Cameras change mobile behaviour

Cameraphones have changed the way mobile networking operates


20 April 2007 10:13 GMT / By Ryan Haynes

M:Metrics has found that the way people use their mobile phones for images and photos is in stark contrast to the market just a few years ago.

Graphic publishers have been hit so hard by the fashion of camera phones that more people are using their own images for wallpapers and graphics than downloading and paying for content.

M:Metrics research found that 20% of Europeans, and 14% of Americans now pay for data services and photo messaging services. Over 30% of users send photos to other phones, email addresses or blogs.

While multi-media messaging has not been as successful as operators might have hoped, increasing popularity of social networking sites such as FaceBook and Flickr is boosting the numbers of people sending photos.

To tackle the problem, mobile phone operators are starting to offer affordable flat-rate data rates, while handset manufacturers are increasingly embedding support for websites.

The company behind the research predict there will be an explosion to photos being shared over the next 3 years. Which would support our news yesterday on the failure of Web 2.0.
Full tags
Phones, Apps, Cameras

share print story pdf email story

Recommended articles

Recommended articles from around the web

Loading

Apps by platform

All the latest apps news and reviews

Best iPad 2 apps

We detail the best iPad 2 and iPad apps in the app store Which iPad app should you download?

Best new iPad apps

We detail the best iPad apps in the app store for your new Retina Display Which iPad app should you download?

Windows 8

First Look: Windows 8 Consumer Preview reviewed

The new iPad

The new iPad: Everything you need to know

Pocket-lint poll

Q. Does the Samsung Galaxy S III deliver what you hoped for?

Vote YES Vote NO

» LAST TIME
When asked Would you switch from iOS to Android? 54% said yes and 46% said no

Hot camera brands

All the latest camera news