Samsung Introduces New Bada-Based Smartphones

Yesterday traditional hardware manufacturer Samsung announced its new proprietary Bada mobile operating system. Samsung is rolling out three new smartphone models that will run the Bada operating system. According to Reuters, the move is an indication of Samsung’s desire to expand its market share “in the low-end segment” of smartphones while expanding its lineup’s heavy focus on Google’s Android software.

The new smartphones are scheduled to be available right about the time Apple’s iPhone 5 is expected to be released. These devices include the Wave 3, with a 4-inch AMOLED screen and 5 MP camera. Samsung is also releasing lower-end, more the cost-effective Wave M and Wave Y. “The Wave M,” Reuters reports, “will have Samsung’s first instant messaging tool chatON installed and entry-level Wave Y with 3.2-inch display.”

Samsung is the world’s second largest smartphone manufacturer as of the second quarter of 2011 and if this move is any indication, we are likely to see this market only getting hotter and hotter over time. Will the Bada operating system have any effect on the mobile application market? Only time will tell.

2 Keys To A Great Mobile Application

The first thing to think about when you decide to engage a mobile application developer is that good usability is even more important for apps than for web sites and other desktop experiences. It is crucial you engage a usability expert for custom built mobile application development projects. While usability is certainly important for every product, it is crucial for mobile applications where users have very little commitment and often, several other options. Basically your mobile application has to be the easiest and friendliest to use to stand out in this situation.

Many studies confirm that users regularly have several mobile applications that they’ve used only once or have forgotten downloading them at all. While well-done push notifications can help overcome this obstacle, they won’t take the place of excellent usability in terms of regularly bringing users back to your application. Beyond that, there is also a lack of focus. Whatever your customers are doing on their phone, your application is most likely not their primary activity. They may be dining and checking in or shopping and texting, but whatever the activity, your application will most likely have a secondary presence on their device.

What are the keys to building a successful mobile application?

1. Make it easy to touch and use. Your eyes are more agile than your fingers. Often you can see links but your fingers can’t select them, use larger touch targets that are easy to find and identify to make navigating your app easy for users. Opt for fewer commands and a few basic options on the first screen to allow users to get into your app quickly and from there use progressive disclosure to build the experience, rather than try to put every option up front. More screens are better, with each being simple and focused.

2. Don’t try to do too much. Usability experts are always very vigilant with design to keep a laser like focus on what is important. Often companies want apps to do everything, but when everything is prominent, nothing is prominent, so eliminate those items that are just nice-to-have and not key to the apps’ purpose. When it comes to copy on mobile applications, short is too long. It must be shorter than short. People will not use mobile for  comparing large amounts of information. Don’t require a user to read much or remember things from screen to screen.

Enhance your brand with exceptional usability in the mobile application experience. Enlist usability experts to develop your iPhone application, Android application, iPad application or other applications for other system or you maybe just inviting one-star comments in the app store.

Sales Of Smartphones Up 74 Percent

According to the respected research firm Gartner, smartphone and mobile device sales in the second quarter of 2011 are up an incredible 74%. Global sales of mobile devices to end users in general totaled 428.7 million units in the second quarter of 2011, for a 16.5 percent increase from the second quarter of 2010.

But it was the smartphone genre that really caught fire in terms of growth. “Smartphone sales continued to rise at the expense of feature phones,” said Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner. “Consumers in mature markets are choosing entry-level and midrange Android smartphones over feature phones, partly due to carriers’ and manufacturers’ promotions.”

Google and Apple are the big gainers in the smartphone market according to Gartner. The combined share of iOS and Android  devices in the smartphone operating system (OS) market doubled to nearly 62 percent in the second quarter of 2011, up from just over 31 percent in the corresponding period of 2010.

This growth has pushed the world of custom-built mobile applications out of the realm of being a good idea and into the realm of a necessity for any competitive business. Businesses with out a comprehensive strategy for growth that addresses custom-built mobile applications including iPhone applications, Android applications and applications for tablets will soon be left behind more savvy competitors that have embraced these markets.

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