Archive for the 'Technology' Category

How the iPad Is Transforming Retail

Apple’s iPad, which launched the modern tablet computer market, is transforming shopping behavior. The iPad’s portability, tactile screen and vivid graphics foster a casual and exploratory shopping experience that leads to product discovery, impulse buying and shared purchasing. A recent survey found that 41% of consumers who planned or were considering buying an iPad cited shopping as a primary reason for their interest. Early iPad buyers tend to be technology savvy, higher-income consumers and business travelers.

Retailers, eager to connect with this growing and potentially lucrative demographic, are taking different paths to creating customer value by developing iPad apps that accommodate this new shopping behavior. Some apps stir brand excitement and aid product awareness, while others deliver utility by showing how to use a product after its purchase.

The iPad’s most dramatic impact for retailers, though, might be its use in stores. Merchants are beginning to equip sales associates with iPads to aid customers with in-store purchasing decisions. Deloitte forecasts that in 2011, 25% of all tablets will be bought for business, and retailers will lead all industries in their adoption. But before tablets become commonplace at retail, several hurdles must be overcome.

 

One in Three Online Consumers to Use a Tablet by 2014

90 million Americans will use a tablet device in 2014

Tablet devices, in their current incarnation, have only been available for a couple years, but the iPad has propelled them to rapid increases in ownership and usage. eMarketer estimates that by the end of 2011, 33.7 million Americans will use a tablet device at least monthly—a rise of 158.6% over last year, the year the iPad was released.

Growth will slow to double digits beginning in 2012, but the number of users will rise to nearly 90 million, or 35.6% of all internet users, by 2014.

US Tablet Users and Penetration, 2010-2014

eMarketer’s previous tablet-related forecasts have focused on unit sales and the total installed base of devices. These current estimates deal instead with usage, and account for device sharing. eMarketer believes that as tablet adoption continues, less growth will come from sharing and more from replacing older devices with new ones. Eventually, tablets may become more like smartphones, which typically have a single user and less sharing.

The iPad, which has clearly led the tablet market since 2010, will continue to do so throughout the forecast period, though its share will be slowly chipped away by competititors. The number of US iPad users will more than double between this year and 2014, from 28 million to 60.8 million. By 2014 iPad users will still account for 68% of the overall US tablet audience.

US iPad Users and Penetration, 2010-2014

The tablet audience is changing, though. Women currently account for slightly less than half of tablet users, but the disparity in tablet usage between sexes will continue to shrink. eMarketer estimates that this year, 31.5% of tablet users are ages 18 to 34, while 55.5% are 35 or older. By 2014, 18- to 34-year-olds will acount for 34.8% of tablet users, while those ages 35 and up will comprise 49.3% of the total. Usage of tablets wil also increase faster among whites than those of other races and ethnicities, growing from 60.6% of total users this year to 65.8% by 2014.

eMarketer bases its forecast of tablet and iPad users on a meta-analysis of survey data and other research on device penetration.

 

Why Your Identity Is Worth $5,000 [INFOGRAPHIC]

Your identity is worth almost $5,000 to a criminal. An estimated 9 million Americans’ identities are stolen each year. And a whopping 43% of theft victims know the criminals who steal their information.

That’s according to this ZoneAlarm infographic, which explains common ways identities are stolen including just how much your identity is actually worth and tips for keeping your information safe.

Identity theft costs each individual victim approximately $4,841. That’s the equivalent of roughly 210 hours of work (at the average national hourly wage). It takes 33 hours on average to solve an identity theft case.

Overall, identity theft cost people a total of $37 million in 2010. While high, that number is actually down from $56 million in 2009. Despite the lower total, individuals paid 63% more ($631) in 2010, up from $387 in 2009.

 

SEE ALSO: 25 Worst Passwords of 2011 [STUDY]

 

Identity theft doesn’t just happen online, either. The ways your information is stolen ranges from snail mail to computer hacks to dumpster dives.

ZoneAlarm also lists steps to take if your identity is stolen. The main takeaway, however, is to be proactive and track your accounts; only 45% of theft cases are discovered by consumers.

Do you know any great tips for keeping your identity safe? Let us know in the comments.

