Thursday, June 21, 2012

Japan Lags in Smartphone Adoption, But Still Leads Asia in Mobile Internet Usage [REPORT]

docomo event

Mobile phone event for Japanese carrier Docomo

Nielsen has some interesting figures about smartphone adoption and usage in Asia in its recent Smartphone Insights Study. Perhaps most interesting is the breakdown of smartphones versus feature phones across the Asia region.

As you can see in the chart below, Singaporean smartphone ownership is highest in Asia as 72 percent own a smartphone in that country. It is followed by Korea, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. Note that in Japan, feature phones are still dominant, although the tide is turning, as it is in many other regions.

nielsen-smartphone-breakdown

But it’s interesting to note that while Japan still lags behind in smartphone ownership, it still leads all regions in mobile internet usage, as 86 percent say they’ve used internet on their mobile in the past 30 days. That’s good enough to top second-place Korea at 80 percent, and Hong Kong at 76 percent.

The report also notes that increased smartphone adoption in Asia is resulting in a surge in activity for location-based services. This is most evident in Korea and Japan with 59 percent and 56 percent of smartphones users respectively using some kind of LBS. The managing director of Nielsen’s Telecom Industry Group in APMEA region, Vishal Bali, explained:

Although currently both location-based and location-aware services are being primarily utilized by smartphone users in mature markets such as Korea, Japan, Singapore and China, other markets in Asia such as Indonesia and Malaysia where currently the usage is more focused on social networking and search will be quick to catch up as availability of these services improves.

[Via Asia Media Journal]

The post Japan Lags in Smartphone Adoption, But Still Leads Asia in Mobile Internet Usage [REPORT] appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Baidu Reveals Secret Recommendation System

Liao Ruoxue, lead architect of Baidu revealed this week that a 100+ people team in the company has been working on a recommendation system since last year. The system has been implemented into many services like Baidu Ting (online music radio), Baidu Zhidao and Baidu News as underlying technology.

Baidu’s Dragon Boat Festival Doodle

Acquiring information online has gone through 3 different stages. The first stage was to browse by categories when the information online is still in scarcity; The second stage was the era of search engine like Google and Baidu; And the next one belongs to the recommendation system that could predict a user’s ‘mind’ and push the right thing to them. No more hard time Googleing through tons of web pages. Liao also said that Baidu’s goal is to “Define and seek users’ hidden demand, especially when these demands are sometimes too complicated to be explained by users themselves.”

The technology of recommendation has become very popular these years, companies like Google, Youdao, Bing, Amazon, Pandora and Netflix all joined. For example, when viewing a product on Amazon.com, you must have seen items recommended by the etailer, which is all based on a matrix of what other shoppers bought or viewed that have association with what you’re viewing right now.

Baidu’s recommendation system features interdisciplinary, platformization and intelligence. Take Baidu Zhidao as an example, it usually takes more than 12 hours before someone eligible coming across a new question on the Q&A service. While with the recommending mechanism, the time can be shortened to less than 5 minutes.

Currently this technology is supported by the users database of Baidu, which stores hundreds of billions webpages and processes 100PB data everyday. “When the traditional mode does not work, I think we might make it a product focusing on recommendation.” Liao also predicted that, “When the technology is ready, it may cooperate with vertical websites like 360buy.com.”

Although Baidu leads its peers in this area, it still has a long way to go. “This area is still new, Douban FM got started early, but none has achieved much.”

Liao pictured an interesting scene for us: in the future, when you enter “nice movies” in the search engine, you will be linked to your favorite Korean movie (because the engine knows you are a big fan of Korean drama); and when you enter “how to propose to a girl”, you will see a customized plan just for you and your girlfriend. Isn’t that cool for you?

 

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Startup 30Rupees, A ISO Certified online grocery store serving NCR

We have been covering the online grocery trend in India and the latest to join the bandwagon is 30Rupees.com, an online store currently active in NCR region (Noida, Gurgaon and Delhi).

As far as the product range is concerned, the company offers a choice of over 10,000 SKUs and promises to deliver products within 4 hours in Gurgaon and 8 working hours’ free home or office delivery in Delhi/NOIDA (minimum order for Gurgaon being Rs. 500 and Delhi/Noida is Rs. 1000/).30rupees

If you are wondering what’s in the name? Well, 30rupees donates Rs. 30 to an NGO for every monthly order valued more than INR 3,000 that is processed and claims to be the first online grocery store to receive ISO 9001:2008 certification, which translates to stringent quality of service.

Customers can pay at the point of delivery by Cash, Meal Vouchers (Sodexo, Ticket) or, by Debit/Credit Cards using GPRS-enabled wireless EDC machines. and the company also offers a ‘no-questions-asked’ return policy.

