon and watch as West Africans take up the challenge of changing the face of the web for Africa and beyond.

 

Hope the Cameroonians will enjoy this event as other African nations did. Google on the move in Africa.


Google continues its efforts to help revamp the capacity building of the next generation Africans. We challenge other companies to invest the time and resources which the g-Africa has demonstrated in these programs which they have run across the continent. It is very important to emphasis that though they are doing this to encourage the local talents to choose their platforms over their competitors, the greatest benefits go to the participants.

 

With Google quality and focus, we are certain that Cameroonian youth will embrace this opportunity and come out in style and enjoy the privilege of “socializing” with the best team in the continent. We think that Google is demonstrating genuine capacity to help revamp Africa’s technical knowledge. For that Tekedia commends them.

BuzzCity Identifies Four Key Factors That Are Driving Mobile Growth In Africa

0

Enjoy this nice piece from Buzzcity, an international advertising network, which we received via email. They noted that four key factors that are driving the diffusion and penetration of mobile usage across the globe and implicitly Africa: affordable phones, the design, data cost and finally the content. Tekedia will be examining a very interesting report/blog from the same company tomorrow.

 

 

There are several key factors that make for the perfect mobile storm, in terms of determining the speed with which mobile phone usage grows in any particular country, says Michael de Souza, VP of Media at international advertising network BuzzCity. “And it has nothing to do with consumers and their perceived level of sophistication.”

 

De Souza says that the entry of sub-$100 smart phones would have a major impact on South African mobile phone usage. “The bottom line is that the less-sophisticated user becomes ‘smart’ with a smart phone, very quickly. They learn to use the phone and its applications very quickly.”

 

So what else which drives an increase in the use of mobiles and mobile content in any society? De Souza says the smarter newer phones generally have bigger screens and this also drives increased mobile usage.  Thirdly there is the cost of data. As this drops so the usage increases. Another driver is the advent of new technology, like 4G and Wi-Max.  Finally when there is a booming and increasing array of content and services the mobile phone.

 

“When you have all of these elements in place the mobile phone and its strengths come to the fore, and businesses who have accepted this and adapted their business models and marketing strategies to fully utilize these strengths, will succeed.

 

“Businesses that pay lip-service to the mobile phone as a key marketing channel do so at their own peril.”

 

BuzzCity is a mobile media company offering brand owners and agencies access to a global advertising network on the mobile internet. The network is made up of publishers from across the world and BuzzCity’s own mobile media properties. As a leading international player, BuzzCity has developed in-depth knowledge of the mobile consumer and provides marketers with clear opportunities to reach this audience via its advertising and publisher programmes.

 

photo credit/BuzzCity

ShopAfrica53 is Empowering SMEs in Ghana By Providing International Gateway

0

ShopAfrica53 advertises goods and services from across Ghana online. It helps to connect small companies to the wider markets across all the African region and beyond. This helps to provide opportunities for the smaller companies.

ShopAfrica53 is a kind of web-mall – advertising goods and services from a range of small businesses in Ghana. This means the tiniest and most remote operator now has access to an international market. The website also handles logistics like collection and delivery of goods, and takes payment on behalf of the vendors.

The technology being used by ShopAfrica53 can be a lifeline for small entrepreneurs ranging from tailors to artists.

The organization operates a series of virtual web malls, one for each African country. It receives payment via a BSL owned proprietary, Africa friendly payment processing system.

This payment system works either via:

a. African Liberty Credits
b. African Liberty Scratch Cards

Malls representing all the other African countries will be activated over the coming months.

CMOS Image Sensors Makes A Comback – Grew 17% in 2010

0

IC Insights reports that CMOS imagers are regaining their lost momentum in  a new report. Most of the cameras and camcorders in use today are done with CMOS imagers. CMOS offers lower static power dissipation making it possible for the battery to last longer. It is also efficiently mass produced in the foundry and that is necessary for the mass market.

 

Less than five years ago, CMOS image sensors were one of the fastest growing segments in semiconductors, but since the middle of the last decade, this optoelectronics category has struggled with price erosion resulting from increasing competition by suppliers, slowing growth rates in camera-phone applications, and the last recession. After dropping 16% in 2009, CMOS image sensor sales rebounded by just 17% in 2010 to $4.5 billion compared to the semiconductor industry’s much stronger growth of 32% last year. Beginning in 2011, however, CMOS image sensor sales are expected to gain new momentum and consistency in growth from new systems applications beyond camera phones and stand-alone digital still cameras, concludes IC Insights’ new 2011

 

An image sensor is a device that converts an optical image into an electronic signal. It is used mostly in digital cameras and other imaging devices. Early sensors were video camera tubes but a modern one is typically a charge-coupled device (CCD) or a complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) active pixel sensor.(wikipedia)