The App Store has now created a new way for users to be able to share their pictures of themselves.
Among the ways that Apple has used its massive store for mobile apps to its best advantage and to generate its successes is through the creation of a method that would allow interesting applications and content to make their way to the surface, despite the tremendous competition.
This makes it very simple for the users of iOS based devices to find a lot of cool stuff quickly and easily.
It is only over the last couple of years that the trend toward taking selfies has become a very big deal. Apple has not failed to watch the way that selfies have been making their way into mobile apps, whether in taking, sharing, or both. The App store has now defined a new category of itself to precisely that trend. It is now possible to head to the “Sharing Selfies” section in order to be able to peruse all of the favorite applications for snapping that picture of oneself from an odd angle and in an awkward way.
There are a surprisingly large number of mobile apps geared toward taking selfies.
This type of picture used to be the definition of being uncool. However, since the term was first coined in the early 2000s, its popularity has been steadily growing, until it simply exploded over the last couple of years. This has caused mobile app development companies to start to focus rather heavily on the appeal of snapping these pictures in order to be able to take advantage of the attraction that people have to taking them.
It has now come to the point that there are so many that they are worth organizing. After all, it isn’t just anything that receives its very own category on the App Store from Apple. Now the section includes everything from Frontback to Front Flash, and from huge names such as Snapchat to tiny applications that have barely ever been downloaded. This new mobile apps category is certain to give them an added chance to stand out and define themselves.
Consumers are far more likely to want to stick with an OS than to a handset brand, says a new study.
According to a mobile technology research report issued by Kantar Worldpanel ComTech, smartphone and tablet users have a greater likelihood of remaining loyal to a specific operating system than to an actual brand of handset.
This is only confirming news that many brands, such as Samsung, have already realized.
Many manufacturers have already worked this mobile technology knowledge into the way that they design and market their products, in order to ensure that they continue to appeal to the areas in which consumers will become – and remain – loyal. They have found that it is exceptionally important to build brand relationships with their customers in order to boost and maintain sales, instead of focusing exclusively on products.
The mobile technology report found that only 41 percent of consumers stay loyal to their device brand.
At the same time, that same report indicated that while less than half of consumers will stay loyal to their brand of mobile device when it comes time for an upgrade, a massive 68 percent will prefer to use the same operating system to which they have become accustomed.
The Kantar report stated that “Apple is, of course, unaffected by this – iOS is Apple, Apple is iOS.” It pointed out that if those customers wanted to bail out on the operating system and choose Android, Windows, or even BlackBerry, instead, then they would be required to re-purchase all of their apps and would need to copy content from one type of operating system to another while they have to learn an entirely new operating system.
The Kantar Worldpanel global insights director, Dominic Sunebo, released a mobile technology news statement that indicated that manufacturers of mobile devices that are based on the Android operating system should be aware of not only the user experience that consumers are enjoying through the use of the product, itself, but also the emotional connections that are being built with that experience as opposed to the rational links. This can help them to better develop and maintain relationships with those consumers.