A quick feedback to the team is to revisit the homepage, get rid of the gatekeeper screens and straightaway jump to the buying experience. Of course, the site needs quite a bit of design touch, but services like these are mostly utilitarian in nature and customers get hooked on to them by the quality and promptness of the service.

If you are in NCR, do give 30rupees a spin and share your comments/feedback.

From the online grocery market:



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Nintendo Announces Bigger, Better 3DS Console

Today Nintendo (TYO:7974) announced an upsized version of its 3DS console, called the 3DS LL. It features a 4.88-inch upper screen and a 4.18-inch lower screen. It’s scheduled to go on sale in Japan on July 28 for 18,900 yen (or about $236).

The post Nintendo Announces Bigger, Better 3DS Console appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Singapore’s hottest travel startup, Flocations, is now hiring

Flocations, an online travel startup based in Singapore, is expanding and looking to hire.

Tough job market out there? Join a startup. After successfully incubating at the 100 day bootcamp organized by a local incubator JFDI, the first TechStars Global Accelerator Network startup incubator in South East Asia, Flocations is now hiring. The Flocations blog post reads, “If you want to free the world from the ubiquitous way of searching travel that online travel agencies have trapped us in for the past 20 years, read the profiles we are looking for and contact us!”

So what does Flocations actually do? We did an interview few months back with cofounder Tudor Coman which explains: “Planning should be as fun as actually going on the trip. Unfortunately, it’s not. People get a lot of joy in daydreaming about their next getaway and actually being on that getaway. However, between those two there is a huge dip; planning and booking. We want to fill that gap with an excellent user experience and this is the reason Flocations is being built; to bring the joy back into planning and booking!”

Photo: Flocations Team

If you have a passion for the travel industry and excited about the working environment of a startup, Flocations will fit your bill. They are looking for community managers and web designers. The job descriptions (taken from their blog) are as follows:

Community Manager
The Flocations Community Manager will be in charge of running Flocations’ marketing and customer facing efforts. The Flocations team consists of engineers, developers, finance and business people. The Community Manager chosen will have artistic freedom in creating unique marketing campaigns to drive customer adoption and remarketing campaigns to retain customers. The Community Manager will be working alongside business people and graphic designers to create marketing material as well as creating the overall unification message to resonate across South East Asia. Flocations’ marketing destiny is in your hands, young padawan, can you handle it?

Web Designer
The Flocations interface is seen as disruptive. The web designer should know that Flocations is one of the only products that has a carte blanche or a blue ocean in terms of future designs – there are no constraints to where it can go and it does not have to abide by traditional online travel agency interfaces. The web designer should have strong user interfacing skills to complement graphical design and drive the utility and fluidity of the interface to the next level. Also, if most of your previous web designs consist of pink and black together, please hit the “next job available” on this website.

To apply, please email info@flocations.com, including  your detailed resume, portfolio details, current and expected salary.


Link to full article

Singapore’s hottest travel startup, Flocations, is now hiring

Flocations, an online travel startup based in Singapore, is expanding and looking to hire.

Tough job market out there? Join a startup. After successfully incubating at the 100 day bootcamp organized by a local incubator JFDI, the first TechStars Global Accelerator Network startup incubator in South East Asia, Flocations is now hiring. The Flocations blog post reads, “If you want to free the world from the ubiquitous way of searching travel that online travel agencies have trapped us in for the past 20 years, read the profiles we are looking for and contact us!”

So what does Flocations actually do? We did an interview few months back with cofounder Tudor Coman which explains: “Planning should be as fun as actually going on the trip. Unfortunately, it’s not. People get a lot of joy in daydreaming about their next getaway and actually being on that getaway. However, between those two there is a huge dip; planning and booking. We want to fill that gap with an excellent user experience and this is the reason Flocations is being built; to bring the joy back into planning and booking!”

Photo: Flocations Team

If you have a passion for the travel industry and excited about the working environment of a startup, Flocations will fit your bill. They are looking for community managers and web designers. The job descriptions (taken from their blog) are as follows:

Community Manager
The Flocations Community Manager will be in charge of running Flocations’ marketing and customer facing efforts. The Flocations team consists of engineers, developers, finance and business people. The Community Manager chosen will have artistic freedom in creating unique marketing campaigns to drive customer adoption and remarketing campaigns to retain customers. The Community Manager will be working alongside business people and graphic designers to create marketing material as well as creating the overall unification message to resonate across South East Asia. Flocations’ marketing destiny is in your hands, young padawan, can you handle it?

