Featured Post

The Price of Pearl Jam’s New Single: One Tweet

Want to snag Pearl Jam’s new single “Just Breathe” without having to pay for it? No problem. You can do an old-fashioned switch-a-roo and swap one of your tweets in exchange for an iTunes download of the track. The band is using Culture Jam’s custom Twitter application to manage the Twitter whuffie...

Read More

The Future of Home Networking

Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in Digital Home | Posted on 24-02-2011

Tags: , , , ,

0

via Mashable

David Henry is a senior director of product marketing for NETGEAR where he works on high performance, dependable and easy home networking, storage and digital media products to connect people with the Internet and their content and devices. You can follow NETGEAR on Twitter @NETGEAR.

The future of home networking will see multiple devices connected to the Internet and to each other. At the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the emphasis was on Internet-enabled everything. Recent market studies also confirm this trend. The penetration of connected consumer electronic devices such as TVs, Blu-ray players, and smartphones are projected to grow 400% between 2010 and 2015, as shown in the chart below.

The introduction of so many new tablets is another indication that the demand for connected consumer electronics is surging. Consumer expectations about the quality of their connectivity is increasing as more and more of the devices are used for entertainment such as streaming movies or online gaming.

Social Media, Mobile and Online Radio, Wi-Fi Up, Broadband Leveling Says Arbitron

Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in Research | Posted on 12-04-2010

Tags: , , ,

1

The percentage of Americans age 12 and older who have a profile on one or more social networking Web sites has reached almost half (48%) of the population in 2010 – double the level from two years ago (24% in 2008). Consumer use of social networking sites is not just a youth phenomenon. While nearly eight in ten teens (78%) and 18 to 24s (77%) have personal profile pages, almost two-thirds of 25 to 34s (65%) and half of 35 to 44s (51%) also now have personal profile pages. 30% of Americans age 12 and older, who have a profile on at least one social networking Web site, use those sites “several times a day” compared with only 18% one year ago, according to a new survey from Arbitron.  Download a free copy

The use of social networking sites has expanded beyond younger consumers, with substantial numbers of Americans over the age of 35 now using social media. Social networking has become a part of mainstream media behavior.

Americans continue to hold radio in high regard, with nearly eight in ten saying they plan to listen to as much AM/FM radio in the future as they do now – despite advances of technology. Younger consumers show interest in radio on mobile phones. More than four in ten mobile phone owners age 12 to 24 say they would listen more to FM radio if a tuner were built into those phones.