 

 

The Challenge of Creating Web-Based Identity Standards

John Fontana is the identity evangelist for Ping Identity and editor of the PingTalk Blog. Prior to joining Ping, he spent 11 years as a senior editor at Network World.

GoogleFacebookYahoo and others all want to be your identity platform on the web. But while it’s certainly convenient to have one credential for multiple websites, many would argue these services are only secure enough to access your grandmother’s online recipe book.

Growing numbers of technologists, IT executives, organizations and governments believe an identity authentication model must establish set standards.

But can any set of standards answer the tough security challenges, and to what degree? Is it safe to check your social security account on a credential issued by Google? To access health records using your Facebook ID?

Not today. And tomorrow is not likely either.

 

SEE ALSO: Who Owns Your Identity on the Social Web?

 

 

 

However, OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.0 (open authentication) are pointing to some of the best and most promising standards of today. OAuth is the foundation for OpenID Connect (the basis for consumer ID) and for User Managed Access (UMA), a model that lets users control their personal data. Companies such as Bechtel, Chevron, Cisco, GE, M&T Bank, Salesforce.com, and others are already enjoying early success. OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.0 offer a place where consumer and corporate IDs can co-mingle in a secure cloud, protected by acceptable levels of security.

While it’s too early to tell if OpenID and OAuth will succeed, so far, they appear able to validate a user’s identity — perhaps even identities created by search engines and social sites.


“Street Identity” and Identity Attribute Data


Furthermore, big names are supporting the standards push. Google, Verizon, data exchange service ID/Webdata, and trust framework provider Open Identity Exchange (OIX) proposed a service called Street Identity at a conference last week. Street Identity is designed to strengthen authentication on the web. Loosely-coupled “providers” contribute user data called attributes, such as street address, age and/or mobile phone number that can be used to more accurately validate a user’s identity.

“Google’s [efforts] recognize what is happening now, which is identities are being deconstructed into attributes,” says Don Thibeau, chairman of OIX.

Ironically, Google and other companies with massive user data repositories don’t have enough validated pieces of user information to strengthen authentication. Google would need to partner with an attribute provider that would incorporate that information into the authentication process — with user consent, of course. The service would include a revenue model for businesses and organizations that agree to participate.

Google’s idea doesn’t replace the current identity standards effort. Rather, Street Identity is building on OpenID Connect and OAuth. It incorporates UMA for user control and features the first implementation of OpenID Connect’s spec for attribute aggregation and distribution, which was largely championed by Microsoft and its internal identity guru, Mike Jones.

Google and its partners believe that by aggregating a user’s data from various trusted sources, Street Identity can solve three problems: First, the service would connect to real-world identities, which OpenID does not do. It would provide a financial incentive for mobile operators that collect fees for providing data. Finally, it allows the government to steer clear of the electronic ID business by accessing needed data via attribute providers.

The prospect sounds promising, but so did pure PKI before its implementers began telling war stories. It seems, however, that Google continues to work toward a user authentication standard. The caveat is that standardization still has a lot more work ahead.

 

How to Pick a Server for Your App

The Mobile App Trends Series is sponsored by Sourcebits, a leading product developer for mobile platforms. Sourcebits offers design and development services for iOS, Android, Mobile and Web platforms. Follow Sourcebits on Twitter for recent news and updates.

For mobile app developers, building an app rarely takes place in a vacuum, as most users expect their apps to interface and work with various Internet services.

Building a mobile app increasingly means building an app that can interface with its own server or set of network services.

For mobile app developers, picking and choosing a server or cloud solution for things like storage, push notifications, user information and analytics can be a struggle.

Fortunately, a new wave of companies and services are stepping in to help developers make the best choices.


Yay Cloud


 

 

 

 

With AWS, Amazon has really led the way toward making cloud services and distributed computing and storage solutions affordable and easily accessible.

Thousands upon thousands of application developers — mobile, web and desktop — use Amazon for storage, to run processes and to store or query data.

Amazon and its competitors have APIs and toolkits designed to make integrating their services with an existing app backend a snap.

AWS SDK — Amazon offers an AWS SDK for Android and an AWS SDK for iOS. These SDKs offer libraries, code samples and documentation to help app developers leverage Amazon’s AWS services, including EC2, S3 and Amazon SimpleDB within their own apps.