Web Designer
The Flocations interface is seen as disruptive. The web designer should know that Flocations is one of the only products that has a carte blanche or a blue ocean in terms of future designs – there are no constraints to where it can go and it does not have to abide by traditional online travel agency interfaces. The web designer should have strong user interfacing skills to complement graphical design and drive the utility and fluidity of the interface to the next level. Also, if most of your previous web designs consist of pink and black together, please hit the “next job available” on this website.

To apply, please email info@flocations.com, including  your detailed resume, portfolio details, current and expected salary.


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Startup Weekend global champ Aftership gets seed funding after DEMO Asia encounter

Aftership, a Hong Kong-based startup that provides package tracking for online retailers and consumers, has secured seed funding from Australian company Business Switch in exchange for a five percent stake.

The size of the investment is undisclosed.

Both companies met at DEMO Asia 2012, a premier startup conference that hosted over 76 startups from 14 countries.

“We met dozens of companies seeking investment from Singapore, Hong Kong, Beijing and Tokyo during recent visits to the region and AfterShip was a clear stand out,” said Matthew Abrahams, managing director of Business Switch, which runs a whole host of services catering to entrepreneurs.

“They have a great online product, management team and strategy. We love that AfterShip solves a big post-sale problem for online retailers — managing delivery expectations of customers.”

Using AfterShip, online merchants can check the delivery status of all their customer packages in one place. The software automatically notifies customers via SMS and email at critical junctures during the delivery process.

The funds will be used to improve and scale the current application across more shopping cart platforms as well as build international market share. Currently, the system supports eBay, Amazon, Shopify, Magento, and Spree.

Launched about four months ago, the startup has already sent more than 70,300 delivery notifications to customers and experienced a 42 percent growth week-on-week in notifications sent. They have about 5,500 users (both merchant and customer) a month.

AfterShip was also a winner at the Global Startup Battle 2011 in Seattle, a startup competition involving the various winners of the Startup Weekend events around the world.

The company is founded by Teddy Chan, Andrew Chan, and Dante Tsang.

 


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Optus Innov8 Seed Program: Turning Australian Startups Towards Asia

Remember back in February we wrote about an absence of capital in the startup scene there, generally because Australian VCs are risk adverse?

Now, some of our friends in the Australian startup scene, especially those with an Asian angle, are going to rejoice. Telco giants Optus and SingTel Innov8 have recently announced their joint efforts to launch an Australian seed program, which aims to help fund early-stage digital startups. Clearly, the role of the incubator Innov8 is to provide itself as a platform for startups to expand into Asia.

The Optus Innov8 Seed Program, backed by SingTel Innov8, will provide up to A$250,000 (US$252,000) in every startup investment. Apart from giving the cash and dedicated co-working spaces, startups will also have access to mentoring and networking opportunities. With this, it hopes to support startups’ growth and progression to series A funding.

Selected startups can look forward to working in dedicated co-working spaces provided by Fishburners and York Butter Factory located in Sydney and Melbourne respectively. Founders can expect regular events to be hosted in these spaces, which aim to connect them with industry experts and potential investors, and share ideas with fellow entrepreneurs.

On the launch, Edgar Hardless, CEO of SingTel Innov8, said:

[T]here is tremendous talent in the Australian market and we expect to invest in up to eight Australian startups in the first year. With the SingTel Group’s strong presence and scale of over 445 million mobile customers, we can assist startups to go regional.

So, if you are an early-stage registered company with an established team based in Australia, have developed solid business strategies, are able to demonstrate a working prototype, have innovative or disruptive digital solutions (either in proof of concept or advanced development stage) in the areas of mobility and convergence, or with a focus on health, education, and media, you can apply for the seed fund.

If you’re interested in the program, you can be referred via incubators or accelerators, such as PushstartPollenizer, and AngelCube. You can also apply directly through ‘pitch events’ held at Fishburners and the York Butter Factory. The first pitch event will be held this late July, and it promises to release more details when the date draws closer. You can keep yourself updated from the website here.

So, to me, this comes across as good news for startups in Australia. But I wonder with such funds becoming more accessible, will Australian entrepreneurs become more complacent? Also, perhaps due to the common language spoken, most Australian entrepreneurs look to the United States for expansion. With this, will more Australian startups take a second look at its neighbouring region, Asia?

For some perspectives on this, I reached out to a good friend of mine, Kim Heras, who is the co-founder of Pushstart and former editor of The Next Web Australia:

I think that this will definitely help the local ecosystem. There is more and more money coming online at the Angel and Series A stage in Australia but it’s always great to have another solid option for startups, particularly those that have an eye on Asian expansion.

[Also,] there’s already a growing awareness of key countries within Asia as attractive markets for appropriate Australian startups and the new fund will only add to that. What’s important though is the support Optus and Innov8 have provided on the ground to the Australian startup ecosystem. My feeling is that they’ll continue to support all startups, even those they don’t fund, and that will do a lot for fostering relationships between Australian startups and Asia.

