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Mobile fun - Talking comics are here

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             Little Eric does not have to peer into comic books to read the adventures of his hero-Nagraj. He can now lean back and let the comic play itself with sounds and dialogues-on his mobile phone.

             Mobile content provider Planet 41 Mobiventures says that it sells as many as 10,000 ‘motion comic’ books per day. It has the rights for mobile versions of titles offered by Raj Comics – like Super Commander, Doga, Hitchiker and others. These comics are available in Hindi and English.

            Somil Gupta, co-founder of planet 41 Mobiventures said that they were hitting notes of new-age consumers who prefer digital content over print editions. The price difference too helps.

            The print editions of these comics range from 50-100, whereas the digital versions
are sold at 10 per book.

             In the animated version, it takes away the text bubble, and re-draw the vacuum that it creates. It also lip movements and hand movements to these comics, and use voice artists to spell the dialogue. The company also adds sound effects like lighting, explosion effects.

            “This is done in the US by Marvel Comics, in India,” said Gupta. Currently, the books are available for Tata Docomo and Idea Cellular customers. The company is planning on expanding it across operators, soon.

            The comic book will be delivered in the form of a URL via an SMS. The comic opens on a WAP browser, and works only on the mobile. Since the company has no means on charging the consumer online, the URL cannot be used on the computer.

           “People would not want to use their credit cards for such small amounts. On the mobile, it will get deducted from the pre-paid balance or add to the bill,” said Gupta.
 
            Gupta feels that URL is a better form of delivery than creating an application. He feels that charging and selling is tougher as many forms of the applications across platforms like Android, iOS have to be created, and also duly promoted. “Now we can go directly promote the content,” he said.
 
           The comics sell quite well in the North like UP, Punjab, Delhi and Uttaranchal where Raj Comics are popular. Planet 41 wants to expand it to the South by translating them in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam. Also, these comics are directed towards children who are older than ten years.

           The company want to gain consumers across age groups with more titles. It is in talks with amond Comics which has famous characters like Chacha Chaudhary, Pinki, Shaktimaan and Captain Vyom. They want to bring in Lotpot comics on mobile as well, and cater to children who are as young as six or seven.

The company has two versions of comics on mobile. The non-animated version is simpler where they expand the text bubble of the comic to make it easier to read.

FCC Seeks fine from Google in wireless data privacy case

Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...
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FCC Seeks $25,000 fine from Google in wireless data privacy case


The Us Federal Communications Commission is seeking a $25,000 fine from Google Inc for not cooperating with an investigation of the company’s collection of personal data from wireless networks.

   For months, Google “impeded” and “delayed” the probe, which concerned e-mail, text messages and other private material gathered in connection with the company’s Street View location service, according to an FCC filing dated April 13.

    “We find that Google apparently and willfully and repeatedly violated. Commission orders to produce certain information and documents,” the FCC said in the filing.

    Google, owner of the world’s most popular search engine, has come under rising scrutiny from regulators over how it handles data. Last year, the company agreed to settle claims with the Federal Trade Commission that it used deceptive tactics and violated its own privacy policies with the Buzz social network introduced in 2010. The FTC settlement requires Google to undergo independent privacy audits for 20 years.

     For three years starting in May 2007, Google collected content from wireless networks that wasn’t needed for its location-based services, the FCC said. Google gathered so-called “payload” data including e-mail and text messages, passwords, Internet-usage history, and “other highly sensitive personal information,” the FCC said.

     In May 2010, Google, which had revenue of $37.9 billion last year, said it would stop using Wi-Fi information for Street View, which displays pictures of streets on Google Maps. At the time, the company acknowledged that it had collected the information by mistake.

    Mistique Cano, a spokeswoman for Mountain View, California-based Google, didn’t immediately have a comment.

    A security personnel answers a call at the reception counter of the Google office in Hyderabad.

                                                                                                            BLOOMBERG
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Where does Google see its future


Google’s Page ‘quite focused’ on lower ends of tablet market

Where does Google see its future in the tablet market? Try the bargain bin.

 Responding to a question about tablets during the company’s earnings call today, Google chief executive Larry Page said: “We definitely believe that there is going to be a lot of success with the lower ends of the market, as well with lower-price products; that will be very significant, and definitely an area we think is important, and we’re quite focused on.”

Tablets running on Google’s Android operating system have struggled to compete with the iPad, which dominates the market.

“There is a number of Android tablets out there, and obviously we have strong competition there,” Page said. 

One of the most popular budget tablets is the Kindle Fire, as Page suggested on the call.

“There’s also obviously been a  lot of success on some lower-price tablets that run Android, maybe not the full Google version of Android,”  Page said, referring to Amazon’s tablet. 

The Kindle Fire is based on Android, but Amazon has reconstructed the software so significantly that it doesn’t help the search giant much. Amazon doesn’t bundle Google’s services, like its search engine, e-mail and social network, with the tablet.

Google has been rumored to be working on a so-called Nexus tablet that will introduce a new version of the Android operating system and sell for a low price. The Verge reported last week, citing unnamed sources, that the tablet’s release date had been pushed back to July in order to reduce production costs.

As part of Google’s harder push into tablets, Page’s ambitions include making Android phones and tablets play better together, probably relying more heavily on cloud synchronization. Google Play, the media hub that the company released last month, will help with that unification, Page said.

“You won’t have to manage all these devices,” Page said. “You want to think about all these screens around you working seamlessly.”

 That goal will be especially important when Google puts a screen directly in front of your eyeball.
                                                                                                              MARK MILIAN
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