"Europe_s Mobile Internet Opens Up"

Published: 20 December 1999 y., Monday
More than 219 million people, or one-third of the European population, will access Internet services using mobile phones by 2003, according to Forrester Research. Nearly 120 million Europeans already use mobile phones and they exchange more than 2 billion short message service (SMS) text messages each month. Ninety percent of ecommerce executives interviewed for the report, "Europe_s Mobile Internet Opens Up", plan to launch sites that will be accessible with mobile phones. These sites will offer news and personalised content and will allow consumers to buy and sell stocks, book holidays and bid at auctions using their mobile phones. As current site content can be easily rendered in wireless application protocol (WAP), the new services are expected to cost providers an average of only USD87,000 (EUR86,226) per year. This is equivalent to six percent of the current average budget for a European ecommerce site. Although Forrester estimates that a third of European mobile Internet providers (MIPs) will initially offer a closed, pay-per-use service to their customers, the pressures of a wildly competitive market will force MIPs to provide open access to all users by 2002. Forrester interviewed 50 European ecommerce executives and representatives of 25 mobile operators that service more than three quarters of European mobile phone users.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

NASA to merge media archives

Space officials want proposals for a NASA archiving system that would create a one-stop multimedia source for the public more »

Google Focuses Local Ad Targeting

Search giant Google will offer its advertisers the chance to more tightly target the geographical areas where their ads will be seen more »

'Linspiration' Hits Lindows

Lindows executives have rolled out a new moniker for its desktop Linux software and the name is...Linspire more »

Spam reaches new high in March

More than one million junk emails sent on one day alone more »

Internet nonprofit meets with U.N.

U.S. company controls domain names; security, governing discussed more »

ITT fashion spring “CeBIT 2004”

18th world’s largest information technologies’ and telecommunications’ exhibition “CeBIT 2004”, which takes place in Hanover (Germany) annually, has already ended. more »

Foreign fraud hits U.S. e-commerce firms hard

Top offending countries: Yugoslavia, Nigeria, Romania more »

'Buffalo Spammer' convicted

A man accused of using EarthLink Inc. e-mail accounts to release a flood of unsolicited commercial ("spam") e-mail on the Internet has been convicted on charges of identity theft and falsifying business records more »

Google Gets E-Mail

Search player Google is getting into the e-mail game more »

New eMail Tales in Microsoft's Minn. Case

Microsoft officials sought to dissuade Intel from investing in handwriting software startup GO Corporation in 1990, according to the latest round of e-mail evidence more »