Windows Azure — Microsoft is pushing its Windows Azure cloud as mobile-dev friendly. The company has released official SDKs and APIs for iOSAndroid and Windows Phone.

Google offers Android developers the ability to link their apps to Google App Engine, using the Google Plugin for Eclipse.


Cloud Backend Solutions


 

 

 

 

In addition to self-selecting cloud services from various providers, a number of startup platforms offer easy access to a variety of cloud services and backends, but without a lot of overhead hassle.

This space is often called Backend as a Service [BaaS] or Platform as a Service [PaaS] and it is heating up fast.

Most of these companies will work directly with the major cloud providers, like Amazon, RackSpace and Windows Azure, but will abstract the process so the developer doesn’t need to mess with a lot of settings, accounts or configurations.

Some of the players in this space include:

Parse — Parse recently closed its Series A funding round and is used by Band of the Day, Hipmunk and Yobongo. It works with iOS and Android and can connect with Heroku. You can also use Parse in cross-platform apps like Appcelerator and Sencha.

StackMob — StackMob is currently in private beta and has an SDK for iOS, Android, Java and custom server side code. Like Parse, StackMob can integrate with Heroku. It also offers server-side integration with Facebook and Twitter.

Kinvey — Kinvey was one of the earliest players in the space and it dubs its solution, Backend as a Service. Kinvey uses AWS, RackSpace Cloud and Windows Azure to offer up its backend tools, along with its own APIs that developers can drop into their own apps.

CloudMine — Cloudmine supports Ruby, Python, PHP and Java.

Buddy Platform — Buddy Platform is kind of a hybrid between developer platforms like Appcelerator and backend platforms. It has APIs for access to features like user management, geo-location data, photos and album information and user messaging.


7 Tips for Boo-tiful Web Design [INFOGRAPHIC]

Listen up, ghouls and boos, we’ve written a lot about web design here at Mashable, but on one day a year, it’s appropriate to call on some more, um, spirited individuals to lay down the laws of basic and proper web design.

We hope you know by now not to use Comic Sans. And while everyone loves an animated GIF, they’re only funny or entertaining when they’re … funny or entertaining. And that blinking text? Get rid of it, unless you’d like to be liable for a few seizures.

Below, you’ll learn from Frankenstein font snobs, mouthy mummies, impatient pumpkins and spiders on the web to help you make your website more of a treat than a scare to browse.

 

 

Inbound Marketing vs. Outbound Marketing

Back in the old days when the Internet has not been developed, we learned about the ads through fliers, ads from the newspapers or magazine – this is what we called ‘outbound marketing’. Nowadays, people has been seen an ads in different way —  for example, we are no longer rely on billboards, TV ads or newspapers  — because the web has empowered us to more methods for  finding, buying and researching brands and products on the web.

On the other hands, The new marketing communication — which is called ‘inbound marketing‘ — has become so popular nowadays. inbound marketing has given a such a great opportunity for poeple to have a two-way dialogue, much of which is facilitated by social media. In addition to that, inbound marketing is the winner compared to outbound marketing because the cost is very less.  Click here to read more

inbound-marketing-small.jpg (300×419)

 

25+ Awesome Illustrator Tutorials of 2011

Adobe Illustrator is a designer’s delight for its targeted approach towards both artist and graphic designers. The artists are always found ready to share thier experiences with the designers’community and we often find tutorials written by them about the use of new techniques and tricks of the software. At this platform we are presenting a whole lot of 25+ best Illustrator tutorials emerged during the current year 2011. The list is never to miss!

1. Gradient Mesh Tool In Illustrator

Gradient Mesh Tool In Illustrator Tutorial

2. Creating a Burning, Vector Match Using Gradient Meshes in Illustrator

Tutorial Vector Match Using Gradient Meshes

3.Create Vector Denim Texture Using Adobe Illustrator

Vector Denim Texture Using Adobe Illustrator

4. Create a Chalkboard Type Treatment

Chalkboard Type Treatment Tutorial

5. Create Proper Gears Using the Dynamic Shapes Tool

Create Gears Using the Dynamic Shapes Tutorial

6. FAUX 3D FINISHES IN ILLUSTRATOR

FAUX 3D FINISH illustrator

7. Master Composition in Vector Art

Master Composition in Vector Art

8. Woodcut effect for type Art

Woodcut effect for type Art in Illustrator

9. Create Angry Birds Characters In Adobe Illustrator

Create Angry Birds Characters In Adobe Illustrator. (Red Bird)

