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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    iPhone spurs Web traffic, if not music sales

    Fri Jan 18, 2008 9:14pm EST
    Journalists test an Apple iPhone following its introduction in Berlin September 19, 2007. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

    DENVER (Billboard) - While Apple did not introduce any significant iPhone upgrades at its annual Macworld convention, which ran January 14-18 in San Francisco, the iconic device still made waves.

    Technology

    Apple has sold more than 4 million iPhones since launch, according to leader Steve Jobs' Macworld keynote. But what's more interesting is what the people who bought it are doing with it.

    In data provided to the New York Times, Google disclosed that it received more traffic from iPhones this Christmas than from any other mobile device, despite owning only 2 percent of the smart-phone market and less than 1 percent of the overall mobile-phone market. That means that while fewer people own iPhones, those who do possess the device use it to access the Internet much more than those with competing handsets.

    What's not clear is whether the iPhone's slick design and simple user interface has proved useful for other functions -- such as buying music. Although iPhone users can purchase songs from iTunes when in range of a Wi-Fi hotspot, Apple declined to reveal how many have done so.

    To date, downloading music to mobile phones has not proved a popular activity. According to a recent M:Metrics study, 20 percent of mobile users internationally listen to music on their mobile devices, but 83 percent of them are sideloading the music from their computers or from other devices rather than downloading it from a mobile music service.

    NEW MODEL EMERGING?

    That has music industry executives wondering whether the future of mobile music will more resemble the Web services model gaining traction on the Internet -- where fans stream music from multiple sources, including one another -- rather than the purchase-and-download model pursued to date.

    In February, Apple will release a software development kit that third-party developers can use to write applications for the iPhone. To date, developers were limited to writing Web-based applications -- one of the reasons behind the iPhone's high rate of browser use compared with other devices.

    The music industry will be watching iPhone versions of existing music-focused online services.

    "Imagine when something like a Last.fm becomes more streamlined and becomes truly portable, either on an iPhone or regular phones," said one label exec who asked to remain anonymous. "Are people going to make more use of it? Maybe."

    The M:Metrics report supports this theory. In France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom, more mobile users were listening to music shared between phones via Bluetooth or other technologies than were doing so with music downloaded from a music store. In France and the United Kingdom, such shared activity accounted for 12.5 percent of the mobile music listened to in November 2007.

    Some wireless operators are already preparing for that reality. Alltel, for instance, recently introduced a service that allows customers to stream and download digital-rights-management-free digital music files from their home computer to their mobile phone from anywhere in the operator's service area.

    Alltel charges $4 per month for the service; labels get nothing, because it's based on users' existing libraries. Should more devices follow the iPhone's lead and become more open-access devices, labels are concerned that their carrier deals may no longer provide the guaranteed revenue they once had.

    "As more phones become Wi-Fi-enabled," the label exec noted, "the need to go through official pipes to pay the piper is not always going to be there."

    Reuters/Billboard



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