Making Your Phone Work: Just-in-time Information through Mobile Conections
Editor's Note: We've observed an uptick in cell phone use for researching purposes recently, including confirmation of the owner's accuracy in a conversation with friends. "Let me check that (on my phone)". Other topics we've observed being consulted through apps as well as favorite website are: times that events start, nearby restaurants, objects on view at a museum, shopping nearby and for endless other purposes.
There has also been a rush travel apps including places to stay near an airport, food courts within airlines, seat and gate selection and location (seatGuru, for instance), the TSA mobile APP, an ATM locator as well as the indispenable GPS.
Strolling stops, a fork is laid down, conversations suspend and the cell phone owner is in action. Increasingly, the wielder is a woman over 50. A summary of a new Pew Internet report follows:
By Lee Rainie, and Susannah Fox
The rapid adoption of cell phones and, especially, the spread of internet-connected smartphones are changing people’s communications with others and their relationships with information. Users’ ability to access data immediately through apps and web browsers and through contact with their social networks is creating a new culture of real-time information seekers and problem solvers.
The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project has documented some of the ways that people perform just-in-time services with their cell phones. A new nationally representative survey by the Pew Internet Project has found additional evidence of this just-in-time phenomenon. Some 70% of all cell phone owners and 86% of smartphone owners have used their phones in the previous 30 days to perform at least one of the following activities:
- Coordinate a meeting or get-together -- 41% of cell phone owners have done this in the past 30 days.
- Solve an unexpected problem that they or someone else had encountered -- 35% have used their phones to do this in the past 30 days.
- Decide whether to visit a business, such as a restaurant — 30% have used their phone to do this in the past 30 days.
- Find information to help settle an argument they were having — 27% haveused their phone to get information for that reason in the past 30 days.
- Look up a score of a sporting event — 23% have used their phone to do that in the past 30 days.
- Get up-to-the-minute traffic or public transit information to find the fastest way to get somewhere — 20% have used their phone to get that kind of information in the past 30 days.
- Get help in an emergency situation — 19% have used their phone to do that in the past 30 days.
Overall, these “just-in-time” cell users — defined as anyone who has done one or more of the above activities using their phone in the preceding 30 days — amount to 62% of the entire adult population.
Read or download the full report: http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Just-in-time.aspx; Copyright © 2012 Pew Internet
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