So will startups be complacent with increased accessibility to funds as such? Kim replies:

No, I don’t think they’ll be complacent. There’s more money but certainly not an oversupply.

The post Optus Innov8 Seed Program: Turning Australian Startups Towards Asia appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Four must-have free Xbox Live games – achievements and points at zero cost!

Okay, this is probably the fiftieth time I’m saying this, but bear with me one more time: Xbox Live games on Windows Phones aren’t cheap. The good ones easily demands that you fork out S$5 or even S$10.

Fortunately, there are also free Xbox Live games! These have been pretty slow in coming, but there’s now a good set that you have no reason not to download if you’re after those achievements and points.

Minesweeper

Responsible for the occasional dip in productivity ever since it was included in Windows, Minesweeper is a game that needs little introduction.

The player has to navigate his/her way through a grid of squares by opening each one by one. Underneath each square is either a number, or a bomb. If it’s a number, say 4, you’ll know that there are a total of 4 bombs around that square. If it’s a bomb, you die. With some careful calculating and planning, it shouldn’t be hard to win the game most of the time.

The Windows Phone version has a slick metro design, and throws in power-ups to make the game more interesting. There are also four levels of difficulty, and two different modes of play. It’s ad-supported, and your phone will run a bit hot while playing, but hey, it’s free!

Wordament

Wordament is one for the lexicon junkies. It’s essentially a game of Boggle: you’re given a four-by-four grid of letters, and you have to find as many words as you can within that grid. The letters have to be in a consecutive chain to count, and you can go in all directions, including diagonally.

Different game modes make it more challenging, and you can compete against your friends and even all players around the world.

Annoyingly, the game makes you sit through a 30-second countdown at the end of every round, forcing you to look at the results, and of course, an ad.  Otherwise, this is a fun game that never serves to remind me how incompetent I am in my vocabulary.

Bug Village

Bug Village is the kind of game which you’ll either love or hate. Here’s a quick test: do you like those Facebook games where you have to build and look after your own city? If yes, then you’ll love Bug Village.

In the game, you build and nurture a colony of ants and bees. You can build homes, gather resources to expand the village, and decorate it in any way you want. You can also feed your bugs things like cookies and cupcakes.

Interestingly, Bug Village relies on in-app purchases after a fashion. You can purchase additional Coins and Acorns for real money, or earn currency through special offers if you want to speed up game play.

Breeze

In Breeze, you play as the wind, trying to get a flower from one end of the level to the other by guiding it. Tap and hold anywhere on the screen to blow from that direction, but be careful – if you blow too hard, the flower will run into obstacles and perish!

Along the way, you can collect sunshine, which will improve your score but is optional. The real challenge is collecting all the sunshine and then making it to the finishing line in the shortest time possible!

It’s really easy to grasp the mechanics of the game, but tremendously hard to master. If you consider yourself an impatient person, then you might want to give this a miss. At least the game’s music is soothing enough so you don’t get too frustrated.


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Hubblr Launches Out of Beta, Ready to Handle Your Social Marketing to China

The Hubblr dashboard now support's China's Renren (pictured) as well as Sina Weibo.

Last winter we looked at Hubblr, a dashboard for global social marketing that includes support for China’s Sina Weibo as well as Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn. Back then it was in private beta. But now the startup’s founder, Michael Lam, informs us that it’s launching officially this week with lots of refinements and also brings support for brands to engage consumers on Renren, the Facebook-esque social network. Now that it’s fully open, Michael says that the Australian startup’s “target market is brands or organizations who engage with their customers in both Western and Chinese social networks.”

The main web app at Hubblr.com is where all the posting and analytics (pictured below) action happens, and the slick service is reminiscent of HootSuite – except that Hubblr includes China’s two hottest social media that have the kind of moneyed, blue collar workers that brands chase after. The startup has given us some stats from its beta testing period: over 200 organizations signed-up to make use of it; those beta users were managing over 2,200 social profiles with an average of 21 social profiles per organization that participated; and, users came from 15 countries, including China itself, Hong Kong, the U.S., Canada, Vietnam, and beyond.

The Hubblr team has also made some technical changes, such as fine-tuning its pricing system, which has three tiered packages that offer access to a greater number of profile pages. Also, Michael says:

We added representation in Hong Kong [and] migrated our solution across to Amazon Web Services to make it scalable.

Whether you’re a fellow startup that needs to reach out to Chinese consumers on Weibo or Renren, or a major brand with multiple campaigns to run, check out the Hubblr tour, and share your social marketing thoughts in the comments below.

One element of the social media analytics in Hubblr (Click to enlarge); Below is the new Renren login.


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