10. Rusty Metal Text Effect

Rusty Metal Text Effect

11. Splash of Colorful Paint Using Adobe Illustrator

Splash Colorful Paint Adobe Illustrator

12. How to Make a Golden Compass in Illustrator

Golden Compass in Illustrator

13. Create a Shiny Shield with Illustrator

Shinny Shield how to Illustrator

14. Create a Colorful Logo Style Icon in Illustrator

Colorful logo icon in Illustrator

15. Draw an Analog Stopwatch with Illustrator

Analog Stopwatch

16. Vector Snake Using Adobe Illustrator CS5 and Mesh Tormentor

Vector Snake Tutorial

17. Origami Style Typography in Illustrator

Origami Text Effects

18. Create a Sparkly Text Effect

Glowing Text Effect in illustrator

19. Create scalable vector halftones in Illustrator

Scalable Vector Halftones

20. Folded Paper Text Effect in Illustrator

Folded Paper Text Effect Adobe Illustrator

21. Magic Book Using Adobe Illustrator

Magic Book light Using Adobe Illustrator

22. Cocktail Glass in Adobe Illustrator

Cocktail Glass

23. Create a Fun Typography Poster in Illustrator

Fun Typography Poster

24. Create a Polished Raised Type Treatment

Polished Raised Type Treatment

25. Create Advertising Billboard

Vector Tutorial Advertising Billboard

GameStop CEO talks iOS devices…

The videogame retailer has started accepting trade-ins of used Apple products — and that may mean a bigger change for their business.

By Daniel Roberts

FORTUNE — The news that GameStop stores are buying used Apple devices alongside traditional consoles and video games hit the Web this week and went viral almost immediately. Many bloggers began stating outright that the chain will also sell new Apple devices, such as the iPod and iPad, but the company has not confirmed this.

Why the fuss over what seems a benign change to a game retailer’s inventory? It may be the endless appetite for Apple (AAPL) news, but GameStop (GME) CEO Paul Raines told Fortune he sees the move helping evolve the company’s business. “We’re selling refurbished iPod Touches like crazy,” he said. “What everyone wants to know now is whether we will become a distributor of Apple products, but that’s something we don’t want to answer yet.”

The retailer has made a business out of taking in used game systems like Microsoft’s (MSFT) Xbox 360 and Sony’s (SNE) Playstation 3, refurbishing them and selling them back to consumers at a discount. GameStop does the same with video game software designed for consoles by independent publishers like Activision Blizzard (ATVI) and Electronic Arts (ERTS) as well. It has created a lucrative secondary market for all manner of digital products, boosting its coffers and driving traffic to its stores, even as it has sometimes complicated relationships with manufacturers and software publishers. Now it hopes to do the same with Apple devices, estimating that U.S. consumers have some $7 billion worth of them in their homes.

The Grapevine, Texas-based retailer has been looking for ways to boost its business. Its stock is hovering between $22 and $24, a fall from a high of $28.21 in late-May, its two-year peak. Shares have seen a slight spike in the last week on the Apple news, but the company failed to makes its numbers for the second quarter. During the second quarter, GameStop sales declined 3.1% to $1.74 billion, where estimates had been $1.83 billion. Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter notes that the industry at large is down, though. “The stock struggles mostly because there’s a widely held investor perception that packaged products are going away, and that’s hard to overcome. But I don’t think they’re going away completely for a long time.”

This latest development with Apple devices may prove beneficial. Pachter says the GameStop move is “a really smart business. I don’t know that it even matters if [they] make any money from this, as much as they become a new destination for a whole bunch of households looking to sell their old iPods.” Pachter is skeptical, however, of whether or not GameStop will soon sell new iPods, iPads and iPhones. “Apple doesn’t have any need to distribute new devices through GameStop. I don’t think it would even be a particularly high-margin business for GameStop.” Instead, the likelihood is that trade-ins of Apple devices would boost purchases of used games at the retailer.

