Sunday, November 7, 2010

Mobile Broadband-- Will We Digress?

So much progress has been made in the past few years with cell phones. This is especially evident in mobile technology, where users have grown accustomed to using fast Internet for sending emails, checking their social networking websites like Facebook, the news, sending photos to one another, etc. But with all of the new iPhone and Blackberry converts from regular phones to such smartphones with Internet capabilities, will the tech side be able to keep up? Experts are worried that within the next five years, everyone will feel the effects of too many people on the mobile web.


Right now, a big part of why smartphones are so popular is that they are geared towards Internet use. If everyone uses a smartphone, then the broadband capabilities are overdrawn and each person gets a slower Internet connection on their phone. Smartphones will not be as necessary anymore. A big part of why people invest in them is to access their favorite sites quickly and easily-- something that is more of a task on any regular cell phone.


Thankfully, 4G and LTE are faster alternatives to the 3G network and could ease some of this traffic if more phone carriers decide to make the transition. But here another issue arises: only a select few cell phones currently have the capabilities of accessing the aforementioned networks. So first you purchase a fancy new BlackBerry or iPhone, in a year you realize that the service is slow because the 3G network is congested with so many users, so you are forced to buy another phone to use the 4G or LTE networks. It seems like a lot of trouble to go through, but it may end up being necessary at the current rate of new developments (not fast enough!).


It can also mean that some people will decide the costs outweigh the benefits, and to switch back to a simpler cell phone. Not everyone will deem purchasing a new expensive cell phone a necessity if there is no guaranteed fast service. In a way, the developments in mobile technologies will be eaten up by their own successes until something new and fast develops that is cost-effective for the average consumer. Because mobile broadband has been so wide and wildly popular, it is almost at the point of crashing (or at least becoming excessively slow).

Yes, we may very well be on the brink of an unsolvable technological problem, despite the fact that we are in the 21st century. The FCC's legitimate concerns will impact many people, obviously, since the fact that there are many is why mobile broadband will possibly be a lot slower in the near future. There will be things like the 4G network and it will work faster for a while, at least until everyone else catches on. Will we have the same problem again?


Perhaps this will be a good thing and people will become less dependent on their phones, and more dependent on real-life interactions. There are pluses to every drawback, and maybe the zenith of mobile technological advancements, at least in the (quite relevant) Internet aspect, will lead to unforeseen benefits.


Source: http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/mobile/11/05/gahran.mobile.spectrum.crunch/index.html?hpt=Sbin

Monday, November 1, 2010

Photojournalism in Global Business

A photograph can be the element that brings interest to a news story and captures the essence of a specific situation. Here are a couple of photos I took that illustrate various aspects utilized by photojournalists.

This is one of the newest commercial shopping malls in Vinnitsa, Ukraine. The first thing you notice when you look at this picture is the framing of the escalators. It draws the focus inward, where a brightly lit, orange-hued stand exudes a sort of warmth that makes one think of the holiday season (when this photo was taken). Throughout, there are many lines that your eyes want to follow: along the floor, the poles, and the escalators. There is a lot going on here, but at the same time, you know what the subject is.

Here we have a skyscraper in the financial district of New York City, taken earlier this year. It is first and foremost a portrayal of linear perspective; the building gets smaller and smaller as it approaches the sky. While the building is gray and the ones around it do not appear to have any interesting, out of the ordinary coloring, there are pops of vivid yellow in the brick. By juxtaposing a different building such as this one to ordinary-looking ones, and with the rule of thirds in play, there is nothing else here that you want to look at. The skyscraper dominates the image.