Europe
UK : Are you the leading wo/man who enjoys the spotlight and embraces
the new videophone age?
Or
the no-show who shuns it for fear of being caught out in places that
are hard to explain? How is etiquette muscling in on the next-generation
of mobile phones and why are grandparents buying not one but two devices
to be part of the action?
From the discovery of new
trends and whole phone communities to the evolution of e-novels and
the instant postcard, Motorola's global survey of 3G users explores
the human side of next-generation mobiles. The Generation HERE report
published today reveals that the take-up of the latest super-handsets
and services is not only growing, but is also fundamentally changing
the way in which users live and communicate.
Dozens of writers and journalists
travelled the world to interview and observe 3G users in different
cultures for Generation HERE. This methodology, Motorola says, led
to a report that had a qualitative rather than quantitative approach
to give a fuller picture of the 3G world.
"This was a report
about nuances," explains its editor Peter Lyle. "Behaviour
and adaptation, creative and unexpected usage. Ultimately it isn't
difficult to get statistics about penetration, but those statistics,
although they still have relevance, do not tell the whole story of
how a new technology impacts upon people's lives."
Generation HERE uncovered
a surprising 3G age range among users. While it is typical to see
teenagers using their mobiles to access community services like Japan's
Mixi and Sweden's LunarStorm, the report's research team also spoke
to Japanese grandparents who keep two 3G phones -- one for themselves,
and the other for recording and sharing pictures and videos of their
grandchildren.
"Generation
HERE is an exercise in gathering stories and recognising patterns,"
says Douglas Hunter, consumer insights manager, Motorola Mobile Devices
Europe. "We conceived it as a snapshot of how people are responding
to 3G here and now, and of how they see its future. And there's surprisingly
little material out there that approaches the technology -- any technology,
in fact -- in that way. So in a way we've learnt as much from it as
anyone else."
An exclusive podcast featuring
in depth discussion of Motorola's Generation HERE with researcher
Stephen Armstrong is available for download at The Podcast Network
(TPN) at http://gadget.thepodcastnetwork.com/the-gadget-show-49-generation-here/
.
TPN is the world's
leading provider of managed podcasts. Launched in February 2005, it
has grown to a service that has delivered over one million shows to
listeners in over 150 countries.