GameStop first began accepting Apple devices in its Dallas-Fort Worth stores last April as a test, but will go national on Monday, September 12. Members of the company’s PowerUp Rewards program received early notification via an email last week. “Did you know that GameStop now buys your old iPod, iPhone and iPad devices?” it asked. “Trade them in at GameStop for in-store credit… Plus, you’ll score PowerUp Rewards points on every item traded.”

Raines said the idea appealed to him as one more way to strengthen its already large buy-sell-trade business, through which the company gave customers $1 billion in trade-in value last year. “If you think about GameStop, our vertical strategy is gaming. What we’ve also learned is that our stores are exceedingly good at buy-sell-trade, so a horizontal strategy is emerging around that,” he said. Launching the program now, he noted, will also allow the company to get ahead of the upgrade cycle spurred by a new iPhone model, widely expected this fall.

Aside from Apple devices, a spokesperson did say that the company “will have a curated offering of tablets by holiday.” Whether that offering will include iPads remains uncertain. Raines suggested the possibility of a GameStop-specific tablet that comes pre-loaded with games selected by the retailer. “What’s happening in tablets is there’s an excess of production, and lack of distribution,” said Raines. “We believe that leaves big potential for gaming-specific tablets. You have your whole gaming library on there, it becomes very appealing.” GameStop bought the casual gaming site Kongregate in late July 2010, another strategic move aimed at cornering the digital market. The purchase price was not disclosed.

The Apple-related news comes at a time when the company is making an effort to have a net of zero new store openings this year, as the industry moves toward DLC (downloadable content) gaming. Rob Lloyd, GameStop’s CFO, explained that although the company still does the bulk of its business from in-store purchases, “The challenge we gave our real estate team this year was, get as good at closing stores as you are at opening them.”

Perhaps, if the welcoming of used Apple devices proves a big success, they’ll want to open some new stores after all.

 

I-phone 5 Rumors to launch October 7

The iPhone 5 could go on sale on Friday, October 7, with preorders to start on September 30, according to the latest rumors in the ongoing saga of the hotly anticipated next edition of Apple’s smartphone

Citing intel from its own sources, 9To5Mac said yesterday that Apple had been eyeing either October 7 or October 14 as potential iPhone 5 launch dates. But with preproduction apparently running smoothly, the site says, Apple has opted for the earlier date.

Apple will reportedly offer the phone for preorder a week before it hits store shelves, looking at either September 29 or 30, though 9To5Mac’s sources pin the 30th as the most likely date. Assuming the preorder date is accurate, at least for now, that also means Apple would have to hold its iPhone 5 unveiling sometime in September. Apple typically shows off new iPhones and iPads at high-visibility media gatherings some days or weeks ahead of the devices going on sale.

The October 7 date has also been floated by TiPb. However, the tech news site suggests taking the reports with a grain of salt since even if the date is on the money at this point, Apple’s plans are fluid. Even 9To5Mac admits that “the date could and likely will change again.”

But October itself has been strongly suggested as the launch month for the iPhone 5 by All Things D’s Kara Swisher, pointing to information from her own sources.

TiPb isn’t quite sure the new phone will be an iPhone 5. The site said it keeps hearing that the device will be an iPhone 4S with some improvements but the same design as the existing phone, a rumor that’s been around for awhile.

Other reports say that Apple will launch two phones–the new and improved iPhone 5 and a more budget-friendly iPhone 4S, one that may even tap into the company’s iCloud service to provide cloud-based storage. TiPb says that the debut of two new phones from Apple could explain the conflicting rumors that it’s heard.

And yet other reports have put a potential iPhone launch date as early as September 7.

Adding further tidbits to the iPhone 5 saga, Macpost has published images purporting to be of replacement parts for the new phone. Replacement parts such as a camera lens and an audio jack have recently popped up online among different Chinese resellers, according to the site, and show some subtle differences from parts for the iPhone 4.

Finally, global carrier Telefonica will reportedly start cutting back on its stock of the iPhone 4 through September 12. Revealing the news, Engadget cited a source who said that such a move “will of course prepare us for the launch of a new smartphone.” The source didn’t offer up a specific date when the new phone will debut, though Engadget said it’s heard that the launch will occur in October.