Motorola Ventures invests in Scanbuy, a mobile barcode firm

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Motorola Ventures, the strategic investment arm of Motorola, has made an unspecified investment in mobile barcode solutions provider Scanbuy. Besides Motorola, Masthead Venture Partners, Hudson Ventures and select private investors have also participated.

Consumers are enabled to scan two-dimensional barcodes with a standard camera phone to automatically display a specific mobile website featuring product reviews, price comparisons and coupon offers through the Scanbuy’s ScanLife application. Users can also view and share that information via social networking communities including Facebook and Twitter.

Android, BlackBerry OS, iPhone OS, Java and Symbian platforms are provided with ScanLife and operators and handset makers in North America, Latin America, Western Europe and Asia has deployed the solution.

1,500 more staffs cut by Ericsson

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Further 1,500 jobs will be cut and more combined services will be offered in 2010 by Ericsson in a bid to shake off the effects of a tough 2009. Due to the slashing of investment in network infrastructure by the carriers because of global recession, the net income of Ericsson plummeted 65% year-on-year to 4.1 billion kronor in 2009. Revenues for the year also fell 1% to 206.5 billion kronor.

Maximum decline came in Western Europe, central and eastern Europe and Middle East & Africa, and Latin America during the second half.

According to Hans Vestberg, Ericsson’s newly appointed president and CEO, the market will remain tough in 2010, but that the firm would look to stay competitive by offering more packages that combine the firm’s infrastructure, customer management and multimedia services.

Just 0.67 decline in the global sales of mobiles: Gartner

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: In the latest prediction for the mobile market, market research firm Gartner said that global sales of mobile devices are expected to remain flat at 121 crore units in 2009. Earlier, the firm said that the sale will
go down to 3.7 percent. Gartner also said handset sales will grow by 9 percent in 2010.

Strong sales in Western Europe and acceleration in the grey market during the third quarter of this year are attributed for the not so bad market condition. However, there is a decline of 0.67 percent from that in 2008.

According to Gartner Research Director Carolina Milanesi, although the grey market or ‘white label’ is not a new phenomenon and has been generated by Chinese device makers who do not have a licence to sell and manufacture devices without a valid international mobile equipment identity, today grey- market sales are no longer limited to China and among all this Nokia will be the biggest sufferer of this grey market.

14 percent of total mobile devices sales in 2009 will be represented by smartphones. Milanesi also feel that it is useless to expect more than 20 percent growth, as mature markets are saturated and most growth will come from emerging markets.

Samsung, LG face stalled mobile phone market growth

SINGAPORE/SEOUL: Wrestling with falling mobile phone sales and shrinking market shares, South Korea’s Samsung and LG yearn for the days when their high-tech, pricey phones were the talk of the town.

The South Korean makers face stalled volume growth whereas rivals Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc are cashing in on trends to go slim and stylish in advanced markets or cheap in emerging markets, such as India.
Analysts say Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and LG Electronics Inc should shift their focus to low-cost phones to catch up, or take the lead, in next-generation technology phones or mobile TV handsets.
“Nokia, Motorola and Sony Ericsson have experienced tremendous growth globally over the last few years – much of this can be attributed to the low-cost handset market, an area where LG and Samsung are not particularly strong,” said Bengt Nordstrom, an analyst with wireless consultancy inCode.
Another issue has been their inability to establish a strong brand, analysts said. Nokia has the scale and brand to control the market, Motorola has achieved cult-status with its blockbuster ultra-thin RAZR, and Sony Ericsson has focused on music and photography, leveraging the Sony Walkman and Cybershot brands to enhance its appeal to younger users. “Samsung and LG’s lack of differentiation is holding them back,” Nordstrom said.
Just two years ago, Samsung was poised to overtake Motorola’s number 2 spot, but its market share is now half the size of Motorola’s, with 26.3 million phones sold against the US rival’s 51.9 million in the April-June quarter.
One reason is the RAZR. Take Chua Chin Yang, a 27-year-old Singaporean freelance writer, who ditched his Samsung C200 handset this year. “I switched to Motorola because its handset designs look better and feel better, compared with Samsung’s, which are bulky and so uncool,” said Chua. “I love the RAZR because it’s so slim, easy to carry and the materials used to make the phone are also hardy.”
Nokia saw a 29 per cent boost to 78.4 million phones, but LG yielded its number 4 position to Sony Ericsson, selling 15.3 million phones against its rival’s 15.7 million.
LG also saw Motorola and Nokia eating into its business with key operators Verizon Communications Inc and Hutchison Telecommunications, leading to losses in its handset business for the second quarter in a row.
“The two megatrends in GSM over the last two years are ultra-thins and smart phones. Samsung has underperformed in both markets,” said Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston. “Samsung cannot afford to miss the next megatrend, whatever it may be.”
With a focus on advanced cellphones and a few low-cost models, Samsung and LG have also missed out on the boom in emerging markets.
“Both Samsung and LG have advanced in next-generation technologies, such as WCDMA, HSDPA, WiMax and multimedia, but these markets have not blossomed yet,” said Suran Seong, analyst with research firm Ovum. “The convergence trend where several technologies or functionalities are packed into a phone, which the Korean vendors have stressed, may not be what all users want,” she added.
LG also had a late entry into the GSM market – the dominant digital mobile standard. About 60-70 per cent of its revenues come from CDMA technology, which is facing shrinking demand. “Starting the GSM business late was one big mistake we made,” LG Electronics finance chief Y.S. Kwon told investors recently.
The world’s two 2G mobile standards are GSM and CDMA. GSM was advocated by governments of western Europe and by firms, including Ericsson and Nokia, while CDMA was backed by the US and companies like Qualcomm Inc.
“The core problem for LG is its limited GSM distribution network. It launches a cool device like the chocolate phone, but struggles to get them on operators’ shelves,” said Mawston. – Reuters

Source- http://www.btimes.com.my

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